Robinson, Kim Stanley - The Years of Rice and Salt
Tripitaka: Monkey, how far is it to the Western Heaven,
the abode of Buddha?
Wu kong: You can walk from the time of your youth
till the time you grow old, and after that, till you become young
again; and even after going through such a cycle a thousand times,
you may still find it difficult to reach the place where you want
to go. But when you perceive, by the resoluteness of your will, the
Buddha nature in all things, and when every one of your
thoughts goes back to that fountain in your memory, that will be
the time you arrive at Spirit Mountain.
--
The Journey to the West
ONE
Another journey west, Bold and Psin find an empty
land;
Temur is displeased, and the chapter has a stormy
end.
Monkey never dies. He keeps coming back to help us in times of
trouble, just as he helped Tripitaka through the dangers of the
first journey to the west, to bring Buddhism back from India to
China.
Now he had taken on the form of a small Mongol named Bold
Bardash, horseman in the army of Temur the Lame. Son of a Tibetan
salt trader and a Mongol innkeeper and spirit woman, and thus a
traveller from before the day of his birth, up and down and back
and forth, over mountains and rivers, across deserts and steppes,
crisscrossing always the heartland of the world. At the time of our
story he was already old: square face, bent nose, grey plaited
hair, four chin whiskers for a beard. He knew this would be Temur's
last campaign, and wondered if it would be his too.
One day, scouting ahead of the army, a small group of them rode
out of dark hills at dusk. Bold was getting skittish at the quiet.
Of course it was not truly quiet, forests were always noisy
compared to the steppe; there was a big river ahead, spilling its
sounds through the wind in the trees; but something was missing.
Birdsong perhaps, or some other sound Bold could not quite
identify. The horses snickered as the men kneed them on. It did not
help that the weather was changing, long mares' tails wisping
orange in the highest part of the sky, wind gusting up, air damp --
a storm rolling in from the west. Under the big sky of the steppe
it would have been obvious. Here in the forested hills there was
less sky to be seen, and the winds were fluky, but the signs were
still there.
They ride by fields that lay rank with unharvested crops. Barley
fallen over itself, Apple trees with apples dry in the branches, Or
black on the ground. No cart tracks or hoof prints or footprints In
the dust of the road. Sun sets, The gibbous moon misshapen
overhead. Owl dips over field. A sudden gust: How big the world
seems in a wind. Horses are tense, Monkey too.
They came to an empty bridge and crossed it, hooves thwocking
the planks. Now they came upon some wooden buildings with thatched
roofs. But no fires, no lantern light. They moved on. More
buildings appeared through the trees, but still no people. The dark
land was empty.
Psin urged them on, and more buildings stood on each side of the
widening road. They followed a turn out of the hills onto a plain,
and before them lay a black silent city. No lights, no voices; only
the wind, rubbing branches together over sheeting surfaces of the
big black flowing river. The city was empty.
Of course we are reborn many times. We fill our bodies like air
in bubbles, and when the bubbles pop we puff away into the bardo,
wandering until we are blown into some new life, somewhere back in
the world. This knowledge had often been a comfort to Bold as he
stumbled exhausted over battlefields in the aftermath, the ground
littered with broken bodies like empty coats.
But it was different to come on a town where there had been no
battle, and find everyone there already dead. Long dead; bodies
dried; in the dusk and moonlight they could see the gleam of
exposed bones, scattered by wolves and crows. Bold repeated the
Heart Sutra to himself. 'Form is emptiness, emptiness form. Gone,
gone, gone beyond, gone altogether beyond. 0, what an Awakening!
All hail!'
The horses stalled on the outskirts of the town. Aside from the
cluck and hiss of the river, all was still. The squinted eye of the
moon gleamed on dressed stone, there in the middle of all the
wooden buildings. A very big stone building, among smaller stone
buildings.
Psin ordered them to put cloths over their faces, to avoid
touching anything, to stay on their horses, and to keep the horses
from touching anything but the ground with their hooves. Slowly
they rode through narrow streets, walled by wooden buildings two or
three storeys high, leaning together as in Chinese cities. The
horses were unhappy but did not refuse outright.
They came into a paved central square near the river, and
stopped before the great stone building. It was huge. Many of the
local people had come to it to die. Their lamasery, no doubt, but
roofless, open to the sky -- unfinished business. As if these
people had only come to religion in their last days; but too late;
the place was a boneyard. Gone, gone, gone beyond, gone altogether
beyond. Nothing moved, and it occurred to Bold that the pass in the
mountains they had ridden through had perhaps been the wrong one,
the one to that other west which is the land of the dead. For an
instant he remembered something, a brief glimpse of another life --
a town much smaller than this one, a village wiped out by some
great rush over their heads, sending them all to the bardo
together. Hours in a room, waiting for death; this was why he so
often felt he recognized the people he met. Their existences were a
shared fate.
'Plague,' Psin said. 'Let's get out of here.'
His eyes glinted as he looked at Bold, his face was hard; he
looked like one of the stone officers in the imperial tombs.
Bold shuddered. 'I wonder why they didn't leave,' he said.
'Maybe there was nowhere to go.'
Plague had struck in India a few years before. Mongols rarely
caught it, only a baby now and then. Turks and Indians were more
susceptible, and of course Temur had all kinds in his army,
Persians, Turks, Mongols, Tibetans, Indians, Tajiks, Arabs,
Georgians. Plague could kill them, any of them, or all of them. If
that was truly what had felled these people. There was no way to be
sure.
'Let's get back and tell them,' Psin said.
The others nodded, pleased that it was Psin's decision. Temur
had told them to scout the Magyar Plain and what lay beyond, west
for four days' ride. He didn't like it when scouting detachments
returned without fulfilling orders, even if they were composed of
his oldest qa'uchin. But Psin could face him.
Back through moonlight they rode, camping briefly when the
horses got tired. On again at dawn, back through the broad gap in
the mountains the earlier scouts had called the Moravian Gate. No
smoke from any village or hut they passed. They kicked the horses
to their fastest long trot, rode hard all that day.
As they came down the long eastern slope of the range back onto
the steppe, an enormous wall of cloud reared up in the western half
of the sky,
Like Kali's black blanket pulling over them,
The Goddess of Death chasing them out of her land. Solid black
underside fluted and rippled,
Black pigs' tails and fishhooks swirling into the air below. A
portent so bleak the horses bow their heads,
The men can no longer look at each other.
They approached Temur's great encampment, and the black
stormcloud covered the rest of the day, causing a darkness like
night. Hair rose on the back of Bold's neck. A few big raindrops
splashed down, and thunder rolled out of the west like giant iron
cartwheels overhead. They hunkered down in their saddles and kicked
the horses on, reluctant to return in such a storm, with such news.
Temur would take it as a portent, just as they did. Temur often
said that he owed all his success to an asura that visited him and
gave him guidance. Bold had witnessed one of these visitations, had
seen Temur engage in conversation with an invisible being, and
afterwards tell people what they were thinking and what would
happen to them. A cloud this black could only be a sign. Evil in
the west. Something bad had happened back there, something worse
even than plague, maybe, and Temur's plan to conquer the Magyars
and the Franks would have to be abandoned; he had been beaten to it
by the goddess of skulls herself. It was hard to imagine him
accepting any such preemption, but there they were, under a
storm like none of them had ever seen, and all the Magyars were
dead.
Smoke rose from the vast camp's cooking fires, looking like a
great sacrifice, the smell familiar and yet distant, as if from a
home they had already left for ever. Psin looked at the men around
him. 'Camp here,' he ordered. He thought things over. 'Bold.'
Bold felt the fear shoot through him.
'Come on.'
Bold swallowed and nodded. He was not courageous, but he had the
stoic manner of the qa'uchin, Temur's oldest warriors. Psin also
would know that Bold was aware they had entered a different realm,
that everything that happened from this point onwards was freakish,
something preordained and being lived through inexorably, a karma
they could not escape.
Psin also was no doubt remembering a certain incident from their
youths, when the two of them had been captured by a tribe of taiga
hunters north of the Kama River. Together they had staged a very
successful escape, knifing the hunters' headman and running through
a bonfire into the night.
The two men rode by the outer sentries and through the camp to
the Khan's tent. To the west and north lightning bolts crazed the
black air. Neither men had ever seen such a storm in all their
lives. The few little hairs on Bold's forearms stood up like pig
bristles, and he felt the air crackling with hungry ghosts, pretas
crowding in to witness Temur emerge from his tent. He had killed so
many.
The two men dismounted and stood there. Guards came out of the
tent, drawing aside the flaps of the doorway and standing at
attention, ready with drawn bows. Bold's throat was too dry to
swallow, and it seemed to him a blue light glowed from within the
great yurt of the Khan.
Temur appeared high in the air, seated on a litter his carriers
had already hefted on their shoulders. He was pale faced and
sweating, the whites of his eyes visible all the way around. He
stared down at Psin.
'Why are you back?'
'Khan, a plague has struck the Magyars. They're all dead.'
Temur regarded his unloved general. 'Why are you back?'
'To tell you, Khan.'
Psin's voice was steady, and he met Temur's fierce gaze without
fear. But Temur was not pleased. Bold swallowed; nothing here was
the same as that time he and Psin had escaped the hunters, there
wasn't a single feature of that effort that could be repeated. Only
the idea that they could do it remained.
Something inside Temur snapped, Bold saw it -- his asura was
speaking through him now, and it looked as if it was wreaking great
harm as it did so. Not an asura, perhaps, but his nafs, the spirit
animal that lived inside him. He rasped, 'They cannot get away as
easily as that! They will suffer for this, no matter how they try
to escape.' He waved an arm weakly. 'Go back to your
detachment.'
Then to his guards he said in a calmer voice, 'Take these two
back and kill them and their men, and their horses. Make a bonfire
and burn everything. Then move our camp two days' ride east.'
He raised up his hand.
The world burst asunder.
A bolt of lightning had exploded among them. Bold sat deaf on
the ground. Looking around stunned, he saw that all the others
there had been flattened as well, that the Khan's tent was burning,
Temur's litter tipped over, his carriers scrambling, the Khan
himself on one knee, clutching his chest. Some of his men rushed to
him. Again lightning blasted down among them.
Blindly Bold picked himself up and fled. He looked over his
shoulder through pulsing green afterimages, and saw Temur's black
nafs fly out of his mouth into the night. Temur i Lang,
Iron the Lame, abandoned by both asura and nafs. The emptied body
collapsed to the ground, and rain bucketed onto it. Bold ran into
the dark to the west. We do not know which way Psin went, or what
happened to him; but as for Bold, you can find out in the next
chapter.
TWO
Through the realm of hungry ghosts
A monkey wanders, lonely as a cloud.
Bold ran or walked west all that night, scrambling through the
growing forest in the pouring rain, climbing into the steepest
hills he could find, to evade any horsemen who might follow. No one
would be too zealous in pursuit of a potential plague carrier, but
he could be shot down from a good distance away, and he wanted to
disappear from their world as if he had never existed. If it had
not been for the uncanny storm he would certainly be dead, already
embarked on another existence: now he was anyway. Gone, gone, gone
beyond, gone altogether beyond ...
He walked the next day and all the second night. Dawn of the
second day found him hurrying back through the Moravian Gate,
feeling that no one would dare follow him there. Once onto the
Magyar Plain he headed south, into trees. In the morning's wet
light he found a fallen tree and slipped deep under its exposed
roots, to sleep for the rest of the day in hidden dryness.
That night the rain stopped, and on the third morning he emerged
ravenous. In short order he found, pulled and ate meadow onions,
then hunted for more substantial food. It was possible that dried
meat still hung in the empty villages' storehouses, or grain in
their granaries. He might also be able to find a bow and some
arrows. He didn't want to go near the dead settlements, but it
seemed the best way to find food, and that took precedence over
everything else.
That night he slept poorly, his stomach full and gassy with
onions. At dawn he made his way south, following the big river. All
the villages and settlements were empty. Any people he saw were
dead on the ground. It was disturbing, but there was nothing to be
done. He too was in some kind of posthumous existence, a very
hungry ghost indeed. Living on from one found bite to the next,
with no name or fellows, he began to close in on himself, as during
the hardest campaigns on the steppes, becoming more and more an
animal, his mind shrinking in like the horns of a touched snail.
For many watches at a time he thought little but the Heart Sutra.
Form is emptiness, emptiness form. Not for nothing had he been
named Sun Wu kong, Awake to Emptiness, in an earlier
incarnation. Monkey in the void.
He came to a village that looked untouched, skirted its edge. In
an empty stable he found an unstrung bow and a quiver of arrows,
all very primitive and poorly made. Something moved in the
pasturage outside, and he went out and whistled up a small black
mare. He caught her with onions, and quickly taught her to take
him.
He rode her across a stone bridge over the big river, and slowly
crossed the grain of the land southwards, up and down, up and down.
All the villages continued empty, their food rotted or scavenged by
animals, but now he had the mare's milk and blood to sustain him,
so the matter was not so urgent.
It was autumn here, and he began to live like the bears, eating
berries and honey, and rabbits shot with the ridiculous bow.
Possibly it had been concocted by a child; he couldn't believe
anyone older would make such a thing. It was a single bend of wood,
probably ash, partly carved but still misshapen; no arrowrest, no
nocking point, its pull like that of a prayer flag line. His old
bow had been a laminate of horn, maplewood and tendon glue covered
by blue leather, with a sweet pull and release, and enough power to
pierce body armour from over a li away. Gone now, gone altogether
beyond, lost with all the rest of his few possessions, and when he
shot these twig arrows with this branch bow and missed, he would
shake his head and wonder if it was even worth tracking the arrow
down. It was no wonder these people had died.
In one small village, five buildings clustered above a stream
ford, the headman's house proved to have a locked larder, still
stocked with dried fishcakes that were spiced with something Bold
did not recognize, which made his stomach queasy. But with the
strange food in him he felt his spirits rise. In a stable he found
sidebags for the mare, and stuffed them with more dried food. He
rode on, paying more attention than he had been to the land he was
passing through.
White barked trees hold up black branches, Pine and cypress
still verdant on the ridge. A red bird and a blue bird sit near
each other In the same tree. Now anything is possible.
Anything but return to his previous life. Not that he harboured
any resentment of Temur; Bold would have done the same in his
place. Plague was plague, and could not be treated lightly. And
this plague was obviously worse than most, having killed everyone
in the region. Among the Mongols plague usually killed a few
babies, maybe made some adults sick. You killed rats or mice on
sight, and if babies got feverish and developed the bumps, their
mothers took them out to live or die by the rivers. Indian cities
were said to have a worse time with it, people dying in great
crowds. But never anything like this. It was possible something
else had killed them.
Travelling through empty land.
Clouds hazy, moon waning and chill. Sky, frost coloured,
cold to look at.
Wind piercing. Sudden terror.
A thousand trees roar in the sparse woodland: A lonely monkey
cries on a barren hill.
But the terror washed through him and then away, like freshets
of rain, leaving a mind as empty as the land itself. It was very
still. Gone, gone, altogether gone.
For a time he thought he would ride through and out of the
region of plague, and find people again. But then he came over a
jagged range of black hills, and saw a big town spread below,
bigger than any he had ever seen, its rooftops covering a whole
valley bottom. But deserted. No smoke, no noise, no movement. In
the centre of the city another giant stone temple stood open to the
sky. Seeing it, the terror poured into him again, and he rode into
the forest to escape the sight of so many people gone like the
autumn leaves.
He knew roughly where he was, of course. South of here, he would
eventually come into the Ottoman Turks' holdings in the Balkans. He
would be able to speak with them, he would be back in the world,
but out of Temur's empire. Something then would start up for him,
some way to live.
So he rode south. But still only skeletons occupied the
villages. He grew hungrier and hungrier. He drove the mare harder,
while drinking more of her blood.
Then one night in the dark of the moon, all of a sudden there
were howls and wolves were on them in a snarling rush. Bold just
had time to cut the mare's tether and scramble into a tree. Most of
the wolves chased the mare, but some sat panting under the tree.
Bold got as comfortable as he could and prepared to wait them out.
When rain came they slunk away. At dawn he woke for the tenth time,
climbed down. He took off downstream and came on the body of the
mare, all skin and gristle and scattered bones. The sidebags were
nowhere to be found.
He continued on foot.
One day, too weak to walk, he lay in wait by a stream, and shot
a deer with one of the sorry little arrows, and made a fire and ate
well, bolting down chunks of cooked haunch. He slept away from the
carcass, hoping to return to it. Wolves couldn't climb trees, but
bears could. He saw a fox, and as the vixen had been his wife's
nafs, long ago, he felt better. In the morning the sun warmed him.
The deer had been removed by a bear, it appeared, but he felt
stronger with all that fresh meat in him, and pressed on.
He walked south for several days, keeping on ridges when he
could, over hills both depopulated and deforested, the ground
underfoot sluiced to stone and baked white by the glare of the sun.
He watched for the vixen in the valleys at dawn, and drank from
springs, and raided dead villages for scraps of food. These grew
harder and harder to find, and for a while he was reduced to
chewing the leather strap from a harness, an old Mongol trick from
the hard campaigns on the steppes. But it seemed to him it had
worked better back there, on the endless grass, which was so much
easier to cross than these baked tortured white hills.
At the end of one day, after he had long got used to living
alone in the world, scavenging it like Monkey himself, he came into
a little copse of trees to make a fire, and was shocked to see one
already there, tended by a living man.
The man was short, like Bold. His hair was as red as maple
leaves, his bushy beard the same colour, his skin pale and brindled
like a dog. At first Bold was sure the man was sick, and he kept
his distance. But the man's eyes, blue in colour, were clear; and
he too was afraid, absolutely on point and ready for anything.
Silently they stared at each other, across a small clearing in the
middle of the copse.
The man gestured at his fire. Bold nodded and came warily into
the glade.
The man was cooking two fish. Bold took a rabbit that he had
killed that morning out of his coat, and skinned and cleaned it
with his knife. The man watched him hungrily, nodding at each
familiar move. He turned his fish on the fire, and made room in the
coals for the rabbit. Bold spitted it on a stick and put it in.
After the meat had cooked they ate in silence, sitting on logs
on opposite sides of the fire. They both stared into the flames,
glancing only occasionally at each other, shy after all their time
alone. After all that it was not obvious what one could say to
another human.
Finally the man spoke, first brokenly, then at length. Sometimes
he used a word that sounded familiar to Bold, but not so familiar
as his movements around the fire, and no matter how hard he tried,
Bold could make nothing of what the man said.
Bold tried out some simple phrases himself, feeling the
strangeness of words in his mouth, like pebbles. The other man
listened closely, his blue eyes gleaming in firelight, out of the
dirty pale skin of his lean face, but he showed no sign of
comprehension, not of Mongolian, Tibetan, Chinese, Turkic, Arabic,
Chagatay, or any other of the polyglot greetings Bold had learned
through his years of crossing the steppe.
At the end of Bold's recitation the man's face spasmed, and he
wept. Then, wiping his eyes clear, leaving big streaks on his dirty
face, he stood before Bold and said something, gesturing widely. He
pointed his finger at Bold, as if angry, then stepped back and sat
on his log, and began to imitate rowing a boat, or so Bold
surmised. He rowed facing backwards, like the fishermen on the
Caspian Sea. He made the motions for fishing, then for catching
fish, cleaning them, cooking them, and feeding them to little
children. By his gestures he evoked all the people he had fed, his
children, his wife, the people he lived with.
Then he turned his face up at the firelit branches over the two
men, and cried again. He pulled up the rough shift covering his body,
and pointed at his arms -- at his underarms, where he made a fist.
Bold nodded, felt his stomach shrink as the man mimed the sickness
and cleat o all the children, by lying down on the ground and
mewling like a dog. Then the wife, then all the rest. All had died
but this man, who walked around the fire pointing at the leaf
litter on the ground intoning words, names perhaps. It was all so
clear to Bold.
Then the man burned his dead village, all in gestures so clear,
and mimed rowing away. He rowed on his log for a long time, so long
Bold thought he had forgotten the story; but then he ground to a
halt and fell back in his boat. He got out, looking around in
feigned surprise. Then he began to walk. He walked around the fire
a dozen times, pretend eating grass and sticks, howling like a
wolf, cowering under his log, walking some more, even rowing again.
Over and over he said the same things, 'Dea, dea, dea, dea,'
shouting it at the branch crossed stars quaking over them.
Bold nodded. He knew the story. The man was moaning, with a low
growl like an animal, cutting at the ground with a stick. His eyes
were as red as any wolf's in the light. Bold ate more of the
rabbit, then offered the stick to the man, who snatched it and ate
hungrily. They sat there and looked at the fire. Bold felt both
companionable and alone. He eyed the other man, who had eaten both
his fish, and was now nodding off. The man jerked up, muttered
something, lay down, curled around the fire, fell asleep. Uneasily
Bold stoked the fire, took the other side of it, and tried to do
the same. When he woke the fire had died and the man was gone. It
was a cold dawn, dew drenched, and the trail of the man led
down the meadow to a big bend in a stream, where it disappeared.
There was no sign of where the man had gone from there.
Days passed, and Bold continued south. Many watches went by in
which he didn't think a thing, only scanning the land for food and
the sky for weather, humming a word or two over and over. Awake to
emptiness. One day he came on a village surrounding a spring,
Old temples scattered throughout,
Broken round columns pointing at the sky. All in the midst of a
vast silence. What made these gods so angry With their people? What
might they make Of a solitary soul wandering by After the world has
ended? White marble drums fallen this way and that: One bird cheeps
in the empty air.
He did not care to test anything by trespassing, and so circled
the temples, chanting 'Orn mane padme hum, om mane padme hummmm',
aware suddenly that he often spoke aloud to himself now, or hummed,
without ever noticing it, as if ignoring an old companion who
always said the same things.
He continued south and east, though he had forgotten why. He
scrounged roadside buildings for dried food. He walked on the empty
roads. It was an old land. Gnarled olive trees, black and heavy
with their inedible fruit, mocked him. No person ate entirely by
his own efforts, no one. He got hungrier, and food became his only
focus, every day. He passed more marble ruins, foraged in the
farmhouses he passed. Once he came on a big clay jar of olive oil,
and stayed there four days to drink it all down. Then game became
more abundant. He saw the vixen more than once. Good shots with his
ridiculous bow kept him away from hunger. He made his fires larger
every night, and once or twice wondered what had become of the man
he had met. Had meeting Bold made him realize he would be alone no
matter what happened or whom he found, so that he had killed
himself to rejoin his jati? Or perhaps just slipped while drinking?
Or walked in the stream to keep Bold from tracking him? There was
no way of telling, but the encounter kept coming back to Bold,
especially the clarity with which he had been able to understand
the man.
The valleys ran south and east. He felt the shape of his travels
in his mind, and found he could not remember enough of the last few
weeks to be sure of his location, relative to the Moravian Gate, or
the khanate of the Golden Horde. From the Black Sea they had ridden
west about ten days' ride, hadn't they? It was like trying to
remember things from a previous life.
It seemed possible, however, that he was nearing the Byzantine
empire, coming towards Constantinople from the north and west.
Sitting slumped before his nightly bonfire, he wondered if
Constantinople would be dead too. He wondered if Mongolia was dead,
if perhaps everyone in the world was dead. The wind soughed through
the shrubs like ghosts' voices, and he fell into an uneasy sleep,
waking through the watches of the night to check the stars and
throw more branches on his fire. He was cold.
He woke again, and there was Temur's ghost standing across the
fire, the light of the flames dancing over his awesome face. His
eyes were black as obsidian, and Bold could see stars gleaming in
them.
'So,' Temur said heavily, 'You ran away.'
'Yes,' Bold whispered.
'What's wrong? Don't want to go out on the hunt again?'
This was a thing he had said to Bold before. At the end he had
been so weak he had had to be carried on a litter, but he never
thought of stopping. In his last winter he had considered whether
to move east in the spring, against China, or west, against the
Franks. During a huge feast he weighed the advantages of each, and
at one point he looked at Bold, and something on Bold's face caused
the Khan to jump him with his powerful voice, still strong despite
his illness: 'What's wrong, Bold? Don't want to go out on the hunt
again?'
That earlier time Bold had said, 'Always, Great Khan. I was
there when we conquered Ferghana, Khorasan, Sistan, Kbrezm and
Mughalistan. One more is fine by me.'
Temur had laughed his angry laugh. 'But which way this time,
Bold? Which way?'
Bold knew enough to shrug. 'All the same to me, Great Khan. Why
don't you flip a coin?'
Which got him another laugh, and a warm place in the stable that
winter, and a good horse in the campaign. They had moved west in
the spring of the year 784.
Now Temur's ghost, as solid as any man, glared reproachfully at
Bold from across the fire. 'I flipped the coin just like you said,
Bold. But it must have come up wrong.'
'Maybe China would have been worse,' Bold said.
Temur laughed angrily. 'How could it have been? Killed by
lightning? How could it have been? You did that, Bold, you and
Psin. You brought the curse of the west back with you. You never
should have come back. And I should have gone to China.'
'Maybe so.' Bold didn't know how to deal with him. Angry ghosts
needed to be defied as often as they needed to be placated. But
those jet black eyes, sparkling with starlight Suddenly Temur
coughed. He put a hand to his mouth, and gagged out something red.
He looked at it, then held it out for Bold to see: a red egg. 'This
is yours,' he said, and tossed it over the flames at Bold.
Bold twisted to catch it, and woke up. He moaned. The ghost of
Temur clearly was not happy. Wandering between worlds, visiting his
old soldiers like any other preta... In a way it was pathetic, but
Bold could not shake the fear in him. Temur's spirit was a big
power, no matter what realm it was in. His hand could reach into
this world and grab Bold's foot at any time.
All that day Bold wandered south in a haze of memories, scarcely
seeing the land before him. The last time Temur visited him in the
stables had been difficult, as the Khan could no longer ride. He
had looked at one thick black mare as if at a woman, and smoothed
its flank and said to Bold, 'The first horse I ever stole looked
just like this one. I started poor and life was hard. God put a
sign on me. But you would think He would have let me ride to the
end.' And he had stared at Bold with that vivid gaze of his, one
eye slightly higher and larger than the other, just like in the
dream. Although in life his eyes had been brown.
Hunger kept Bold hunting. Temur, though a hungry ghost, no
longer had to worry about food; but Bold did. All the game ran
south, down the valleys. One day, high on a ridge, he saw water,
bronze in the distance. A large lake, or sea. Old roads led him
over another pass, down into another city.
Again, no one there was alive. All was motionless and silent.
Bold wandered down empty streets, between empty buildings, feeling
the cold hands of pretas running down his back.
On the central hill of the city stood a copse of white temples,
like bones bleaching in the sun. Seeing them, Bold decided that he
had found the capital of this dead land. He had walked from
peripheral towns of rude stone to capital temples of smooth white
marble, and still no one had survived. A white haze filled his
vision, and through it he stumbled up the dusty streets, up onto
the temple hill, to lay his case before the local gods.
On the sacred plateau three smaller temples flanked a large one,
a rectangular beauty with double rows of smooth columns on all four
sides, supporting a gleaming roof of marble tiles. Under the eaves
carved, figures fought, marched, flew and gestured in a great stone
tableau depicting the absent people, or their gods. Bold sat on a
marble drum from a long toppled column and stared up at the
carving in stone, seeing the world that had been lost.
Finally he approached the temple, entered it praying aloud.
Unlike the big stone temples in the north, it had been no place of
congregation in the end; there were no skeletons inside. Indeed it
looked as if it had been abandoned for many years. Bats hung in the
rafters, and the darkness was lanced by sunbeams breaking through
broken rooftiles. At the far end of the temple it looked as if an
altar had been hastily erected. On it a single candlewick burned in
a pot of oil. Their last prayer, flickering even after they had
died.
Bold had nothing to offer by way of sacrifice, and the great
white temple stood silent above him. 'Gone, gone, gone beyond, gone
altogether beyond! 0 what an awakening! All hail!' His words echoed
hollowly.
He stumbled back outside into the afternoon glare, and saw to
the south the blink of the sea. He would go there. There was
nothing here to keep him; the people and their gods too had
died.
A long bay cut in between hills. A harbour at the head of the
bay was empty, except for a few small rowing boats slapping against
the waves, or upturned on the shingle beach stretching away from
the docks. He did not risk the boats, he knew nothing about them.
He had seen Issyk Kul and Lake Qinghai, and the Aral, Caspian and
Black Seas, but he had never been in a boat in his life, except for
ferries crossing rivers. He did not want to start now.
No traveller seen on this long road,
No boats from afar return for the night. Nothing moves in this
dead harbour.
On the beach he scooped a handful of water to drink -- spat it
out it was salty, like the Black Sea, or the springs in the Tarim
Basin. It was strange to see so much waste water. He had beard
there was an ocean surrounding the world. Perhaps he was at the
edge of the world, the western edge, or the southern. Possibly the
Arabs lived south of this sea. He didn't know, and for the first
time in all his wandering, he had the feeling that he had no idea
where he was.
He was asleep on the warm sand of a beach, dreaming of the
steppes, trying to keep Temur out of the dream by force of will
alone, when he was rousted by strong hands, rolling him over and
tying his legs together and his arms behind his back. He was hauled
to his feet.
A man said 'What have we here?' or something to that effect. He
spoke something like Turkic, Bold didn't know many of the words,
but it was some kind of Turkic, and he could usually catch the
drift of what they were saying. They looked like soldiers or
perhaps brigands, big hard handed ruffians, wearing gold
earrings and dirty cotton clothes. He wept while grinning foolishly
at the sight of them; he felt his face stretch and his eyes burn.
They regarded him warily.
'A madman,' one ventured.
Bold shook his head at this. 'I -- I haven't seen anyone,' he
said in Ulu Turkic. His tongue was big in his mouth, for despite
all his babbling to himself and the gods, he had forgotten how to
talk to people. 'I thought everyone was dead.'
He gestured to the north and west.
They did not seem to understand him.
'Kill him,' one said, as dismissive as Temur.
'The Christians all died,' another said.
'Kill him, let's go. Boats are full.'
'Bring him,' the other said. 'The slavers will pay for him. He
won't bring down the boat, thin as he is.'
Something like that. They hauled behind him down the beach. He
had to hurry so the rope wouldn't pull him around backwards, and
the effort made him dizzy. He didn't have much strength. The men
smelled of garlic and that made him ravenous, though it was a foul
smell. But if they meant to sell him to slavers, they would have to
feed him. His mouth was watering so heavily that he slobbered like
a dog, and he was weeping as well, nose running, and with his hands
tied behind his back he couldn't wipe his face.
'He's foaming at the mouth like a horse.'
'He's sick.'
'He's not sick. Bring him. Come on,' this to Bold, 'don't be
scared.
Where we take you even the slaves live a better life than you
barbaria dogs.'
Then he was shoved over the side of a beached boat, and with
great jerks it was pulled off into the water, where it rocked
violently. Immediately he fell sideways into the wooden wall of the
thing.
' UP here, slave. On that pile of rope. Sit!'
He sat and watched them work. Whatever happened, it was better
than the empty land. Just to see men move, to hear them talk,
filled him. It was like watching horses run on the steppe. Hungrily
he watched them haul a sail into the air on a mast, and the boat
heeled to the side such that he threw himself the other way. They
roared with laughter at this. He grinned sheepishly, gesturing at
the big lateen.
'It takes more wind than this breath to tip us.'
'Allah protect us from it.'
'Allah protect us.'
Muslims. 'Allah protect us,' Bold said politely. Then, in
Arabic, 'In the name of God, the merciful, the compassionate.' In
his years in Temur's army he had learned to be as much a Muslim as
anyone. The Buddha did not mind what you said to be polite. Now it
would not keep him from slavery, but it would perhaps earn him a
little more food. The men regarded him curiously. He watched the
land slide by. They untied his arms and gave him some dried mutton
and bread. He tried to chew each bite a hundred times. The familiar
tastes called back to him his whole life. He ate what they gave
him, drank fresh water from a cup they gave him.
'Praise be to Allah. Thank you in the name of God the
compassionate, the merciful.'
They sailed down a long bay, into a larger sea. At night they
pulled behind headlands and anchored the boat and slept. Bold
curled under a coil of rope. Every time he woke in the night he had
to remind himself where he was.
In the mornings they sailed south and south again, and one day
they passed through a long narrows into an open sea, with big
waves. The rocking of the boat was like riding a camel. Bold
gestured west. The men named it, but Bold didn't catch the name.
'They're all dead,' the men said.
The sunset came and they were still on the open sea. For the
first time they sailed all night long, always awake when Bold woke,
watching the stars without talking to each other. For three days
they sailed out of the sight of any land, and Bold wondered how
long it would go on. But on the fourth morning the sky to the south
grew white, then brown, A haze like the one that blew out of the
Gobi. Sand in the air, sand and fine dust. Land ho! Very low land.
The sea and sky Both turn the same brown Before catching sight of a
stone tower, Then a great stone breakwater, fronting a harbour.
One of the sailors happily names it: 'Alexandria!' Bold had
heard the name, though he knew nothing about it. Neither do we; but
to find out more, you can read the next chapter.
THREE
In Egypt our pilgrim is sold into slavery; In Zanj
he encounters again the inescapable Chinese.
His captors sailed to a beach, anchored with a stone tied to a
rock, tied Bold up securely, and left him in the boat under a
blanket while they went ashore.
It was a beach for small boats, near an immense long wooden
dockfront behind the seawall, which served much bigger ships. When
the men came back they were drunk and arguing. Without untying
anything but his legs, and with no more words to him, they pulled
Bold out of the boat and marched him down the great seafront of the
city, which appeared to Bold dusty and salty and worn down,
stinking in the sun like a dead fish, of which there were indeed
many scattered about. On the docks before a long building were
bales, boxes, great clay jars, netted bolts of cloth; then a fish
market, which made his mouth water at the same time that his
stomach flopped.
They came to a slave market. A small square with a raised dais
in its middle, somewhat like a lama's teaching platform. Three
slaves were quickly sold. The women being sold garnered the most
attention and comment from the crowd. They were stripped of all but
the ropes or chains holding them, if such were necessary, and stood
there listlessly, or cowered. Most were black, some brown. They
seemed to be at the end of auction day, people selling off
leftovers. Before Bold an emaciated girl of about ten years was
sold to a fat black man in dirty silk robes. The transaction was
completed in a kind of Arabic; she sold for some unit of currency
Bold had never heard of before, the payment in little gold coins.
He helped his captors get his crusted old clothes off.
'I don't need tying,' he tried to tell them in Arabic, but they
ignored him and chained his ankles. He walked onto the platform
feeling the baked air settle on him. Even to himself he emitted a
powerful smell, and looking down he saw that his time in the empty
land had left him about as fleshless as the little girl before him.
But what was left was muscle, and he stood up straight, looking
into the sun as the bidding went on, thinking the part of the Lapis
Lazuli Sutra that went, 'The ruffian demons of unkindness roam the
earth, begone! begone! The Buddha renounces slavery!'
'Does he speak Arabic?' someone asked.
One of his captors prodded him, and in Arabic he said, 'In the
name of God the merciful, the compassionate, I speak Arabic, also
Turkic, Mongolian, Ulu, Tibetan and Chinese,' and he began to chant
the first chapter of the Quran as far as he remembered it, until
they pulled his chain and he took this as a sign to stop. He was
very thirsty.
A short, slight Arab bought him for twenty somethings. His
captors seemed pleased. They handed him his clothes as he stepped
down, slapped him on the back and were off. He began to put on his
greasy coat, but his new owner stopped him, handing him a length of
clean cotton cloth.
'Wrap that around you. Leave the other filth here.'
Surprised, Bold looked down at the last vestiges of his previous
life. Dirty rags only, but they had accompanied him this far. He
pulled his amulet out of them, leaving his knife hidden in a
sleeve, but his owner intervened and threw it back onto the
clothes.
'Come on. I know a market in Zanj where I can sell a barbarian
like you for three times what I just paid. Meanwhile you can help
me get ready for the voyage there. Do you understand? Help, and it
will go easier for you. I'll feed you more.'
'I understand.'
'Be sure that you do. Don't think of trying to escape.
Alexandria is a very fine city. The Mamlukes keep things stricter
than sharia here. They are not forgiving of slaves that try to
escape. They're orphans brought here from north of the Black Sea,
men whose parents were killed by barbarians like you.'
In fact Bold himself had killed quite a few of the Golden Horde,
so he nodded without comment.
His owner said, 'They have been trained by Arabs in the way of
Allah, and now they are more than Muslim.' He whistled at the
thought. 'Trained to rule Egypt apart from all lesser influences,
to be true only to the sharia. You don't want to cross them.'
Bold nodded again. 'I understand.'
Crossing the Sinai was like travelling with a caravan crossing
one of the deserts of the heartland, except this time Bold was
walking with the slaves, in the cloud of dust at the back of the
camel train. They were part of the year's haj. Enormous numbers of
camels and people had tramped over this road through the desert,
and now it was a broad dusty smooth swathe through rockier hills.
Smaller parties going north passed by to their left. Bold had never
seen so many camels.
The caravanserai were beaten and ashy. The ropes tying him to
his new master's other slaves were never untied, and they slept in
circles on the ground at night. The nights were warmer than Bold
was used to, and this almost made up for the heat of the days.
Their master, whose name was Zeyk, kept them well watered and
fed them adequately at night and at dawn, treating them about as
well as his camels, Bold observed: a tradesman, taking care of the
goods in his possession. Bold approved of the attitude, and did
what he could to keep the bedraggled string of slaves in good form.
If they all kept the pace it made the walking that much easier. One
night he looked up and saw the Archer looking down on him, and he
remembered his nights alone in the empty land.
The ghost of Temur,
The last survivor of the fisherfolk,
The empty stone temples open to the sky, The days of hunger, the
little mare,
That ridiculous bow and arrow,
A red bird and blue bird, sitting side by side.
They came to the Red Sea, and boarded a ship three or four times
as long as the one that had brought him to Alexandria, a dhow or
zambuco, people called it both. The wind always blew from the west,
sometimes hard, and they hugged the western shore with their big
lateen sail bellied out to the cast. They made good time. Zeyk fed
his string of slaves more and more, fattening them for the market.
Bold happily downed the extra rice and cucumbers, and saw the sores
around his ankles begin to heal. For the first time in a long time
he was not perpetually hungry, and he felt as if he was coming out
of a fog or a dream, waking up more each day. Of course now he was
a slave, but he wouldn't always be one. Something would happen.
After a stop at a dry brown port called Massawa, one of the
hajjira depots, they sailed east across the Red Sea and rounded the
low red cape marking the end of Arabia, to Aden, a big seaside
oasis, indeed the biggest port Bold had ever seen, a very rich town
of green palms waving over ceramic roofs, citrus trees, and
numberless minarets. Zeyk did not disembark his goods or slaves
here, however; after a day on shore he came back shaking his
head.
'Mombasa,' he said to the ship's captain, and paid him more, and
they sailed south across the strait again, around the horn and Ras
Hafun, then down the coast of Zanj, sailing much farther south than
Bold had ever been. The sun at noon was nearly directly overhead,
and beat down on them most cruelly all day, day after day, with
never a cloud in the sky. The air baked as if the world were an
oven. The coast appeared either dead brown or else vibrant green,
nothing in between. They stopped at Mogadishu, Lamu and Malinda,
each a prosperous Arab trading port, but Zeyk got off only briefly
at them.
As they sailed into Mombasa, the grandest harbour yet, they came
on a fleet of giant ships, ships bigger than Bold had imagined
possible. Each one was as big as a small town, with a long line of
masts down its centre. There were about ten of these gigantic
outlandish ships, with another twenty smaller ones anchored among
them. 'Ah good,' said Zeyk to the zambuco's captain and owner. 'The
Chinese are here.'
The Chinese! Bold had had no idea they owned such a great fleet
as this one. It made sense, though. Their pagodas, their great
wall; they liked to build big.
The fleet was like an archipelago. All on board the zambuco
looked at the great ships, abashed and apprehensive, as if faced
with sea going gods. The large Chinese ships were as long as a
dozen of the biggest dhows, and Bold counted nine masts on one of
them. Zeyk saw him and nodded. 'Look well. Those will soon be your
home, God willing.'
The zambuco's master brought them inshore on a breath of a
breeze. The town's little waterfront was entirely occupied by the
landing boats of the visitors, and after some discussion with Zeyk,
the zambuco's owner beached his craft just south of the waterfront.
Zeyk and his man rolled up their robes and stepped over the
freeboard into the water, and helped the whole string of slaves
over the side onto land. The green water was as warm as blood, or
even hotter.
Bold spotted some Chinese, wearing their characteristic red felt
coats even here, where they were certainly much too warm. They
wandered the market, fingering the goods on display and chattering
among themselves, trading with the aid of a translator Zeyk knew.
Zeyk approached and greeted him effusively, asked about direct
trade with the Chinese visitors. The translator introduced him to
some of the Chinese, who seemed polite, even affable, in their
usual way. Bold found himself trembling slightly, perhaps from heat
and hunger, perhaps from the sight of the Chinese, after all these
years, on the other side of the world. Still pursuing their
business.
Zeyk and his assistant led the slaves through the market. It was
a riot of smell, colour and sound. People as black as pitch, their
eyeballs and teeth flashing white or yellow against their skin,
offered goods and bartered happily. Bold followed the others past
Great mounds of green and yellow fruit, Rice, coffee, dried fish
and squid,
Lengths and bolts of coloured cotton cloth,
Some spotted, others striped white and blue; Bales of
Chinese silk, piles of Mecca carpets; Huge brown nuts, copper pans
Filled with coloured beads or gemstones, Or round balls of
sweet smelling opium; Pearls, raw copper, carnelian,
quicksilver; Daggers and swords, turbans, shawls; Elephant tusks,
rhinoceros horns,
Yellow sandalwood, ambergris,
Ingots and coin strings of gold and silver, White cloth,
red cloth, porcelains,
All the things of this world, solid in the sun.
And then the slave market, again in a square of its own, next to
the main market, with a central auction block, so much like a
lama's dais when empty.
The locals were gathered around a sale to one side, not a full
auction.
They were mostly Arabs here, and often dressed in blue cloth
robes and red leather shoes. Behind the market a mosque and minaret
stood before rows of four--and even five storey buildings. The
clamour was great, but surveying the scene, Zeyk shook his head.
'We'll wait for a private audience,' he said.
He fed the slaves barley cakes and led them to one of the big
buildings next to the mosque. There some Chinese arrived with their
translator, and they all went inside to an inner courtyard of the
building, shaded and full of green broad leaved plants and a
burbling fountain. A room opening onto this courtyard had shelves
on all its walls, with bowls and figures placed on them in an
elaborate, beautiful display: Bold recognized pottery from
Samarqand, and painted figurines from Persia, among Chinese white
porcelain bowls painted in blue, gold leaf and copper.
'Very elegant,' Zeyk said.
Then they were to business. The Chinese officers inspected
Zeyk's string of slaves. They spoke to the translator, and Zeyk
conferred in private with the man, nodding frequently. Bold found
he was sweating, though he felt cold. They were being sold to the
Chinese as a single lot.
One of the Chinese strolled down the line of slaves. He looked
Bold over.
'How did you get here?' he asked Bold in Chinese.
Bold gulped, waved north. 'I was a trader.' His Chinese was
really rusty. 'The Golden Horde took me and brought me to Anatolia.
Then to Alexandria, then here.'
The Chinese nodded, then moved on. Soon after they were led off
by Chinese sailors in trousers and short shirts, back to the
waterfront. There several other strings and groups of slaves were
gathered. They were stripped, washed down with fresh water, an
astringent, more fresh water. They were given new robes of plain
cotton, led to boats, and rowed out to the huge side of one of the
great ships. Bold climbed a ladder forty one steps up the
wooden wall of the ship's side, following a skinny black slave boy.
They were taken together below the main deck, to a room near the
rear of the ship. What happened in there we don't want to tell you,
but the story won't make sense unless we do, so on to the next
chapter. These things happened.
FOUR
After dismal events, a piece of the Buddha
appears;
Then the treasure fleet asks Tianfei to calm their
fears.
The ship was so big it did not rock on the waves. It was like
being on an island. The room they were kept in was low and broad,
extending across the width of the ship. Gratings on both sides let
in air and some light, though it was dim. A hole under one grating
overhung the ship's side and served as the place of relief.
The skinny black boy looked down it as if judging whether he
could escape through the hole. He spoke Arabic better than Bold,
though it was not his native tongue either; he had a guttural
accent that Bold had never heard before. 'They trot you like derg.'
He came from the hills behind the sahil he said, staring down the
hole. He stuck one foot through, then another. He wasn't going to
get through.
Then the doorlock rattled and he pulled his feet out and sprang
away like an animal. Three men came in and had them all stand
before them. Ship's petty officers, Bold judged. Checking the
cargo. One of them inspected the black boy closely. He nodded to
the others, and they put wooden bowls of rice on the floor, and a
big bamboo tube bucket of water , and left.
That was the routine for two days. The black boy, whose name was
Kyu, spent much of his time looking down the shithole, at the water
it seemed, or at nothing. On the third day they were led up and out
to help load the ship's cargo. It was hauled inboard on ropes
running through pulleys on the masts, then guided down hatches into
holds below. The loaders followed instructions from the officer of
the watch, usually a big moon faced Han. Bold learned that the
hold was broken by interior walls into nine individual
compartments, each several times bigger than the biggest Red Sea
dhows. The slaves who had been on ships before said that would make
the great ship impossible to sink; if one compartment leaked it
could be emptied and repaired, or even left to flood, but the
others would keep the ship afloat. It was like being on nine ships
tied together.
One morning the deck overhead reverberated with the drumming of
sailors' feet, and they could feel the two giant stone anchors
being raised. Big sails were hauled up on crossbeams, one for each
mast. The ship began a slow stately rocking over the water, heeling
slightly.
It was indeed a floating town. Hundreds lived on it; moving bags
and boxes from hold to hold, Bold counted five hundred different
people, and there were no doubt many more. It was astonishing how
many people were aboard. Very Chinese, the slaves all agreed. The
Chinese didn't notice it was crowded, to them it was normal, no
different from any other Chinese town.
The admiral of the great fleet was on their ship: Zheng He, a
giant of a man, a flat--faced western Chinese, a hui as some slaves
called him under their breath. Because of his presence the upper
deck was crowded with officers, dignitaries, priests and
supernumeraries of every sort. Belowdecks there were a lot of black
men, Zanjis and Malays, doing the hardest work.
That night four men came into the slaves' room. One was Hua Man,
Zheng's first officer. They stopped before Kyu and grabbed him up.
Hua struck him on the head with a short club. The other three
pulled off the boy's robe and separated his legs. They tied
bandages tightly around his thighs and around his waist. They held
the semi conscious boy up, and Hua took a small curved knife
from his sleeve. He grasped the boy's penis and pulled it out, and
with a single deft slice cut off penis and balls, right next to the
body. The boy groaned as Hua squeezed the bleeding wound and
slipped a leather thong around it. He leaned down and inserted a
slender metal plug into the wound, then pulled the thong tight and
tied it off. He went to the shithole and dropped the boy's genitals
through it into the sea. Then from one of his assistants he took a
wet wad of paper and held it against the wound he had made, while
the others bandaged it in place. When it was secured two of them
put the boy's arms over their shoulders, and walked him out the
door.
They returned with him a watch or so later, and let him lie
down. Apparently they had been walking him the whole time. 'Don't
let him drink,' Hua said to the cowed slaves. 'If he drinks or eats
in the next three days, he'll die.'
The boy moaned through the night. The other slaves moved
instinctively to the other side of the room, too scared to talk
about it yet. Bold, who had gelded quite a few horses in his time,
went and sat by him. The boy was perhaps ten or twelve years old.
His grey face had some quality that drew Bold, and he stayed by
him. For three days the boy moaned for water, but Bold didn't give
him any.
On the night of the third day the eunuchs returned. 'Now we see
whether he will live or die,' Hua said. They held up the boy, took
off the bandages, and with a swift jerk Hua pulled the plug from
the boy's wound. Kyu yelped and groaned as a hard stream of urine
sprayed out of him into a porcelain chamberpot held in place by the
second eunuch.
'Good,' Hua said to the silent slaves. 'Keep him clean. Remind
him to take out the plug to relieve himself, and to get it back in
quick, until he heals.'
They left and locked the door.
Now the Abyssinian slaves would talk to the boy. 'If you keep it
clean it will heal right up. Urine cleans it too, so that's all
right, I mean, if you wet yourself when you go.'
'Lucky they didn't do it to all of us.'
'Who says they won't?'
'They don't do it to men. Too many die of it. Only boys can
sustain the loss.'
The next morning Bold led the boy to the shithole and helped him
to get the bandage off, so he could pull the plug and pee again.
Then Bold put it back for him, showing him where it went, trying to
be delicate as the boy whimpered. 'You have to have the plug, or
the tube will close up and you'll die.'
The boy lay on his cotton shift, feverish. The others tried not
to look at the horrible wound, but it was hard not to see it once
in a while.
'How could they do it?' one said in Arabic, when the boy was
sleeping.
'They're eunuchs themselves,' one of the Abyssinians said. 'Hua
is a eunuch. The admiral himself is a eunuch.'
'You'd think they'd be the ones to know.'
'They know and that's why they do it. They hate us all. They
rule the Chinese Emperor, and they hate everyone else. You can see
how it will be,' waving around at the immense ship. 'They'll
castrate all of us. It's the end coming.'
'You Christians like to say that, but so far it's only been true
for you.'
'God took us first to shorten our suffering. Your turn will
come.'
'It's not God I fear, but Admiral Zheng He, the Three Jewel
Eunuch. He and the Yongle Emperor were friends when they were boys,
and the Emperor ordered him castrated when they were both thirteen.
Can you believe it? Now the eunuchs do it to all the boys they take
prisoner.'
In the days that followed Kyu got hotter and hotter, and was
seldom conscious. Bold sat by his side and put wet rags in his
mouth, reciting sutras in his mind. The last time he had seen his
own son, almost thirty years before, the boy had been about this
age. This one's lips were grey and parched, his dark skin dull, and
very dry and hot. Bold had never felt anyone that hot who had not
died, so it was probably a waste of time for all concerned; best to
let the poor sexless creature slip away, no doubt. But he kept
giving him water anyway. He recalled the boy looking around the
ship as they had loaded it, his gaze intense and searching. Now the
body lay there looking like some sad little African girl, sick to
death from an infection in her loins.
But the fever passed. Kyu ate more and more. Even when he was
active again, however, he spoke little compared to before. His eyes
were not the same either; they stared at people like a bird's eyes
do, as if they did not quite believe anything they saw. Bold
realized that the boy had travelled out of his body, gone into the
bardo and come back someone else. All different. That black boy was
dead; this one started anew.
'What is your name now?' he asked him.
'Kyu,' the boy said, but unsurprised, as if he didn't remember
telling Bold before.
'Welcome to this life, Kyu.'
Sailing on the open ocean was a strange way to travel. The skies
flew by overhead, but it never looked as if they had moved
anywhere. Bold tried to reckon what a day's ride was for the fleet,
wondering if it was faster in the long run than horses, but he
couldn't do it. He could only watch the weather and wait.
...............
Twenty three days later the fleet sailed into Calicut, a
city much bigger than any of the ports of Zanj, as big as
Alexandria, or bigger.
Sandstone towers bulbed, walls crenellated,
All overgrown by a riot of greens.
This close to the sun life fountains into the sky. Around the
stone of the central districts,
Light wooden buildings fill the green bush Up the coast in both
directions,
Into the hills behind; the city extends As far as the eye can
see, up the sides Of a mountain ringing the town.
Despite its great size, all activity in the city stopped at the
arrival of the Chinese fleet. Bold and Kyu and the Ethiopians
looked through their grating at the shouting crowds, all those
people in their colours waving their arms overhead in awe.
'These Chinese will conquer the whole world.'
'Then the Mongols will conquer China,' Bold said.
He saw Kyu watching the throng on shore. The boy's expression
was that of a preta, unburied at death. Certain demon masks had
that look, the old Bon look, like Bold's father when enraged,
staring into a person's soul and saying I'm taking this along with
me, you can't stop me and you'd better not try. Bold shuddered to
see such a face on a mere boy.
They were put to work unloading cargo into boats, and taking
other loads out of boats onto the ship, but none of the slaves was
sold, and only once were they taken ashore, to help break up a mass
of cloth bolts and carry them to the long low dug outs being
used to transfer goods from the beaches to the treasure fleet.
During this work Zheng He came ashore in his personal barge,
which was painted, gilded and encrusted with jewellery and
porcelain mosaics, and had a gold statue facing forwards from the
bow. Zheng stepped down a walkway from the barge, wearing golden
robes embroidered in red and blue. His men had laid a carpet strip
on the beach for him to walk on, but he left it to come over and
observe the loading of the new cargo. He was truly an immense man,
tall, broad, and with a deep draught fore and aft. He had
a broad face, not Han; and he was a eunuch; he was all the
Abyssinians had claimed. Bold watched him out of the corner of his
eye, and then noticed that Kyu was standing bolt upright staring at
him too, work forgotten, eyes fixed like a hawk's on a mouse. Bold
grabbed the boy and hauled him back to work. 'Come on, Kyu, we're
chained together here, move or I'll knock you down and drag you
across the ground. I don't want to get in trouble here, Tara knows
what happens to a slave in trouble with such people as these.'
From Calicut they sailed south to Lanka. Here the slaves were
left aboard the ship, while the soldiers went ashore and
disappeared for several days. The behaviour of the officers left
behind made Bold think the detachment was out on a campaign, and he
watched them as closely as he could as the days passed and they
grew more nervous. Bold could not guess what they might do if Zheng
He did not return, but he did not think they would sail away.
Indeed the fire officers were hard at work laying out their array
of incendiaries, when the admiral's barge and the other boats came
flying back out of Lanka's inner harbour, and their men came aboard
shouting triumphantly. Not only had they fought their way out of an
inland trap, they said, but they had captured the treacherous local
usurper who had laid the trap, and taken the rightful king as well
though there seemed to be some confusion in the story as to
which was which, and why they should abduct the rightful king as
well as the usurper. Most amazing of all, they said that the
rightful king had had in his possession the island's holiest relic,
a tooth of the Buddha, called the Dalada. Zheng held up the little
gold reliquary to show all aboard this prize. An eyetooth,
apparently. Crew, passengers, slaves, all spontaneously roared
their acclaim, in throattearing shouts that went on and on.
'This is a great bit of fortune,' Bold told Kyu when the awful
noise died down, pressing his hands together and reciting the
Descent into Lanka Sutra. In fact it was so much good fortune it
frightened him. And there was no doubt that fright had been a big
part of the roar of the crew. The Buddha had blessed Lanka, it was
one of his special lands, with a branch of his Bodhi tree growing
in its soil, and his mineralized tears still falling off the sides
of the sacred mountain in the island's centre, the one that was
topped by Adam's footprint. Surely it was not right to take the
Dalada away from its rightful place in such a holy land. There was
an affront in the act that could not be denied.
As they sailed cast, the story circulated through the ship that
the Dalada was only proof of the deposed king's right to rule; it
would be returned to Lanka when the Yongle Emperor determined the
rights of the case. The slaves were reassured by this news.
'So the Emperor of China will decide who rules that island,' Kyu
said. Bold nodded. The Yongle Emperor had himself come to the
throne in a violent coup, so it was not clear to Bold which of the
two Lankan contenders he would favour. Meanwhile, they had the
Dalada on board. 'It's good,' he said to Kyu after thinking it over
some more. 'Nothing bad can happen to us on this voyage,
anyway.'
And so it proved. Black squalls, bearing directly down on them,
unaccountably evaporated just as they struck. Giant seas rocked
all the horizons, great dragon tails visibly whipping up the waves,
while they sailed serenely over a moving flat calm at their centre.
They even sailed through the Malacca Strait without hindrance from
Palembanque, or, north of that, from the myriad pirates of Cham, or
the Japanese wakou -- though, as Kyu pointed out, no pirate in his
right mind would chal lenge a fleet so huge and powerful,
tooth of the Buddha or no.
Then as they sailed into the south China Sea, someone saw the
Dalada floating about the ship at night, as if, he said, it were a
little candle flame. 'How does he know it wasn't a candle flame?'
Kyu asked. But the next morning the sky dawned red. Black clouds
rolled over the horizon in a line from the south, in a way that
reminded Bold strongly of the storm that had killed Temur.
Driving rain struck, then a violent wind that turned the sea
white. Shooting up and down in their dim little room, Bold realized
that such a storm was even more frightening at sea than on land.
The ship's astrologer cried out that a great dragon under the sea
was angry, and thrashing the water under them. Bold joined the
other slaves in holding to the gratings and looking out of their
little holes to see if they could catch sight of spine or claw or
snout of this dragon, but the spume flying over the whitewater
obscured the surface. Bold thought he might have seen part of a
dark green tail in the foam.
Wind shrieks through the nine masts,
All bare of sail. The great ship tilts in the wind, Rolls side
to side, and the little ships Accompanying them bob like corks,
In and out of view through the grating.
In storms like this, nothing to be done but hold on! Bold and
Kyu cling fast to the wall, Listening through the howl for the
officers' shouts And the thumping feet of the sailors Doing what
they can to secure the sails And then to tie the tiller securely in
place. They hear the fear in the officers, And sense it in the
sailors' feet. Even belowdecks they are wet with spray.
Up on the great poop deck the officers and astrologers performed
some sort of ceremony of appeasement, and Zheng He himself could be
heard calling out to Tianfei, the Chinese goddess of safety at
sea.
'Let the dark water dragons go down into the sea, and leave us
free from calamity! Humbly, respectfully, piously, we offer up this
flagon of wine, offer it once and offer it again, pouring out this
fine, fragrant wine! That our sails may meet favourable winds, that
the sea lanes be peaceful, that the all seeing and
all hearing spirit soldiers of winds and seasons, the
wave quellers and swell drinkers, the airborne immortals,
the god of the year, and the protectress of our ship, the Celestial
Consort, brilliant, divine, marvellous, responsive, mysterious
Tianfei might save us!'
Looking up through the dripping cracks in the deck Bold could
see a composite vision of sailors watching this ceremony, mouths
all open wide shouting against the wind's roar. Their guard yelled
at them, 'Pray to Tianfei, pray to the Celestial Consort, the
sailor's only friend! Pray for her intercession! All of you! Much
more of this wind and the ship will be torn apart!'
'Tianfei preserve us,' Bold chanted, squeezing Kyu to indicate
he should do the same. The black boy said nothing. He pointed up at
the forward masts, however, which they could see through the
hatchway grating, and Bold looked up and saw red filaments of light
dancing between the masts: balls of light, like Chinese lanterns
without the paper or the fire, glowing at the top of the mast and
over it, illuminating the flying rain and even the black bottoms of
the clouds that were peeling by overhead. The otherworldly beauty
of the sight tempered the terror of it; Bold and everyone else
moved outside the realm of terror, it was too strange and awesome a
sight to worry any longer about life or death. All the men were
crying out, praying at the top of their lungs. Tianfei coalesced
out of the dancing red light, her figure gleaming brightly over
them, and the wind diminished all at once. The seas calmed around
them. Tianfei dissipated, ran redly out of the rigging and back
into the air. Now their grateful voices could be heard above the
wind. Whitecaps still toppled and rolled, but all at a distance
from them, halfway to the horizon.
Tianfei!' Bold shouted with the rest. 'Tianfei!'
Zheng He stood at the poop rail and raised both hands in a light
rain. He shouted 'Tianfei! Tianfei has saved us!' and they all
bellowed it with him, filled with joy in the same way the air had
been filled with the red light of the goddess. Later the wind blew
hard again, but they had no fear.
How the rest of the voyage home went is not really material;
nothing of note happened, they made it back safely, and what
happened after that you can find out by reading the next
chapter.
FIVE
In a Hangzhou restaurant, Bold and Kyu rejoin their
jati; In a single moment, end of many months' harmony.
Storm tossed, Tianfei protected, the treasure fleet
sailed into a big estuary. Ashore, behind a great seawall, stood
the rooftops of a vast city. Even the part visible from the ship
was bigger than all the cities Bold had ever seen put together --
all the bazaars of central Asia, the Indian cities Temur had razed,
the ghost towns of Frengistan, the white seaside towns of Zanj,
Calicut all combined would have occupied only a quarter or a
third of the land covered by this forest of rooftops, this steppe
of rooftops, extending all the way to distant hills visible to the
west.
The slaves stood in the waist of the big ship, silent in the
midst of the cheering Chinese, who cried out 'Tianfei, Celestial
Consort, thank you!' and 'Hangzhou, my home, never thought to be
seen again!' 'Home, wife, new year festival!' 'We happy, happy men,
to have travelled all the way to the other side of the world and
then make it back home!' and so on.
The ships' huge anchor stones were dropped over the side. Where
the Chientang River entered the estuary there was a powerful tidal
bore, and any ship not securely anchored could be swept far up into
the shal lows, or flushed out to sea. When the ships were
anchored the work of unloading began. This was a massive operation,
and once as he ate rice between watches at the hoist, Bold noted
that there were no horses, camels, water buffalo, mules or asses to
help with the job, or with any other job in the city: just
thousands of labourers, endless lines of them, moving the food and
goods in, or taking out the refuse and manure,
Mostly by canal -- in and out, in and out, as if the city were a
monstrous imperial body lying on the land, being fed and relieved
by all its subjects together.
Many days passed in the labour of unloading, and Bold and Kyu
saw a bit of the harbour Kanpu, and Hangzhou itself, when manning
barges on trips to state warehouses under the southern bill
compound that had once been the imperial palace, hundreds of years
before. Now lesser aristocrats and even high ranking
bureaucrats and eunuchs lived in the old palace grounds. North of
these extended the walled enclosure of the old city, impossibly
crowded with warrens of wooden buildings that were five, six and
even seven storeys tall -- old buildings that overhung the canals,
people's bedding spread out from balconies to dry in the sun, grass
growing out of the roofs.
Bold and Kyu gawked up from the canals while unloading the
barges. Kyu looked with his bird's gaze, seeming unsurprised,
unimpressed, unafraid. 'There are a lot of them,' he conceded.
Constantly he was asking Bold the Chinese words for things, and in
the attempt to answer Bold learned many more words himself.
When the unloading was done, the slaves from their ship were
gathered together and taken to Phoenix Hill, 'the hill of the
foreigners', and sold to a local merchant named Shen. No slave
market here, no auction, no fuss. They never learned what they had
been sold for, or who in particular had owned them during their sea
passage. Possibly it had been Zheng He himself.
Chained together at the ankles, Bold and Kyu were led through
the narrow crowded streets to a building near the shores of a lake
flanking the west edge of the old city. The first floor of the
building was a restaurant. It was the fourteenth day of the first
moon of the year, Shen told them, the start of the Feast of
Lanterns, so they would have to learn fast, because the place was
hopping.
Tables spill out of the restaurant Into the broad street
bordering the lakefront, Every chair filled all day long.
The lake itself dotted with boats,
Each boat sporting lanterns of all kinds Coloured glass painted
with figures,
Carved white and apple jade, Roundabouts turning on their
candles' hot air, Paper lanterns burning up in brief blazes. A dyke
crowded with lantern bearers Extends into the lake, the opposite
shore is crowded As well, so at the day's end The lake and all the
city around it Spark in the dusk of the festival twilight. Certain
moments give us such unexpected beauty.
Shen's eldest wife, I Ii, ran the kitchen very strictly,
and Bold and Kyu soon found themselves unloading hundredweight bags
of rice from the canal barges tied up behind the restaurant;
carrying them in; returning bags of refuse to the compost barges;
cleaning the tables; and mopping and sweeping the floor. They ran
in and out, also upstairs to the family compound above the
restaurant. The pace was relentless, but all the while they were
surrounded by the restaurant women, in white robes with paper
butterflies in their hair, and by thousands of other women as well,
promenading under the globes of coloured light, so that even Kyu
raced about drunk on the sights and smells, and on drinks salvaged
from near empty cups. They drank lychee, honey and ginger
punch, paw paw and pear juice, and teas green and black. Shen also
served fifteen kinds of rice wine; they tried the dregs of them
all. They drank everything but plain water, which they were warned
against as dangerous to the health.
As for the food, which again came to them mostly in the form of
table scraps -- well, it beggared description. They were given a
plateful of rice every morning, with some kidneys or other offal
thrown in, and after that they were expected to fend for themselves
with what customers left behind. Bold ate everything he got his
hands on, astonished at the variety. The Feast of Lanterns was a
time for Shen and I Ii to offer their fullest menu, and so
Bold had the chance to taste roebuck, red deer, rabbit, partridge,
quail, clams cooked in rice wine, goose with apricots, lotus seed
soup, pimento soup with mussels, fish cooked with plums, fritters
and souffles, ravioli, pies and cornflour fruitcakes. Every kind of
food, in fact, except for any beef or dairy; strangely, the Chinese
had no cattle. But they had eighteen kinds of soy, Shen said, nine
of rice, eleven of apricots, eight of pears. It was a feast every
day.
After the rush of the Feast of Lanterns was over, I Ii
liked to take short breaks from her work in the kitchen, and visit
some of the other,, , restaurants of the city, to see what
they were offering. She would return" to inform Shen and the cooks
that they needed to make a sweet soy soup, for instance, like that
she had found at the Mixed Wares Market; or pig cooked in ashes,
like that at the Longevity and Compassion Palace.
She started taking Bold with her on her morning trips to the
abattoir, located right in the heart of the old city. There she
chose her pork ribs, and the liver and kidneys for the slaves. Here
Bold learned why they were never to drink the city's water; the
offal and blood from the slaughter were washed off right into the
big canal running down to the river, but often the tides pushed
water back up this canal and through the rest of the city's water
network.
Returning behind I li with his wheelbarrow of pork one day,
pausing to let a party of nine intoxicated women in white pass by,
Bold felt all of a sudden that he was in a different world. Back at
the restaurant he said to Kyu, 'We've been reborn without our
noticing it.'
'Maybe you have. You're like a baby here.'
'Both of us! Look about you! It's . . .' He could not express
it.
'They are rich,' Kyu said, looking about. Then they were back to
work.
The lakefront never was an ordinary place. Festival or not --
and there were festivals almost every month -- the lakefront was
one of the main places the people of Hangzhou congregated. Every
week there were private parties between the more general festivals,
so the promenade was a daily celebration of greater or lesser
magnitude, and although there was a great deal of work to be done
supplying and maintaining the restaurant, there was also a great
deal of food and drink to be scavenged, or poached in the kitchen,
and both Bold and Kyu were insatiable. They soon filled out, and
Kyu was also still sprouting up, looking tall among the
Chinese.
Soon it was as if they had never lived any other life. Well
before dawn, resonant wooden fish were struck with mallets, and the
weathermen shouted their announcements from the firewatch towers:
'It is raining! It is cloudy today!' Bold and Kyu and about twenty
other slaves got up and were let out of their room, and most went
down to the service canal that ran in from the suburbs, to meet the
rice barges. The barge crews had got up even earlier -- theirs was
night work, starting at midnight many li away. All together they
heaved the bulging sacks onto wheelbarrows, then the slaves wheeled
them back through the alleys to Shen's. They sweep up the
restaurant,
Light the stove fires, set the tables,
Wash bowls and chopsticks, chop vegetables, Cook, carry supplies
and food Out to Shen's two pleasure boats, And then as dawn breaks
And people begin slowly to appear On the lakefront for
breakfast,
They help the cooks, wait on tables,
Wait and clean tables -- anything needed, Lost in the meditation
of labour though usually the hardest work in the place
was theirs, as they were the newest slaves. But even the hardest
work wasn't very hard, and with the constant availability of food,
Bold considered their placement a windfall; a chance to put some
meat on their bones, and learn better the local dialect and the
ways of the Chinese. Kyu pretended never to notice any of these
things, indeed pretended not to understand most of the Chinese
spoken to him, but Bold saw that he was actually soaking in
everything like a dishwasher's sponge, watching sideways so that it
seemed he never watched, when he always watched. That was Kyu's
way. He already knew more Chinese than Bold.
The eighth day of the fourth moon was another big festival,
celebrating a deity who was patron to many of the guilds of the
town. The guilds organized a procession, down the broad imperial
way that divided the old city north to south, then over to West
Lake for dragon boat jousts, among all the other more usual
pleasures of the lakefront. Each guild wore its particular costume
and mask, and brandished identical umbrellas, flags or bouquets as
they marched in squares together, shouting 'Ten thousand years! Ten
thousand years!' as they had done ever since the emperors had
actually lived in Hangzhou, and heard these shouted hopes for their
longevity. Spread out along the lakefront at the end of the parade,
they watched a dance of a hundred little eunuchs in a circle, a
particular celebration of that festival. Kyu almost looked directly
at these children.
Later that day he and Bold were assigned to one of Shen's
pleasure boats, which were floating extensions of his restaurant.
'We have a wonderful feast for our passengers today,' Shen cried as
they arrived and filed aboard. 'We'll be serving the Eight Dainties
today dragon livers, phoenix marrow, bear paws, lips of
apes, rabbit embryo, carp tail, broiled osprey, and kumiss.'
Bold smiled to think of kumiss, which was simply fermented
mares' milk, included among the Eight Dainties; he had practically
grown up on it. 'Some of those are easier to obtain than others,'
he said, and Shen laughed and kicked him into the boat.
Onto the lake they paddled. 'How come your lips are still on
your face?' Kyu called back at Shen, who was out of hearing.
Bold laughed. 'The Eight Dainties,' he said. 'What these people
think of!'
'They do love their numbers,' Kyu agreed. 'The Three Pure Ones,
the Four Emperors, the Nine Luminaries 'The Twenty eight
Constellations '
'The Twelve Horary Branches, the Five Elders of the Five Regions
. .
'The Fifty Star Spirits.'
'The Ten Unforgivable Sins.'
'The Six Bad Recipes.'
Kyu cackled briefly. 'It's not numbers they like, it's lists.
Lists of all the things they have.'
Out on the lake Bold and Kyu saw up close the magnificent
decoration of the day's dragon boats, bedecked with flowers,
feathers, coloured flags and spinners. Musicians on each boat
played madly, trying with drum and horn to drown out the sound of
all the others, while pikemen in the bows reached out with padded
staves to knock people on other boats into the water.
In the midst of this happy tumult, screams of a different tone
caught the attention of those on the water, and they looked ashore
and saw that there was a fire. Instantly the games ended and all
the boats made a beeline for land, piling up five deep against the
docks. People ran right over the boats in their haste, some towards
the fire, some towards their own neighbourhoods. As they hurried
over to the restaurant Bold and Kyu saw for the first time a fire
brigade. Each neighbourhood had one, with its own equipment, and
they would all follow the signal flags from the watchtowers around
the city, soaking roofs in districts threatened by the blaze, or
putting out flying embers. Hangzhou's buildings were all wood or
bamboo, and most districts had gone up in flames at one time or
another, so the routine was well practised. Bold and Kyu ran
behind Shen up to the burning neighbourhood, which was to the north
of theirs and upwind, so that they too were in danger.
At the fire's edge thousands of men and women were at work, many
in bucket lines that extended to the nearest canals. The buckets
were run upstairs into smoky buildings, and tossed down onto the
flames. There were also quite a number of men carrying staves,
pikes, and even crossbows, and questioning men hauled out of the
fiery alleyways bordering the conflagration. Suddenly these men
beat one of those that emerged to a bloody mass, right there amid
the firefighting. Looter, someone said. Army detachments would soon
arrive to help capture more and kill them on the spot, after public
torture, if there was time.
Despite this threat, Bold saw now that there were figures
without buckets, darting in and out of the burning buildings. The
fight against looters was as intense as that against the fire! Kyu
too saw this as he passed wooden or bamboo buckets down the line,
openly watching everything.
Days flew by, each busier than the last. Kyu was still nearly
mute, head always lowered, a mere beast of burden or kitchen swab
incapable of learning Chinese, or so everyone in the
restaurant believed. Only semihuman in fact, which was the usual
attitude of the Chinese towards black slaves in the city.
Bold spent more and more time working for I li. She
appeared to prefer to take him on her trips out, and he hustled to
keep up with her, manoeuvring the wheelbarrow through the crowd.
She was always in a tearing hurry, mostly in her quest for new
foods; she seemed anxious to try everything. Bold saw that the
restaurant's success had resulted from her efforts. Shen himself
was more an impediment than a help, as he was bad with his abacus
and couldn't remember much, especially about his debts, and he
kicked his slaves and his girls for hire.
So Bold was pleased to follow I Ii They visited Mother
Sung's outside the Cash--reserve Gate, to try her white soy soup.
They watched Wei Big Knife at the Cat Bridge boil pork, and Chou
Number Five in front of the Five span Pavilion, making his
honey fritters. Back in the kitchen I Ii would try to
reproduce these foods exactly, shaking her head ominously as she
did. Sometimes she would retire to her room to think, and a few
times she called Bold up the stairs, to order him out in search of
some spice or ingredient she had thought of that might help with a
dish.
Her room had a table by the bed, covered with cosmetic bottles,
jewellery, perfume sachets, mirrors and little boxes of lacquered
wood, jade, gold and silver. Gifts from Shen, apparently. Bold
glanced at them while she sat there thinking.
A tub of white foundation powder, Still flat and shiny on
top.
A deep rose shade of grease blush,
For cheeks already chapped dark red. A box of pink balsam leaves
Crushed in alum, for tinted nails,
Which many women in the restaurant displayed. I Ii's nails
were bitten to the quick.
Cosmetics never used, jewellery never worn,
Mirrors never looked into. The outward gaze.
Once she stained her palms with the pink balsam dye; another
time, all the dogs and cats in the kitchen. Just to see what would
happen, as far as Bold could tell.
But she was interested in the things of the city. Half her trips
out were occupied by talk, by asking questions. Once she came home
troubled: 'Bold, they say that northerners here go to restaurants
that serve human flesh. "Two legged mutton", have you heard
that? Different names for old men, women, young girls, children?
Are they really such monsters up there?'
'I don't think so,' Bold said. 'I never met any.'
She was not entirely reassured. She often saw hungry ghosts in
her sleep, and they had to come from somewhere. And they sometimes
complained to her of having had their bodies eaten. It made sense
to her that they might cluster around restaurants in search of some
kind of retribution. Bold nodded; it made sense to him too, though
it was hard to believe the teeming city harboured practising
cannibals when there was so much other food to be had.
As the restaurant prospered, I Ii made Shen improve the
place, cutting holes in the side walls and putting in windows,
filling them with square trellis works supporting oiled paper,
which blazed or glowed with sunlight, depending on the hour and
weather. She opened the front of the building entirely to the
lakefront promenade, and paved the downstairs with glazed bricks.
She burned pots of mosquito smoke during the summer, when they were
at their worst. She built in a number of small wall shrines devoted
to various gods deities of place, animal spirits, demons and
hungry ghosts, even, at Bold's humble request, one to Tianfei the
Celestial Consort, despite her suspicion that this was only another
name for Tara, already much honoured in the nooks and crannies of
the house. If it annoyed Tara, she said, it would be on Bold's
head.
Once she came home retailing a story of a number of people who
had died and come back to life shortly thereafter, apparently
because of the mistakes of careless celestial scribes, who had
written down the wrong names. Bold smiled; the Chinese imagined a
complicated bureaucracy for the dead, just like the ones they had
established for everything else. 'They came back with information
for their living relatives, things that turned out to be correct
even though the briefly deceased person couldn't have known about
it!'
'Marvels,' Bold said.
'Marvels happen every day,' I li replied. It was, as far as
she was concerned, a universe peopled by spirits, genies, demons,
ghosts as many kinds of beings as tastes. She had never had
the bardo explained to her, and so she didn't understand the six
levels of reality that organized cosmic existence; and Bold did not
feel that he was in a position to teach her. So it remained at the
level of ghosts and demons. Malignant ones could be held off by
various practices that annoyed them; firecrackers, drums and gongs,
these things chased them away. It was also possible to strike them
with a stick, or burn artemisia, a Sechuan custom that I Li
practised. She also bought magic writing on miniature papers or
cylinders of silver, and put up white jade square tiles in every
doorway; dark demons disliked the light of these. And the
restaurant and its household prospered, so she felt she had done
the right things.
Following her out several times a week, Bold learned a lot about
Hangzhou. He learned the best rhinoceros skins were found at
Chien's,
As you went down from the service canal to little Chinghu Lake;
the finest turbans were at Kang Number Eight's, in the Street of
the Worn Cash Coin, or at Yang Number Three's, going down the canal
after the Three Bridges. The largest display of books was at the
bookstalls under the big trees near the summer house of the Orange
Tree Garden. Wicker cages for birds and crickets could be found in
Ironwire Lane, ivory combs at Fei's, painted fans at the Coal
Bridge. I Ii liked to know of these places, even though she
only bought what they sold as gifts for her friends or her
mother in law. A very curious person indeed. Bold could
hardly keep up with her. One day in the street, rattling off some
story or other, she stopped and looked up at him, surprised, and
said, 'I want to know everything!'
But all the while, Kyu had been watching without watching. And
one night, during the tidal bore of the eighth moon, when the
Chientang River roared with high waves and there were many visitors
in the city, in the hour before the woodblocks and the weathermen's
cries, Bold was awakened by a gentle tug on the ear, then the firm
pressure of a hand over his mouth.
It was Kyu. He held a key to their room in his hand. 'I stole
the key.' Bold pulled Kyu's hand away from his mouth. 'What are you
doing?' he whispered.
'Come on,' Kyu said in Arabic, in the phrase used for a balking
camel. 'We're escaping.'
'What? What do you mean?'
'We're escaping, I said.'
'But where will we go?'
'Away from this city. North to Nanjing.'
'But we have it good here!'
'Come on, none of that. We're finished here. I've already killed
Shen.' 'You what!'
'Shhhh. We need to set the fires and get out of here before the
wake up.'
Stunned, Bold scrambled to his feet, whispering 'Why, why, why,
why? We had a good thing here, you should have asked me first if I
wanted any part of this!'
'I want to escape,' Kyu said, land I need you to do it. I need a
master to get around.'
'Get around where?'
But now Bold was following Kyu through the silent household,
stepping blindly with complete assurance, so well had he come to
know this building, the first one he had ever lived in. He liked
it. Kyu led him into the kitchen, took a branch sticking out of the
smouldering stove fire; he must have put it in before rousing Bold,
for the pitchy knot at the end was now blazing. 'We're going north
to the capital,' Kyu said over his shoulder as he led Bold
outdoors. 'I'm going to kill the Emperor.'
'What!'
'More about that later,' Kyu said, and applied the flaming torch
to a bundle of rush and kindling and balls of wax he had put
against the walls, in a corner. When it had caught fire he ran
outside, and Bold followed him appalled. Kyu lit another bundle of
kindling against the house next door, and placed the brand against
a third house, and all the while Bold stayed right behind him, too
shocked to think properly. He would have stopped the boy if it
weren't for the fact that Shen was already murdered. Kyu and Bold's
lives were forfeit; setting the district on fire was probably their
only chance, as it might burn the body so that the killing would
not show. It also might be assumed that some slaves had been burned
up entire, locked in their room as they were. 'Hopefully they'll
all burn,' Kyu said, echoing this thought.
We are as shocked as you are by this development, and don't know
what happened next, but no doubt the next chapter will tell us.
SIX
By way of the Grand Canal our pilgrims escape
justice;
In Nanjing they beg the aid of the Three jewel
Eunuch.
They ran north up the dark alleys paralleling the service canal.
Behind them the alarm was being raised already, people screaming,
fire bells ringing, a fresh dawn wind blowing in off West Lake.
'Did you take some cash?' Bold thought to ask.
'Many strings,' Kyu said. He had a full bag under his arm.
They would need to get as far away as they could, as quickly as
possible. With a black like Kyu it would be hard to be
inconspicuous. Necessarily he would have to remain a young black
eunuch slave, Bold therefore his master. Bold would have to do all
the talking; this was why Kyu had brought him along. This was why
he had not murdered Bold along with the rest of the household.
'What about I Ii Did you kill her too?'
'No. Her bedroom has a window. She'll do fine.'
Bold wasn't so sure; widows had a hard time of it; she'd end up
like Wei Big Knife, on the street cooking meals on a brazier for
passers by. Although for her that might be opportunity
enough.
Wherever there were a lot of slaves, there were usually quite a
few blacks. The canal boats were often moved along through the
countryside by slaves, turning capstans or pulling their ropes
directly, like mules or camels. Possibly the two of them could take
on such a role and hide in it; he could pretend to be a slave
himself but no, they needed a master to account for them. If
they could slip onto the end of a rope line ... He couldn't believe
he was thinking about joining a canal boat ropeline, when he had
been waiting tables in a restaurant! It made him so angry at Kyu
that he hissed.
And now Kyu needed him. Bold could abandon the boy and he would
stand a much better chance of slipping into obscurity, among the
many traders and Buddhist monks and beggars on the roads of China;
even their famous bureaucracy of local yamens and district
officials could not keep track of all the poor people slipping
around in the hills and the back country. While with a black boy he
stood out like a festival clown with his monkey.
But he was not going to abandon Kyu, not really, so he just
hissed. On they ran through the outer city, Kyu pulling Bold by the
hand from time to time and urging him in Arabic to hurry. 'You know
this is what you really wanted, you're a great Mongol warrior, you
told me, a barbarian of the steppes, feared by all the peoples, you
were only just pretending not to mind being someone's kitchen
slave, you're good at not thinking about things, about not seeing
things, but it's all an act, of course you always knew, you just
pretend not to know, you wanted to escape all the while.' Bold was
amazed to think anyone could have misunderstood him that
completely.
The suburbs of Hangzhou were much greener than the old central
quarter, every household compound marked by trees, even small
mulberry orchards. Behind them the fire alarm bells were waking the
whole city, the day starting in a panic. From a slight rise they
could look back between walls and see the lakefront aglow; the
entire district appeared to have caught fire as quickly as Kyu's
little balls of wax and kindling, fanned by a good stiff west wind.
Bold wondered if Kyu had waited for a windy night to make his
break. The thought chilled him. He had known the boy was clever,
but this ruthlessness he had never suspected, despite the preta
look he sometimes had, which reminded Bold of Temur's look -- some
intensity of focus, some totemic aspect, his raptor nafs looking
out no doubt. Each person was in some crucial sense his or her
nafs, and Bold had already concluded Kyu's was a falcon, hooded and
tied. Temur's had been an eagle on high, stooping to tear at the
world.
So he had seen some sign, had had some idea. And there was that
closed aspect of Kyu too, the sense that his true thoughts were
many rooms away, ever since his castration. Of course that would
have had its effects. The original boy was gone, leaving the nafs
to negotiate with some new person.
They hurried through the northernmost sub prefecture of
Hangzhou, and out of the gate in the last city wall. The road rose
higher into the Su Tung po Hills, and they got a view back to
the lakefront district, the flames less visible in the dawn, more a
matter of clouds of black smoke, no doubt throwing sparks east to
spread the blaze. 'This fire will kill a lot of people!' Bold
exclaimed.
'They're Chinese,' Kyu said. 'There's more than enough to take
their place.'
Walking hard to the north, paralleling the Grand Canal on its
west side, they saw again how crowded China was. Up here a whole
country of rice paddies and villages fed the great city on the
coast. Farmers were out in the morning light,
Sticking rice starts into the submerged fields, Bending over
time after time. A man walks Behind a water buffalo. Strange to see
Such rain polished black poverty,
Tiny farms, rundown crossroad villages,
After all the colourful glories of Hangzhou.
'I don't see why they all don't move to the city,' Kyu said. 'I
would.'
'They never think of it,' Bold said, marvelling that Kyu would
suppose other people thought like he did. 'Besides, their families
are here.'
They could just see the Grand Canal through the trees lining it,
some two or three li to the east. Mounds of earth and timber stood
by it, marking repairs or improvements. They kept their distance,
hoping to avoid any army detachments or prefecture posses that
might be patrolling the canal on this unfortunate day.
'Do you want a drink of water?' Kyu asked. 'Do you think we can
drink it here?'
He was very solicitous, Bold saw; but of course now he had to
be. Near the Grand Canal the sight of Kyu would probably pass for
normal, but Bold had no paperwork, and local prefects or canal
officials might very well ask him to produce some. So neither the
Grand Canal nor the country away from it would work all the time.
They would have to slip on and off it as they went, depending on
who was around. They might even have to move by night, which would
slow them down and be more dangerous. Then again it seemed unlikely
that all the hordes of people moving up and down the canal and its
corridor were being checked for papers, or had them either.
So they moved over into the crowd walking the canal road, and
Kyu carried his bundle and wore his chains, and fetched water for
Bold, and pretended ignorance of any but the simplest commands. He
could do a scarily believable imitation of an idiot. Gangs of men
hauled barges, or turned the capstans that raised and lowered the
lock gates that interrupted the flow of the canal at regular
intervals. Pairs of men, master and servant or slave, were common.
Bold ordered Kyu about, but was too worried to enjoy it. Who knew
what trouble Kyu might cause in the north. Bold didn't know what he
felt, it changed minute by minute. He still couldn't believe Kyu
had forced this escape on him. He hissed again; he had
life or death power over the boy, yet he remained afraid
of him.
At a new little paved square, next to locks made of new raw
timber, a local yamen and his deputies were stopping every fourth
or fifth group. Suddenly they waved at Bold, and when he led Kyu
over, suddenly hopeless, they asked to see his papers. The yamen
was accompanied by a higher official in robes, a prefect wearing a
patch with twinned sparrow hawks embroidered on it. The prefects'
symbols of rank were easy to read -- the lowest rank showed quail
pecking the ground, the highest, cranes sporting over the clouds.
So this was a fairly senior figure here, possibly on the hunt for
the arsonist of Hangzhou, and Bold was trying to think of lies, his
body tensing to run, when Kyu reached into his bag and gave Bold a
packet of papers tied with a silk ribbon. Bold undid the ribbon's
knot and gave the packet to the yamen, wondering what it said. He
knew the Tibetan letters for 'om mani padme hum', as who could not
with them carved on every rock in the Himalaya, but other than that
he was illiterate, and the Chinese alphabet looked like chicken
tracks, each letter different from all the rest.
The yamen and the sparrow hawk official read the top two sheets,
then handed them back to Bold, who tied them up and gave them to
Kyu without looking at him.
'Take care around Nanjing,' Sparrow Hawk said. 'There are
bandits in the hills just south of it.'
'We'll stick to the canal,' Bold said.
When they were out of sight of the patrol, Bold struck Kyu hard
for the first time. 'What was that! Why didn't you tell me about
the papers! How can you expect me to know what to say to
people?'
'I was afraid you would take them and leave me.'
'What do you mean? If they say I have a black slave, then I need
a black slave, don't I? What do they say?'
'They say you are a horse merchant from the treasure fleet,
travelling to Nanjing to complete business in horses. And that I am
your slave.'
'Where did you get them?'
'A rice boatman who does them wrote one for me.'
'So he knows our plans?'
Kyu said nothing, and Bold wondered if the boatman too was dead.
The boy seemed capable of anything. Getting a key, getting papers
forged, preparing the little fireballs ... If the time came where
he thought he didn't need Bold, Bold would no doubt wake up one
morning with a slit throat. He would most certainly be safer on his
own.
As they trudged past the barge ropelines, he brooded on this. He
could abandon the boy to whatever fate befell him -- more
enslavement, or quick death as a runaway, or slow death as an
arsonist and murderer -- and then work his way north and west to
the great wall and the steppes beyond, and thence home.
From the way Kyu avoided his gaze and slunk behind him, it was
apparent that he knew more or less what Bold was thinking. So for a
day or two Bold ordered him about harshly, and Kyu jumped at every
word.
But Bold did not leave him, and Kyu did not slit Bold's throat.
Thinking it over, Bold had to admit to himself that his karma was
somehow tied up with the boy's. He was part of it somehow. Very
possibly he was there to help the boy.
'Listen,' Bold said one day as they walked. 'You can't go to the
capital and kill the Emperor. It isn't possible. And why would you
want to anyway?'
Hunched, sullen, the boy eventually said in Arabic, 'To bring
them down.'
Again the term he used came from camel driving.
'To what?'
'To stop them.'
'But killing the Emperor, even if you could, wouldn't do that.
They'd just replace him with another one, and it would all go on
the same as before. That's how it works.'
Much trudging, and then: 'They wouldn't fight over who got to be
the new emperor?'
'Over the succession? Sometimes that happens. It depends on
who's in line to succeed. I don't know about that any more. This
Emperor, the Yongle, is a usurper himself. He took it away from his
nephew, or uncle. But usually the eldest son has a clear right. Or
the Emperor designates a different successor. In any case the
dynasty continues. It isn't often there is a problem.'
'But there might be?'
'There might be and there might not. Meanwhile they'd be staying
up at night working out better ways to torture you. What they did
to you on the ship would be nothing compared to it. The Ming
emperors have the best torturers in the world, everyone knows
that.'
More trudging. 'They have the best everything in the world,' the
boy complained. 'The best canals, the best cities, the best ships,
the best armies. They sail around the seas and everywhere they go
people kotow to them. They land and see the tooth of the Buddha,
they take it with them. They instal a king that will serve them,
and move on and do the same everywhere they go. They'll conquer the
whole world, cut all the boys, and all the children will be theirs,
and the whole world will end up Chinese.'
'Maybe so,' Bold said. 'It's possible. There certainly are a lot
of them. And those treasure ships are impressive, no doubt of that.
But you can't sail into the heart of the world, the steppes where I
came from. And the people out there are much tougher than the
Chinese. They've conquered the Chinese before. So things should be
all right. And listen, no matter what happens, you can't do
anything about it.'
'We'll see about that in Nanjing.'
It was crazy, of course. The boy was deluded. Nevertheless there
was that look that came into his eye -- inhuman, totemic, his nafs
looking out at things -- the sight of which gave Bold a chill down
the chakra nerve right to the first centre, behind his balls. Aside
from the raptor nafs, which he had been born with, there was
something scary in the hatred of a eunuch, something impersonal and
uncanny. Bold had no doubt that he was travelling with some kind of
power, some African witch child or shaman, a tulku, who had been
captured out of the jungles and mutilated, so that his power had
been redoubled, and was now turning to revenge. Revenge, against
the Chinese! Despite his belief that it was crazy, Bold was curious
to see what might come of that.
Nanjing was bigger even than Hangzhou. Bold had to give up being
amazed. It was also the home harbour for the great treasure fleet.
An entire city of shipbuilders had been established down by the
Yangzi River estuary, the shipyards including seven enormous
drydocks running perpendicular to the river, behind high dams with
guards patrolling their gates so that no one could sabotage them.
Thousands of shipwrights, carpenters and sailmakers lived in
quarters behind the drydocks, and this sprawling town of workshops,
called Longjiang, included scores of inns for visiting labourers,
and sailors ashore. Evening discussions in these inns concerned
mainly the fate of the treasure fleet and of Zheng He, who
currently was occupied building a temple to Tianfei, while he
worked on another great expedition to the west.
It was easy for Bold and Kyu to slip into this scene as
small time trader and slave, and they rented sleeping spaces
on the mattresses at the South Sea Inn. Here in the evenings they
learned of the construction of a new capital up in Beiping, a
project which was absorbing a great deal of the Yongle Emperor's
attention and cash. Beiping, a provin cial northern outpost
except during the Mongol dynasties, had been Zhu Di's first power
base before he usurped the Dragon Throne and became the Yongle
Emperor, and he was now rewarding it by making it the imperial
capital once again, changing its name from Beiping ('northern
peace') to Beijing ('northern capital'). Hundreds of thousands of
workers had been sent north from Nanjing to build a truly enormous
palace, indeed from all accounts the whole city was being made into
a kind of palace the Great Within, it was called, forbidden
to any but the Emperor and his concubines and eunuchs. Outside this
precious ground was to be a larger imperial city, also new.
All this construction was said to be opposed by the Confucian
bureaucracy who ruled the country for the Emperor. The new capital,
like the treasure fleet, was a huge expense, an imperial
extravagance that the officials disliked, for bleeding the country
of its wealth. They must not have seen the treasures being
unloaded, or did not believe them equal to what had been spent to
gain them. They understood Confucius to say that the wealth of the
empire ought to be land based, a matter of expanded
agriculture and assimilation of border people, in the traditional
style. All this innovation, this shipbuilding and travel, seemed to
them to be manifestations of the growing power of the imperial
eunuchs, whom they hated as their rivals in influence. The talk in
the sailors' inns supported the eunuchs, for the most part, as the
sailors were loyal to sailing, to the fleet and Zheng He, and the
other eunuch admirals. But the officials didn't agree.
Bold saw the way Kyu picked up on this talk, and even asked
further questions to learn more. After only a few days in Nanjing,
he had found out all kinds of gossip Bold had not heard: the
Emperor had been thrown by a horse given to him by the Temurid
emissaries, a horse once owned by Temur himself (Bold wondered
which horse it was; strange to think an animal had lived so long,
though on reflection he realized it had been less than two years
since Temur's death). Then lightning had struck the new palace in
Beijing and burned it all down. The Emperor had released an edict
blaming himself for this disfavour from Heaven, causing fear and
confusion and criticism. In the wake of these events, certain
bureaucrats had openly criticized the monstrous expenditures of the
new capital and the treasure fleet, draining the treasury surplus
just as famine and rebellion in the south cried out for imperial
relief. Very quickly the Yongle Emperor had tired of this
criticism, and had had one of the most prominent critics exiled
from China, and the rest banished to the provinces.
'That's all bad,' one sailor said, a little bit the worse for
drink, 'but worst of all for the Emperor is the fact that he's
sixty years old. There's no help for that, even when you're
Emperor. It may even be worse for him.'
Everyone nodded. 'Bad, very bad.' 'He won't be able to keep the
eunuchs and officials from fighting.' 'We could see a civil war
before too long.'
'To Beijing,' Kyu said to Bold.
But before they left, Kyu insisted they go up to Zheng He's
house, a rambling mansion with a front door carved to look like the
stern of one of his treasure ships. The rooms inside
(seventy two, the sailors said) were each supposed to be
decorated to resemble a different Muslim country, and in the
courtyard the gardens were planted to resemble Yunnan.
Bold complained all the way up the hill. 'He will never see a
poor trader and his slave. His servants will kick us away from the
door, this is ridiculous!'
It happened just as Bold had predicted. The gatekeeper sized
them up and told them to be on their way.
'All right,' Kyu said. 'Off to the temple for Tianfei.'
This was a grand complex of buildings, built by Zheng He to
honour the Celestial Consort, and to thank her for her miraculous
rescue of them in the storm.
The centrepiece of the temple Is a nine storeyed octagonal
pagoda,
Tiled in white porcelain fired with Persian cobalt That the
treasure fleet brought back with it.
Each level of the pagoda must be built With the same number of
tiles, this Pleases Tianfei, so the tiles get smaller As each
storey narrows to a graceful peak, Far above the treetops.
Beautiful offering And testament to a goddess of pure mercy.
There in the midst of the construction, conversing with men who
looked no better than Bold or Kyu, was Zheng He himself. He looked
at Kyu as they approached, and paused to talk to him. Bold shook
his head to see this example of the boy's power revealing
itself.
Zheng nodded as Kyu explained they had been part of his last
expedition. 'You looked familiar.' He frowned, however, when Kyu
went on to explain that they wanted to serve the Emperor in
Beijing.
'Zhu Di is off campaigning in the west. On horseback, with his
rheumatism.' He sighed. 'He needs to understand that the fleet's
way of conquering is best. Arrive with the ships, start trading,
instal a local ruler who will cooperate, and for the rest, simply
let them be. Trade with them. Make sure the man at the top is
friendly. There are sixteen countries sending tribute to the
Emperor as a direct result of the voyages of our fleet.
Sixteen!'
'It's hard to get the fleet to Mongolia,' Kyu said, frightening
Bold. But Zheng He laughed.
'Yes, the Great Without is high and dry. We have to convince the
Emperor to forget the Mongols, and look to the sea.'
'We want to do that,' Kyu said earnestly. 'In Beijing we will
argue the case every chance we get. Will you give us introductions
to the eunuch officials at the palace? I could join them, and my
master here would be good in the imperial stables.'
Zheng looked amused. 'It won't make any difference. But I'll
help you for old times' sake, and wish you luck.'
He shook his head as he wrote a memorial, his brush wielded like
a little hand broom. What happened to him afterwards is
well known: grounded by the Emperor, given a land locked
military command, spending his days constructing the
nine storeyed porcelain pagoda honouring Tianfei; we imagine
he missed his voyages over the distant seas of the world, but
cannot say for sure. But we do know what happened to Bold and Kyu,
and we will tell you in the next chapter.
SEVEN
New capital, new emperor, plots reach their ends.
Boy against China; you can guess who wins.
Beijing was raw in every sense, the wind frigid and damp, the
wood of the buildings still white and dripping with sap, the smell
of pitch and turned earth and wet cement everywhere. It was
crowded, too, though not like Hangzhou or Nanjing, so that Bold and
Kyu felt cosmopolitan and sophisticated, as if this huge
construction site were beneath them somehow. A lot of people here
had that attitude.
They made their way to the eunuch clinic named in Zheng He's
memorial, located just south of the Meridian Gate, the southern
entrance to the Forbidden City. Kyu presented his introduction, and
he and Bold were whisked inside to see the clinic's head eunuch. 'A
reference from Zheng He will take you far in the palace,' this
eunuch told them, 'even if Zheng himself is having troubles with
the imperial officials. I know the palace's Director of Ceremonies,
Wu Han, very well, and will introduce you. He is an old friend of
Zheng's, and needs eunuchs in the Literary Depth Pavilion for
rescript writing. But wait, you are not literate, are you? But Wu
also administers the eunuch priests maintained to attend to the
spiritual welfare of the concubines.'
'My master here is a lama,' Kyu said, indicating Bold. 'He has
trained me in all the mysteries of the bardo.'
The eunuch regarded Bold sceptically. 'Be that as it may, one
way or another the memorial from Zheng will get you in. He has
recommended you very highly. But you will need your pao, of
course.'
'Pao?' Kyu said. 'My precious?'
'You know.' The eunuch gestured at Kyu's groin. 'It is necessary
to prove your status, even after I have inspected and certified
you. Also, more importantly perhaps, when you die you will be
buried with it on your chest, to fool the gods. You don't want to
come back as a shemule, after all.' He glanced at Kyu curiously.
'You don't have yours?'
Kyu shook his head.
'Well, we have many here you can choose from, left over from
patients who died. I doubt you can tell black from Chinese after
the pickling!' He laughed and led them down a hall.
His name was jiang, he said; he was an ex sailor from
Fukian, and was puzzled that anyone young and fit would ever leave
the coast to come to a place like Beijing. 'But as black as you
are, you'll be like the quillin that the fleet brought back last
time for the Emperor, the spotted unicorn with the long neck. I
think it also was from Zanj. Do you know it?'
' It was a big fleet,' Kyu said.
'I see. Well, Wu and the other palace eunuchs love exotics like
you and the quillin, and so does the Emperor, so you'll be fine.
Keep quiet and don't get mixed up in any conspiracies, and you'll
do well.'
In a cool storage building they went into a room filled with
sealed porcelain and glass jars, and found a black penis for Kyu to
take with him. The head eunuch then inspected him personally, to
make sure he was what he said he was, and then brushed his
certification onto the introduction from Zheng, and put his chop to
it in red ink. 'Some people try to fake it, of course, but if
they're caught they get it handed to them, and then they aren't
faking it any more, are they. You know, I noticed they didn't put
in a quill when they cut you. You should have a quill to keep it
open, and then the plug goes in the quill. It's much more
comfortable that way. They should have done that when you were
cut.'
'I seem to be all right without it,' Kyu said. He held the glass
jar up against the light, looking closely at his new pao. Bold
shuddered and led the way out of the creepy room.
While further arrangements were made in the palace, Kyu was
assigned a bed in the dorm, and Bold was offered a room in the
clinic's men's building. 'Temporary, you understand. Unless you
care to join us in the main building. Great opportunities for
advancement ... 'No thank you,' Bold said politely. But he saw that
many men were coming in to request the operation, desperate for a
job. When there was famine in the countryside there was no shortage
of applicants, they even had to turn people away. As with
everything in China, there was a whole bureaucracy at work here,
the palace requiring as it did several thousand eunuchs for its
operation. This clinic was just a small part of that.
So they were launched in Beijing. Indeed, things had gone so
well that Bold wondered if Kyu, no longer needing Bold as he had
during their journey north, would now abandon him -- move into the
Forbidden City and disappear from his life. The idea made him sad,
despite all.
But Kyu, after being assigned to the concubines of Zhu Gaozhi,
the Emperor's eldest legitimate son and the Heir Designate, asked
Bold to come with him and apply to be a stabler for the Heir. 'I
still need your help,' he said simply, looking like the boy who had
boarded the treasure ship so long ago.
'I'll try,' Bold said.
Kyu was able to ask the favour of an interview from Zhu Gaozhi's
stable master, and Bold went in and displayed his expertise with
some big beautiful horses, and was given a job. Mongolians had the
same kind of advantage in the stable that eunuchs had in the
palace.
It was easy work, Bold found; the Heir Designate was an indolent
man, his horses seldom ridden, so that the stablers had to exercise
them on a track, and in the new parks of the palace grounds. The
horses were all very big and white, but slow and weak winded;
Bold saw now why the Chinese could never go north of their Great
Wall and attack the Mongols to any great effect, despite their
stupendous numbers. Mongols lived on their horses, and lived off
them too made their clothes and shelter from their felt and
wool, drank their milk and blood, ate them when they had to.
Mongolian horses were the life of the people; whereas these big
clodhoppers might as well have been driving millstones in a circle
with blinkers on, for all the wind and spirit they had.
It turned out Zhu Gaozhi spent a lot of time in Nanjing, where
he had been brought up, visiting his mother the Empress Xu. So as
the months passed, Bold and Kyu made the trip between the two
capitals many times, travelling on barges on the Grand Canal, or on
horseback beside it. Zhu Gaozhi preferred Nanjing to Beijing, for
obvious reasons of climate and culture; late at night, after
drinking vast quantities of rice wine, he could be heard declaring
to his intimates that he would move the capital back to Nanjing on
the very day of his father's death. This made the enormous labour
of building Beijing look odd to them when they were there.
But more and more they were in Nanjing. Kyu helped run the
Heir's harem, and spent most of his time inside their enclosure. He
never told Bold a thing about what he did in there, except one
time, when he came out to the stables late at night, a bit drunk.
This was almost the only time Bold saw him any more, and he looked
forward to these nocturnal visits, despite the way they made him
nervous.
On this occasion Kyu remarked that his main task these days was
to find husbands for those of the Emperor's concubines who had
reached the age of thirty without ever having relations with the
Emperor. Zhu Di farmed these out to his son, with instructions to
marry them off.
'Would you like a wife?' Kyu asked Bold slyly. 'A
thirty year old virgin, expertly trained?'
'No thanks,' Bold said uneasily. He already had an arrangement
with one of the servant women in the compound in Nanking, and
though he supposed Kyu was joking, it made him feel strange.
Usually when Kyu made these midnight visits out to the stables,
he was deep in thought. He did not hear things Bold said to him, or
answered oddly, as if replying to some other question. Bold had
heard that the young eunuch was well liked, knew many people
in the palace, and had the favour of Wu, the Director of
Ceremonies. But what they all did in the concubines' quarters
during the long nights of the Beijing winters, he had no idea.
Usually Kyu came out to the stables reeking of wine and perfume,
sometimes urine, once even vomit. 'To stink like a eunuch' -- the
common phrase came back to Bold at those times with unpleasant
force. He saw how people made fun of the mincing eunuch walk, the
hunched little steps with feet pointing outwards, something that
was either a physical necessity or a group style, Bold didn't know.
They were called crows for their falsetto voices, among other
names; but always behind their backs; and everyone agreed that as
they fattened and then wizened in their characteristic fashion,
they came to look like bent old women.
Kyu was still young and pretty, however, and drunk and
dishevelled as he was during his night visits to Bold, he seemed
very pleased with himself. 'Let me know if you ever want women,' he
said. 'We've got more than we need in there.'
During one of the Heir's visits to Beijing, Bold caught a
glimpse of the Emperor and his heir together, as he brought their
perfectly groomed horses out to the Gate of Heavenly Purity, so
that the two could ride to ether in the parks of the imperial
garden. Except the Emperor wanted to leave the enclosure and ride
well to the north of the city, apparently, and sleep out in tents.
Clearly the Heir Designate was unenthusiastic, and the officials
accompanying the Emperor were as well. Finally he gave in and
agreed to make it a day ride, but outside the imperial city, by the
river.
As they were mounting the horses he exclaimed to his son, 'You
have to learn to fit the punishment to the crime! People need to
feel the justice of your decision! When the Board of Punishments
recommended that Xu Pei yi be put to the lingering death, and
all his male relations over sixteen put to death and all his female
relations and children enslaved, I was merciful! I lowered his
sentence to beheading, sparing all the relatives. And so they say,
"the Emperor has a sense of proportion, he understands
things".'
'Of course they do,' the Heir agreed blandly.
The Emperor glanced sharply at him, and off they rode.
When they returned, late in the day, he was still lecturing his
son, sounding even more peeved than he had in the morning. 'If you
know nothing but the court, you will never be able to rule! The
people expect the Emperor to understand them, to be a man who rides
and shoots as well as the Heavenly Envoy! Why do you think your
governors will do what you say if they think you are womanly? They
will only obey you to your face, and behind your back they will
mock you and do whatever they like.'
'Of course they will,' said the Heir, looking the other way.
The Emperor glared at him. 'Off the horse,' he said in a heavy
voice.
The Heir sighed and slid from his mount. Bold caught the reins
and calmed the horse with a quick hand while leading it towards the
Emperor's mount, ready when the Emperor leapt off and roared
'Obey!'
The Heir fell to his knees and kotowed.
'You think the bureaucrats care about you!' the Emperor shouted.
'But they don't! Your mother is wrong about that, like she is about
everything else! They have their own ideas, and they won't support
you when there's the least trouble. You need your own men.'
' Or eunuchs,' the Heir said into the gravel.
The Yongle Emperor stared at him. 'Yes. My eunuchs know they
depend on my good will above all else. No one else will back them.
So they're the only people in the world you know will back
you.'
No reply from the prostrated elder son. Bold, facing away and
moving to the very edge of earshot, risked a glance back. The
Emperor, shaking his head heavily, was walking away, leaving his
son kneeling on the ground.
'You may be backing the wrong horse,' Bold said to Kyu the next
time they met, on one of Kyu's increasingly rare night visits to
the stables. 'The Emperor is going out with his second son now.
They ride, they hunt, they laugh. One day they killed three hundred
deer we had enclosed. While with the Heir Designate, the Emperor
has to drag him out of doors, can't get him off the palace grounds,
and spends the whole time yelling at him. And the Heir nearly mocks
him to his face. Comes as close as he dares. And the Emperor knows
it too. I wouldn't be surprised if he changed the Heir
Designate.'
'He can't,' Kyu said. 'He wants to, but he can't.'
'Whyever not?'
'The eldest is the son of the Empress. The second born is
the son of a courtesan. A low ranking courtesan at that.'
'But the Emperor can do what he wants, right?'
'Wrong. It only works when they all follow the laws together. If
anyone breaks the laws, it can mean civil war, and the end of the
dynasty.'
Bold had seen this in the Chinggurid wars of succession, which
had gone on for generations. Indeed it was said now that Temur's
sons had been fighting ever since his death, with the Khan's empire
divided into four parts, and no sign of it ever coming together
again.
But Bold also knew that a strong ruler could get away with
things. 'You're parroting what you've heard from the Empress and
the Heir and their officials. But it isn't that simple. People make
the laws, and sometimes they change them. Or ignore them. And if
they've got the swords, that's it.'
Kyu considered this in silence. Then he said, 'There's talk that
the countryside is suffering. Famine in Hunan, piracy on the coast,
diseases in the south. The officials don't like it. They think the
great treasure fleet brought back disease instead of treasure, and
wasted huge sums of money. They don't understand what trade brings
back, they don't believe in it. They don't believe in the new
capital. They tell the Empress and the Heir that they should help
the people, that we should get back to agriculture, and stop
wasting so much cash on extravagant projects.'
Bold nodded. 'I'm sure they do.'
'But the Emperor persists. He does what he wants, and he has the
army behind him, and his eunuchs. The eunuchs like the foreign
trade, as they see it makes them rich. And they like the new
capital, and all the rest. Right?'
Bold nodded again. 'So it seems.'
'The regular officials hate the eunuchs.'
Bold glanced at him. 'Do you see that yourself?'
'Yes. Although it's the Emperor's eunuchs they really hate.'
'No doubt. Whoever is closest to power is feared by all the
rest.'
Again Kyu thought things over. He seemed to Bold to be happy,
these days; but then again Bold had thought that in Hangzhou. So it
always made Bold nervous to see Kyu's little smile.
Soon after that conversation, when they were all in Beijing, a
great storm came.
Yellow dust makes the first raindrops muddy; Lightning cracks
down bronze through it,
Stitching together earth and sky,
Visible through closed eyelids.
About an hour later word comes: The new palaces have caught
fire.
The whole centre of the Forbidden City Burning as though
drenched in pitch,
Flames licking the wet clouds,
Pillar of smoke merging with the storm,
Rain downwind baked out of the air, replaced by ash.
Running back and forth with terrified horses, then with buckets
of water, Bold kept an eye out, and finally, at dawn, when they had
given up fighting the blaze, for it was useless, he caught sight of
Kyu there among the evacuated imperial concubines. All the Heir
Designate's people had a hectic look, but Kyu in particular seemed
to Bold elated, the whites of his eyes visible all the way around.
Like a shaman after a successful voyage to the spirit world. He
started this fire, Bold thought, just like in Hangzhou, this time
using the lightning as his cover.
The next time Kyu made one of his midnight visits to the
stables, Bold was almost afraid to speak to him.
Nevertheless he said, 'Did you set that fire?' -- whispering in
Arabic, even though they were alone, outside the stables, with no
chance of being overheard.
Kyu just stared at him. The look said Yes, but he didn't
elaborate.
Finally he said calmly, 'An exciting night, wasn't it? I saved
one of the Script Pavilion's cabinets, and some concubines as well.
The redjackets were very grateful about their documents.'
He went on about the beauty of the fire, and the panic of the
concu bines, and the rage, and later the fear, of the
Emperor, who took the fire to be a sign of heavenly disapproval,
the worst bad portent ever to smite him; but Bold could not follow
the boy's talk, his mind filled as it was with images of the
various forms of the lingering death. To burn down a merchant in
Hangzhou was one thing, but the Emperor of all China! The Dragon
Throne! He glimpsed again that thing inside the boy, the black nafs
banging its wings around inside, and felt the distance between them
grown vast and unbridgeable.
'Be quiet!' he said sharply in Arabic. 'You're a fool. You'll
get yourself killed, and me too.'
Kyu smiled grimly. 'On to a better life, right? Isn't that what
you told me? Why should I fear dying?'
Bold had no answer.
After that they saw less of each other than ever. Days passed,
festivals, seasons. Kyu grew up. When Bold caught sight of him, he
saw a tall slender black eunuch, pretty and perfumed, mincing along
with a flash of the eye, and, once, that raptor look as he regarded
the people around him. Bejewelled, plump, perfumed, dressed in
elaborate silk: a favourite of the Empress and the Heir, even
though they hated the eunuchs of the Emperor. Kyu was their pet,
and perhaps even a spy in the Emperor's harem. Bold feared for him
at the same time that he feared him. The boy was wreaking havoc
among the concubines of both Emperor and Heir, many said, even
people in the stables who had no way of knowing directly. The way
he moved through them was too forward, he was bound to be making
enemies. Cliques would be plotting to bring him down. He must know
that, he must be courting it; he laughed in their faces, so that
they would hate him even more. It all seemed to delight him. But
imperial revenge had a long reach. If someone fell, everyone he
knew came down too.
So when the news spread that two of the Emperor's concubines had
hanged themselves, and the furious Emperor demanded an accounting,
and the whole nest of corruption began to unravel before everyone,
fear rippling through the court like the plague itself, lies
spreading the blame wider and wider, until fully three thousand
concubines and eunuchs were implicated in the scandal, Bold
expected to hear any hour of his young friend's torture and
lingering death, perhaps from the mouths of guards come to execute
him as well.
But it didn't happen. Kyu existed under a spell of protection
like that of a sorcerer, it was so obvious that everyone saw it.
The Emperor executed forty of his concubines with his own hand,
swinging the sword furiously, cutting them in half or decapitating
them with single strokes, or running them through over and over,
until the steps of the rebuilt Hall of Great Harmony ran with their
blood; but Kyu stood just to the side, unharmed. One concubine even
cried out towards Kyu as she stood naked before them all, a
wordless shriek, and then she cursed the Emperor to his face, 'It's
your fault, you're too old, your yang is gone, the eunuchs do it
better than you!' Then snick, her head was falling into the puddles
of blood like a sacrificed sheep's. All that beauty wasted. And yet
no one touched Kyu; the Emperor dared not look at him; and the
black youth watched it all with a gleam in his eye, enjoying the
wastage, and the way the bureaucrats hated him for it. The court
was literally a shambles, they were feeding on each other now; and
yet none of them had the courage to take on the weird black
eunuch.
Bold's last meeting with him happened just before Bold was to
accompany the Emperor on an expedition to the west, to destroy the
Tartars led by Arughtai. It was a hopeless cause; the Tartars were
too fast, the Emperor not well. Nothing would come of it. They
would be back when winter came on, in just a few months. So Bold
was surprised when Kyu came to the stables to say farewell.
It was like talking to a stranger now. But the youth clasped
Bold by the arm suddenly, affectionate and serious, like a prince
talking to a trusted old retainer.
' Do you never want to go home?' he asked.
'Home,' Bold said.
'Isn't your family out there?'
'I don't know. It's been years. I'm sure they think I died. They
could be anywhere.'
'But not just anywhere. You could find them.'
'Maybe.' He looked at Kyu curiously. 'Why do you ask?'
Kyu didn't answer at first. He was still clutching Bold's arm.
Finally he said, 'Do you know the story of the eunuch Chao Kao, who
caused the downfall of the Chin dynasty?'
'No. Surely you're not still talking about that.'
Kyu smiled. 'No.' He pulled a little carving from his sleeve
half of a tiger, carved from black ironwood, its stripes cut
into the smooth surface. The amputation across its middle was
mortised; it was a tally, like those used by officials to
authenticate their communications with the capital when they were
in the provinces. 'Take this with you when you go. I'll keep the
other half. It will help you. We'll meet again.'
Bold took it, frightened. It seemed to him like Kyu's nafs, but
of course that was something that couldn't be given away.
'We'll meet again. In our lives to come at least, as you always
used to tell me. Your prayers for the dead give them instructions
on how to proceed in the bardo, right?'
'That's right.'
'I must go.' And with a kiss to the cheek Kyu was off into the
night.
The expedition to conquer the Tartars was a miserable failure,
as expected, and one rainy night the Yongle Emperor died. Bold
stayed up all through that night, pumping the bellows for a fire
the officers used to melt all the tin cups they had, to make a
coffin to carry the imperial body back to Beijing. It rained all
the way back, the heavens crying. Only when they reached Beijing
did the officers let the news be known.
The imperial body lay in state in a proper coffin for a hundred
days. Music, weddings and all religious ceremonies were forbidden
during this interval, and all the temples in the land were required
to ring their bells thirty thousand times.
For the funeral Bold joined the ten thousand members of the
escort, Sixty li's march to the imperial tomb site,
Northwest of Beijing. Three days zigzagging To foil evil
spirits, who only travel in straight lines. The funeral complex
deep underground,
Filled with the dead Emperor's best clothes and goods, At the
end of a tunnel three li long,
Lined with stone servants awaiting his next command. How many
lifetimes will they stand waiting?
Sixteen of his concubines are hanged, Their bodies buried around
his coffin.
The day the Successor ascended the Dragon Throne, his first
edict was read aloud to all in the Great Within and the Great
Without. Near the end of the edict, the reader in the palace
proclaimed to all assembled there before the Hall of Great
Harmony,
'All voyages of the treasure fleet are to be stopped. All the
ships moored in Hangzhou are ordered to return to Nanjing, and all
goods on the ships are to be turned over to the Department of
Internal Affairs, and stored. Officials abroad on business are to
return to the capital immediately; and all those called to go on
future voyages are ordered back to their homes. The building and
repair of all treasure ships is to stop immediately. All official
procurement for going abroad must also be stopped, and all those
involved in purchasing should return to the capital.'
When the reader had finished, the new Emperor, who had just
named himself the Hongxi Emperor, spoke for himself. 'We have spent
too much on extravagance. The capital will return to Nanjing, and
Beijing will be designated an auxiliary capital. There will be no
more waste of imperial resources. The people are suffering.
Relieving people's poverty ought to be handled as though one were
rescuing them from fire, or saving them from drowning. One cannot
hesitate.'
Bold saw Kyu's face across the great courtyard, a little black
figurine with blazing eyes. The new Emperor turned to look at his
dead father's retinue, so many of them eunuchs. 'For years you
eunuchs have only been thinking of yourselves, at the expense of
China. The Yongle Emperor thought you were on his side. But you
were not. You have betrayed all China.'
Kyu spoke up before his fellows could stop him. 'Your Highness,
it's the officials who are betraying China! They are trying to be
as regent to you, and make you a boy emperor for ever!'
With a roar a gang of the officials rushed at Kyu and some of
the other eunuchs, pulling knives from their sleeves as they
pounced. The eunuchs struggled or fled, but many were cut down on
the spot. Kyu they stabbed a thousand times.
The Hongxi Emperor stood and watched. When it was over he said,
'Take the bodies and hang them outside the Meridian Gate. Let all
the eunuchs beware.'
Later, in the stables, Bold sat holding the half tiger
tally in his hand. He had thought they would kill him too, and was
ashamed how much that thought had dominated him during the
slaughter of the eunuchs; but no one had paid the slightest
attention to him. It was possible no one else even remembered his
connection to Kyu.
He knew he was leaving, but he didn't know where to go. If he
went to Nanjing and helped burn the treasure fleet, and all its
docks and warehouses, he would certainly be continuing his young
friend's project. But all that would be done in any case.
Bold recalled their last conversation. Time to go home, perhaps,
to start a new life.
But guards appeared in the doorway. We know what happened next;
and so do you; so let's go on to the next chapter.
EIGHT
In the bardo, Bold explains to Kyu the true nature
of reality; Their jati regathered, they are cast back into the
world.
At the moment of death Kyu saw the clear white light. It was
everywhere, it bathed the void in itself, and he was part of it,
and sang it out into the void.
Some eternity later he thought: This is what you strive for.
And so he fell out of it, into awareness of himself. His
thoughts were continuing in their tumbling monologue reverie, even
after death. Incredible but true. Perhaps he wasn't dead yet. But
there was his body, hacked to pieces on the sand of the Forbidden
City.
He heard Bold's voice, there inside his thoughts, speaking a
prayer. 'Kyu my boy, my beautiful boy,
The time has come for you to seek the path. This life is over.
You are now Face to face with the clear light.'
I'm past that, Kyu thought. What happens next? But Bold couldn't
know where he was along his way. Prayers for the dead were useless
in that regard.
' You are about to experience reality In its pure state. All
things are void. You will be like a clear sky,
Empty and pure. Your named mind Will be like clear still
water.'
I'm past that! Kyu thought. Get to the next part!
'Use the mind to question the mind. Don't sleep at this crucial
time. Your soul must leave your body awake, and go out through the
Brahma hole.'
The dead can't sleep, Kyu thought irritably. And my soul is
already out of my body.
His guide was far behind him. But it had always been that way
with Bold. Kyu would have to find his own way. Emptiness still
surrounded the single thread of his thoughts. Some of the dreams he
had had during his life had been of this place.
He blinked, or slept, and then he was in a vast court of
judgment. The dais of the judge was on a broad deck, a plateau in a
sea of clouds. The judge was a huge black faced deity, sitting
potbellied on the dais. Its hair was fire, burning wildly on its
head. Behind it a black man held a pagoda roof that might have come
straight out of the palace in Beijing. Above the roof floated a
little seated Buddha, radiating calm. To his left and right were
peaceful deities, standing with gifts in their arms; but these were
all a great distance away, and not for him. The righteous dead were
climbing long flying roads up to these gods. On the deck
surrounding the dais, less fortunate dead were being hacked to
pieces by demons, demons as black as the Lord of Death, but smaller
and more agile. Below the deck more demons were torturing yet more
souls. It was a busy scene and Kyu was annoyed. This is my
judgment, and it's like a morning abattoir! How am I supposed to
concentrate?
A creature like a monkey approached him and raised a hand:
'Judg ment,' it said in a deep voice.
Bold's prayer sounded in his mind, and Kyu realized that Bold
and this monkey were related somehow. 'Remember, whatever you
suffer now is the result of your own karma,' Bold was saying. 'It's
yours and no one else's. Pray for mercy. A little white god and a
little black demon will appear, and count out the white and black
pebbles of your good and evil deeds.'
Indeed it was so. The white imp was pale as an egg, the black
imp like onyx; and they were hoeing great piles of white and black
stones into heaps, which to Kyu's surprise appeared about equal in
size. He could not remember doing any good deeds.
'You will be frightened, awed, terrified.'
I will not! These prayers were for a different kind of dead, for
people like Bold.
'You will attempt to tell lies, saying I have not committed any
evil deed.'
I will not say any such ridiculous thing.
Then the Lord of Death, up on its throne, suddenly took notice
of Kyu, and despite himself Kyu flinched.
'Bring the mirror of karma,' the god said, grinning horribly.
Its eyes were burning coals.
'Don't be frightened,' Bold's voice said inside him. 'Don't tell
any lies, don't be terrified, don't fear the Lord of Death. The
body you're in now is only a mental body. You can't die in the
bardo, even if they hack you to pieces.'
Thanks, Kyu thought uneasily. That is such a comfort.
'Now comes the moment of judgment. Hold fast, think good
thoughts; remember, all these events are your own hallucinations,
and what life comes next depends on your thoughts now. In a single
moment of time a great difference is created. Don't be distracted
when the six lights appear. Regard them all with compassion. Face
the Lord of Death without fear.'
The black god held a mirror up with such practised accuracy that
Kyu saw in the glass his own face, dark as the god's. He saw that
the face is the naked soul itself, always, and that his was as dark
and dire as the Lord of Death's. This was the moment of truth! And
he had to concentrate on it, as Bold kept reminding him. And yet
all the while the whole antic festival shouted and shrieked and
clanged around him, every possible punishment or reward given out
at once, and he couldn't help it, he was annoyed.
'Why is black evil and white good?' he demanded of the Lord of
Death. 'I never saw it that way. If this is all my own thinking,
then why is that so? Why is my Lord of Death not a big Arab slave
trader, as it would be in my own village? Why are your agents not
lions and leopards?'
But the Lord of Death was an Arab slave trader, he saw now, an
Arab intaglioed in miniature in the surface of the god's black
forehead, looking out at Kyu and waving. The one who had captured
him and taken him to the coast. And among the shrieks of the
rendered there were lions and leopards, hungrily gnawing the
intestines of living victims.
All just my thoughts, Kyu reminded himself, feeling fear rise in
his throat. This realm was like the dream world, but more solid;
more solid even than the waking world of his just completed
life; everything trebly stuffed with itself, so that the leaves on
the round ornamental bushes (in ceramic pots!) hung like jade
leaves, while the jade throne of the god pulsed with a solidity far
beyond that of stone. Of all the worlds the bardo was the one of
the utmost reality.
The white Arab face in the black forehead laughed and squeaked,
'Condemned!' and the huge black face of the Lord of Death roared,
'Condemned to hell!' It threw a rope around Kyu's neck and dragged
him off the dais. It cut off Kyu's head, tore out his heart, pulled
out his entrails, drank his blood, gnawed his bones; yet Kyu did
not die. Body hacked to pieces, yet it revived. And it all began
again. Intense pain throughout. Tortured by reality. Life is a
thing of extreme reality; death also.
Ideas are planted in the mind of the child like seeds, and may
grow to dominate the life completely.
The plea: I have done no evil.
Agony disassembled into anguish, regret, remorse; nausea at his
past lives and how little they had gained him. In this terrible
hour he sensed them all without actually being able to remember
them. But they had happened. Oh, to get off the endless wheel of
fire and tears. The sorrow and grief he felt then was worse than
the pain of dismemberment. The solidity of the bardo fell apart,
and he was bombarded by light exploding in his thoughts, through
which the palace of judgment could only be seen as a kind of veil,
or a painting on the air.
But there was Bold up there, being judged in his turn. Bold, a
cowering monkey, the only person after Kyu's capture who had meant
anything at all to him. Kyu wanted to cry out to him for help, but
stifled the thought, as he did not want to distract his friend at
the very moment, of all the infinity of moments, when he needed not
to be distracted. Nevertheless something must have escaped from
Kyu, some groan of the mind, some anguished thought or cry for
help; for a gang of furious four armed demons dragged Kyu down
and away, out of sight of Bold's judgment.
Then he was indeed in hell, and pain the least of his burdens,
as superficial as mosquito bites, compared to the deep, oceanic
ache of his loss. The anguish of solitude! Coloured explosions,
tangerine, lime, quicksilver, each shade more acid than the last,
burned his consciousness with an anguish ever deeper. I'm wandering
in the bardo, rescue me, rescue me!
And then Bold was there with him.
They stood in their old bodies, looking at each other. The
lights grew clearer, less painful to the eyes; a single ray of hope
pierced the depth of Kyu's despair, like a lone paper lantern seen
across West Lake. You found me, Kyu said.
Yes.
It's a miracle you could find me here.
No. We always meet in the bardo. We will cross paths for as long
as the six worlds turn in this cycle of the cosmos. We are part of
a karmic jati.
What's that?
Jati, subcaste, family, village. It manifests differently. We
all came into the cosmos together. New souls are born out of the
void, but infrequently, especially at this point in the cycle, for
we are in the Kali yuga, the Age of Destruction. When new
souls do appear it happens like a dandelion pod, souls like seeds,
floating away on the dharma wind. We are all seeds of what we could
be. But the new seeds float together and never separate by much,
that's my point. We have gone through many lives together already.
Our jati has been particularly tight since the avalanche. That fate
bound us together. We rise or fall together.
But I don't remember any other lives. And I don't remember
anyone from this past life but you. I only recognize you! Where are
the rest of them?
You didn't recognize me either. We found you. You have been
falling away from the jati for many reincarnations now, down and
down into yourself alone, in lower and lower lokas. There are six
lokas; they are t e orlds, the realms of rebirth and illusion.
Heaven, the world of the devas; then the world of the asuras, those
giants full of dissension; then the human world; then the animal
world; then the world of pretas, or hungry ghosts; then hell. We
move between them as our karma changes, life by life.
How many of us are there in this jati?
I don't know. A dozen perhaps, or half a dozen. The group blurs
at the boundaries. Some go away and don't come back until much
later. We were a village, that time in Tibet. But there were
visitors, traders. Fewer every time. People get lost, or fall away.
As you have been doing. When the despair strikes.
At the mere sound of the word it washed through Kyu: Despair.
Bold's figure grew transparent.
Bold, help me! What do I do?
Think good thoughts. Listen, Kyu, listen -- as we think, so we
are. Both here and hereafter, in all the worlds. For thoughts are
things, the parents of all actions, good and bad alike. And as the
sowing has been, so the harvest will be.
I'll think good thoughts, or try, but what should I do? What
should I look for?
The lights will lead you. Each world has its own colour. White
light from the devas, green from the asuras, yellow from the human,
blue from the beasts, red from ghosts, smoke coloured from
hell. Your body will appear the colour of the world you are to
return to.
But we're yellow! Kyu said, looking at his hand. And Bold was as
yellow as a flower.
That means we must try again. We try and try again, life after
life, until we achieve Buddha wisdom, and are released at
last. Or some then choose to return to the human world, to help
others along their way to release. Those are called bodhisattvas.
You could be one of those, Kyu. I can see it inside you. Listen to
me now. Soon you'll run for it. Things will chase you, and you'll
hide. In a house, a cave, a jungle, a lotus blossom. These are all
wombs. You'll want to stay in your hiding place, to escape the
terrors of the bardo. That way lies preta, and you will become a
ghost. You must emerge again to have any hope. Choose your womb
door without any feelings of attraction or repulsion. Looks can be
deceiving. Go as you see fit. Follow the heart. Try helping other
spirits first, as if you were a bodhisattva already.
I don't know how!
Learn. Pay attention and learn. You must follow, or lose the
jati for good.
Then they were attacked by huge male lions, manes already matted
with blood, roaring angrily. Bold took off in one direction and Kyu
in another. Kyu ran and ran, the lion on his heels. He dodged
through two trees and onto a path. The lion ran on and lost
him.
To the east he saw a lake, adorned with black and white swans.
To the west, a lake with horses standing in it; to the south, a
scattering of pagodas; to the north a lake with a castle in it. He
moved south towards the pagodas, feeling vaguely that this would
have been Bold's choice; feeling also that Bold and the rest of his
jati were already there, in one of the temples waiting for him.
He reached the pagodas. He wandered from one building to the
next, looking in doorways, shocked by visions of crowds in
disarray, fighting or fleeing from hyena headed guards and
wardens; a hell of a village, each possible future catastrophic,
terrifying. Death's home town.
A long time passed in this horrible search, and then he was
looking through the gates of a temple at his jati, his cohort, Bold
and all the rest of them, Shen, I li Dem his mother, Zheng He,
Psin, all of them immediately known to him -- oh, he thought, of
course. They were naked and bloodied, but putting on the gear of
war nevertheless. Then hyenas howled, and Kyu fled through the raw
yellow light of morning, through trees into the protection of
elephant grass. The hyenas prowled between the huge tufts of grass,
and he pressed through the knife edges of one broken down
clump to take refuge inside it.
For a long time he cowered in the grass, until the hyenas went
away, also the cries of his jati as they looked for him, telling
him to stick with them. He hid there through a long night of awful
sounds, creatures being killed and eaten; but he was safe; and
morning came again. He decided to venture forth, and found the way
out was closed. The knife edged grass blades had grown, and
were like long swords caging him, even pressing in on him, cutting
him as they grew. Ah, he realized; this is a womb. I've chosen one
without trying to, without listening to Bold's advice, separated
from my family, unaware and in fear. The worst kind of
choosing.
And yet to stay here would be to become a hungry ghost. He would
have to submit. He would have to be born again. He groaned at the
thought, cursed himself for a fool. Try to have a little more
presence of mind next time, he thought, a little more courage! It
would not be easy, the bardo was a scary place. But now, when it
was too late, he decided he had to try. Next time!
And so he re entered the human realm. What happened to him
and to his companions that time around, it is not our task to tell.
Gone, gone, gone altogether beyond! All hail!
One. The Cuckoo in the Village
What happens is that sometimes there is a confusion, and
the reincarnating soul enters into a womb already occupied. Then
there are two souls in the same baby, and a fight breaks out.
Mothers can feel that kind, the babies that thrash around inside,
wrestling themselves. Then they're born and the shock of that
ejection stills them for a while, they're fully occupied learning
to breathe and otherwise coming to grips with this world. After
that the fight between the two souls for the possession of the one
body recommences. That's colic.
A baby suffering colic will cry out as if struck, arch
its back in pain, even writhe in agony, for many of its waking
hours. This should be no surprise, two souls are struggling within
it, and so for weeks the baby cries all the time, its guts twisted
by the conflict. Nothing can ease its distress. It's not a
situation that can last for long, it's too much for any little body
to bear. In most cases the cuckoo soul drives out the original, and
then the body finally calms down. Or sometimes the first soul
successfully drives out the cuckoo and is restored to itself. Or
else, in rare cases, neither one is strong enough to drive the
other out, and the colic finally subsides but the baby grows up a
divided person, confused, erratic, unreliable, prone to
insanity.
Kokila was born at midnight, and the dai pulled her out
and said, 'It's a girl, poor thing.' Her mother Zaneeta hugged the
little creature to her breast, saying, 'We will love you
anyway.'
She was a week old when the colic struck. She spat up her
mother's milk and cried inconsolably all through the nights. Very
quickly Zaneeta forgot what the cheerful new babe had been like, a
kind of placid grub at her breast sucking, gurgling amazedly at the
world. Under the assault of the colic she screamed, cried, moaned,
writhed. It was painful to see it. Zaneeta could do nothing but
hold her, hands under her stomach as it banded with cramping
muscles, letting her hang face downwards from Zaneeta's hip.
Something about this posture, perhaps just the effort of keeping
her head upright, quieted Kokila. But it did not always work, and
never for long. Then the writhing and screams began again, until
Zaneeta was near distraction. She had to keep her husband Rajit fed
and her two older daughters as well, and having borne three
daughters in a row she was already out of Rajit's favour, and the
babe was intolerable. Zaneeta tried sleeping with her out in the
women's ground, but the menstruating women, while sympathetic, did
not appreciate the noise. They enjoyed getting out of the home away
with the girls, and it was not a place for babies. So Zaneeta was
driven to sleeping with Kokila out against the side of their
family's house, where they both dozed fitfully between bouts of
crying.
This went on for a couple of months, and then it ended.
Afterwards the baby had a different look in her eye. The dai who
had delivered her, Insef, checked her pulse and her irises and her
urine, and declared that a different soul had indeed taken over the
body, but that this was not really important -- it happened to many
babies, and could be an improvement, as usually in colic battles
the stronger soul won out.
But after all that internal violence, Zaneeta regarded
Kokila with trepi dation, and all through her infancy and
childhood Kokila looked back at her, and at the rest of the world,
with a kind of black wild look, as if she were uncertain where she
was or what she was doing there. A confused and often angry little
girl, in fact, although clever in manipu lating others, quick
to caress or to yell, and very beautiful. She was strong, too, and
quick, and by the time she was five she was more help than harm
around the home. By then Zaneeta had had two more children, the
younger of them a son, the sun of their lives, all thanks to Ganesh
and Kartik, and with all the work there was to be done she
appreciated Kokila's self reliance and quick abilities.
Naturally the new son, jahan, was the centre of the
household, and Kokila only the most capable of Zaneeta's daughters,
absorbed in the business of her childhood and youth, not
particularly well known to Zaneeta compared to Rajit
and jahan, whom naturally she had to study in depth.
So Kokila was free to follow her own thoughts for a few
years. Insef often said that childhood was the best time in a
woman's life, because as a girl she was somewhat free of men, and
mostly just another worker around the house and in the fields. But
the dai was old, and cynical about love and marriage, having seen
their results so often turn bad, for herself and for others. Kokila
was no more inclined to listen to her than to anyone else. To tell
the truth she didn't seem to listen much to anybody. She watched
everyone with that startled wary look you see on animals you come
upon suddenly in the forest, and spoke little. She seemed to enjoy
going off to do the daily work. She stayed silent and observant
around her father, and the other children of the village didn't
interest her, except for one girl, who had been found abandoned as
an infant, one morning in the women's ground. This foundling Insef
was raising to be the dai after her. Insef had named her Bihari,
and often Kokila went to the dai's hut and took Bihari with her on
her morning round of chores, not talking to her very much more than
she did to anyone else, but pointing things out to her, and most of
all, bothering to bring her along in the first place, which
surprised Zaneeta. The foundling was nothing unusual, after all,
just a little girl like all the rest. It was another of Kokila's
mysteries.
In the months before monsoon, the work for Kokila and all
the rest of them got harder for several weeks on end. Wake in the
morning and stoke the fire. Cross the cool village, the air not yet
dusty. Pick up Bihari at the dai's little hut in the woods.
Downstream to the defecation grounds, wash afterwards, then back
through the village to pick up the water jars and head upstream.
Past the laundry pools, where women were already congregating, and
on to the watering hole. Fill up and hump the big heavy jars back
home, stopping several times to rest. Then off into the forest to
forage for firewood. This could take most of the morning. Then back
to the fields west of the village, where her father and his
brothers had some land, to sow pulse of wheat and barley. They put
it in over a few weeks, so that it would ripen through the long
harvest month. This week's row was weak, the tops small, but Kokila
thrust them in the ploughed earth without thought, then in the heat
of the day sat with the other women and girls, mixing grain and
water to make a pasty dough, throwing chapatis, cooking some of
them. After that she went out to their cow. A few rhythmic downward
tugs of her finger in its rectum started a spill of dung that she
collected warm in her hands, slapped into patties with some straw
for drying, and put on the stoneand turf wall bordering her
father's field. After that she took some dried dung cakes by the
house, put one on the fire, went out to the stream to wash her
hands and the dirty clothes: four saris, dhotis, wraps. Then back
to the house in the waning light of the day, the heat and dust
making everything golden in the slant air, to the hearth in the
central room of their house, to cook chapatis and daal bhat on the
little clay stove next to the firepit.
Some time after dark Rajit would come home, and Zaneeta
and the girls would surround him with care, and after he had eaten
the daal bhat and chapatis he would relax and tell Zaneeta
something about his day, as long as it had not gone too badly. If
it had, he wouldn't speak of it. But usually he told them something
of his juggling of land and cattle deals. The village families used
marginal pastures as securities for new animals, or vice versa, and
brokering trade in calves and kids and pasture rights was what her
father did, mostly between Yelapur and Sivapur. Then also he was
always making marriage arrangements for his daughters, a bad
business as he had so many of them, but he made up dowries when he
could, and had no hesitation in marrying them down. Had no choice,
really.
So the evening would end and they slept on rush
mattresses unrolled for the night on the floor, by the fire for
warmth if it was cool, for the smoke's protection from mosquitos if
it was warm. Another night would pass.
One evening after dinner, a few days before Durga Puja
marked the end of the harvest, her father told her mother that he
had arranged a possible marriage for Kokila, whose turn it was, to
a man from Dharwar, the market village just the other side of
Sivapur. The prospective husband was a Lingayat, like Rajit's
family and most of Yelapur, and the third son of Dharwar's headman.
He had quarrelled with his father, however, and this left him
unable to ask Rajit for much of a dowry. Probably he was
unmarriageable in Dharwar, Kokila guessed, but she was excited
anyway. Zaneeta seemed pleased, and said she would look the
candidate over during the Durga Puja.
Ordinary life was pegged to whichever festival was coming
next, and the festivals all had different natures, colouring the
feel of the days leading up to them. Thus the Car Festival of
Krishna takes place in the monsoon, and its colour and gaiety stand
in contrast to the lowering grey overhead; boys blow their
palm leaf trumpets as if to hold off the rain by the blast of
their breath, and everyone would go crazy from the noise if the
blowing itself didn't reduce the trumpets quickly to palm leaves
again. Then the Swing Festival of Krishna takes place at the end of
monsoon, and the fair associated with it is full of stalls selling
superfluous things like sitars and drums, or silks, or embroidered
caps, or chairs and tables and cabinets. The time for the ld shifts
through the year, making it seem a very human event somehow, free
of the earth and its gods, and during it all the Muslims come to
Sivapur to watch their elephant parade.
Then Durga Puja marks the harvest, the grand climax of
the year, honouring the mother goddess and all her works.
So the women gathered on the first day, and mixed a batch
of vermilion bindi paste, while drinking some of the dai's fiery
chang, and they scattered after that, painted and giggling,
following the Muslim drummers in the opening parade, shouting 'To
the victory of Mother Durga!' The goddess's slant eyed statue,
made of clay and dressed in coloured pith and gilding, looked
faintly Tibetan. Placed around it were similarly dressed statues of
Laksmi and Saraswati, and her sons Ganesh and Kartik. Two goats
were tethered in turn to a sacrificial post before these statues
and decapitated, the bleeding heads staring up from the dust.
The sacrifice of the buffalo was an even greater matter;
a special priest came from Bbadrapur, with a big scimitar sharpened
for the occasion. This was important, for if the blade didn't make
it all the way through the buffalo's big neck, it meant that the
goddess was displeased and had refused the offering. Boys spent the
morning rubbing the skin on the top of its neck with ghee, to
soften it.
This time the heavy stroke of the priest was successful,
and all the shouting celebrants charged the body to make little
balls of blood and dust, and throw them at each other,
shrieking.
An hour or two later the mood was entirely different. One
of the old men started singing 'The world is pain, its load past
bearing', and then the women took it up, for it was dangerous for
the men to be heard questioning the Great Mother; even the women
had to pretend to be wounded demons in the song: 'Who is she
that walks the fields as Death, She that fights and swoops as
Death? A mother will not destroy her child, Her own flesh,
creation's joy, yet we see the Killer looking here then there . .
.'
Later, as night fell, the women went home and dressed in
their best saris, and came back out and stood in two lines, and the
boys and men shouted 'Victory to the Great Goddess!' and the music
began, wild and carefree, the whole crowd dancing and talking
around the bonfire, looking beautiful and dangerous in their
firelit finery.
Then people from Dharwar turned up, and the dancing grew
wild. Kokila's father took her by the hand out of the line and
introduced her to the parents of her intended. Apparently a
reconciliation had been patched together for the sake of this
formality. The father she had seen before, headman of Dharwar as he
was, named Shastri; the mother she had never seen before, as the
father had pretensions of purdah, though he was not really
wealthy.
The mother looked Kokila over with a sharp, not
unfriendly eye, bindi paste running down between her eyebrows, face
sweaty in the hot night. Possibly a decent mother in law.
Then the son was produced: Gopal, third son of Shastri. Kokila
nodded stiffly, looking aslant at him, not knowing what she felt.
He was a thin faced, intent looking youth, perhaps
nervous -- she couldn't tell. She was taller than he was. But that
might change.
They were swept back into their respective parties
without exchanging a word. Nothing but that single nervous glance,
and she did not see him again for three years. All the while,
however, she knew they were destined to marry, and it was a good
thing, as her affairs were therefore settled, and her father could
stop worrying about her, and treat her without irritation.
Over time she learned from the women's gossip a bit more
about the family she was going to join. Shastri was an unpopular
headman. His latest offence was to have exiled a Dharwar
blacksmith, for visiting a brother in the hills without asking his
permission first. He had not called the panchayat together to
discuss or approve this decision. He had never called the panchayat
together, in fact, since inheriting the headman position
from his deceased father a few years before. Why, people muttered,
he and his eldest son ran Dharwar as if they were the zamindars of
the place!
Kokila took all this in without too much concern, and
spent as much time as she could with Bihari, who was learning the
herbs the dai used as medicines. Thus when they were out collecting
firewood, Bihari was also inspecting the forest floor and finding
plants to bring back -- bittersweet in sunny patches, whiteroot in
wet shade, castor bean under saal trees among their roots, and so
on. Back at their hut Kokila helped grind the dried plants, or
otherwise prepare them, using oils or spirits, for use by Insef in
her midwifery, for the most part: to stimulate contractions, relax
the womb, reduce pain, open the cervix, slow bleeding and so on.
There were scores of source plants and animal parts that the dai
wanted them to learn. 'I'm old,' she would say, 'I'm
thirty six, and my mother died at thirty. Her mother taught
her the lore, and the dai who taught my grandmother was from a
Dravidian village to the south, where names and even property were
reckoned down through the women, and she taught my grandmother all
the Dravidians know, and that goes back through all the dais of
time to Saraswati, the goddess of learning herself, so we can't let
it go forgotten, you must learn it and teach your daughters, so
that birthing is made as easy as it can be, poor things, and as
many kept alive as possible.' People said of Insef that she had a
centipede in her head (this was mostly an expression said of
eccentrics, although in fact mothers searched your ears for them if
you had been lying with your head on the grass, and sometimes
rinsed out your ears with oil, for centipedes detest oil), and she
often talked as fast as you ever heard anyone talk, rambling on and
on, mostly to herself, but Kokila liked to hear her.
And it took very little for Insef to convince Bihari of
the importance of these things. She was a lively sweet girl with a
good eye in the forest, a good memory for plants, and always a
cheerful smile and a kind word for people. She was if anything too
cheery and attractive, because in the year Kokila was to be married
to Gopal, Shardul, his older brother, the eldest son of Shastri,
soon to become Kokila's brother in law -- one of those in
her husband's family who would have the right to tell her what to
do he started looking at Bihari in an interested way, and
after that, no matter what she did, he watched her. It couldn't
lead to any good, as Bihari was perhaps untouchable and therefore
unmarriageable, and Insef did what she could to seclude her. But
the festivals brought the single men and women together, and the
daily life of the village afforded various glimpses and encounters
as well. And Bihari was interested, anyway, even though she knew
she was unmarriageable. She liked the idea of being normal, no
matter how vehemently the dai warned her against it.
The day came when Kokila was married to Gopal and moved
to Dharwan. Her new mother in law turned out to be
withdrawn and irritable, and Gopal himself was no prize. An anxious
man with little to say, dominated by his parents, never reconciled
with his father, he at first tried to lord it over Kokila the way
they did over him, but without much conviction, particularly after
she had snapped at him a few times. He was used to that, and
quickly enough she had the upper hand. She didn't much like him,
and looked forward to dropping by to see Bihari and the dai in the
forest. Really only the second son, Prithvi, seemed to her at all
admirable in the headman's family, and he left early every day and
had as little to do with his family as he could, keeping quiet with
a distant air.
There was a lot of traffic between the two villages, more
than Kokila had ever noticed before it became so important to her,
and she made do -- secretly taking a preparation that the dai had
made for her, to keep from having a baby. She was fourteen years
old but she wanted to wait.
Before long things went bad. The dai got so crippled by
her swollen joints that Bihari had to take over her work, and she
was much more frequently seen in Dharwar. Meanwhile Shastri and
Shardul were conspiring to make money by betraying their village,
changing the tax assessment with the agent of the zamindar,
shifting it to the zamindar's great advantage, with Shastri
skimming off some for himself. Basically they were colluding to
change Dharwar over to the Muslim form of farm tax rather than the
Hindu law. The Hindu law, which was a religious injunction and
sacred, allowed a tax of no more than one sixth of all
produce, while the Muslim claim was to everything, with whatever
the farmers kept being a matter of the pleasure of the zamindar. In
practice this often meant little difference, but Muslim allowances
varied for crops and circumstance, and this is where Shastri and
Shardul were helping the zamindar, by calculating what more could
be taken without starving the villagers. Kokila lay there at
night with Gopal, and through the open doorway as he slept she
heard Shastri and Shardul going over the possibilities.
'Wheat and barley, two fifths when naturally
watered, three tenths when watered by wheels.'
'That sounds good. Then dates, vines, green crops and
gardens, onethird.'
'But summer crops one fourth.'
Eventually, to aid in this work, the zamindar gave
Shardul the post of qanungo, assessor for the village; and he was
already an awful man. And he still had an eye for Bihari. The night
of the car festival he took her in the forest. From her account
afterwards it was clear to Kokila that Bihari hadn't completely
minded it, she relished telling the details, 'I was on my back in
the mud, it was raining on my face and he was licking the rain off
it, saying I love you I love you.'
'But he won't marry you,' Kokila pointed out, worried.
'And his brothers won't like it if they hear about this.'
'They won't hear. And it was so passionate, Kokila, you
have no idea.' She knew Kokila was not impressed by Gopal.
'Yes yes. But it could lead to trouble. Is a few minutes'
passion worth that?'
'It is, it is. Believe me.'
For a while she was happy, and sang all the old love
songs, especially one they used to sing together, an old one:
'I like sleeping with somebody different, Often. It's nicest
when my husband is in a far country, Far away. And there's rain in
the streets at night and wind And nobody.'
But Bihari got pregnant, despite Insef's preparations.
She tried to keep to herself, but with the dai crippled there were
births that she had to attend, and so she went and her condition
was noted, and people put together what they had seen or heard, and
said that Shardul had got her with child. Then Prithvi's wife was
giving birth and Bihari went to help, and the baby, a boy, died a
few minutes after it was born, and outside their house Shastri
struck Bihari in the face, calling her a witch and a whore.
All this Kokila heard about when she visited Prithvi's
house, from Prithvi's wife, who said the birth had gone faster than
anyone expected, and that she doubted Bihari had done anything bad.
Kokila hurried off to the dai's hut, and found the gnarled old
woman puffing with effort between Bihari's legs, trying to get the
baby out. 'She's miscarrying,' she told Kokila. So Kokila took over
and did what the dai told her to, forgetting her own family until
night fell, when she remembered and exclaimed, 'I have to go!' and
Bihari whispered, 'Go. It will be all right.'
Kokila rushed home through the forest to Dharwar, where
her mother in law slapped her, but perhaps just to
pre empt Gopal, who punched her hard in the arm and forbade
her to return to the forest or Sivapur ever again, a ludicrous
command given the realities of their life, and she almost said 'How
will I fetch your water then?' but bit her lip and rubbed her arm,
looking daggers at them, until she judged they were as frightened
as they could get without beating her, after which she glared like
Kali at the floor instead, and cleaned up after their impromptu
dinner, which had been hobbled by her absence. They could not even
cat without her. This fury was the thing she would remember for
ever.
Before dawn next morning she slipped out with the water
jugs and hurried through the wet grey forest, leaves scattered at
every level from the ground to the high canopy overhead, and
arrived at the dai's hut frightened and breathing hard.
Bihari was dead. The baby was dead, Bihari was dead, even
the old woman lay stretched on her pallet, gasping with the pain of
her exertions, looking as if she too might expire and leave this
world at any minute. 'They went an hour ago,' she said. 'The baby
should have lived, I don't know what happened. Bihari bled too
much. I tried to stop it but I couldn't reach.'
'Teach me a poison.'
'What?'
'Teach me a good poison to use. I know you know them.
Teach me the strongest one you know, right now.'
The old woman turned her head to the wall, weeping.
Kokila pulled her around roughly and shouted, 'Teach me!'
The old woman looked over at the two bodies under a
spread sari, but there was no one else there to be alarmed. Kokila
began to raise a hand to threaten her, then stopped herself.
'Please,' she begged. 'I have to know.'
'It's too dangerous.'
'Not as dangerous as sticking a knife in Shastri.'
'No.'
'I'll stab him if you don't tell me, and they'll burn me
on a bonfire.'
'They'll do that if you poison him.'
'No one will know.'
'They'll think I did it.'
'Everyone knows you can't move.'
'That won't matter. Or they'll think you did it.'
'I'll do it cleverly, believe me. I'll be at my
parents'.'
'It won't matter. They'll blame us anyway. And Shardul is
as bad as Shastri, or worse.'
'Tell me.'
The old woman looked into her face for a time. Then she
rolled over, opened her sewing basket. She showed Kokila a small
dried plant, then some berries. 'This is water hemlock. These are
castor bean seeds. Grind the hemlock leaves to a paste, add seeds
to the paste just before you place it. It's bitter, but you don't
need much. A pinch in spicy food will kill without any taste. But
it looks like poisoning afterwards, I warn you. It's not like being
sick.'
So Kokila watched and made her plan. Shastri and Shardul
continued their work for the zamindar, gaining new enemies every
month. And it was rumoured Shardul had raped another girl in the
forest, the night of Gaurl Hunnime, the woman's festival when mud
images of Siva and Parvati are worshipped.
Meanwhile Kokila had learned every detail of their
routine. Shastri and Shardul ate a leisurely breakfast, and then
Shastri heard cases at the pavilion between his house and the well,
while Shardul did accounting beside the house. In the heat of
midday they napped and received visitors on the verandah facing
north into the forest. In the afternoons of most days they ate a
small meal while lying on couches, like little zamindars, then
walked with Gopal or one or two associates to that day's market,
where they 'did business' until the sun was low.
They returned to the village drunk or drinking, stumbling
cheerfully through the dusk to their home and dinner. It was as
steady a routine as any in the village.
So Kokila considered her plans while spending some of her
firewood walks on the hunt for water hemlock and castor beans.
These grew in the dankest parts of the forest, where it shaded into
swamp, and hid every manner of dangerous creature, from mosquito to
tiger. But at midday all such pests were resting; indeed in the hot
months everything alive seemed sleeping at midday, even the
drooping plants. Insects buzzed sleepily in the sleepy silence, and
the two poison plants glowed in the dim light like little green
lanterns. A prayer to Kali and she plucked them out, while she was
bleeding, and pulled apart a bean pod for the seeds, and tucked
them in the band of her sari, and hid them for the night in the
forest near the defecation grounds, the day before the Durga Puja.
That night she did not sleep at all, except for during short
dreams, in which Bihari came to her and told her not to be sad.
'Bad things happen in every life,' Bihari said. 'No anger.' There
was more but on waking it all slipped away, and Kokila went to her
hiding place and found the plant parts and ground the hemlock
leaves furiously together in a gourd with a stone, then cast the
stone and gourd away in beds of ferns. With the paste on a leaf in
her hand she went to Shastri's house, and waited until their
afternoon nap, a day that seemed to last for ever; then put the
little seeds in the paste, and smeared a tiny dab of the paste
inside the doughballs made for Shastri and Shardul's afternoon
snack. Then she ran from the house and through the forest, her
heart taking flight like a deer ahead of her -- too like a deer, in
that she ran wild with the thrill of what she had done, and fell
into an unseen deer snare, set by a man from Bhadrapur. By the time
he found her, stunned and just starting to struggle in the lines,
with some of the paste still on her fingers, and took her to
Dharwar, Shastri and Shardul were dead, and Prithvi was the new
headman of the village, and Kokila was declared a witch and
poisoner and killed on the spot.
Two. Back in the Bardo
Back in the bardo Kokila and Bihari sat next to each
other on the black floor of the universe, waiting their turn for
judgment.
' You're not getting it,' said Bihari -- also Bold, and
Bel, and Borondi, and many, many other incarnations before, back to
her original birth in the dawn of this Kali--yuga, this age of
destruction, fourth of the four ages, when as a new soul she had
spun out of the Void, an eruption of Being out of Non being, a
miracle inexplicable by natural law and indicative of the existence
of some higher realm, a realm above that even of the deva gods who
now sat on the dais looking down at them. The realm that they all
sought instinctively to return to.
Bihari continued: 'The dharma is a matter that can't be
short changed, you have to work at it step by step, doing what
you can in each given situation. You can't leap up to heaven.'
'I shit on all that,' Kokila said, making a rude gesture
at the gods. She was still so angry she could spit, and terrified
too, weeping and wiping her nose on the back of her hand, 'I'll be
damned if I cooperate in such a horrible thing.'
'Yes, you will! That's why we keep almost losing you.
That's why you never recognize your jati when you're in the world,
why you keep doing your own family harm. We rise and fall
together.'
'I don't see why.'
Now Shastri was being judged, kneeling with his hands
together in supplication.
'He'd better be sent to hell!' Kokila shouted at the black god.
'The lowest nastiest level of hell!'
Bihari shook her head. 'It's step by step, as I said.
Little steps up and down. And it's you they're likely to judge
down, after what you did.'
'It was justice!' Kokila exclaimed with vehement
bitterness. 'I took justice into my own hands because no one else
would do it! And I would do it again, too.' She shouted up at the
black god: 'Justice, damn it!'
'Shh!' Bihari said urgently. 'You'll get your turn. You
don't want to be sent back as an animal.'
Kokila glared at her. 'We are animals already, and don't
you forget it.' She took a slap at Bihari's arm and her hand went
right through Bihari's which somewhat deflated her point. They were
in the realm of souls, there was no denying it. 'Forget these
gods,' she snarled, 'it's justice we need! I'll bring the revolt
right into the bardo itself if that's what it takes!'
'First things first,' Bihari's said. 'One step at a time.
just try to recognize your jati, and take care of them first. Then
on from there.'
Three. Tiger Mercy
Kya the tiger moved through elephant grass, stomach full
and fur warm in the sun. The grass was a green wall around her,
pressing in on every side. Above her the grass tips waved in the
breeze, crossing the blue of the sky. The grass grew in giant
bunches, radiating out from their centre and bending over at the
tops, and though the clumps were very close, her way forward was to
find the narrow breaks at the bottom between clumps, pushing
through the fallen stalks. Eventually she came to the edge of the
grass, bordering a parklike maidan, burned annually by humans to
keep it clear. Here grazed great numbers of chital and other deer,
wild pig, and antelopes, especially the nilghai.
This morning there stood a lone wapiti doe, nibbling
grass. Kya could imitate the sound of a wapiti stag, and when she
was in heat, she did it just to do it; but now she simply waited.
The doe sensed something and jolted away. But a young gaur wandered
into the clearing, dark chestnut in colour, white socked. As
it approached Kya lifted her left forepaw, straightened her tail
back, and swayed slightly fore and back, getting her balance. Then
she threw her tail up and leapt across the park in a series of
twenty foot bounds, roaring all the while. She hit the gaur
and knocked it down, bit its neck until it died.
She ate.
Ba loo ah!
Her kol babl, a jackal that had been kicked out of
his pack and was now following her around, showed his ugly face at
the far end of the maidan, and barked again. She growled at him to
leave, and he slunk back into the grass.
When she was full she got up and padded downhill. The
kol bahl and ravens would finish the gaur.
She came to the river that wound its way through this
part of the country. The shallow expanse was studded with islands,
each a little jungle under its canopy of sal and shisharn trees,
and several of these held nests of hers, in the matted undergrowth
of brake and creepers, under tamarisk trees overhanging the warm
sand on the banks of the stream. The tiger padded over pebbles to
the water's edge, drank. She stepped in the river and stood,
feeling the current push her fur downstream. The water was clear
and warmed by the sun. In the sand at the stream's edge were
pawprints of a number of animals, and in the grass their scents:
wapiti and mouse deer, jackal and hyena, rhinoceros and gaur, pig
and pangolin; the whole village, but none in sight. She waded
across to one of her islands, lay in the smashed grass of her bed,
in the shade. A nap. No cubs this year, no need to hunt for another
day or two: Kya yawned hugely in her bed. She fell asleep in the
silence that extends out from tigers in the jungle.
She dreamed that she was a little brown village girl. Her
tail twitched as she felt again the heat of a cooking fire, the
feel of sex face to face, the impact of witch--killing stones. A
sleeping rumble, big fangs exposed. The fear of it woke her up and
she stirred, trying to fall back into a different dream.
Noises pulled her back into the world. Birds and monkeys
were talking about the arrival of people, coming in from the west,
no doubt to the ford they used downstream. Kya rose quickly and
splashed off the island, slipped into thickets of elephant grass
backing the curve of the stream. People could be dangerous,
especially in groups. Individually they were helpless, it was only
a question of picking one's moment and attacking from behind. But
groups of them could drive animals into traps or ambushes, and that
had been the end of many tigers, left skinned and beheaded. Once
she had seen a male tiger try to walk a pole to some meat, slip on
a slippery patch, and fall onto spikes hidden in leaves. People had
arranged that.
But today, no drums, no shouts, no bells. And it was too
late in the day for humans to hunt. More likely they were
travellers. Kya slipped through the elephant grass
unobtrusively, testing the air with ear and nose, and moving
towards a long glade in the grass that would give her a view of
their ford.
She settled down in a broken clump to watch them pass.
She lay there with her eyes slitted.
There were other humans there, she saw, hiding like she
was, scattered through the sal forest, lying in wait for the humans
to arrive at the ford.
As she noticed this, a column of people reached the ford,
and the hidden ones leapt out of their hiding places and screamed
as they fired arrows at the others. A big hunt, it seemed. Kya
settled down and watched more closely, ears flattened. She had come
upon such a scene once before, and the number of humans killed had
been surprising. It was where she had first tasted their flesh, as
she had had twins to feed that summer. They were certainly the most
dangerous beast in the jungle, apart from the elephant. They killed
wantonly, like kol bahls sometimes did. There would be meat
left here afterwards, no matter what else happened. Kya hunkered
down and listened more than watched. Screams, cries, roars, shouts,
trumpet blasts, death rattles; somewhat like the end of one of her
hunts, only multiplied many times.
Eventually it grew quiet. The hunters left the scene.
When they had been gone a long time, and the ordinary shush of the
jungle had returned, Kya shifted onto her paws and looked around.
The air reeked of blood, and her mouth watered. Dead bodies lay on
both banks of the river, and were caught on snags against the banks
of the stream, or had rolled into shallows. The tiger padded among
them cautiously, pulled a large one into the shadows and ate some
of it. But she was not very hungry. A noise caused her to slink
swiftly back into the shadows, hair erect on her back, looking for
the source of the sound, which had been a cracked branch. Now a
footfall, over there. Ah. A human, still standing. A survivor.
Kya relaxed. Sated already, she approached the man out of
no more than curiosity. He saw her and jumped backwards, startling
her; his body had done it without his volition. He stood there
looking at her in the way hurt animals sometimes did, accepting
their fate; only in this one's face there was also a little roll of
the eyes, as if to say, what else could go wrong, or, not this too.
It was a gesture so like that of the girls she had watched
gathering wood in the forest that she paused, unllungry. The
hunters who had ambushed this man's group still occupied the trail
to the nearest village. He would soon be caught and killed.
He expected her to do it. Humans were so sure of
themselves, so sure they had the world worked out and were lords of
it all. And with their monkey numbers and their arrows, so often
they were right. This as much as anything was why she killed them
when she did. They were a scrawny meal in all truth, which of
course was not the main consideration, many a tiger had died trying
to reach the tasty flesh of the porcupine; but humans tasted
strange. With the things they ate, it was no surprise.
The confounding thing would be to help him; so she padded
to his side. His teeth chattered with his trembling. He was no
longer stunned, but holding his place on purpose. She nosed up one
of his hands, rested it on her head between her ears. She held
still until he stroked her head, then moved until he was stroking
between her shoulders, and she was standing by his side, facing the
same direction. Then very slowly she began to walk, indicating by
her speed that he should come along. He did, hand stroking her back
with every step.
She led him through the sal forest. Sunlight blinked
through trees onto them. There was a sudden noise and clatter, then
voices from the trail below, in the trees, and the hand clutched at
her fur. She stopped and listened. Voices of the people--hunters.
She growled, then coughed deeply, then gave a short roar.
Dead silence from below. In the absence of an organized
beat, no human could find her up here. Sounds of them hurrying off
came to her on the wind.
The way was now free. The man's hand was clenched in the
fur between her shoulderblades. She turned her head and nuzzled his
shoulder and he let go. He was more afraid of the other men than of
her, which showed sense. He was like a helpless cub in some ways,
but quick. Her own mother had held her by biting the same fold of
skin between the shoulderblades that he had seized, and at the same
pressure -- as if he too had once been a tigress mother, and was
making an unremembered appeal to her.
She walked the man slowly to the next ford, across it and
along one of the deer trails. Wapiti were bigger than humans, and
it was an easy trail. She took him to one of her entrances
to the big nullah of the region, a steep and narrow ravine, so
precipitous and cragbound that its floor was only accessible at a
couple of points. This was one, and she led the man down to the
ravine floor, then downstream towards a village where the people
smelled much like he did. The man had to walk fast to match her
gait, but she did not slow down. Only a few pools dotted the ravine
floor, as it had been hot for a long time. Springs dripped over
ferny rockfalls. As they padded and stumbled along she thought
about it, and seemed to recall a hut, near the edge of the village
she was headed for, that had smelled almost exactly like him. She
led him through a dense grove of date palms filling the floor of
the nullah, then still denser clumps of bamboo. Green coverts of
jaman fruit bushes covered the sides of the ravine, mixed with the
ber thorn bush, dotted with its acid orange fruit.
A gap in this fragrant shrubbery led her up and out of
the nullah. She sniffed, a male tiger had been here recently,
spraying the exit from the nullah to mark it as his. She growled,
and the man clutched the fur between her shoulders again, held on
for help as she climbed the last pitch out.
Back in the forested hills flanking the nullah, angling
uphill, she had to nudge him with her shoulder -- he wanted to
contour the slope, or go directly down to the village, not up and
around to it. A few bumps from her and he gave that up, and
followed her without resistance. Now he had a male tiger to avoid
too, but he did not know that.
She led him through the ruins of an old hill fort,
overgrown with bamboo, a place that humans avoided, and that she
had made her lair several winters running. She had borne her cubs
here, near the human village and among human ruins, to make them
safer from male tigers. The man recognized the place, and calmed
down. They continued on towards the backside of the village.
At his pace it was a long way. His body hung from his
joints, and she saw how hard it must be to walk on two feet. Never
a moment's rest, always balancing, falling forwards and catching
himself, as if always crossing a log over a creek. Shaky as a new
cub, blind and wet.
But they reached the village margin, a barley field
rippling in the afternoon light, and stopped in the last elephant
grass under the sal trees. The barley field had furrows of earth
into which they poured water,
Clever monkeys that they were, tiptoeing through life in their
perpetual balancing act.
At the sight of the field, the exhausted creature looked
up and around. He led the tiger now, around the field, and Kya
followed him closer to the village than she would have dared in
most situations, though the afternoon's mix of sun and shadow
provided her with maximum cover, rendering her nearly invisible to
others, a mere mind ripple in the landscape, if she moved
quickly. But she had to keep to his faltering pace. It took a bit
of boldness; but there were bold tigers and timid tigers, and she
was one of the bold ones.
Finally she stopped. A hut lay before them, under a pipal
tree. The man pointed it out to her. She sniffed; it was his home,
sure enough. He whispered in his language, gave her a final squeeze
expressing his gratitude, and then he was stumbling forwards
through the barley, in the last stages of exhaustion. When he
reached the door there were cries from inside, and a woman and two
children rushed out and hugged him. But then to the tiger's
surprise an older man strode out heavily and beat him across the
back, several heavy blows.
The tiger settled down to watch.
The older man refused to allow her refugee into the hut.
The woman and children brought out food to him. Finally he curled
up outside the door, on the ground, and slept.
Through the following days he remained in disfavour with
the old man, though he fed at the house, and worked in the fields
around it. Kya watched and saw the pattern of his life, strange as
it was. It seemed also that he had forgotten her; or would not risk
the jungle to come out and look for her. Or did not imagine she was
still there, perhaps.
She was surprised, therefore, when he came out one dusk
with his hands held before him, a bird carcass plucked and cooked,
it appeared even boned! He walked right to her, and greeted
her very quietly and respectfully, holding out the offering. He was
tentative, frightened; he did not know that when her whiskers were
down she was feeling relaxed. The offered titbit smelled of its own
hot juices, and some other mix of scents -- nutmeg, lavender -- she
took it gently in her mouth and let it cool, tasting it between her
teeth as it dripped hot on her tongue. A very odd perfumed meat.
She chewed it, growling a little purr growl, and swallowed. He
said his farewells and backed away, returning to the hut.
After that she came by from time to time in the lancing
horizontal light of sunrise, when he was going off to work. After a
while he usually came out with a gift for her, some scrap or
morsel, nothing like the bird, but tastier than it had been, simple
uncooked bits of meat; somehow he knew. He still slept outside the
hut, and one cold night she slunk in and slept curled around him,
till dawn greyed the skies. The monkeys in the trees were
scandalized.
Then the old man beat him again, hard enough to make him
bleed from one car. Kya went off to her hill fort then, growling
and making long scratches in the ground. The huge mohua tree on the
hill was dropping its great weight of flowers, and she ate some of
the fleshy, intoxicating petals. She returned to the village
perimeter, and deliberately sniffed out the old man, and found him
on the well--travelled road to the village west of theirs. He had
met several other men there, and they talked for a long time,
drinking fermented drinks and getting drunk. He laughed like her
kol bahl.
On his way home she struck him down and killed him with a
bite to the neck. She ate part of his entrails, tasting again all
the strange tastes; they ate such odd things that they ended up
tasting peculiar themselves, rich and various. Not unlike the first
offering her young man had brought out to her. An acquired taste;
and perhaps she had acquired it.
Other people were hurrying towards them now, and she
slipped away, hearing behind her their cries, shocked and then
dismayed, although with that note of triumph or celebration one
often heard in monkeys relating bad news -- that whatever it was,
it hadn't happened to them.
No one would care about that old man, he had left this
life as lonely as a male tiger, unregretted even by those in his
own hut. It was not his death but the presence of a man eating
tiger that these people lamented. Tigers who learned to like
manfiesh were dangerous; usually they were mothers who were having
trouble feeding their cubs, or old males who had broken their
fangs; so that they were likely to do it often. Certainly a
campaign to exterminate her would now begin. But she did not regret
the killing. On the contrary, she leapt through the trees and
shadows like a young tigress just out on her own, licking her chops
and growling. Kya, Queen of the jungle!
But the next time she came to visit her young man, he
brought out a morsel of goat meat, and then tapped her gently on
the nose, talking very seriously. He was warning ber of something,
and was worried that the details of the warning were escaping her,
which they were. Next time she came by he shouted at her to leave,
and even threw rocks at her, but it was too late; she hit a trip
line connected to spring loaded bows, and poisoned arrows
pierced her and she died.
Four. Akbar
As they carried the body of the tigress into the village,
four men working hard, huffing and puffing under its weight as it
swung by its tied paws from a stout bamboo bouncing on their
shoulders, Bistami understood: God is in all things. And God, may
all his ninety nine names prosper and fall into our souls, did
not want any killing. From the doorway of his older brother's hut,
Bistami shouted through his tears, 'She was my sister, she was my
aunt, she saved me from the Hindu rebels, you ought not to have
killed her, she was protecting us all!'
But of course no one was listening. No one understands
us, not ever.
And it was perhaps just as well, given that this tigress
had undoubtedly killed his brother. But he would have given his
brother's life ten times over for the sake of that tiger.
Despite himself he followed the procession into the
village centre. Everyone was drinking rahkshi, and the drummers
were running out of their homes with their drums, pounding happily.
'Kya Kya Kya Kya, leave us alone forevermore!' A tiger holiday was
upon them, and the rest of the day and perhaps the next would be
devoted to the impromptu festivalizing. They would burn its
whiskers to make sure that its soul would not pass into a killer in
another world. The whiskers were poisonous: one ground up in tiger
meat would kill a man, while a whole one placed inside a tender
bamboo shoot would give those who ate it cysts, leading to a slower
death. Or so it was said. The hypochondriacal Chinese believed in
the efficacious properties of almost everything, including every
part of tigers, it seemed. Much of the body of this Kya would be
saved and taken north by traders, no doubt. The skin would go to
the zamindar.
Bistami sat miserably on the ground at the edge of the
village centre. There was no one to explain himself to. He had done
everything he could to warn the tigress off, but to no avail. He
had addressed her not as Kya but as madam, or Madam Thirty, which
was what the villagers called tigers when they were out in the
jungle, so as not to offend them. He had given her offerings, and
checked to make sure that the markings on her forehead did not form
the letter 's', a sign that the beast was a were--tiger, and would
change to human form for good at the moment of death. That had not
happened, and indeed there had been no 's' on her forehead; the
mark was more like a birdwing in flight. He had kept eye contact
with ber, as one is supposed to do when coming on tigers
unexpectedly; he had stayed calm, and been saved by her from death.
Indeed all the stories he had heard of helpful tigers -- the one
that had led two lost children back to the village, the one who had
kissed a sleeping hunter on the cheek -- all these stories paled in
comparison to his, although they had prepared him as well. She had
been his sister, and now he was distraught with grief.
The villagers began to dismember her body. Bistami left
the village, unable to watch. His brutal older brother was dead;
his other relatives, like his brother, had no sympathy for his sufi
interests. 'The high look to the high, and so they can see each
other from a great distance off.' But he was so far away from
anyone of wisdom, he could see nothing at all. He remembered what
his sufi master Tutsami had told him when he left Allahabad: 'Keep
the haj in your heart, and make your way to Mecca as Allah wills
it. Slow or fast, but always on your tariqat, the path to
enlightenment.'
He gathered his few possessions in his shoulder bag. The
death of the tiger began to take on the cast of a destiny, a
message to Bistami, to accept the gift of God and put it to use in
his actions, and regret nothing. So that now it was time to say
Thank you God, thank you Kya my sister, and leave his home village
for ever.
Bistami walked to Agra, and there he spent the last of
his money to buy a sufi wanderer's robe. He asked for shelter in
the sufi lodge, a long old building in the southernmost district of
the old capital, and he bathed in their pool, purifying himself
inside and out.
Then he left the city and walked out to Fatepur Sikri,
the new capital of Akbar's empire. He saw that the
not yet completed city replicated in stone the vast tent
camps of Mughal armies, even down to marble pillars standing free
of the walls, like tent poles. The city was dusty, or muddy, its
white stone already stained. The trees were all short, the gardens
raw and new. The long wall of the Emperor's palace fronted the
great avenue that bisected the city north and south, leading to a
big marble mosque, and a dargah Bistami had heard about in Agra,
the tomb of the sufi saint Shaikh Salim Chishti. At the end of his
long life Chishti had instructed the young Akbar, and now his
memory was said to be Akbar's strongest link to Islam. And this
same Chishti in his youth had travelled in Iran, and studied under
Shah Esmail, who had also instructed Bistami's master Tutsami.
So Bistami approached Chishti's great white tomb walking
backwards, and reciting from the Quran. 'In the name of God, the
compassionate, the merciful. Be patient with those who call upon
their Lord at morn and even, seeking his face: and let not thine
eyes be turned away from them in quest of the pomp of this life;
neither obey him whose heart we have made careless of the
remembrance of Us, and who followeth his own lusts, and whose ways
are unbridled.'
At the entry he prostrated himself towards Mecca and said
the morning prayer, then entered the walled in courtyard of
the tomb, and made his tribute to Chishti. Others were doing the
same, of course, and when he had finished paying his respects he
spoke to some of them, describing his journey all the way back to
his time in Iran, eliding the stops along the way. Eventually he
told this tale to one of the ulama of Akbar's own court, and
emphasized his master's relation by teaching to Chishti,
and returned to his prayers. He came back to the tomb day after
day, establishing a routine of prayer, purification rites, the
answering of questions from pilgrims who spoke only Persian, and
socializing with all the people visiting the shrine. This finally
led to the grandson of Chishti speaking to him, and this man then
spoke well of him to Akbar, or so he heard. He ate his one meal a
day at the sufi lodge, and persevered, hungry but hopeful.
One morning at the very first light, when he was already
in the tomb's courtyard at prayers, the Emperor Akbar himself came
in to the shrine, and took up an ordinary broom, and swept the courtyard. It was a
cool morning, the night chill still in the air, and yet Bistami was
sweating as Akbar finished his devotions, and Chishti's grandson
arrived, and asked Bistami to come when he had finished his
prayers, to be introduced.
'A great honour,' he replied, and returned to his
prayers, murmuring them thoughtlessly as the things he might say
raced through his head; and he wondered how long he should delay
before approaching the Emperor, to show that prayer came first. The
tomb was still relatively empty and cool, the sun just rising. When
it cleared the trees entirely, Bistami stood and walked to the
Emperor and Chishti's grandson, and bowed deeply. Greeting,
obeisances, and then he was obeying a polite request to tell his
story to the watchful young man in the imperial finery, whose
unblinking gaze never left his face, or indeed his eyes. Study in
Iran with Tutsami, pilgrimage to Qom, return home, a year's work as
a teacher of the Quran in Gujarat, a journey to visit his family,
ambush by Hindu rebels, salvation by tiger: by the end of the story
Bistami had been approved, he could see it.
'We welcome you,' Akbar said. The whole city of Fatepur
Sikri served to show how devout he was, as well as displaying his
ability to create devotion in others. Now he had seen Bistami's
devotion, exhibited in all the forms of piety, and as they
continued their conversation, and the tomb began to fill with the
day's visitors, Bistami managed to lead the discussion to the one
hadith he knew that had come by way of Chishti to Iran, so that the
isnad, or genealogy of the phrase, made a short link between his
education and the Emperor's.
'I had it from Tutsami, who had it from the Shah Esmail,
teacher of Shaikh Chishti, who had it from Bahr ibn Kaniz
al Saqqa, that Uthman ibn Saj related to him, from Said ibn
Jubair, God's mercy on him, who said, "Let him give a general
greeting to all the Muslims, including the young boys and the
adolescents, and when he has arrived at class, let him restrain
whoever was sitting from standing up for him, since neglecting this
is one of the banes of the soul. -- Akbar frowned,
trying to follow it. It occurred to Bistami that it could be
interpreted as meaning that he had been the one who had refrained
from asking for any kind of obeisance from the other. He began to
sweat in the chill morning air.
Akbar turned to one of his retainers, standing
unobtrusively against the marble wall of the tomb. 'Bring
this man with us on our return to the palace.'
After another hour of prayer for Bistami, and
consultations for Akbar, who was relaxed but increasingly terse as
the morning wore on and the line of supplicants grew rather than
shrank before him, the Emperor bid the line to disperse and come
back again later. After that he led Bistami and his retinue through
the raw worksites of the city, to his palace.
The city was being built in the shape of a big square,
like any other Mughal military encampment -- indeed, in the form of
the empire itself, Bistami's guard told him, which was a
quadrilateral protected by the four cities of Lahore, Agra,
Allahabad and Ajimer. These were all big compared to the new
capital, and Bistami's guard was particularly fond of Agra, where
he had worked in the construction of the Emperor's great fort, now
finished. 'Inside it are more than five hundred buildings,' he said
as he must always have said when speaking of it. He was of the
opinion that Akbar had founded Fatepur Sikri because the fort of
Agra was mostly complete, and the Emperor liked beginning great
projects. 'He is a builder, that one, he will remake the world
itself before he is done, I assure you. Islam has never had such a
servant as him.'
'It must be so,' Bistami said, looking around at the
construction, white buildings rising out of cocoons of scaffolding,
set in seas of black mud. 'Praise be to God.'
The guard, whose name was Husain Ali, looked at Bistami
suspi ciously. Pious pilgrims were no doubt a commonplace. He
led Bistami after the Emperor and through the gate of the new
palace. Inside the outer wall were gardens that looked as if they
had been in place for years: big pine trees over jasmines, flower
beds in all directions. The palace itself was smaller than the
mosque, or the tomb of Chishti, but exquisite in every detail. A
white marble tent, broad and low, its interior filled by room after
cool room, all surrounding a fountain filled central courtyard
and garden. The whole wing at the back of the courtyard consisted
of a long gallery walled with paintings: hunting scenes, the skies
always turquoise; the dogs and deer and lions rendered to the life;
the skirted hunters carrying bow or flintlock. Opposite these
scenes were suites of white walled rooms, finished but empty.
Bistami was given one of these to stay in.
That night's meal was a feast, set sumptuously in a long
hall opening onto the central courtyard. As it proceeded, Bistami
understood that it was simply the ordinary evening meal in the
palace. He ate roast quail, cucumber yoghurts, shredded pork in
curry, and tastes of many dishes he didn't recognize.
That began a dreamlike period for him, in which he felt
like Manjushri in the tale, fallen upwards into the land of milk
and honey. Food dominated his days and his thoughts. One day he was
visited in his rooms by a team of black slaves dressed better than
he was, who quickly brought him up to their level of raiment and
beyond, outfitting him in a fine white gown that looked well but
hung heavily on him. After that he was given another audience with
the Emperor.
This meeting, surrounded by sharp eyed counsellors,
generals and imperial retainers of all kinds, felt very different
from the dawn meeting at the tomb, when two young men out to smell
the morning air and see the sunrise, and sing the glory of Allah's
world, had spoken to each other chest to chest. And yet in all
these trappings, it was the same face looking at him -- curious,
serious, interested in what he had to say. Focusing on that face
allowed Bistami to relax.
The Emperor said, 'We invite you to join us and share
your knowledge of the law. In return for your wisdom, and the
rendering of judg ments on certain cases and questions that
will be brought before you, you will be made zamindar of the late
Shah Muzaffar's estates, may Allah honour his name.'
'Praise be to God,' Bistami murmured, looking down. 'I
will ask God's help in fulfilling this great task to your
satisfaction.'
Even with his gaze steadfast to the ground, or returned
to the Emperor's face, Bistami could sense that some of the
imperial retinue were less than pleased by this decision. But
afterwards, some who had seemed least pleased came up to him and
introduced themselves, spoke kindly, led him around the palace,
probed in a most gentle way concerning his background and history,
and told him more about the estate he was to administer. This, it
appeared, would mostly be overseen by local assistants on site, and
was mainly his title and source of income. And in return he was to
outfit and provide one hundred soldiers to the Emperor's armies,
when required, and teach all he knew of the Quran, and judge
various civil disputes given to his charge.
'There are disputes that only the ulama are fit to
judge,' the Emperor's adviser Raja Todor Mai told him. 'The
Emperor has great responsibilities. The empire itself is not yet
secure from its enemies. Akbar's grandfather Babur came here from
the Punjab, and established a Muslim kingdom only forty years ago,
and the infidels still attack us from the south and the east. Every
year some campaigns are necessary to drive them back. All the
faithful in his empire are under his care, in theory, but the
burden of his responsibilities means in practice he simp y oesn't
have time.'
'Of course not.'
'Meanwhile, there is no other system of justice for
disputes among people. As the law is based on the Quran, the qadis,
the ulama and other holy men such as yourself are the logical
choice to take on this burden.'
'Of course.'
In the weeks following, Bistami did indeed find himself
sitting in judgment in disputes brought before him by some of the
Emperor's slave assistants. Two men claimed the same land; Bistami
asked where their fathers had lived, and their fathers' fathers,
and determined that one's family had lived in the region longer
than the other's. In ways like this he made his judgments.
More new clothes came from the tailors; a new house and
complete retinue of servants and slaves were provided; he was given
a trunk of gold and silver coins numbering one hundred thousand.
And for all this he merely had to consult the Quran and recall the
hadith he had learned (really very few, and even fewer relevant),
and render judgments that were usually obvious to all. When they
were not obvious, he made them as best he could and retired to the
mosque and prayed uneasily, then attended the Emperor and the
evening meal. He went on his own at dawn every day to the tomb of
Chishti, and so saw the Emperor again in the same informal
circumstances as their first meeting, perhaps once or twice a month
enough to keep the very busy Emperor aware of his existence.
He always had prepared the story he would relate to Akbar that day,
when asked what he had been doing; each story was chosen for what
it might teach the Emperor, about himself, or Bistami, or the
empire or the world. Surely a decent and thoughtful lesson was the
least he could do for the incredible bounty that Akbar had bestowed
on him.
One morning he told him the story from Sura Eighteen,
about the men who lived in a city that had forsaken God, and God
took them apart to a cave, and made them to sleep as it were a
single night, to them; and when they went out they found that three
hundred and nine years had passed. 'Thus with your work, mighty
Akbar, you shoot us into the future.'
Another morning he told him the story of El Khadir,
the reputed vizier of Dhoulkarnain, who was said to have drunk of
the fountain of life, by virtue of which he still lives, and will
live till the day of judgment; who appeared, clad in green robes,
to Muslims in distress, to help them. 'Thus your work here, great
Akbar, will continue deathless through the years to help Muslims in
distress.'
The Emperor appeared to appreciate these cool dewy
conversations. He invited Bistami to join him in several hunts, and
Bistami and his retinue occupied a big white tent, and spent the
hot days riding horses as they crashed through the jungle after the
howling dogs or beaters; or, more to Bistami's taste, sat on the
howdah of an elephant, and watched the great falcons leave Akbar's
wrist and soar high above, thence to dive in terrific stoops onto
hare or fowl. Akbar fixed his attention on you in just the same way
the falcons did.
Akbar loved his falcons, in fact, as kin, and always
spent the days of the hunt in excellent spirits. He would call
Bistami to his side to speak a blessing over the great birds, who
looked off to the horizon, unimpressed. Then they were cast into
the air, and flapped hard as they made their way quickly up to
their hunting height, splaying wide their big wing feathers. When
they were settled in their gyres overhead, a few doves were
released. These birds flew as fast as they could for cover in trees
or bush, but they were not usually fast enough to escape the attack
of the hawks. Their broken bodies were returned by the great
raptors to the feet of the Emperor's retainers, and then the
falcons flew back to Akbar's wrist, where they were greeted with a
stare as fixed as their own, and bits of raw mutton.
It was just such a happy day that was interrupted by bad
news from the south. A messenger arrived saying that Adharn Khan's
campaign against the Sultan of Malwa, Baz Bahadur, had succeeded,
but that the Khan's army had gone on to slaughter all of the
captured men, women and children of the town of Malwa, including
many Muslim theologians, and even some Sayyids, that is to say
direct descendants of the Prophet.
Akbar's fair complexion turned red all over his neck and
face, leaving only the mole on the left side of his face untouched,
like a white raisin embedded in his skin. 'No more,' he declared to
his falcon, and then he began to give orders, the bird thrown to
its falconer and the hunt forgotten. 'He thinks I am still under
age.'
He rode off hard, leaving all his retinue behind except
for Pir Muhammed Khan, his most trusted general. Bistami heard
later that Akbar had personally relieved Adharn Khan of his
command.
Bistami had the Chishti tomb to himself for a month. Then
he found the Emperor there one morning, with a dark look. Adharn
Khan had been replaced as vakil, the chief minister, by Zein. 'It
will enrage him but it must be done,' Akbar said. 'We will have to
put him under house arrest.'
Bistami nodded and continued to sweep the cool dry floor
of the inner chamber. The idea of Adharn Khan under permanent
guard, usually a prelude to execution, was disturbing to
contemplate. He had a lot of friends in Agra. He might be so bold
as to try to rebel. As the Emperor must very well know.
Indeed, two days later, when Bistami was standing at the
edge of Akbar's afternoon group at the palace, he was frightened
but not surprised to see Adharn Khan appear and stamp to the top of
the stairs, armed, bloody, shouting that he had killed Zein not an
hour before, in the man's own audience chamber, for usurping what
was rightfully his.
Hearing this Akbar went red faced again, and struck
the Khan hard on the side of the head with his drinking cup. He
grabbed the man by the front of his jacket, and pulled him across
the room. The slightest resistance from Adharn would have been
instant death from the Emperor's guards, who stood at each side of
them, swords at the ready; and so he allowed himself to be dragged
out to the balcony, where Akbar flung him over the railing into
space. Then Akbar, redder than ever, raced down the stairs, ran to
the half conscious Khan, seized him by the hair and dragged
him bodily up the stairs, armoured though he was, over the carpet
and out to the balcony, where he heaved him over the rail again.
Adhere Khan hit the patio below with a loose heavy thud.
Indeed he had been killed. The Emperor retired into his
private quarters in the palace.
The next morning Bistami swept the shrine of Chishti with a
tightness all through his body.
Akbar appeared, and Bistami's heart hammered in his
chest. Akbar seemed calm, though distracted. The tomb was a place
to give himself some serenity. But the vigorous brushing he gave
the floor that Bistami had already cleaned belied the calm of his
speech. He's the Emperor, Bistami thought suddenly, he can do what
he wants.
But then again, as a Muslim emperor, he was subservient
to God, and the sharia. All powerful and yet
all submissive, all at once. No wonder he seemed thoughtful to
the point of distraction, sweeping the shrine in the early morning.
It was hard to imagine him mad with anger, like a bull elephant in
must, throwing a man bodily to his death. There was within him a
deep well of rage.
Rebellion of ostensibly Muslim subjects struck deepest
into this well. A new rebellion in the Punjab was reported, an army
sent to put it down. The innocents of the region were spared, and
even those who had fought for the rebellion. But its leaders, some
forty of them, were brought to Agra and placed in a circle of war
elephants that had long blades like giant swords attached to their
tusks. The elephants were unleashed on the traitors, who screamed
as they were mowed down and trampled underfoot, their bodies then
tossed high in the air by the blood maddened elephants.
Bistami had not realized that elephants could be driven to such
blood lust. Akbar stood high on a throne howdah perched on the
biggest elephant of all, an elephant that stood still before the
spectacle, the two of them observing the carnage.
Some days later, when the Emperor came to the tomb at
dawn, it felt strange to sweep the shadowed courtyard of the tomb
with him. Bistami swept assiduously, trying not to meet Akbar's
gaze.
Finally he had to acknowledge the sovereign's presence.
Akbar was already staring at him.
'You seem troubled,' Akbar said.
'No, mighty Akbar -- not at all.'
'You don't approve of the execution of traitors to
Islam?'
'Not at all, yes, of course I do.'
Akbar stared at him in the same way one of his falcons
would have.
'But didn't Ibn Khaldun say that the caliph has to submit
to Allah in the same way as the humblest slave? Didn't he say that
the caliph has a duty to obey Muslim law? And doesn't Muslim
law forbid torture of prisoners? Isn't that Khaldun's point?'
'Khaldun was just a historian,' Bistami said.
Akbar laughed. 'And what about the hadith, that has it
from Abu Taiba by way of Murra Ibn Harridan by way of Sufyan
al Thawri, who had it related to him by Ali Ibn Abi Talaib,
that the Messenger of God, may God bless his name for ever, said,
"You shall not torture slaves?" What about the lines of the Quran
that command the ruler to imitate Allah and to show compassion and
mercy to prisoners? Did I not break the spirit of these
commandments, 0 wise sufi pilgrim?'
Bistami studied the flagstones of the courtyard. 'Perhaps
so, great Akbar. Only you know.'
Akbar regarded him. 'Leave the tomb of Chishti,' he
said.
Bistami hurried out of the gate.
The next time Bistami saw Akbar was at the palace, where
he had been commanded to appear; as it turned out, to explain why,
as the Emperor put it icily, 'your friends in Gujarat are rebelling
against me'?
Bistami said uneasily, 'I left Ahmadabad precisely
because there was so much strife. The mirzas were always having
trouble. The King Muzaffar Shah the Third was no longer in control.
You know all this. This is why you took Gujarat under your
protection.'
Akbar nodded, seeming to remember that campaign. 'But now
Husain Mirza has come back out of the Deccan, and many of the
nobles of Gujarat have joined him in rebellion. If word spreads
that I can be defied so easily, who knows what will follow?'
'Surely Gujarat must be retaken,' Bistami said
uncertainly; perhaps, as last time, this was exactly what Akbar did
not want to hear. What was expected of Bistami was not clear to
him; he was an official of the court, a qadi, but his advice before
had all been religious, or legal. Now, with a previous residence of
his in revolt, he was apparently on the spot; not where one wanted
to be when Akbar was angry.
'It may already be too late,' Akbar said. 'The coast is
two months away.'
'Must it be?' Bistami asked. 'I have made the trip by
myself in ten days. Perhaps if you took only your best hundreds, on
female camels, you could surprise the rebels.'
Akbar favoured him with his hawk look. He called for Raja
Todor Mal, and soon it was arranged as Bistami had suggested. A
cavalry of three thousand soldiers, led by Akbar, with Bistami
ordered along, covered the distance between Agra and Ahmadabad in
eleven dusty long days, and this cavalry, made strong and bold by
the swift march, shattered a ragtag horde of many thousands of
rebels, fifteen thousand by one general's count, most of them
killed in the battle.
Bistami spent that day on camelback, following the main
charges of the front, trying to stay within sight of Akbar, and
when that failed, helping wounded men into the shade. Even without
Akbar's great siege guns, the noise of the battle was shocking --
most of it created by the screaming of men and camels. Dust
blanketing the hot air smelled of blood.
Late in the afternoon, desperately thirsty, Bistami made
his way down to the river. Scores of wounded and dying were already
there, staining the river red. Even at the upstream edge of the
crowd it was impossible to drink a mouthful that did not taste of
blood.
Then Raja Todor Mal and a gang of soldiers arrived among
them, executing with swords the mirzas and Afghans who had led the
rebellion. One of the mirzas caught sight of Bistami and cried out
'Bistami, save me! Save me!'
The next moment he was headless, his body pouring its
blood onto the bankside from the open neck. Bistami turned away,
Raja Todor Mal staring after him.
Clearly Akbar heard of this later, for all during the
leisurely march back to Fatepur Sikri, despite the triumphant
nature of the procession, and Akbar's evident high spirits, he did
not call Bistami into his presence. This despite the fact that the
lightning assault on the rebels had been Bistami's idea. Or perhaps
this also was part of it. Raja Todor Mal and his cronies could not
be pleased by that.
It looked bad, and nothing in the great victory festival
on their return to Fatepur Sikri, only forty three days after
their departure, made Bistami feel any better. On the contrary, he
felt more and more apprehensive, as the days passed and Akbar did
not come to the tomb of Chishti.
Instead, one morning, three guards appeared there. They
had been assigned to guard Bistami at the tomb, also back at his
own compound. They informed him that he was not allowed to go
anywhere else but these two places. He was under house arrest.
This was the usual prelude to the interrogation and
execution of traitors. Bistami could see in his guards' eyes that
this time was no exception, and that they considered him a dead
man. It was hard for him to believe that Akbar had turned on him;
he struggled to understand it. Fear grew daily in him. The image
of the mirza's headless body, gushing blood, kept recurring to him,
and each time it did the blood in his own body would pound through
him as if testing the means of escape, eager for release in a
bursting red fountain.
He went to the Chishti tomb on one of these frightful
mornings, and decided not to leave it. He sent orders for one of
his retainers to bring him food every day at sundown, and after
eating outside the gate of the tomb, he slept on a mat in the
corner of the courtyard. He fasted through the days as if it were
Ramadan, and alternated days reciting from the Quran and from
Rumi's 'Mathnawi', and other Persian sufi texts. Some part of him
hoped and expected that one of the guards would speak Persian, so
that the words of the Mowlana, Rumi the great poet and voice of the
sufis, would be understood as they came pouring out of him.
'Here are the miracle signs you want,' he would say in a
loud voice, that you cry through the night and get up at dawn,
asking that in the absence of what you ask for, your day gets dark,
your neck thin as a spindle, that what you give away is all you
own, that you sacrifice belongings, sleep, health, your head, that
you often sit down in a fire like aloes wood, and often go out
to meet a blade like a battered helmet. When acts of helplessness
become habitual, those are the signs. You run back and forth
listening for unusual events, peering into the faces of travellers.
Why are you looking at me like a madman? I have lost a Friend.
Please forgive me. Searching like that does not fail. There will
come a rider who holds you close. You faint and gibber. The
uninitiated say, he's faking. How could they know? Water washes
over a beached fish.
'Blessed is that intelligence into whose heart's ear from
heaven the sound of "come hither" is coming. The defiled ear hears
not that sound -- only the deserving gets his desserts. Defile not
your eye with human cheek and mole, for that emperor of eternal
life is coming; and if it has become defiled, wash it with tears,
for the cure comes from those tears. A caravan of sugar has arrived
from Egypt; the sound of a footfall and bell is coming. Ha, be
silent, for to complete the ode our speaking King is coming.'
After many days of that, Bistami began to repeat the
Quran sura by sura, returning often to the first sura, the Opening
of the Book, the Fatiha, the Healer, which the guards would never
fail to recognize: 'Praise be to God, Lord of the worlds!
The compassionate, the merciful! King on the day of reckoning! Thee
only do we worship, and to Thee do we cry for help. Guide Thou us
on the straight path, the path of those to whom Thou has been
gracious; -- and with whom Thou are not angry, and who go not
astray.'
This great opening prayer, so appropriate to his
situation, Bistami repeated hundreds of times per day. Sometimes he
repeated only the prayer 'Sufficient for us is God and excellent
the Protector'; once he said it thirty three thousand times in
a row. Then he switched to 'Allah is merciful, submit to Allah,
Allah is merciful, submit to Allah', which he repeated until his
mouth was parched, his voice hoarse, and the muscles of his face
cramped with exhaustion.
All the while he swept the courtyard clear, and then all
the rooms of the shrine, one by one, and he filled the lamps and
trimmed the wicks, and swept some more, looking at the skies as
they changed through the days, and he said the same things over and
over, feeling the wind push through him, watching the leaves of the
trees surrounding the shrine pulse, each in its own transparent
light. Arabic is learning, but Persian is sugar. He tasted his food
at sundown as he had never tasted food before. Nevertheless it
became easy to fast, perhaps because it was winter and the days
were a bit shorter. Fear still stabbed him frequently, causing his
blood to surge in him at enormous pressure, and he prayed aloud in
every waking moment, no doubt driving his guards mad with the
droning of it.
Eventually the whole world contracted to the tomb, and he
began to forget the things that had happened before to him, or the
things that presumably were still happening in the world outside
the shrine grounds. He forgot them. His mind was becoming
clarified, indeed everything in the world seemed to be becoming
slightly transparent. He could see into leaves, and sometimes
through them, as if they were made of glass; and it was the same
with the white marble and alabaster of the tomb, which glowed as if
alive in the dusks; and with his own flesh. 'All save the face
of God doth perish. To Him shall we return.' These were the
words from the Quran embedded in the Mowlana's beautiful poem of
reincarnation,
'I died as mineral and became a plant, I died as plant
and rose as animal, I died as animal and I was Man. Why should I
fear? When was I less by dying? Yet once more I shall die as Man,
to soar With angels blessed; but even from angelhood I must pass
on: "All save the face of God doth perish." When I have sacrificed
my angelic soul, I shall become what no mind has ever conceived,
Oh, let me not exist! for non existence Proclaims in organ
tones: "To Him shall we return".'
He repeated this poem a thousand times, always whispering
the last part, for fear the guards would report to Akbar that he
was preparing himself for death.
Days passed; weeks passed. He grew hungrier, and
hypersensitive to all tastes and smells, then to the air and the
light. He could feel the nights that stayed hot and steamy as if
they were blankets swaddling him, and in the brief cool of dawn he
walked around sweeping and praying, looking at the sky over the
leafy trees growing lighter and lighter; and then one morning as
dawn grew, everything began to turn into light. '0 he, 0 he who is
He, 0 he who is naught but He!' Over and over he cried these words
out into the world of light, and even the words were shards of
light bursting out of his mouth. The tomb became a thing of pure
white light, glowing in the cool green light of the trees, the
trees of green light, and the fountain poured its water of light up
into the lit air, and the walls of the courtyard were bricks of
light, and everything was light, pulsing lightly. He could see
through the Earth, and back through time, over a Khyber Pass made
of slabs of yellow light, back to the time of his birth, in the
tenth day of Moharram, the day when the Imam Hosain, the only
living grandson of Mohammed, had died defending the faith, and he
saw that whether or not Akbar had him killed he would live on, for
he had lived before many times, and was not going to be done when
this life ended. 'Why should I be afraid?
When did I ever lose by dying?' He was a creature of light as
everything else was, and had once been a village girl, another time
a horseman on the steppes, another time the servant of the Twelfth
Imam, so that he knew how and why the Imam had disappeared, and
when he would return to save the world. Knowing that, there was no
reason to fear anything. 'Why should I be afraid? 0 he, 0 he who is
He, sufficient is God and excellent the Protector, Allah the
merciful, the beneficent!' Allah who had sent Mohammed on his isra,
his journey into light, just as Bistami was being sent now, towards
the ascension of miraj, when all would become a light utterly
transparent and invisible.
Understanding this, Bistami looked through the
transparent walls and trees and earth to Akbar, across the city in
his clear palace, robed in light like an angel, a man surely more
than half angel already, an angel spirit that he had known in
previous lives, and that he would know again in future lives, until
they all came to one place and Allah rang down the universe.
Except this Akbar of light turned his head, and looked
through the lit space between them, and Bistami saw then that his
eyes were black balls in his head, black as onyx; and he said to
Bistami, We have never met before; I am not the one you seek; the
one you seek is elsewhere.
Bistami reeled, fell back in the corner made by the two
walls.
When he came to himself, still in a colourful glassine
world, Akbar in the flesh stood there before him, sweeping the
courtyard with Bistami's broom.
'Master,' Bistami said, and began to weep. 'Mowlana.'
Akbar stopped over him, stared down at him.
Finally he put a hand to Bistami's head. 'You are a
servant of God,' he said.
'Yes, Mowlana.'
'"Now hath God been gracious to
us",' Akbar recited in Arabic. For whoso feareth
God and endureth, God verily will not suffer the reward of the
righteous to perish. --
This was from Sura Twelve, the story of Joseph and his
brothers. Bistami, encouraged, still seeing through the edges of
things, including Akbar and his luminous hand and face, a creature
of light pulsing through lives like days, recited verses from the
end of the next sura, 'Thunder':
Those who lived before them made plots; but
all plotting is controlled by God: He knoweth the works of every
one. --
Akbar nodded, looking to Chishti's tomb and thinking his
own thoughts.
No blame be on you this day",' he
muttered, speaking the words Joseph spoke as he forgave his
brothers. God will forgive you, for He is the most
merciful of those who show mercy."'
'Yes, mowlana. God gives us all things, God the merciful
and compassionate, he who is He. 0 he who is He, 0 he who is He, 0
he who is He . . .' With difficulty he stopped himself.
'Yes.' Akbar looked back down at him again. 'Now,
whatever may have happened in Gujarat, I don't wish to hear any
more of it. I don't believe you had anything to do with the
rebellion. Stop weeping. But Abul Fazl and Shaikh Abdul Nabi do
believe this, and they are among my chief advisers. In most matters
I trust them. I am loyal to them, as they are to me. So I can
ignore them in this, and instruct them to leave you alone, but even
if I do that, your life here will not be as comfortable as it was
before. You understand.'
'Yes, master.'
'So I am going to send you away 'No, master!'
'Be silent. I am going to send you on the haj.'
Bistami's mouth fell open. After all these days of
endless talking, his jaw hung from his face like a broken gate.
White light filled everything, and for a moment he swooned.
Then colours returned, and he began to hear again:
' you will ride to Surat and sail on my pilgrim ship, llahi,
across the Arabian Sea to Jiddah. The waqf has generated a good
donation to Mecca and Medina, and I have appointed Wazir as the mir
haj, and the party will include my aunt, Bulbadan Begam, and my
wife Salima. I would like to go myself, but Abul FazI insists that
I am needed here.'
Bistami nodded. 'You are indispensable, master.'
Akbar contemplated him. 'Unlike you.'
He removed his hand from Bistami's head. 'But the mir haj
can always use another cladi. And I wish to establish a permanent
Timurid school in Mecca. You can help with that.'
'But -- and not come back?'
'Not if you value this existence.'
Bistami stared down at the ground, feeling a chill.
' Come now,' the Emperor said. 'For such a devout scholar
as you, a life in Mecca should be pure joy.'
'Yes, master. Of course.' But his voice choked on the
words.
Akbar laughed. 'It's better than beheading, you must
admit! And who knows. Life is long. Perhaps you will come back one
day.'
They both knew it was not likely. Life was not long.
'Whatever God wills,' Bistami murmured, looking around.
This courtyard, this tomb, these trees, which he knew stone by
stone, branch by branch, leaf by leaf this life, which had
filled a hundred years in the last month -- it was over. All that
he knew so well would pass from him, including this beloved awesome
young man. Strange to think that each true life was only a few
years long that one passed through several in each bodily
span. He said, 'God is great. We will never meet again.'
Five. The Haj to Mecca
From the port of jiddah to Mecca, the pilgrims' camels
were continuous from horizon to horizon, looking as if they might
continue unbroken all the way across Arabia, or the world. The
rocky shallow valleys around Mecca were filled with encampments,
and the mutton greased smoke of cooking fires rose into the
clear skies at sunset. Cool nights, warm days, never a cloud in the
whitish blue sky, and thousands of pilgrims, enthusiastically
making the final rounds of the haj, everyone in the city
participating in the same ecstatic ritual, all dressed in white,
accented by the green turbans in the crowd, worn by the sayyids,
those who claimed direct descent from the Prophet: a big family, if
the turbans were to be believed, all reciting verses from the Quran
following the people in front of them, who followed those before
them, and those before them, in a line that extended back nine
centuries.
On the voyage to Arabia, Bistami had fasted more
seriously than ever in his life, even in the tomb of Chishti. Now
he flowed through the stone streets of Mecca light as a feather,
looking up at the palms dusting the sky with their gently waving
green fronds, feeling so airy in God's grace that it sometimes
seemed he looked down on the palm tops, or around the corners into
the Kaaba, and he would have to stare at his feet for a while to
regain his balance and his sense of self, though as he did so his
feet began to seem like distant creatures of their own, thrusting
forwards one after the other, time after time. 0 he, 0 he who is He
...
He had separated himself from the representatives of
Fatepur Sikri, as Akbar's family he found an unwelcome reminder of
his lost master.
With them it was always Akbar this and Akbar that, his wife
Salima (a second wife, not the Empress) plaintive in a
self satisfied way, his aunt egging her on -- no. Women were
on their own pilgrimage in any case, but the men in the Mughal
retinue were almost as bad. And Wazir the mir haj was an ally of
Abul Fazl, and therefore suspicious of Bistami, dismissive of him
to the point of contempt. There would be no place for Bistami in
the Mughal school, assuming that they established one at all,
rather than just disbursing some alms and city funds from an
embassy, which was how it looked as if it would come about. Either
way Bistami would not be welcome among them, that was clear.
But this was one of those blessed moments when the future
was no matter for concern, when both past and future were absent
from the world. That was what struck Bistami most, even at the
time, even in the act of floating along in the line of belief, one
of a million whiterobed hajjis pilgrims from all over Dar
al Islam, from the Maghrib to Mindanao, from Siberia to the
Seychelles: how they were all there together in this one moment,
the sky and the town under it all glowing with their presence, not
transparently as at Chishti's tomb, but full of colour, stuffed
with all the colours of the world. All the people of the world were
one.
This holiness radiated outwards from the Kaaba. Bistami
moved with the line of humanity into the holiest mosque, and passed
by the big smooth black stone, blacker than ebony or jet, black as
the night sky without stars, like a boulder--shaped hole in
reality. He felt his body and soul pulsing in the same rhythm as
the line, as the world. Touching the black stone was like touching
flesh. It seemed to revolve around him. The dream image of Akbar's
black eyes came to him and he shrugged them away, aware they were
distractions out of his own mind, aware of Allah's ban on images.
The stone was all and it was just a stone, black reality itself,
made solid by God. He kept his place in the line and felt the
spirits of the people ahead of him lifting as they passed out of
the square, as if they were climbing a stairway into heaven.
Dispersal; return to camp; the first sips of soup and
coffee at sundown; all occurred in a silent cool evening under the
evening star. Everyone at such peace. Washed clean inside. Looking
around at all the faces, Bistami thought, Oh why don't we live like
this all the time? What is important enough to take us away from
this moment? Firelit faces, starry night overhead, ripples
of song or soft laughter, peace, peace: no one seemed to want to
fall asleep, to end this moment and wake up the next day, back in
the sensible world.
Akbar's family and haj left in a caravan back to Jiddah
Bistami went to the outskirts of town to see them off; Akbar's wife
and aunt said goodbye to him, waving from camel back. The rest
were already intent on the long journey to Fatepur Sikri.
After that Bistami was alone in Mecca, a city of
strangers. Most were leaving now, in caravan after caravan. It was
a lugubrious, uncanny sight: hundreds of caravans, thousands of
people, happy but deflated, their white robes packed away or
revealed suddenly to be dusty, fringed at the foot with brown dirt.
So many were leaving that it seemed the city was being abandoned
before some approaching disaster, as perhaps had happened once or
twice, in time of war or famine or plague.
But a week or two later the ordinary Mecca was revealed,
a whitewashed dusty little town of a few thousand people. Many of
them were clerics or scholars or sufis or qadis or ulema, or
heterodox refugees of one sort or another, claiming the sanctuary
of the holy city. Most, however, were merchants and tradespeople.
In the aftermath of the haj they looked exhausted, drained, almost
stunned it seemed, and inclined to disappear into their
blank walled compounds, leaving the remaining outsiders in
town to fend for themselves for a month or two. For the remnant
ulema and scholars, it was as if they were camping out in the empty
heart of Islam, making it full by their own devotions, cooking over
fires on the edges of town at dusk, trading for food with passing
nomads. Many sang songs through most of the night.
The Persian speaking group was big, and congregated
nightly around fires of its khitta on the eastern edge of town,
where the canals came in from the hills. Thus they were the first
to experience the spate that burst onto the town after storms to
the north, which they heard but never saw. A wall of muddy black
water slammed down the canals and spread out through the streets,
rolling palm trunks and boulders like weapons into the upper half
of the town. Everything flooded after that, until even the Kaaba
itself stood in water up to the silver ring that held it in
place.
Bistami threw himself with great pleasure into the
efforts to drain the waters, and then to clean up the town. After
the experience of the light in Chishti's tomb, and the supreme
experience of the haj, there was little more he felt he could do in
the mystic realm. He lived now in the aftermath of those events,
and felt himself utterly changed; but what he wanted to do now was
to read Persian poetry for an hour in the brief cool of the
mornings, then work outside in the low hot winter sun in the
afternoons. With the town broken and waist deep in mud, there
was a lot of work to be done. Pray, read, work, eat, pray, sleep;
this was the pattern of a good day. Day after day passed in this
satisfying round.
Then as the winter wore on, he began to study at a sufi
madressa established by scholars from the Maghrib, that western end
of the world that was becoming more powerful, extending as it was
both north into al Andalus and Firanja, and south into the
Sahel. Bistami and the others there read and discussed not just
Rumi and Shams, but also the philosophers Ibn Sina and Ibn Rashd,
and the ancient Greek Aristotle, and the historian Ibn Khaldun. The
Maghribis in the madressa were not as interested in contesting
points of doctrine as they were in exchanging new information about
the world; they were full of stories of the reoccupation of
al Andalus and Firanja, and tales of the lost Frankish
civilization. They were friendly to Bistami; they had no opinion of
him one way or another; they thought of him as Persian, and so it
was much more pleasant to be among them than with the Mughalis in
the Timurid embassy, where he was regarded uneasily at best.
Bistami saw that if his being stationed in Mecca was punishment in
the form of exile from Akbar and Sind, then the other Mughalis
assigned here had to wonder if they too were in disfavour, rather
than honoured for their religious devotion. Seeing Bistami reminded
them of this possibility, and so he was shunned like a leper. He
therefore spent more and more of his time at the Maghribi madressa,
and out in the Persian--speaking khitta, now set a bit higher in
the hills above the canals east of town.
The year in Mecca always oriented itself in time to the
haj, in just the same way that Islam oriented itself in space to
Mecca. As the months passed, all began to make their preparations,
and as Ramadan approached, nothing else in the world mattered but
the upcoming haj. Much of the effort involved simply feeding the
masses that would descend on the town. A whole system had developed
to accomplish this miraculous feat, astonishing in its size and
efficiency, here on this out of the way
corner of a nearly lifeless desert peninsula. Though of course Aden
and Yemen were rich, to the south below them. No doubt, Bistami
thought as he walked by the pastures now filling up with sheep and
goats, mulling over his readings in Ibn Khaldun, the system had
grown with the growth of the haj itself. Which must have been
rapid: Islam had exploded out of Arabia in the first century after
the hegira, he was coming to understand. Al Andalus had been
Islamicized by the year 100, the far reaches of the Spice Islands
by the year 200; the whole span of the known world had been
converted, only two centuries after the Prophet had received the
Word and spread it to the people of this little land in the middle.
Ever since then people had been coming here in greater and greater
numbers.
One day he and a few other young scholars went to Medina,
walking all the way, reciting prayers as they went, to see
Mohammed's first mosque again. Past endless pens of sheep and
goats, past cheese dairies, granaries, date palm groves, then into
the outskirts of Medina, a sleepy, sandy, dilapidated little
settlement when the haj was not there to bring it alive. In one
stand of thick ancient palms, the little whitewashed mosque hid in
the shade, as polished as a pearl. Here the Prophet had preached
during his exile, and taken down most of the verses of the Quran
from Allah.
Bistami wandered the garden outside this holy place,
trying to imagine how it had happened. Reading Khaldun had made him
understand: these things had all happened. In the beginning, the
Prophet had stood in this grove, speaking in the open air. Later he
had leaned against a palm tree when he spoke, and some of his
followers had suggested a chair. He had agreed to it only as long
as it was low enough that there was no suggestion he was claiming
any sort of privilege for himself. The Prophet, perfect man that he
had been, was modest. He had agreed to the construction of a mosque
where he taught, but for many years it had gone roofless; Mohammed
had declared there was more important business for the faithful to
accomplish first. And then they had made their return to Mecca, and
the Prophet had led twenty six military campaigns himself: the
jihad. After that, how quickly the word had spread. Khaldun
attributed this rapidity to a readiness in people for the next
stage in civilization, and to the manifest truth of the Quran
Bistami, troubled by something he could not pin down,
wondered about this explanation. In India, civilizations had come
and gone, come and gone. Islam itself had conquered India. But
under the Mughals the ancient beliefs of the Indians endured, and
Islam itself changed in its constant contact with them. This had
become clearer to Bistami as he studied the pure religion in the
madressa. Although sufism itself was perhaps more than a simple
return to the pure source. An advance, or (could one say M) a
clarification, even an improvement. An effort to bypass the ulemas.
In any case, change. It did not seem that it could be prevented.
Everything changed. As the sufi junnaiyd at the madressa said, the
word of God came down to man as rain to soil, and the result was
mud, not clear water. After the winter's great flood, this image
was particularly vivid and troubling. Islam, spreading over the
world like a spate of mud, a mix of God and man; it did not seem
very much like what had happened to him in the tomb of Chishti, or
at the moment of the haj, when it seemed the Kaaba had revolved
around him. But even his memory of those events was changing.
Everything changed in this world.
Including Medina and Mecca, which grew in population
rapidly as the haj approached, and shepherds poured into town with
their flocks, tradesmen with their wares -- clothing, travelling
equipment to replace things broken or lost, religious scripts,
mementos of the haj, and so on. In the final month of preparation
the early pilgrims began to arrive, long strings of camels carrying
dusty, happy travellers, their faces alight with the feeling
Bistami remembered from the year before, a year which seemed to
have gone so fast and yet his own haj at the same time
seemed as if it were on the far side of a great abyss in his mind.
He could not call up in himself the feeling that he saw on their
faces. He was no pilgrim this time, but a resident, and he found
himself feeling some of the residents' resentment, that his
peaceful village, like a big madressa really, was swelling to a
ridiculous engorgement, as if a great family of enthusiastic
relatives had descended on them all at once. Not a happy way of
thinking of it, and Bistami set himself guiltily to a full round of
prayers, fasting, and aid of the influx, especially those exhausted
or sick: leading them to khittas and finas and caravanserai and
hostelries, throwing himself into a routine to make himself feel he
was more in the spirit of the haj. But daily exposure to the
ecstatic faces of the pilgrims reminded him how far he was from
that. Their faces were alight with God. He saw how clearly
faces revealed the soul, they were like windows into a deeper
world.
So he hoped that his pleasure at greeting the pilgrims
from Akbar's court was obvious on his face. But Akbar himself had
not come, nor any of his immediate family, and no one in the group
looked at all happy to be there, or to see Bistami. The news from
home was ominous. Akbar had become critical of his ulema. He
received Hindu rajas, and listened sympathetically to their
concerns. He had even begun openly to worship the sun, prostrating
himself four times a day before a sacred fire, abstaining from
meat, alcohol and sexual intercourse. These were Hindu practices,
and indeed on every Sunday he was initiating twelve of his amirs in
his service. The neophytes placed their heads directly on Akbar's
feet during this ceremony, an extreme form of prostration known as
sijdah, a form of submission to another human being that was
blasphemous to Muslims. And he had not been willing to fund much of
a pilgrimage; indeed, he had had to be convinced to send any at
all. He had sent Shaikh Abdul Nabi and Malauna Abdulla as a way of
exiling them, just as he had Bistami the year before. In short, he
appeared to be falling away from the faith. Akbar, falling away
from Islam!
And, Abdul Nabi told Bistami bluntly, many at the court
blamed him, Bistami, for this change in Akbar. It was a matter of
convenience only, Abdul Nabi assured him. 'Blaming someone who is
far away is safest for all, you see. But now they have it that you
were sent to Mecca with the idea of reforming you. You were
babbling about the light, the light, and you were sent away, and
now Akbar is worshipping the sun like a Zoroastrian or some pagan
from the ancient times.'
'So I can't return,' Bistami said.
Abdul Nabi shook his head. 'Not only that, but I judge
that it isn't even safe for you to stay here. If you do, the ulema
may accuse you of heresy, and come and take you back for judgment.
Or even judge you here.'
'You're saying I should leave here?'
Abdul Nabi nodded, slowly and deeply. 'Surely there are
more interesting places for you than Mecca. A qadi like you can
find good work to do, anywhere the ruler is a Muslim. Nothing will
happen during the haj, of course. But when it's over .
Bistami nodded and thanked the shaikh for his honesty.
He realized that he wanted to leave anyway. He didn't
want to stay in Mecca. He wanted to go back to Akbar, and the
timeless hours in Chishti's tomb, and live in that space for ever;
but if that was not possible, he would have to begin his tariqat
again, and wander in search of his real life. He recalled what had
happened to Shams when the disciples of Rumi got tired of Rumi's
infatuation with his friend. Shams had disappeared, never to be
seen again, some said tied to rocks and thrown in a river. If
people in Fatepur Sikri thought that Akbar had found his Shams in
Bistami -- which struck Bistami as backwards -- but they had spent
a lot of time together, more than seemed explicable; and no one
else knew what had gone on between them in those meetings, how much
it had been a matter of Akbar teaching the teacher. It is always
the teacher who must learn the most, Bistami thought, or else
nothing real has happened in the exchange.
The rest of that haj was strange. The crowds seemed huge,
inhuman, possessed, a pestilence consuming hundreds of sheep a day,
and all the ulema like shepherds, organizing this cannibalism. Of
course one could not speak of these things, but only repeat some of
the phrases that had burned their way into his soul so deeply, 0 he
who is He, 0 he who is He, Allah the Merciful the Compassionate.
Why should I be afraid? God sets all in action. No doubt he was
supposed to continue his tariclat until he found something more.
After the haj one was supposed to move on.
The Maghribi scholars were the friendliest he knew, they
exhibited the sufi hospitality at its finest, as well as a keen
curiosity about the world. He could go back up to Isfahan, of
course, but something drew him westwards. Clarified as he had been
in the realm of light, he did not care to go back to the richness
of the Iranian gardens. In the Quran the word for Paradise, and all
of Mohammed's words for describing Paradise, came out of Persian
words; while the word for Hell, in the very same suras, came from
Hebrew, a desert language. That was a sign. Bistami did not want
Paradise. He wanted something he could not define, a human
challenge of some indefinable kind. Say the human was a mix of
material and divine, and that the divine soul lived on; there must
then be some purpose to this travel through the days, some movement
up towards higher realms of being, so that the Khaldunian model of
cycling dynasties, moving endlessly from youthful vigour to
lethargic bloated old age, had to be altered by the addition of
reason to human affairs. Thus the notion of the cycle being in fact
a rising gyre, in which the possibility of the next young dynasty
beginning at a higher level than the last time around was
acknowledged and made a goal. This is what he wanted to teach, this
is what he wanted to learn. Westwards, following the sun, he would
find it, and all would be well.
Six. Al Andalus
Everywhere he went seemed the new centre of the world. When he
was young, Isfahan had seemed the capital of everywhere; then
Gujarat, then Agra and Fatepur Sikri; then Mecca and the black
stone of Abraham, the true heart of all. Now Cairo appeared to him
the ultimate metropolis, impossibly ancient, dusty and huge. The
Marnlukes walked through the crowded streets with their retinues in
train, powerful men wearing feathered helmets, confident in their
mastery of Cairo, Egypt and most of the Levant. When Bistami saw
them he usually followed for a while, as did many others, and he
found himself both reminded of Akbar's pomp, and struck by how
different the Marnlukes were, how they formed a jati that was
brought into being anew with each generation. Nothing could be less
imperial; there was no dynasty; and yet their control over the
populace was even stronger than a dynasty's. It could be that
everything Khaldun had said about dynastic cycling was rendered
irrelevant by this new system of governance, which had not existed
in his time. Things changed, so that even the greatest historian of
all could not speak the last word.
Thus the days in the great old city were exciting. But
the Maghribi scholars were anxious to begin their long journey
home, and so Bistami helped them prepare their caravan, and when
they were ready, he joined them continuing westwards on the road to
Fez.
This part of the tariqat led them first north, to
Alexandria ' They led their camels to a caravanserai and went down
to have a look at the historic harbour, with its long
curving dock against the pale water of the Mediterranean. Looking
at it Bistami was struck by the feeling one sometimes gets, that he
had seen this place before. He waited for the sensation to pass,
and followed the others on.
As the caravan moved through the Libyan desert, the talk
at night around the fires was of the Marnlukes, and of Suleiman the
Magnificent, the Ottoman Emperor who had recently died. Among his
conquests had been the very coast they were now skirting, though
there was no way to tell that, except for an extra measure of
respect given to Ottoman officials in the towns and caravanserai
they passed through. These people never bothered them, or put a
tariff on their passing. Bistami saw that the world of the sufis
was, among many other things, a refuge from worldly power. In each
region of the earth there were sultans and emperors, Suleimans and
Akbars and Marnlukes, all ostensibly Muslim, and yet worldly,
powerful, capricious, dangerous. Most of these were in the
Khaldunian state of late dynastic corruption. Then there were the
sufis. Bistami watched his fellow scholars around the fire in the
evenings, intent on a point of doctrine, or the questionable isnad
of a hadith, and what that meant, arguing with exaggerated
punctilio and little debater's jokes and flourishes, while a pot of
thick hot coffee was poured with solemn attention into little
glazed clay cups, all eyes gleaming with firelight and pleasure in
the argument; and he thought, these are the Muslims who make Islam
good. These are the men who have conquered the world, not the
warriors. The armies could have done nothing without the word.
Worldly but not powerful, devout but not pedantic (most of them,
anyway); men interested in a direct relation to God, without any
human authority's intervention; a relation to God, and a fellowship
among men.
One night the talk turned to al Andalus, and Bistami
listened with an extra measure of interest.
'It must be strange to re enter an empty land like
that.'
Fishermen have been living on the coast for a long time
now, and zott scavengers. The Zott and Armenians have moved inland
as well.'
'Dangerous, I should think. The plague might return.'
'No one appears to be affected.'
'Khaldun says that the plague is an effect of
overpopulation,' said Ibn Ezra, the chief scholar of Khaldun among
them. 'In his chapter on dynasties in "The Muqaddimah",
forty ninth section, he says that plagues result from
corruption of the air caused by overpopulation, and the
putrefaction and evil moistures that result from so many people
living close together. The lungs are affected, and so disease is
conveyed. He makes the ironic point that these things result from
the early success of a dynasty, so that good government, kindness,
safety, and light taxation lead to growth and thence to pestilence.
He says, 'Therefore, science has made it clear that it is necessary
to have empty spaces and waste regions interspersed between urban
areas. This makes circulation of the air possible, and removes the
corruption and putrefaction affecting the air after contact with
living beings, and brings healthy air." If he is right, well --
Firanja has been empty for a long time, and can be expected to be
healthy again. No danger of plague should exist, until the time
comes when the region is heavily populated once again. But that
will be a long time from now.'
'It was God's judgment,' one of the other scholars said.
'The Christians were exterminated by Allah for their persecution of
Muslims, and Jews too.'
'But al Andalus was still Muslim at the time of the
plague,' Ibn Ezra pointed out. 'Granada was still Muslim, the whole
south of Iberia was Muslim. And they too died. As did the Muslims
in the Balkans, or so says al Gazzabi in his history of the
Greeks. It was a matter of location, it seems. Firanja was
stricken, perhaps from overpopulation as Khaldun says, perhaps from
its many moist valleys, that held the bad air. No one can say.'
'It was Christianity that died. They were people of the
Book, but they persecuted Islam. They made war on Islam for
centuries, and tortured every Muslim prisoner to death. Allah put
an end to them.'
'But al Andalus died too,' Ibn Ezra repeated. 'And
there were Christians in the Maghrib and in Ethiopia that survived,
and in Armenia. There are still little pockets of Christians in
these places, living in the mountains.' He shook his head. 'I don't
think we know what happened. Allah judges.'
'That's what I'm saying.'
'So al Andalus is reinhabited,' Bistami said.
'Yes.'
'And, sufis are there?'
'Of course. Sufis are everywhere. In al Andalus they lead
the way, I have heard. They go north into still empty land, in
Allah's name, exploring and exorcising the past. Proving the way is
safe. Al Andalus was a great garden in its time. Good land,
and empty.'
Bistami looked in the bottom of his clay cup, feeling the
sparks in him of those two words struck together. Good and empty,
empty and good. This was how he had felt in Mecca.
Bistami felt that he was now cast loose, a wandering sufi
dervish, homeless and searching. On his tariqat. He kept himself as
clean as the dusty, sandy Maghrib would allow, remembering the
words of Mohammed concerning holy behaviour: one came to prosper
after washing hands and face, and eating no garlic. He fasted
often, and found himself growing light in the air, his vision
altering each day, from the glassy clarity of dawn, to the blurred
yellow haze of midday, to the semi--transparency of sunset, when
glories of gold and bronze haloed every tree and rock and skyline.
The towns of the Maghrib were small and handsome, often set out on
hillsides, and planted with palms and exotic trees that made each
town and rooftop a garden. Houses were square whitewashed blocks in
nests of palm, with rooftop patios and interior courtyard gardens,
cool and green and watered by fountains. Towns had been set where
water leaked out of the hillsides, and the biggest town turned out
to have the biggest springs: Fez, the end of their caravan.
Bistami stayed at the sufi lodge in Fez, and then he and
Ibn Ezra travelled by camel north to Ceuta, and paid for a crossing
by ship to Malaga. The ships here were rounder than in the Persian
Sea, with pronounced high ended keels, smaller sails, and
rudders under their centreposts. The crossing of the narrow strait
at the west end of the Mediterranean was rough, but they could see
al Andalus from the moment they left Ceuta, and the strong
current pouring into the Mediterranean, combined with a westerly
gale, bounced them over the waves at a great rate.
The coast of al Andalus proved cliffy, and above one
indentation towered a huge rock mountain. Beyond it the coast
curved to the north, and they took the offshore breezes in their
little sails and heeled in towards Malaga. Inland they could see a
distant white mountain range.
Bistami, exalted by the dramatic sea crossing, was reminded of
the view of the Zagros Mountains from Isfahan, and suddenly his
heart ached for a home he had almost forgotten. But here and now,
bouncing on the wild ocean of this new life, he was about to set
foot on a new land.
Al Andalus was a garden everywhere, green trees
foresting the slopes of the hills, snowy mountains to the north,
and on the coastal plains great sweeps of grain, and groves of
round green trees bearing round orange fruit, lovely to taste. The
sky dawned blue every day, and as the sun crossed the sky it was
warm in the sun, cool in the shade.
Malaga was a fine little city, with a rough stone fort
and a big ancient mosque filling the city centre. Wide
tree shaded streets rayed away from the mosque, which was
being refurbished, up to the hills, and from their slopes one
looked out at the blue Mediterranean, sheeting off to the Maghrib's
dry bony mountains, over the water to the south.
Al Andalus!
Bistami and Ibn Ezra found a little lodge like the
Persian ribats, in a kind of village at the edge of the town,
between fields and orange groves. Sufis grew the oranges, and
cultivated grapevines. Bistami went out in the mornings to help
them work. Most of their time was spent in the wheat field
stretching off to the west. The oranges were easy: 'We trim the
trees to keep the fruit off the ground,' a ribat worker named Zeya
told Bistami and Ibn Ezra one morning, 'as you see. I've been
trying various degrees of thinning, to see what the fruit does, but
the trees left alone develop a shape like an olive, and if you keep
branches off the ground at the bottom, then the fruit can't pick up
any groundbased rots. They are fairly susceptible to diseases, I
must say. The fruit gets green or black moulds, the leaves go
brittle or white or brown. The bark crusts over with orange or
white fungi. Lady bugs help, and smoking with smudge pots,
which is what we do to save the trees during frosts.'
'It gets that cold here?'
'Sometimes, in the late winter, yes. It's not paradise
here you know.'
'I was thinking it was.'
The call of the muezzin came from the house, and they
pulled out their prayer mats and knelt to the southeast, a
direction Bistami had still not got used to. Afterwards Zeya led
them to a stone stove holding a fire, and brewed them a cup of
coffee.
'It does not seem like new land,' Bistami noted, sipping
blissfully.
'It was Muslim land for many centuries. The Umayyads
ruled here from the second century until the Christians took the
region, and the plague killed them.'
'People of the Book,' Bistami murmured.
'Yes, but corrupt. Cruel taskmasters to free men or
slave. And always fighting among themselves. It was chaos
then.'
'As in Arabia before the Prophet.'
'Yes, exactly the same, even thought the Christians had
the idea of one God. They were strange that way, contentious. They
even tried to split God himself in three. So Islam prevailed. But
then after a few centuries, life here was so easy that even Muslims
grew corrupt. The Umayyads; were defeated, and no strong dynasty
replaced them. The taifa states numbered more than thirty, and they
fought constantly. Then the Almoravids invaded from Africa, in the
fifth century, and in the sixth century the Almohads from Morocco
ousted the Almoravids, and made Sevilla their capital. The
Christians meanwhile had continued to fight in the north, in
Catalonia and over the mountains in Navarre and Firanja, and they
came back and retook most of al Andalus. But never the
southernmost part, the Nasrid kingdom, including Malaga and
Granada. These lands remained Islam to the very end.'
'And yet they too died,' Bistami said.
'Yes. Everyone died.'
'I don't understand that. They say Allah punished the
infidels for their persecution of Islam, but if that were true, why
would He kill the Muslims here as well?'
Ibn Ezra shook his head decisively. 'Allah did not kill
the Christians. People are wrong about that.'
Bistami said, 'But even if He didn't, He allowed it to
happen. He didn't protect them. And yet Allah is all powerful.
I don't understand that.'
Ibn Ezra shrugged. 'Well, this is another manifestation
of the problem of death and evil in the world. This world is not
Paradise, and Allah, when he created us, gave us free will. This
world is ours to prove ourselves devout or corrupt. This is very
clear, because even more than Allah is powerful, He is good. He
cannot create evil. And yet evil exists in the world. So clearly we
create that ourselves. Therefore our destinies cannot have been
fixed or predetermined by Allah. We must work them out for
ourselves. And sometimes we create evil, out of fear, or greed, or
laziness. That's our fault.'
'But the plague,' Zeya said.
'That wasn't us or Allah. Look, all living things cat
each other, and often the smaller eats the larger. The dynasty ends
and the little warriors cat it up. This fungus, for instance,
eating this fallen orange. The fungus is like a field of a million
small mushrooms. I can show you in a magni fying glass I
have. And see the orange it's a blood orange, see, dark red
inside. You people must have bred them for that, right?'
Zeya nodded.
'You get hybrids, like mules. Then with plants you can do
it again, and again, until you've bred a new orange. That's just
how Allah made us. The two parents mix their stock in the
offspring. All traits are mixed, I suspect, though only some show.
Some are carried unseen to a later generation. Anyway, say some
mould like this, in their bread, or even living in their water,
bred with another mould, and made some new creature that was
poison. It spread, and being stronger than its parents, supplanted
them. And so the people died. Maybe it drifted through the air like
pollen in spring, maybe it lived inside the people it poisoned for
weeks before it killed them, and passed on their breath, or at the
touch. And then it was such a poison that in the end it killed off
all its food, in effect, and then died out itself, for lack of
sustenance.'
Bistami stared at the segments of blood red orange
still in his hand, feeling faintly sick. The red fleshed
segments were like wedges of bright death.
Zeya laughed at him. 'Come now, eat up! We can't live
like angels! All that happened over a hundred years ago, and people
have been coming back and living here without any problems for a
long time. Now we are as free from the plague as any other country.
I've lived here all my life. So finish your orange.'
Bistami did so, thinking it over. 'So it was all an
accident.'
'Yes,' Ibn Ezra said. 'I think so.'
'It doesn't seem like Allah should allow it.'
'All living things are free in this world. Besides, it
could be that it was not entirely accident. The Quran teaches us to
live cleanly, and it could be that the Christians ignored the laws
at their peril. They ate pigs, they kept dogs, they drank wine
'
'We here don't believe that wine was the problem,' Zeya
said with another laugh.'
Ibn Ezra smiled. 'But if they lived in their sewage,
among the tanneries and shambles, and ate pork and touched dogs,
and killed each other like the barbarians of the cast, and tortured
each other, and had their way with boys, and left the dead bodies
of their enemies hanging at the gates -- and they did all these
things then perhaps they made their own plague, do you see
what I mean? They created the conditions that killed them.'
'But were they so different than anyone else?' Bistami
asked, thinking of the crowds and filth in Cairo, or Agra.
Ibn Ezra shrugged. 'They were cruel.'
'More cruel than Temur the Lame?'
'I don't know.'
'Did they conquer cities and put every person to the
sword?'
'I don't know.'
'The Mongols did that, and they became Muslim. Temur was
a Muslim.'
'So they changed their ways. I don't know. But the
Christians were torturers. Maybe it mattered, maybe it didn't. All
living things are free. Anyway they're gone now, and we're
here.'
'And healthy, by and large,' said Zeya. 'Of course
sometimes a child catches a fever and dies. And everyone dies
eventually. But it's a sweet life here, while it lasts.'
When the orange and grape harvests were over, the days
grew short. Bistami had not felt such a chill in the air since his
years in Isfahan. And yet in this very season, during the coldest
nights, the orange trees blossomed, near the shortest day of the
year: little white flowers all over the green round trees, fragrant
with a smell reminiscent of their taste but heavier, and very
sweet, almost cloying.
Through this giddy air came a cavalry, leading a long
caravan of camels and mules, and then, in the evening, slaves on
foot.
This was the Sultan of Carmona, near Sevilla, someone
said; one Mawji Darya, and his travelling party. The Sultan was the
youngest son of the new caliph, and had suffered a disagreement
with his elder brothers in Sevilla and al Majriti, and had
therefore decamped with his retainers with the intent of moving
north across the Pyrenees, and establishing a new city. His father
and elder brothers ruled in Cordoba, Sevilla and Toledo, and he
planned to lead his group out of al Andalus, up the
Mediterranean coast on the old road to Valencia, then inland to
Saragossa, where there was a bridge, he said, over the River
Ebro.
At the outset of this 'hegira of the heart', as the
Sultan called it, a dozen or more like minded nobles and their
people had joined him. And it became clear as the motley crowd
filed into the ribat yard, that along with the young Sevillan
nobles' families, retainers, friends and dependants, they had been
joined by many more followers from the villages and farms that had
sprung up in the countryside between Sevilla and Malaga. Sufi
dervishes, Armenian traders, Turks, Jews, Zott, Berbers, all were
represented; it was like a trade caravan, or some dream haj in
which all the wrong people were on their way to Mecca, all the
people who would never become hajjis Here there were a pair of
dwarves on ponies, behind them a group of one handed and
handless ex criminals, then some musicians, then two men
dressed as women; this caravan had them all.
The Sultan spread a broad hand. 'They are calling us the
Caravan of Fools, like the Ship of Fools. We will sail over the
mountains to a land of grace, and be fools for God. God will guide
us.'
From among them appeared his sultana, riding a horse. She
dismounted from it without regard for the big servant there to help
her down, and joined the Sultan as he was greeted by the Zeya and
the other members of the ribat. 'My wife, the Sultana Katima,
originally from al Majriti.'
The Castilian woman was bare headed, short and
slender armed, her riding skirts fringed with gold that swung
through the dust, ber long black hair swept back in a glossy curve
from her forehead, held by a string of pearls. Her face was slender
and her eyes a pale blue, making her gaze odd. She smiled at
Bistami when they were introduced, and later smiled at the farm,
and the water wheels, and the orange groves. Small things amused
her that no one else saw. The men there began to do what they could
to accommodate the Sultan and stay by his side, so that they could
remain in her presence. Bistami did it himself. She looked at him
and said something inconsequential, her voice like a Turkish oboe,
nasal and low, and hearing it he remembered what the vision
of Akbar had said to him during his immersion in the light: the one
you seek is elsewhere.
Ibn Ezra bowed low when he was introduced. 'I am a sufi
pilgrim, Sultana, and a humble student of the world. I intend to
make the haj, but I like the idea of your hegira very much; I would
like to see Firanja for myself. I study the ancient ruins.'
'Of the Christians?' the Sultana asked, fixing him with
her look.
'Yes, but also of the Romans, who came before them, in
the time before the Prophet. Perhaps I can make my haj the wrong
way around.'
'All are welcome who have the spirit to join us,' she
said.
Bistami cleared his throat, and Ibn Ezra smoothly brought
him forward. 'This is my young friend Bistami, a sufi scholar from
Sind, who has been on the haj and is now continuing his studies in
the west.'
Sultana Katima looked at him closely for the first time,
and stopped short, visibly startled. Her thick black eyebrows
knitted together in concentration over her pale eyes, and suddenly
Bistami saw that it was the birdwing mark that had crossed the
forehead of his tiger, the mark that had always made the tigress
look faintly surprised or perplexed, as it did with this woman.
' I am happy to meet you, Bistami. We always look forward
to learning from scholars of the Quran.'
Later that same day she sent a slave asking him to join
her for a private audience, in the garden designated hers for the
duration of her stay. Bistami went, plucking helplessly at his
robe, grubby beyond all aid.
It was sunset. Clouds shone in the western sky between
the black silhouettes of cypresses. Lemon blossoms lent the air
their fragrance, and seeing her standing alone by a gurgling
fountain, Bistami felt as if he had entered a place he had been
before; but everything here was turned around. Different in
particulars, but more than anything, strangely, terribly familiar,
like the feeling that had come over him briefly in Alexandria. She
was not like Akbar, nor even the tigress, not really. But this had
happened before. He became aware of his breathing.
She saw him standing under the arabesqued arches of the
entryway, and beckoned him to her. She smiled at him. People said
she had suffered a serious illness some years before, and that when
she had recovered, she had seemed different.
'I hope you do not mind me not wearing the veil. I will never do
so. The Quran says nothing about the veil, except for an injunction
to veil the bosom, which is obvious. As for the face, Mohammed's
wife Khadijeh never wore the veil, nor did the other wives of the
Prophet after Khadijeh died. While she lived he was faithful to her
alone, you know. If she had not died he never would have married
any other woman, he says so himself. So if she didn't wear the
veil, I feel no need to. The veil began when the caliphs in Baghdad
wore them, to separate themselves from the masses, and from any
khajirites who might be among them. It was a sign of power in
danger, a sign of fear. Certainly women are dangerous to men, but
not so much so that they need hide their faces. Indeed when you see
faces you understand better that we are all the same before God. No
veils between us and God, this is what each Muslim has gained by
his submission, don't you agree?'
'I do,' Bistami said, still shocked by the sense of
alreadyness that had overcome him. Even the shapes of the clouds in
the west were familiar at this moment.
'And I don't believe there is any sanction given in the
Quran for the husband to beat his wife, do you? The only possible
suggestion of such a thing is Sura 4:34, "As to those women on
whose part you fear disloyalty and ill conduct, admonish them,
next refuse to share their beds", how horrible that would be, "last
beat them lightly". Daraba, not darraba, which is really the word
"to beat" after all. Daraba is nudge, or even stroke with a
feather, as in the poem, or even to provoke while lovemaking, you
know, daraba, daraba. Mohammed made it very clear.'
Shocked, Bistami managed to nod. He could feel that there
was an astonished look on his face.
She saw it and smiled. 'This is what the Quran tells me,'
she said. 'Sura 2:223 says that "your wives are as your farm to
you, so treat her as you would your farm". The ulema have quoted
this as if it meant you could treat women like the dirt under your
feet, but these clerics, who stand as unneeded intercessors between
us and God, are never farmers, and farmers read the Quran right,
and see their wives are their food, their drink, their work, the
bed they lie on at night, the very ground under their feet! Yes, of
course you treat your wife as the ground under your feet! Give
thanks to God for giving us the sacred Quran and all its
wisdom.'
'Thanks to God,' Bistami said.
She looked at him and laughed out loud. 'You think I am
forward.'
'Not at all.'
'Oh but I am forward, believe me. I am very forward. But
don't you agree with my reading of the holy Quran? Have I not
cleaved to its every phrase, as a good wife cleaves to her
husband's every move?'
'So it seems to me, Sultana. I think the Quran ...
insists everywhere that all are equal before God. And thus, men and
women. There are hierarchies in all things, but each member of the
hierarchy has equal status before God, and this is the only status
that really matters. So the high and the low in station here on
Earth must have consideration for each other, as fellow members of
the faith. Brothers and sisters in belief, no matter caliph or
slave. And thus all the Quranic rules concerning treatment of
others. Constraints, even of an emperor over his lowest slave, or
the enemy he has captured.'
'The Christians' holy book had very few rules,' she said
obliquely, following her own train of thought.
'I didn't know that. You have read it?'
'An emperor over his slave, you said. There are rules
even for that. But still, no one would choose to be a slave rather
than an emperor. And the ulema have twisted the Quran with all
their hadith, always twisting it towards those in power, until the
message Mohammed laid out so clearly, straight from God, has been
reversed, and good Muslim women are made like slaves again, or
worse. Not cattle quite, but not like men, either. Wife to husband
portrayed as slave to emperor, rather than feminine to masculine,
power to power, equal to equal.'
By now her cheeks were flushed, he could see their colour
even in the dusk's poor light. Her eyes were so pale they seemed
like little pools of the twilit sky. When servants brought out
torches her blush was enhanced, and now there was a glitter in her
pale eyes, the torchfire dancing in those windows to her soul.
There was a lot of anger in there, hot anger, but Bistami had never
seen such beauty. He stared at her, trying to fix the moment in his
memory, thinking, You will never forget this, never forget
this!
After the silence had gone on a while, Bistami realized
that if he did not say something, the conversation might come to an
end.
'The sufis,' he said, I speak often of the direct
approach to God. It is a matter of illumination; I have . . . I
have experienced it myself, in a time of extremity. To the senses
it is like being filled with light; for the soul it is the state of
baraka, divine grace. And this is available to all equally.'
'But do the sufis mean women when they say "all"?'
He thought it over. Sufis were men, it was true. They
formed brotherhoods, they travelled alone and stayed in ribat or
zawiya, the lodges where there were no women, nor women's quarters;
if they were married they were sufis, and their wives were wives of
sufis.
'It depends where you are,' he temporized, 'and which
sufi teacher you follow.'
She looked at him with a small smile, and he realized he
had made a move without knowing he had done it, in this game to
stay near her.
'But the sufi teacher could not be a woman,' she
said.
'Well, no. They sometimes lead the prayers.'
'And a woman could never lead prayers.'
'Well,' Bistami said, shocked. 'I have never heard of
such a thing happening.'
'Just as a man has never given birth.'
'Exactly.' Feeling relieved.
'But men cannot give birth,' she pointed out. 'While
women could very easily lead prayers. Within the harem I lead them
every day.'
Bistami didn't know what to say. He was still surprised
at the idea.
'And mothers always instruct their children what to
pray.'
'Yes, that's true.'
'The Arabs before Mohammed worshipped goddesses, you
know.'
'Idols.'
'But the idea was there. Women are powers in the realm of
the soul.' 'Yes.'
'And as above, so below. This is true in everything.'
And she stepped towards him, suddenly, and put her hand
to his bare arm.
'Yes,' he said.
'We need scholars of the Quran to come north with us, to
help us to clear the Quran of these webs obscuring it, and to teach
us about illumination. Will you come with us? Will you do
that?'
'Yes.'
Seven. The Caravan of Fools
Sultan Mawji Darya was almost as handsome and gracious as
his wife, and just as interested in talking about his ideas, which
often returned to the topic of 'the convivencia'. Ibn Ezra informed
Bistami that this was the current enthusiasm among some of the
young nobles of al Andalus: to re create the golden age
of the Umayyad caliphate of the sixth century, when Muslim rulers
had allowed the Christians and Jews among them to flourish, and all
together had created the beautiful civilization that had been
al Andalus before the inquisition and the plague.
As the caravan in its ragged glory rode out of Malaga,
Ibn Ezra told Bistami more about this period, which Khaldun had
treated only very briefly, and the scholars of Mecca and Cairo not
at all. The Andalusi Jews in particular had flourished, translating
a great many ancient Greek texts into Arabic, with commentaries of
their own, and also making original investigations in medicine and
astronomy. Andalusi Muslim scholars had then used what they learned
of Greek logic, chiefly Aristotle, to defend all the tenets of
Islam with the full force of reason, Ibn Sina and Ibn Rashd being
the two most important of these. Ibn Ezra was full of praise for
the work of these men. 'I hope to extend it in my own small way,
God willing, with a particular application to nature and to the
ruins of the past.'
They fell back into the rhythms of caravan, known to them
all. Dawn: stoke the campfires, brew the coffee, feed the camels.
Pack and load, get the camels moving. Their column stretched out
more than a league with various groups falling behind, catching up, stopping,
starting; mostly moving slowly along. Afternoon: into camp or
caravanserai, though as they went farther north they seldom found
anything but deserted ruins, and even the road was nearly gone,
overgrown by fully mature trees, as thick trunked as
barrels.
The beautiful land they crossed was stitched by mountain
ridges, between which stood high, broad plateaux. Crossing them,
Bistami felt they had travelled up into a higher space, where
sunsets threw long shadows over a vast, dark, windy world. Once
when a last shard of sunset light shot under dark lowering clouds,
Bistami heard from somewhere in their camp a musician playing a
Turkish oboe, carving in the air a long plaintive melody that wound
on and on, the song of the dusky plateau's own voice or soul, it
seemed. The Sultana stood at the edge of camp, listening with him,
her fine head turned like a hawk's as she watched the sun descend.
It dropped at the very speed of time itself. There was no need to
speak in this singing world, so huge, so knotted; no human mind
could ever comprehend it, even the music only touched the hem of
it, and even that strand they failed to understand -- they only
felt it. The universal whole was beyond them.
And yet; and yet; sometimes, as at this moment, at dusk,
in the wind, we catch, with a sixth sense we don't know we have,
glimpses of that larger world -- vast shapes of cosmic
significance, a sense of everything holy to dimensions beyond sense
or thought or even feeling this visible world of ours, lit
from within, stuffed vibrant with reality.
The Sultana stirred. The stars were shining in the indigo
sky. She went to one of the fires. She had chosen him as their
qadi, Bistami realized, to give herself more room for her own
ideas. A community like theirs needed a sufi teacher rather than a
mere scholar.
Well, it would become clearer as it happened. Meanwhile,
the Sultana; the sound of the oboe; this vast plateau. These things
only happen once. The force of this sensation struck him just as
strongly as the feel of alreadyness had in the ribat garden.
Just as the Andalusi plateaux stood high under the sun,
its rivers were likewise deep in ravines, like the wadi of the
Maghrib, but always running. The rivers were also long, and
crossing them was no easy matter. The town of Saragossa had grown
in the past because of its great stone bridge, which spanned
one of the biggest of these rivers, called the Ebro. Now the town
was still substantially abandoned, with only some road merchants
and vendors and shepherds clustered around the bridge, in stone
buildings that looked as if they had been built by the bridge
itself, in its sleep. The rest of the town was gone, overgrown by
pine trees and shrubbery.
But the bridge remained. It was made of dressed stones,
big squarish blocks worn so smooth they appeared bevelled, though
they eventually met in lines that would not admit a coin or even a
fingernail. The foundations on each bank were squat massive stone
towers, resting on bedrock, Ibn Ezra said. He studied them with
great interest as the backed up caravan crossed it and set
camp on the other side. Bistami looked at his drawing of it.
'Beautiful, isn't it? Like an equation. Seven semi--circular
arches, with a big one in the middle, over the deep part of the
stream. Every Roman bridge I've seen is very nicely fitted to the
site. Almost always they use semi circular arches, which make
for strength, although they don't cover much distance, so they
needed a lot of them. And always ashlar, that's the squared stones.
So they sit squarely on each other, and nothing ever moves them.
There's nothing tricky about it. We could do it ourselves, if we
took the time and trouble. The only real problem is protecting the
foundations from floods. I've seen some done really well, with
iron tipped piles driven into the river bottom. But if
anything's going to go, it's the foundations. When they tried to do
those quicker, with a big weight of rock, they dammed the water,
and increased its force against what they put in.'
'Where I come from bridges are washed out all the time,'
Bistami said. 'People just build another one.'
'Yes, but this is so much more elegant. I wonder if they
put any of this down on paper. I haven't seen any books of theirs.
The libraries left behind here are terrible, all account books,
with the occasional bit of pornography. If there was ever anything
more it's been burned to start fires. Anyway, the stones tell the
story. See, the stones were cut so well there was no need for
mortar. The iron pegs you see sticking out were probably used to
anchor scaffolding.'
'The Mughals build well in Sind,' Bistami said, thinking
of the perfect joints in Chishti's tomb. 'But mostly the temples
and forts. The bridges are usually bamboo, set in piles of
stone.'
Ibn nodded. 'You see a lot of that. But maybe this river doesn't
flood as much. It seems like dry country.'
In the evenings Ibn Ezra showed them a little model of
the hoists the Romans must have used to move the great stones:
stick tripods, string ropes. The Sultan and Sultana were his
principal audience, but many others watched too, while others
wandered in and out of the torchlight. These people asked Ibn Ezra
questions, they made comments; they stayed around when the Sultan's
cavalry head, Sharif jalil, came into the circle with two of his
horsemen holding between them a third, who had been accused of
theft, apparently not for the first time. As the Sultan discussed
his case with Sharif, Bistami gathered that the accused man had an
unsavoury reputation, for reasons known to them but left unsaid --
an interest in boys perhaps. Apprehension very like dread filled
Bistami, recalling scenes from Fatepur Sikri; strict sharia called
for thieves' hands to be cut off, and sodomy, the infamous vice of
the Christian crusaders, was punishable by death.
But Mawji Darya merely strode up to the man and yanked
him down by the ear, as if chastising a child. 'You want for
nothing with us. You joined us in Malaga, and need only work
honestly to be part of our city.'
The Sultana nodded at this.
'If we wanted to, we would have the right to punish you
in ways you would not like at all. Go talk to our handless
penitents if you doubt me! Or we could simply leave you behind, and
see how you fare with the locals. The Zott don't like anyone but
themselves doing things like this. They would dispose of you
quickly. I tell you now, this will happen if Sharif brings you
before me again. You will be cast out of your family. Believe me
'glancing significantly towards his wife -- 'you would regret
that.'
The man blubbered something submissive (he was drunk,
Bistami saw) and was hauled away. The Sultan told Ibn Ezra to
continue his exposition on Roman bridges.
Later Bistami joined the Sultana in the big royal tent,
and remarked on the general openness of their court.
'No veils,' Katima said sharply. 'Not the izar nor the
hijab, the veil that kept the caliph from the people. The hijab was
the first step on the road to the despotism of the caliph. Mohammed
was never like that, never. He made the first mosque an assembly of friends.
Everyone had access to him, and everyone spoke their mind. It could
have stayed like that, and the mosque become the place of ... of a
different way. With both women and men speaking. This was what
Mohammed began, and who are we to change it? Why follow the ways of
those who build barriers, who turned into despots? Mohammed wanted
group feeling to lead, and the person in charge to be no more than
a hakam, an arbiter. This was the title he loved the most and was
most proud of, did you know that?'
'Yes.'
'But when he was gone to Heaven, Muawiya established the
caliphate, and put guards in the mosques to protect himself, and it
has been tyranny ever since. Islam changed from submission to
subjugation, and women were banned from the mosques and from their
rightful place. It's a travesty of Islam!'
She was red cheeked, vibrant with suppressed
emotion. Bistami had never seen such fervour and beauty together in
one face, and he could hardly think; or, he was full of thought on
several levels at once, so that focus on any one stream of ideas
left him fluttering in all the others, restless and inclined to
stop following that tributary; inclined merely to let all rivers of
thought roll at once.
'Yes,' he said.
She stalked away towards the next fire, squatted down all
at once in a fluff of skirts, in the group of handless and
one handed men. They greeted her cheerfully and offered her
one of their cups, and she drank deeply, then put it down and said,
'Come on then, it's time, you're looking ratty again.' They pulled
out a stool, she sat on it, and one of them knelt before her, his
broad back to her. She took the offered comb and a vial of oil, and
began to work the comb through the man's long tangled hair. The
motley crew of their ship of fools settled in around her
contentedly.
North of the Ebro the caravan stopped growing. There were
fewer towns on the old road to the north, and they were smaller,
composed of recent Maghribi settlers, Berbers who had sailed
straight across from Algiers and even Tunis. They were growing
barley and cucumbers, and pasturing sheep and goats in the long
fertile valleys with their rocky ridgelines,
Not far inland from the Mediterranean. Catalonia, this had been
called, very fine land, heavily forested on the hills. They had
left behind the taifa kingdoms to the south, and the people here
were content; they felt no need to follow a dispossessed sufi
sultan and his motley caravan, over the Pyrenees and into wild
Firanja. And in any case, as Ibn Ezra pointed out, the caravan did
not boast food enough to feed many more dependants, nor the gold or
money to buy more food than they already were from the villages
they passed.
So they continued on the old road, and at the head of a
long narrowing valley they found themselves on a broad, dry, rocky
plateau, leading up to the forested flanks of a range of mountains,
formed of rock darker than the rock of the Himalaya. The old road
wound up the flattest part of the tilted plateau, by the side of a
gravelly streambed almost devoid of water. Further along it
followed a cut in the hills, just above the bed of this small
stream, wandering up into mountains that grew rockier and taller.
Now when they camped at night they met no one at all, but bedded
down in tents or under the stars, sleeping to the sound of the wind
in the trees, and the clattering brooks, and the shifting horses
against their harness lines. Eventually the road wound up among
rocks, a flat way leading through a rockbound pass, then across a
mountain meadow among the peaks, then up through another tight
pass, flanked by granite battlements; and then down at last.
Compared to the Khyber Pass it was not much of a struggle, Bistami
thought, but many in the caravan were shivering and afraid.
On the other side of the pass, rockslides had buried the
old road repeatedly, and each time the road became a mere foot
trail, switchbacking at sharp angles across the rockslides. These
were hard going, and the Sultana often got off her horse and
walked, leading her women with no tolerance for ineptitude or
complaint. Indeed she had a sharp tongue when she was annoyed,
sharp and scornful.
Ibn Ezra inspected the roads every evening when they
stopped, and the rockslides too when they passed them, making
drawings of any exposed roadbeds, coping stones or drainage
ditches. 'It's classic Roman,' he said one evening by the fire as
they ate roast mutton. 'They knitted all the land around the
Mediterranean with these roads. I wonder if this was their main
route over the Pyrenees. I don't suppose so, it's so far to the
west. It will lead us to the western ocean rather than the
Mediterranean. But perhaps it's the easiest pass. It's hard to
believe this is not the main road, it's so big.'
'Perhaps they're all that way,' said the Sultana.
'Possibly. They may have used things like these carts the
people have found, so they needed their roads to be wider than
ours. Camels of course need no road at all. Or this may be their
main road after all. It may be the road Hannibal used on his way to
attack Rome, with his army of Carthaginians and their elephants! I
have seen those ruins, north of Tunis. It was a very great city.
But Hannibal lost and Carthage lost, and the Romans pulled their
city down and sowed salt in the fields, and the Maghrib dried up.
No more Carthage.'
'So elephants may have walked this road,' the Sultana
said. The Sultan looked down at the track, shaking his head in
wonder. These were the kinds of things the two of them liked to
know.
Coming down out of the mountains, they found themselves
in a colder land. The midday sun cleared the peaks of the Pyrenees,
but only just. The land was flat and grey, and often swathed in
ground mist. The ocean lay to the west, grey and cold and wild with
high surf.
The caravan came to a river that emptied into this
western sea, flanked by the ruins of an ancient city. On the
outskirts of the ruins stood some modest new buildings, fishermen's
shacks they seemed, on each side of a newly built wooden
bridge.
'Look how much less skilful we are than the Romans,' Ibn
Ezra said, but hurried over to look at the new work anyway.
He came back. 'I believe this was a city called Bayonne.
There's an inscription on the remaining bridge tower over there.
The maps indicate there was a bigger city to the north, called
Bordeaux. Water's Edge.'
The Sultan shook his head. 'We've come far enough. This
will do. Over the mountains, but yet only a moderate journey back
to al Andalus. That's just what I want. We'll settle
here.'
Sultana Katima nodded, and the caravan began the long
process of settling in.
Eight. Baraka
In general, they built upstream from the ruins of the
ancient town, scavenging stone and beams until very little of the
old buildings remained, except for the church, a big stone barn of
a structure, stripped of all idols and images. It was not a
beautiful structure compared to the mosques of the civilized world,
being a rude squat rectangular thing, but it was big, and situated
on a prominence overlooking a turn in the river. So after
discussion among all the members of the caravan, they decided to
make it their grand or Friday mosque.
Modifications began immediately. This project became
Bistami's responsibility, and he spent a lot of time with Ibn Ezra,
describing what he remembered of the Chishti shrine and the other
great buildings of Akbar's empire, poring over Ibn Ezra's drawings
to see what might be done to make the old church more
mosque like. They settled on a plan to tear the roof off the
old structure, which in any case was showing the sky in many
places, and to keep the walls as the interior buttressing of a
circular or rather egg shaped mosque, with a dome. The Sultana
wanted the prayer courtyard to open onto a larger city square, to
indicate the all embracing quality of their version of Islam,
and Bistami did what he could to oblige her, despite signs that it
would rain often in this region, and snow perhaps in the winter. It
wasn't important; the place of worship would continue out from the
grand mosque into a plaza and then the city at large, and by
extension, the whole world.
Ibn Ezra happily designed scaffolding, hods, carts,
braces, buttressing, cements and so on, and he determined by the stars and
such maps as they had, the direction of Mecca, which would be
indicated not only by the usual signs, but also by the orientation
of the mosque itself. The rest of the town moved in towards the
grand mosque, all the old ruins removed and used for new
construction as people settled closer and closer. The scattering of
Armenians and Zott who had been living in the ruins before their
arrival either joined the community, or moved off to the north.
'We should save room near the mosque for a madressa,' Ibn
Ezra said, 'before the town fills this whole district.'
Sultan Mawji thought this was a good idea, and he ordered
those who had settled next to the mosque while working on it to
move. Some of the workers objected to this, and then refused
outright. In a meeting the Sultan lost his temper and threatened
this group with expulsion from the town, though the fact was he
commanded only a very small personal bodyguard, barely enough to
defend himself, in Bistami's opinion. Bistami recalled the giant
cavalries of Akbar, the Marnlukes' soldiers; nothing like that here
for the Sultan, who now faced a mere dozen or two sullen
recalcitrants, and yet could do nothing with them. And the open
tradition of the caravan, the feel of it, was in danger.
But Sultana Katima rode up on her Arabian mare, and slid
down from it and went to the Sultan's side. She put her hand to his
arm, said something just to him. He looked startled, thinking fast.
The Sultana shot a fierce glance at the uncooperative squatters,
such a bitter rebuke that Bistami shuddered; not for the world
would he risk such a glance from her. And indeed the miscreants
paled and looked down in shame.
She said, 'Mohammed told us that learning is God's great
hope for humanity. The mosque is the heart of learning, the Quran's
home. The madressa is an extension of the mosque. It must be so in
any Muslim community, to know God more completely. And so it will
be here. Of course.'
She then led her husband away from the place, to the
palace on the other side of the city's old bridge. In the middle of
the night the Sultan's guards returned with swords drawn and pikes
at the ready, to rouse the squatters and send them off; but the
area was already deserted.
Ibn Ezra nodded with relief when he heard the news. 'In
the future we must plan ahead well enough to avoid such scenes,' he
said in a low voice to Bistami. 'This incident adds to the
reputation of the Sultana, perhaps, in some ways, but at a
cost.'
Bistami didn't want to think about it. 'At least now we
will have mosque and madressa side by side.'
'They are two parts of the same thing, as the Sultana
said. Especially if the study of the sensible world is included in
the curriculum of the madressa. I hope so. I can't stand for such a
place to be wasted on mere devotionals. God put us in this world to
understand it! That is the highest form of devotion to God, as Ibn
Sina said.'
This small crisis was soon forgotten, and the new town,
named by the Sultana Baraka, that term for grace that Bistami had
mentioned to her, took shape as if there could never have been any
other plan. The ruins of the old town disappeared under the new
city's streets and plazas, gardens and workshops; the architecture
and city plan both resembled Malaga, and the other Andalusi coastal
cities, but with higher walls, and smaller windows, for the winters
here were cold, and a raw wind blew in from the ocean in the autumn
and spring. The Sultan's palace was the only structure in the town
as open and light as a Mediterranean building; this reminded people
of their origins, and showed them that the Sultan lived above the
usual demands of nature. Across the bridge from it, the plazas were
small, the streets and alleyways narrow, so that a riverside medina
or casbah developed that was, as in any Maghribi or Arabian city, a
veritable warren of buildings, mostly three storeys tall, with the
upper windows facing each other across alleyways so tight that one
could, as was said everywhere, pass condiments from window to
window across the streets.
The first time snow fell, everyone rushed out to the
plaza before the grand mosque, dressed in most of their clothes. A
great bonfire was lit, the muezzin made his call, prayers were
recited, and the palace musicians played with blue lips and frozen
fingers as people danced in the sufi way around the bonfire.
Whirling dervishes in the snow: all laughed to see it, feeling they
had brought Islam to a new place, a new climate. They were making a
new world! There was plenty of wood in the undisturbed forests to
the north, and a constant supply of fish and fowl; they would be
warm, they would be fed; in the winters the life of the city would
go on, under a thin blanket of wet melting snow, as if they
lived in high mountains, and yet the river poured out its long
estuary into the grey ocean, which pounded the beach with
unrelenting ferocity, eating instantly the snowflakes that fell
into the waves. This was their country.
One day in spring another caravan arrived, full of
strangers and their possessions; they had heard of the new town
Baraka, and wanted to move there. It was another ship of fools,
come from the Armenian and Zott settlements in Portugal and
Castile, its criminal tendencies made obvious by the high incidence
of handlessness and musical instruments, puppeteers and fortune
tellers.
'I'm surprised they made it over the mountains,' Bistami
said to Ibn Ezra.
'Necessity made them inventive, no doubt. Al Andalus
is a dangerous place for people like these. The Sultan's brother is
proving a very strict caliph, I have heard, almost Almohad in his
purity. The form of Islam he enforces is so pure that I don't
believe it was ever lived before, even in the time of the Prophet.
No, this caravan is made of people on the run. And so was
ours.'
'Sanctuary,' Bistami said. 'That's what the Christians
called a place of protection. Usually their churches, or else a
royal court. Like some of the sufi ribat in Persia. It's a good
thing. The good people come to you when the law elsewhere becomes
too harsh.'
So they came. Some were apostates or heretics, and
Bistami debated these in the mosque itself, trying as he spoke to
create an atmosphere in which all these matters could be discussed
freely, without a sense of danger hanging overhead -- it existed,
but far away, back over the Pyrenees -- but also without anything
blasphemous against God or Mohammed being affirmed. It did not
matter whether one was Sunni or Shiite Arabian or Andalusi, Turk or
Zott, man or woman; what mattered was devotion, and the Quran.
It was interesting to Bistami that this religious
balancing act got easier to maintain the longer he worked at it, as
if he were practising something physical, on a ledge or high wall.
A challenge to the authority of the caliph? See what the Quran said
about it. Ignore the hadith that had encrusted the holy book, and
so often distorted it: cut through to the source. There the
messages might be ambiguous, often they were.
But the book had come to Mohammed over a period of many years,
and important concepts were usually repeated in it, in slightly
different ways each time. They would read all the relevant
passages, and discuss the differences. 'When I was in Mecca
studying, the true scholars would say . . .' This was as much
authority as Bistami would claim for himself; that he had heard
true authorities speak. It was the method of the hadith, of course,
but with a different content: that the hadith could not be trusted,
only the Quran.
'I was speaking with the Sultana about this matter This
was another common gambit. Indeed, he consulted with her about
almost every question that came up, and without fail in all matters
having to do with women or child rearing; concerning family
life he always deferred to ber judgment, which he learned to trust
more and more as the first years passed. She knew the Quran inside
out, and had memorized every sura that aided her case against undue
hierarchy, and her protectiveness for the weak of the city grew
unabated. Above all she commanded the eye and the heart, wherever
she went, and never more so than in the mosque. There was no longer
any question of her right to be there, and occasionally even to
lead the prayers. It would have seemed unnatural to bar such a
being, so full of divine grace, from the place of worship in a city
named Baraka. As she herself said, 'Did God make me? Did He give me
a mind and a soul as great as any man's? Did men's children come
out of a woman? Would you deny your own mother a place in heaven?
Can anyone gain heaven who is not admitted to the sight of God on
this Earth?'
No one who would answer these questions in the negative
stayed long in Baraka. There were other towns being settled
upstream and to the north, founded by Armenians and Zott who were
less full of Muslim fervour. A fair number of the Sultan's subjects
moved away as time passed. Nevertheless, the crowds at the grand
mosque grew. They built smaller ones on the expanding outskirts of
town, the usual neighbourhood mosques, but always the Friday mosque
remained the meeting place of the city, its plaza and the madressa
grounds filled by the whole population on holy days, and during the
festivals and Ramadan, and on the first day of snow every year,
when the bonfire of winter was lit. Baraka was a single family
then, and Sultana Katima its mother and sister.
The madressa grew as fast as the town, or faster. Every
spring, after the snows on the mountain roads had melted, new
caravans arrived, guided by mountain folk. Some in each group had
come to study in the madressa, which grew famous for Ibn Ezra's
investigations into plants and animals, the Romans, building
technique, and the stars. When they came from al Andalus they
sometimes brought with them newly recovered books by Ibn Rashd or
Maimonides, or new Arabic translations of the ancient Greeks, and
they brought also the desire to share what they knew, and learn
more. The new convivencia had its heart in Baraka's madressa, and
word spread.
Then one bad day, late in the sixth year of the Barakan
hegira, Sultan Mawji Darya fell gravely ill. He had grown fat in
the previous months, and Ibn Ezra had tried to be his doctor,
putting him on a strict diet of grain and milk, which seemed to
help his complexion and energy; but then one night he took ill. Ibn
Ezra woke Bistami from his bed: 'Come along. The Sultan is so ill
he needs the prayers.'
This coming from Ibn Ezra was bad indeed, as he was not
much of a one for prayer. Bistami hurried after him, and joined the
royal family in their part of the big palace. Sultana Katima was
white faced, and Bistami was shocked to see how unhappy his
arrival made her. It wasn't anything personal, but she knew why Ibn
Ezra had brought him at such an hour, and she bit her lip and
looked away, the tears streaming down her cheeks.
Inside their bedroom the Sultan writhed, silent but for
heavy, choked breathing. His face was a dark red colour.
'Has he been poisoned?' Bistami asked Ibn Ezra in a
whisper.
'No, I don't think so. Their taster is fine,' indicating
the big cat sleeping curled in its little bed in the corner.
'Unless someone pricked him with a poisoned needle. But I see no
sign of that.'
Bistami sat by the roiling Sultan and took his hot hand.
Before a word had escaped him, the Sultan gave a weak groan and
arched back. His breathing stopped. Ibn Ezra grabbed his arms and
crossed them before his chest and pressed hard, grunting himself.
To no avail; the Sultan had died, his body still locked in its last
paroxysm. The Sultana burst weeping into the room, tried to revive
him herself, calling to him and to God, and begging Ibn Ezra to
keep up his efforts. It took both men some time to convince her
that it was all in vain; they had failed; the Sultan was dead.
Funerals in Islam harked back to earlier times. Men and
women congregated in different areas during the ceremonies, and
only mingled in the cemetery afterwards, during the brief
interment.
But of course this was the first funeral for a sultan of
Baraka, and the Sultana herself led the whole population into the
grand mosque plaza, where she had ordered the body to lie in state.
Bistami could only go along with the crowd and stand before them,
saying the old prayers of the service as if they were always
announced to all together. And why not? Certain lines of the
service made sense only if said to eve one in the community: and
suddenly, looking out at the stripped, desolate faces of every
person in the city, he understood that the tradition had been
wrong, that it was plainly wrong and even cruel to split the
community apart at the very moment it needed to see itself all
together as one. He had never felt such a heterodox opinion so
strongly before; he had always agreed with the Sultana's ideas out
of the unexamined principle that she ought always to be right.
Shaken by this sudden conversion in his ideas, and by the sight of
the beloved Sultan's body there in its coffin on its dais, he
reminded them all that the sun only shone a certain number of hours
on any life. He spoke the words of this impromptu sermon in a
hoarse tearing voice which sounded even to him as if it were coming
from some other throat; it was the same as it had been during those
eternal days long ago, reciting the Quran under the cloud of
Akbar's anger. This association was too much, and he began to weep,
struggled to speak. All in the plaza wept, the wailing began again,
many striking themselves in the self flagellation that took
some of the pain away.
The whole town followed the cortege, Sultana Katima
leading it on her bay mare. The crowd roared in its sorrow like the
sea on its pebble beach. They buried him overlooking the great grey
ocean, and after that it was black cloth and ashes for many
months.
Somehow they never came out of that year of mourning. It
was more than the death of the ruler; it was that the Sultana
continued to rule on alone.
Now Bistami, and everyone else, would have said that
Sultana Katima had been the true leader all along, and the Sultan
merely her gracious and beloved consort. No doubt that was true.
But now, when Sultana Katima of Baraka came into the grand mosque
and spoke in the Friday prayers, Bistami was once again uneasy, and
he could see the townspeople were as well. Katima had spoken before
many times in this manner, but now all felt the absence of the
covering angel provided by the lenient Sultan's presence across the
river.
This unease communicated itself to Katima, of course, and
her talks became more strident and plaintive. 'God wants relations
in marriage between husband and wife to be between equals. What the
husband can be the wife can be also! In the time of the chaos
before the year one, in the zero time, you see, men treated women
like domestic beasts. God spoke through Mohammed, and made it clear
that women were souls equal to men, to be treated as such. They
were given by God many specific rights, in inheritance, divorce,
power of choice, power to command their children -- given their
lives, do you understand? Before the first hegira, before the year
one, right in the middle of this tribal chaos of murder and theft,
this monkey society, God told Mohammed to change it all. He said,
Oh yes, of course you can marry more than one wife, if you want to
-- if you can do it without strife. Then the next verse says "But
it cannot be done without strife!" What is this but a ban on
polygamy stated in two parts, in the form of a riddle or a lesson,
for men who could not otherwise imagine it?'
But now it was very clear that she was trying to change
the way things worked, the way Islam worked. Of course they all had
been, all along -- but secretly, perhaps, not admitting it to
anyone, not even to themselves. Now it faced them with the face of
their only ruler, a woman. There were no queens in Islam. None of
the hadith applied any more.
Bistami, desperate to help, made up his own hadith, and
either supplied them with plausible but false isnads, attributing
them to ancient sufi authorities made up out of whole cloth; or
else he ascribed them to their Sultan, Mawji Darya, or to some old
Persian sufi he knew about; or he left them to be understood as
wisdom too common to need ascription. The Sultana did the same,
following his lead, he thought, but took most of her refuge in the
Quran itself, returning obsessively to the suras that supported her
positions.
But everyone knew how things were done in al Andalus, and
the Maghrib, and in Mecca, and indeed everywhere across Dar
al Islam, from the western ocean to the eastern ocean (which
Ibn Ezra now claimed were the two shores of the same ocean,
spanning the greater part of the Earth, which was a globe covered
mostly by water). Women did not lead prayers. When the Sultana did,
it remained shocking, and triply so with the Sultan gone. Everyone
said it; if she wished to continue along this path, she needed to
remarry.
But she showed no sign of interest in that. She wore her
widow's black, and held herself aloof from everyone in the town,
and had no royal communications with anyone in al Andalus. The
man other than Mawji Darya who had spent the most time in her
company was Bistami himself; and when he understood the looks some
townspeople were giving him, implying that lie might conceivably
marry the Sultana and remove them from their difficulty, it made
him feel light headed, almost nauseous. He loved her so much
that he could not imagine himself married to her. It wasn't that
kind of love. He didn't think she could imagine it either, so there
was no question of testing the idea, which was both attractive and
terrifying, and so in the end painful in the extreme. Once she was
talking to Ibn Ezra when Bistami was present, asking him about his
claims concerning the ocean fronting them.
'You say this is the same ocean as the one seen by the
Moluccans and Sumatrans, on the other side of the world? How could
this be?'
'The world is most certainly a globe,' said Ibn Ezra.
'It's round like the moon, or the sun. A spherical ball. And we
have come to the western end of the land in the world, and around
the globe is the eastern end of the land in the world. And this
ocean covers the rest of the world, you see.'
'So we could sail to Sumatra?'
'In theory, yes. But I've been trying to calculate the
size of the earth, using some calculations made by the ancient
Greeks, and Brahmagupta of south India, and by my studies of the
sky, and though I cannot be sure, I believe it must be some ten
thousand leagues around. Brahmagupta said five thousand yoganda,
which as I understand it is about the same distance. And the land
mass of the world, from Morocco to the Moluccas, I reckon to be
about five thousand leagues. So this ocean we look out on covers
half the world, five thousand leagues or more. No ship could make
it across.'
'Are you sure it is so big as that?'
Ibn Ezra waggled a hand uncertainly. 'Not sure, Sultana.
But I think it must be something like that.'
'What about islands? Surely this ocean is not completely
empty for five thousand leagues! Surely there are islands!'
'Undoubtedly, Sultana. I mean, it seems likely. Andalusi
fishermen have reported running into islands when storms or
currents carried them far to the west, but they don't describe how
far, or in what direction.'
The Sultana looked hopeful. 'So we could perhaps sail
away, and find the same islands, or others like them.'
Ibn Ezra waggled his hand again.
'Well?' she said sharply. 'Do you not think you could
build a seaworthy ship?'
'Possibly, Sultana. But supplying it for a voyage that
long . . . We don't know how long it would be.'
' Well,' she said darkly, 'we may have to find out. With
the Sultan dead, and no one for me to remarry ' and she shot
a single glance at Bistami -- 'there will be Andalusi villains
thinking to rule us.'
It was like a stab to his heart. That night Bistami lay
twisting on his bed, seeing that short glance over and over. But
what could he do? How could he be expected to help such a
situation? He could not sleep, not the entire night long.
Because a husband would have helped. There was no longer
a feeling of harmony in Baraka, and word of the situation certainly
had made its way over the Pyrenees, for early in the following
spring, when the rivers were still running high and the mountains
protecting them still stood white and jagged edged to the
south, horsemen came down the road out of the hills, just ahead of
a cold spring storm, pouring in from the ocean: a long column of
cavalry, in fact, with pennants from Toledo and Granada flying, and
swords and pikes at their hips gleaming in the sun. They rode right
into the mosque plaza at the centre of town, colourful under the
lowering clouds, and lowered their pikes until they all pointed
forwards. Their leader was one of the Sultan's elder brothers, Said
Darya, and he stood in his silver stirrups so that he towered over
the people gathering there, and said, 'We claim this town in the
name of the Caliph of al Andalus, to save it from apostasy,
and from the witch who threw her spell over my brother and killed
him in his bed.'
'The crowd, growing by the moment, stared stupidly up at the
horsemen. Some of the townspeople were red faced and
tight lipped, some pleased, most confused or sullen. A few of
the rabble from the original Ship of Fools were already pulling
cobblestones out of the ground.
Bistami saw all this from the avenue leading to the
river, and all of a sudden something about the sight struck him
like a blow; those pikes and crossbows, pointing inwards: it was
like the tiger trap, back in India. These people were like the
Bagh mari, the professional tiger killing clans that went
about the country disposing of problem tigers for a fee. He had
seen them before! And not only with the tigress, but before that as
well, some other time that he couldn't remember but remembered
anyway, some ambush for Katima, a death trap, men stabbing her when
she was tall and black skinned -- oh, this had all happened
before!
In a panic he ran across the bridge to the palace.
Sultana Katima was about to get on her horse to go and confront the
invaders, and he threw himself between her and the horse; she was
furious and tried to brush by him, and he put his arm around her
waist, as slender as a girl's, which shocked them both, and he
cried, 'No, no, no, no, no! No, Sultana, I beg you, I beg you,
don't go over there! They'll kill you, it's a trap! I've seen it!
They will kill you!'
'I have to go,' she said, cheeks flushed. 'The people
need me 'No they don't! They need you alive! We can leave
and they can follow! They will follow! We have to let those people
have this town, the buildings mean nothing, we can move north and
your people will follow! Listen to me, listen!' And he caught her
up by the shoulders and held her fast, looked ber in the eye: 'I
have seen all this play out before. I have been given knowledge. We
have to escape or we will be killed.'
Across the river they could hear screams. The Andalusi
horsemen were not used to opposition from a population without any
soldiers, without cavalry, and they were charging down the streets
after mobs who threw stones as they fled. A lot of Barakis were
crazy with rage, certainly the one handed ones would die to
the man to defend her, and the invaders were not going to have as
easy a time of it as they had thought. Snow was now twirling down
through the dark air, flying sideways on the wind out of grey
clouds streaming low overhead, and already there were fires
in the city, the district around the grand mosque beginning to
burn.
'Come on, Sultana, there's no time to waste! I've seen
how this happens, they'll have no mercy, they're on their way here
to the palace, we need to leave now! This has happened before! We
can make a new city in the north, some of the people will come with
us, gather a caravan and start over, defend ourselves
properly!'
' All right!' Sultana Katima shouted suddenly, looking
across at the burning town. The wind gusted, and they could just
hear screaming in the town over the whoosh of the air. 'Damn them!
Damn them! Get a horse then, come on, all of you come on! We'll
need to ride hard.'
Nine. Another Meeting in the Bardo
And so it was that when they all reconvened in the bardo,
many years later, after going north and founding the city of Nsara
at the mouth of the Lawiyya River, and defending it successfully
from the Andalusi taifa sultans coming up to attack them in after
years, and building the beginnings of a maritime power, fishing
all the way across the sea, and trading farther yet than that,
Bistami was well pleased. He and Katima had never married, the
matter had never come up again, but he had been Nsara's principal
ulema for many years, and had helped to create a religious
legitimacy for this new thing, a queen in Islam. And he and Katima
had worked together on this project almost every day of those
lives.
'I recognized you!' he reminded Katima. 'In the midst of
life, through the veil of forgetting, when it mattered, I saw who
you were, and you -- you saw something too. You knew something from
a higher reality was going on! We're making progress.'
Katima did not reply. They were sitting on the flagstones
of a courtyard in a place very like Chishti's shrine in Fatepur
Sikri, except that the courtyard was vastly bigger. People waited
in a line to go in the shrine and be judged. They looked like
hajjis in line to see the Kaaba. Bistami could hear Mohammed's
voice inside, praising some, admonishing others. 'You need to try
again,' be heard a voice like Mohammed's say to someone. Everything
was quiet and subdued. It was the hour before sunrise, cool and
damp, the air filled with distant birdsong. Sitting there beside
her, Bistami could see very clearly now how Katima was not
at all like Akbar. Akbar had no doubt been sent down to a lower
realm, and was even now prowling the jungle hunting for his food,
as Katima had been in the existence before last, when she had been
a tigress, a killer who had nevertheless befriended Bistami. She
had saved him from the Hindu rebels, then picked him out of the
ribat in al Andalus: 'You recognized me too,' he said. 'And we
both knew Ibn Ezra,' who was at this moment inspecting the wall of
the courtyard, running his fingernail down the line between two
blocks, admiring the stonework of the bardo.
'This is genuine progress,' Bistami repeated. 'We are
finally getting somewhere!'
Katima gave him a sceptical glance. 'You call that
progress? Chased to a hole at the far corner of the world?'
'But who cares where we were? We recognized each other,
you didn't get killed '
'Wonderful.'
'It was wonderful! I saw through time, I felt the touch
of the eternal. We made a place where people could love the good.
Little steps, life after life; and eventually we will be there for
good, in the white light.'
Katima gestured; her brother in law, Said
Darya, was entering the palace of judgment.
'Look at him, a miserable creature, and yet he is not
thrown down into hell, nor even become a worm or a jackal, as he
deserves. He will return to the human realm, and wreak havoc all
over again. He too is part of our jati, did you recognize him? Did
you know he was part of our little band, like Ibn Ezra here?'
Ibn Ezra sat beside them. The line moved up and they
shifted with it. 'The walls are solid,' he reported. 'Very well
built, in fact. I don't think we're going to able to escape.'
'Escape!' Bistami cried. 'This is God's judgment! No one
escapes that!'
Katima and Ibn Ezra looked at each other. Ibn Ezra said,
'My impression is that any improvement in the tenor of existence
will have to be anthropogenic.'
'What?' Bistami cried.
'It's up to us. No one will help us.'
'I'm not saying they will. Although God always helps if
you ask. But it is up to us, that's what I've been saying all
along, and we are doing what we can, we are making progress.'
Katima was not at all convinced. 'We'll see,' she said.
'Time will tell. For now, I myself withhold judgment.' She faced
the white tomb, drew herself up queenlike, spoke with a tigerish
curl of the lip: 'And no one judges me.'
With a wave of the hand she dismissed the tomb. 'It's not
here that matters. What matters is what happens in the world.'
* * *
In the thirty fifth year of his reign, the Wanli
Emperor turned his feverish and permanently dissatisfied eye on
Nippon. Ten years earlier the Nipponese general Hideyoshi had had
the temerity to attempt the conquest of China, and when the Koreans
had refused him passage, his army had invaded Korea as the first
step in its path. It had taken a large Chinese army three years to
drive the invaders off the Korean peninsula, and the
twenty six million ounces of silver it had cost the Wanli
Emperor had put his treasury in acute difficulties, difficulties
from which it had never recovered. The Emperor was inclined to
avenge this unprovoked assault (if you did not count the two
unsuccessful attacks on Nippon made by Kublai Khan), and to remove
the danger of any future problem arising from Nippon, by
subjugating it to Chinese suzerainty. Hideyoshi had died, and
leyasu, the head of a new Tokugawa. Shogunate, had successfully
united all the Nipponese islands under his command, and then closed
the country to foreigners. All Nipponese were forbidden to leave,
and those who did were forbidden to return. The building of
seaworthy ships was also forbidden, although the Wanli noted
irritably in his vermilion memoranda that this did not stop hordes
of Nipponese pirates attacking on the long Chinese coastline using
smaller craft. He thought leyasu's retreat from the world signalled
weakness, and yet at the same time, a fortress nation of warriors
just offshore from the Middle Kingdom was not something to be
tolerated either. It pleased the Wanli to think of returning this
bastard child of Chinese culture to its rightful place under the
Dragon Throne, joining there Korea, Annam, Tibet, Mindanao and the
Spice Islands.
His advisers were not enthusiastic about the plan. For
one thing, the treasury was still depleted. For another, the Ming
court was already drained by all the previous dramatic events of
the Wanli reign, not only the defence of Korea but also the racking
dissension caused by the succession problem, still only nominally
solved by the Wanli's choice of his elder son, and his younger
son's banishment to the provinces; all that could change in a week.
And around that highly combustible situation, like a civil war in
waiting, constellated all the conflicts and jealous manoeuvrings of
the court powers: the Empress Mother, the Empress, the senior civil
servants, the eunuchs and the generals. Something in the Wanli's
combination of intelligence and vacillation, his permanent
discontent and his occasional bursts of vengeful fury, made the
court of his old age a flayed and exhausted nest of intrigues. To
his advisers, particularly the generals and the heads of the
treasury, conquering Nippon did not seem even remotely
possible.
The Emperor, true to form, insisted that it be done.
His senior generals came back with an alternative plan,
which they hoped very much would satisfy his desire. They proposed
that the Emperor's diplomats arrange a treaty with one of the minor
Nipponese shoguns, the Tozama Daimyo, who were out of leyasu's
favour because they had joined him only after his military victory
at Sekigahara. The treaty would stipulate that this minor shogun
would invite the Chinese to come to one of his ports, and open it
permanently to Chinese trade. A Chinese navy would then land at
this port in force, and in essence make the port a Chinese port,
defended by the full power of the Chinese navy, grown so much
bigger during the Wanli's reign in the attempt to defend the coast
against pirates. Most of the pirates were from Nippon, so there was
a kind of justice there; and a chance to trade with Nippon as well.
After that, the treaty port could serve as the staging centre of a
slower conquest of Nippon, conceived of as happening in stages
rather than all at once. That would make it affordable.
The Wanli grumbled about his advisers' meagre, partial,
eunuchlike enactments of his desires, but patient advocacy by his
most trusted advisers of that period finally won him over, and he
approved the plan. A secret treaty was arranged with a local lord,
Omura, who invited the Chinese to land and trade at a small fishing
village with an excellent harbour, called Nagasaki.
Preparations for an expedition that would arrive there with
overwhelming force were made in the rebuilt shipyards of Longjiang,
near Nanjing, also on the Cantonese coast. The big new ships of the
invading fleet were filled with supplies to enable the landing
force to withstand a long siege, and they assembled for the first
time off the coast of Taiwan, with no one in Nippon except for
Omura and his advisers any the wiser.
The fleet was, by the Wanli's direct order, put under the
command of one Admiral Kheim, of Annam. This admiral had already
led a fleet for the Emperor, in the subjugation of Taiwan some
years before, but he was still seen by the Chinese bureaucracy and
military as an outsider, an expert in pirate suppression who had
achieved his expertise by spending much of his youth as a pirate
himself, plundering the Fujian coast. The Wanli Emperor did not
care about this, and even regarded it as a point in Kheim's favour;
he wanted someone who could get results, and if he came from
outside the military bureaucracy, with its many entanglements at
court and in the provinces, so much the better.
The fleet set out in the thirty eighth year of the
Wanli, on the third day of the first month. The spring winds were
constant from the northwest for eight days, and the fleet
positioned itself in the Kuroshio, the Black River, that great
ocean current which runs like a river a hundred li wide, up the
long southern shores of the Nipponese islands.
This was as planned, and they were on their way; but then
the winds died. Nothing in the air stirred. No bird was seen, and
the paper sails of the fleet hung limp, their cross slats
ticking the masts only because of the rippling of the Kuroshio
itself, which carried them north and east past the main Nipponese
islands, past Hokkaido, and out onto the empty expanse of the
Dahai, the Great Ocean. This shoreless blue expanse was bisected by
their invisible but powerful Black River, flowing relentlessly
cast.
Admiral Kheim ordered all the captains of the Eight Great
Ships and of the Lesser Eighteen Ships to row over to the flagship,
where they consulted. Many of the most experienced ocean sailors of
Taiwan, Annam, Fujian and Canton were among these men, and their
faces were grave; to be carried off by the Kuroshio was a dangerous
business. All of them had heard stories of junks that had been
becalmed in the current, or dismasted by squalls, or had had to
chop down their masts in order to avoid being capsized, and after
that disappeared for years in onestory nine years, in
another thirty -- after which they had drifted back out of the
southeast, bleached and empty, or manned by skeletons. These
stories, and the eyewitness evidence of the flagship's doctor,
I Chen, who claimed to have ridden around the Dahai
successfully in his youth on a fishing junk disabled by a typhoon,
led them to agree that there was probably a big circular current
flowing around the vast sea, and. That if they could stay alive
long enough, they might be able to sail around in it, back to
home.
It was not a plan any of them would have chosen to
undertake deliberately, but at that point they had no other option
but to try it. The captains sat in the Admiral's cabin on the
flagship and regarded each other unhappily. Many of the Chinese
there knew the legend of Hsu Fu, admiral of the Han dynasty of
ancient times, who had sailed off with his fleet in search of lands
to settle on the other side of the Dahai, and never been heard from
again. They knew as well the story of Kubla Khan's two attempts at
invading Nippon, both demolished by unseasonable typhoons, which
had given the Nipponese the conviction that there was a divine wind
that would defend their home islands from foreign attack. Who could
disagree? And it seemed all too possible that this divine wind was
now doing its work in a kind of joke or ironic reversal,
manifesting itself as a divine calm while they were in the
Kuroshio, causing their destruction just as effectively as any
typhoon. The calm after all was uncannily complete, its timing
miraculously good; it could be they had got caught up in gods'
business. That being the case, they could only give their fate over
to their own gods, and hope to ride things out.
This was not Admiral Kheim's favoured mode of being.
'Enough,' he said darkly, ending the meeting. He had no faith in
the sea gods' good will, and took no stock in old stories, except
as they were useful. They were caught in the Kuroshio; they had
some knowledge of the currents of the Dahai -- that north of the
equator they ran cast, south of the equator, west. They knew the
prevailing winds tended to follow likewise. The doctor,
I Chen, had successfully ridden the entirety of this great
circle, his unprepared ship's crew living off fish and seaweed,
drinking rainwater, and stopping for supplies at islands they
passed. This was cause for hope. And as the air remained eerily
calm, hope was all they had. It was not as if they had any
other options; the ships were dead in the water, and the big ones
were too big to row anywhere. In truth they had no choice but to
make the best of it.
Admiral Kheim therefore ordered most of the men of the
fleet to get on board the Eighteen Lesser Ships, and ordered half
of these to row north, half south, with the idea they could row at
an angle out of the Black Stream, and sail home when the wind
returned, to get word to the Emperor concerning what had happened.
The Eight Great Ships, manned by the smallest crews that could sail
them, with as much of the fleet's supplies as could be fitted in
their holds, settled in to wait out the ride around the ocean on
the currents. If the smaller ones succeeded in sailing back to
China, they were to tell the Emperor to expect the Great Eight to
return at some later date, out of the southeast.
In a couple of days the smaller ships all disappeared
over the horizon, and the Eight Great Ships drifted on, roped
together in a perfect calm, off the maps to the unknown east. There
was nothing else they could do.
Thirty days passed without the slightest breeze. Each day
they rode the current farther to the cast.
No one had ever seen anything like it. Admiral Kheim
rejected all talk of the Divine Calm, however; as he pointed out,
the weather had gone strange in recent years, mostly much colder,
with lakes freezing over that had never frozen before, and freak
winds, such as certain whirlwinds that had stood in place for weeks
at a time. Something was wrong in the heavens. This was just part
of that.
When the wind returned at last, it was strong from the
west, pushing them even farther along. They angled south across the
prevailing wind, but cautiously now, hoping to stay within the
hypothetical great circle current, as being the fastest way around
the ocean and back home. In the middle of the circle there was
rumoured to be a permanent zone of calm, perhaps the very
centrepoint of the Dahai, as it was near the equator, and perhaps
equidistant from shores east and west, though no one could say for
sure about that. A doldrums that no junk could escape, in any case.
They had to go out far enough to the east to get around that, then
head south, then, below the equator, back west again.
They saw no islands. Seabirds sometimes flew over, and they shot
a few with arrows and ate them for luck. They fished day and night
with nets, and caught flying fish in their sails, and pulled in
snarls of seaweed that grew increasingly rare, and refilled their
water casks when it rained, setting funnels like inverted umbrellas
over them. And they were seldom thirsty, and never hungry.
But never a sight of land. The voyage went on, day after
day, week after week, month after month. The rattan and the rigging
began to wear thin. The sails grew transparent. Their skin began to
grow transparent.
The sailors grumbled. They no longer approved of the plan
to ride the circle of currents around the great sea; but there was
no turning back, as Kheim pointed out to them. So they passed
through their grumbling, as through a storm. Kheim was not an
admiral anyone wanted to cross.
They rode out storms in the sky, and felt the rocking of
storms under the sea. So many days passed that their lives before
the voyage grew distant and indistinct; Nippon, Taiwan, even China
itself began to seem like dreams of a former existence. Sailing
became the whole world: a water world, with its blue plate of waves
under an inverted bowl of blue sky, and nothing else. They no
longer even looked for land. A mass of seaweed was as astonishing
as an island would once have been. Rain was always welcome, as the
occasional periods of rationing and thirst had taught them
painfully their utter reliance on fresh water. This mostly came
from rain, despite the little stills that I Chen had
constructed to clarify salt water, which gave them a few buckets a
day.
All things were reduced to their elemental being. Water
was ocean; air was sky; earth, their ships; fire, the sun, and
their thoughts. The fires banked down. Some days Kheim woke, and
lived, and watched the sun go down again, and realized that he had
forgotten to think a single thought that whole day. And he was the
admiral.
Once they passed the bleached wreckage of a huge junk,
intertwined with seaweed and whitened with bird droppings, barely
afloat. Another time they saw a sea serpent out to the east, near
the horizon, perhaps leading them on.
Perhaps the fire had left their minds entirely, and was
in the sun alone, burning above through rainless days. But
something must have remained -- grey coals, almost burnt out -- for
when land poked over the horizon to the cast, late one afternoon,
they shouted as if it was all they had ever thought of, in
every moment of the hundred and sixty days of their unexpected
journey. Green mountainsides, falling precipitously into the sea,
apparently empty; it didn't matter; it was land. What looked to be
a large island.
The next morning it was still there ahead of them. Land
ho!
Very steep land, however, so steep that there was no
obvious place to make landfall: no bays, no river mouths of any
size; just a great wall of green hills, rising wetly out of the
sea.
Kheim ordered them to sail south, thinking even now of
the return to China. The wind was in their favour for once, and the
current also. They sailed south all that day and the next, without
a single harbour to be seen. Then, as light fog lifted one morning,
they saw they had passed a cape, which protected a sandy southern
reach; and farther south there was a gap in the hills, dramatic and
obvious. A bay. There was a patch of turbulent white water on the
north side of this majestic entrance strait, but beyond that it was
clear sailing, and the flood tide helping to usher them in.
So they sailed into a bay like nothing any of them had
ever seen in all their travels. An inland sea, really, with three
or four rocky islands in it, and hills all around, and marshes
bordering most of its shores. The hills were rocky on top but
mostly forested, the marshes lime green, yellowed by autumn
colours. Beautiful land; and empty!
They turned north and anchored in a shallow inlet,
protected by a hilly spine that ran down into the water. Then some
of them spotted a line of smoke rising up into the evening air.
'People,' I Chen said. 'But I don't think this can
be the western end of the Muslim lands. We haven't sailed far
enough for that, if Hsing Ho is correct. We shouldn't even be close
yet.'
'Maybe it was a stronger current than you thought.'
'Maybe. I can refine our distance from equator
tonight.'
'Good.'
But a distance from China would have been
better, and that was the calculation they could not make. Dead
reckoning had been impossible during the long period of their
drift, and despite I Chen's continual guesses, Kheim didn't
think they knew their distance from China to within a
thousand li.
As for distance from equator, I Chen reported
that night, after measuring the stars, that they were at about the
same line as Edo or Beijing a little higher than Edo, a little
lower than Beijing. I Chen tapped his astrolabe thoughtfully.
'It's the same level as the hui countries in the far west, in Fulan
where all the people died. If Hsing Ho's map can be trusted. Fulan,
see? A harbour called Lisboa. But there's no Fulan chi here. I
don't think this can be Fulan. We must have come upon an
island.'
'A big island!'
'Yes, a big island.' I Chen sighed. 'If we could
only solve the distancefrom China problem.'
It was an everlasting complaint with him, causing an
obsession with clockmaking; an accurate clock would have made it
possible to calculate longitude, using an almanac to give the star
times in China, and timing from there. The Emperor had some fine
timepieces in his palace, it was said, but they had no clock on
their ship. Kheim left him to his muttering.
The next morning they woke to find a group of locals,
men, women and children, dressed in leather skirts, shell
necklaces, and feather headdresses, standing on the beach watching
them. They had no cloth, it appeared, and no metal except small
bits of hammered gold, copper and silver. Their arrowheads and
spear tips were flaked obsidian, their baskets woven of reeds and
pine needles. Great mounds of shells lay heaped on the beach above
the high tide mark, and the visitors could see smoke rising
from fires set inside wicker hovels, little shelters like those the
poor farmers in China used for their pigs in winter.
The sailors laughed and chattered to see such people.
They were partly relieved and partly amazed, but it was impossible
to be frightened of these folk.
Kheim was not so sure. 'They're like the wild people on
Taiwan,' he said. 'We had some terrible fights with them when we
went after pirates in the mountains. We have to be careful.'
I Chen said, 'Tribes like that exist on some of the
Spice Islands too, I've seen them. But even those people have more
things than these.'
'No brick or wood houses, no iron that I can see, meaning
no guns . . .'
'No fields for that matter. They must cat the clams,'
pointing at the great shell heaps, 'and fish. And whatever
they can hunt or glean. These are poor people.'
'That won't leave much for us.'
'No.'
The sailors were shouting down at them: 'Hello!
Hello!'
Kheim ordered them to be quiet. He and I Chen got in
one of the little rowing boats they had on the great ship, and had
four sailors row them ashore.
From the shallows Kheim stood and greeted the locals,
palms up and out, as one did in the Spice Islands with the wild
ones. The locals didn't understand anything he said, but his
gestures made plain his peaceful intent, and they seemed to
recognize it. After a while he stepped ashore, confident of a
peaceful welcome, but instructing the sailors to keep their
flintlocks and crossbows below the seats at the ready, just in
case.
On shore he was surrounded by curious people, babbling in
their own tongue. Somewhat distracted by the sight of the women's
breasts, he greeted a man who stepped forward, whose elaborate and
colourful headdress perhaps confirmed him as their headman. Kheim's
silk neck scarf, much salt damaged and faded, had the image of
a phoenix on it, and Kheim untied it and gave it to the man,
holding it flat so he could see the image. The silk itself
interested the man more than the image on it. 'We should have
brought more silk,' Kheim said to I Chen I Chen
shook his head. 'We were invading Nippon. Get their words for
things if you can.'
I Chen was pointing to one thing after another,
their baskets, spears, dresses, headpieces, shell mounds; repeating
what they said, noting it quickly on his slate. 'Good, good. Well
met, well met. The Emperor of China and his humble servants send
their greetings.'
The thought of the Emperor made Kheim smile. What would
the Wanli, Heavenly Envoy, make of these poor
shell grubbers?
'We need to teach some of them Mandarin,' I Chen
said. 'Perhaps a young boy, they are quicker.'
'Or a young girl.'
'Don't let's get into that,' I Chen said. 'We need
to spend some time here, to repair the ships and restock. We don't
want the men here turning on us.'
Kheim mimed their intentions to the headman. Stay for a
while camp on shore -- cat, drink -- repair ships -- go back home,
beyond the, sunset to the west. It seemed they eventually
understood most of this. In return he understood from them that
they ate acorns and courgettes, fish and clams and birds, and
larger animals, probably they meant deer. They hunted in the hills
behind. There was lots of food, and the Chinese were welcome to it.
They liked Kheim's silk, and would trade fine baskets and food for
more of it. Their ornamental gold came from hills to the east,
beyond the delta of a big river that entered the bay across from
them, almost directly cast; they indicated where it flowed through
a gap in the hills, somewhat like the gap leading out to the
ocean.
As this information about the land obviously interested
I Chen, they conveyed more to him in a most ingenious way;
though they had no paper, nor ink, nor writing nor drawing, except
for the patterns in their baskets, they did have maps of a
particular kind, made in the sand on the beach. The headman and
some other notables crouched and shaped damp sand most minutely
with their hands, smoothing flat the part meant to represent the
bay, then getting into spirited discussions about the true shape of
the mountain between them and the ocean, which they called Tamalpi,
and which they indicated by gesture was a sleeping maiden, a
goddess apparently, though it was hard to be sure. They used grass
to represent a broad valley inland of the hills bracketing the bay
on the east, and wetted the channels of a delta and two rivers, one
draining the north, the other the south part of a great valley. To
the east of this big valley were foothills rising to mountains much
bigger than the coastal range, snow capped (indicated by
dandelion fluff) and holding in their midst a big lake or two.
All this they marked out with endless disputations
concerning the details, and care over fingernail creasings and bits
of grass or pine sprays; and all for a map that would be washed
away in the next high tide. But when they were done, the Chinese
knew that their gold came from people who lived in the foothills;
their salt from the shores of the bay; their obsidian from the
north and from beyond the high mountains, whence came also their
turquoise; and so on. And all without any language in common,
merely things displayed in mime, and their sand model of their
country.
In the days that followed, however, they exchanged words
for a host of daily objects and events, and I Chen kept lists
and started a glossary, and started teaching one of the local children, a girl of
about six years who was the child of the headman, and very forward;
a constant babbler in ber own tongue, whom the Chinese sailors
named Butterfly, both for her manner and for the joke that perhaps
at this point they were only her dream. She delighted in telling
I Chen what was what, very firmly; and quicker than Kheim
could have believed possible she was using Chinese as well as her
own language, mixing them together sometimes, but usually reserving
her Chinese for I Chen, as if it were his private tongue and
he some sort of freak, or inveterate joker, always making up fake
words for things neither opinion far from the truth.
Certainly her elders agreed that I Chen was a strange
foreigner, feeling their pulse and abdomens, looking in their
mouths, asking to inspect their urine (this they refused), and so
on. They had a kind of doctor themselves, who led them in ritual
purifications in a simple steam bath. This elderly raddled
wild eyed man was no doctor in the sense I Chen was, but
I Chen took great interest in the man's herbarium and his
explanations, as far as I Chen could make them out, using ever
more sophisticated sign languages, and Butterfly's growing facility
in Chinese. The locals' language was called Miwok, as the people
also called themselves; the word meant 'people' or something like.
They made it clear with their maps that their village controlled
the watershed of the stream that flowed into the bay. Other Miwok
lived in the nearly watersheds of the peninsula, between bay and
ocean; other people with different languages lived in other parts
of the country, each with its own name and territory, though the
Miwok could argue among themselves over the details of these things
endlessly. They told the Chinese that the great strait leading out
to the ocean had been created by an earthquake, and that the bay
had been fresh water before the cataclysm had let the ocean in.
This seemed unlikely to I Chen and Kheim, but then one morning
after they had slept on shore, they were awakened by a severe
shaking, and the earthquake lasted many heartbeats, and came back
twice that morning; so that after that they were not as sure about
the strait as they had been before.
They both enjoyed listening to the Miwok speak, but only
I Chen was interested in how the women made the bitter acorns
of the jaggedleaved oaks edible, by grinding and leeching the acorn
powder in beds of leaves and sand, giving them a sort of flour;
I Chen thought it was most ingenious. This flour, and salmon
both fresh and dried, were the staples of their diet, which they
offered the Chinese freely. They also ate deer, a kind of giant
deer, rabbits, and all manner of waterfowl. Indeed, as the autumn
descended mildly on them, and the months passed, the Chinese began
to understand that food was so plentiful in this place that there
was no need for agriculture as practised in China. Despite which
there were very few people living there. That was one of the
mysteries of this island.
The Miwok's hunts were big parties in the hills,
all day events that Kheim and his men were allowed to join.
The bows used by the Miwok were weak but adequate. Kheim ordered
his sailors to leave the crossbows and guns hidden on the ships,
and the cannon were simply left to view but not explained, and none
of the locals asked about them.
On one of these hunting trips Kheim and I Chen
followed the headman, Ta Ma, and some of the Miwok men up the
stream that poured through their village, up into hills to a high
meadow that had a view of the ocean to the west. To the cast they
could see across the bay, to range after range of green hills.
The meadow was marshy by the stream, grassy above it,
with stands of oak and other trees tufting the air. There was a
lake at the lower end of the meadow that was entirely covered with
geese -- a white blanket of living birds, all honking now, upset by
something, complaining. Then the whole flock thrashed into the air,
groups swirling and fragmenting, coming together, flying low over
the hunters, squawking or silently concentrating, on flight, the
distinctive creak of their pumping wing feathers loud in the air.
Thousands on thousands.
The men stood and watched the spectacle, eyes bright.
When the geese had all departed, they saw the reason they had left;
a herd of giant deer had come to the lake to drink. The stags had
huge racks of antlers. They stared across the water at the men,
vigilant but undeterred.
For a moment, all was still.
In the end the giant deer stepped away. Reality awoke
again. 'All sentient beings,' said I Chen, who had been
muttering his Buddhist sutras all along. Kheim normally had no time
for such claptrap, but now, as the day continued, and they hiked
over the hills on their hunt, seeing great numbers of peaceful
beaver, quail, rabbits, foxes, seagulls and crows, ordinary
deer, a bear and two cubs, a slinky long tailed grey hunting
creature, like a fox crossed with a squirrel -- on and on -- simply
a whole country of animals, living together under a silent blue sky
nothing disturbed, the land flourishing on its own, the people
there just a small part of it -- Kheim began to feel odd. He
realized that he had taken China for reality itself. Taiwan and the
Mindanaos and the other islands he had seen were like scraps of
land, leftovers; China had seemed to him the world. And China meant
people. Built up, cultivated, parcelled off ha by ha, it was so
completely a human world that Kheim had never considered that there
might once have been a natural world different to it. But here was
natural land, right before his eyes, full as could be with animals
of every kind, and obviously very much bigger than Taiwan; bigger
than China; bigger than the world he had known before.
'Where on Earth are we?' he said to I Chen
I Chen said, 'We have found the source of the
peach blossom stream.'
Winter arrived, and yet it stayed warm during the days,
cool at night. The Miwok gave them cloaks of sea otter pelts sewn
together with leather thread, and nothing could have been more
comfortable against the skin, they were as luxurious as the clothes
of the jade Emperor. During storms it rained and was cloudy, but
otherwise it was bright and sunny. This was all happening at the
same latitude as Beijing, according to I Chen, and at a time
of year when it would have been bitterly cold and windy there, so
the climate was much remarked on by the sailors. Kheim could
scarcely believe the locals when they said it was like this every
winter.
On the winter solstice, a sunny warm day like all the
rest, the Miwok invited Kheim and I Chen into their temple, a
little round thing like a dwarves' pagoda, the floor sunken into
the earth and the whole thing covered with sod, the weight of which
was held up by some tree trunks forking up into a nest of branches.
It was like being in a cave, and only the fire's light and the
smoky sun shafting down through a smokehole in the roof illuminated
the dim interior. The men were dressed in ceremonial feather
headdresses and many shell necklaces, which gleamed in the
firelight. To a constant drum rhythm they danced round the fire,
taking turns as night followed day, going on until it seemed to the
stupefied Kheim that they might never stop. He struggled to stay
awake, feeling the importance of the event for these men who looked
somehow like the animals they fed on. This day marked the return of
the sun, after all. But it was hard to stay awake. Eventually he
struggled to his feet and joined the younger dancers, and they made
room for him as he galumphed about, his sea legs bandying out to
the sides. On and on he danced, until it felt right to collapse in
a corner, and only emerge at the last part of dawn, the sky fully
lit, the sun about to burst over the hills backing the bay. The
happy loose limbed band of dancers and drummers was led by a
group of the young unmarried women to their sweat lodge, and in his
stupefied state Kheim saw how beautiful the women were, supremely
strong, as robust as the men, their feet unbound and their eyes
clear and without deference -- indeed they appeared to laugh
heartily at the weary men as they escorted them into the steam
bath, and helped them out of their headdresses and finery, making
what sounded like ribald commentary to Kheim, though it was
possible he was only making it up out of his own desire. But the
burnt air, the sweat pouring out of him, the abrupt clumsy plunge
into their little river, blasting him awake in the morning light;
all only increased his sense of the women's loveliness, beyond
anything he could remember exper encing in China, where a
sailor was always being taken by the precious blown flower girls in
the restaurants. Wonder and lust and the river's chill battled his
exhaustion, and then he slept on the beach in the sun.
He was back on the flagship when I Chen came to him,
mouth tight. 'One of them died last night. They brought me to see.
It was the pox.'
'What! Are you sure?'
I Chen nodded heavily, as grim as Kheim had ever
seen him.
Kheim rocked back. 'We will have to stay on board the
ships.'
'We should leave,' I Chen said. 'I think we brought
it to them.'
'But how? No one had pox on this trip.'
'None of the people here have any pox scars at all. I
suspect it is new to them. And some of us had it as children, as
you can see. Li and Peng are heavily pocked, and Peng has been
sleeping with one of the local women, and it was her child died of
it. And the woman is sick too.'
'No.'
'Yes. Alas. You know what happens to wild people when a
new sickness arrives. I've seen it in Aozhou. Most of them die. The
ones who don't will be balanced against it after that, but
they may still be able to tip others of the unexposed off their
balance, I don't know. In any case, it's bad.'
They could hear little Butterfly squealing up on the
deck, playing some game with the sailors. Kheim gestured above.
'What about her?'
'We could take her with us, I suppose. If we return her
to shore, she'll probably die with the rest.'
'But if she stays with us she may catch it and die
too.'
'True. But I could try to nurse her through it.'
Kheim frowned. Finally he said, 'We're provisioned and
watered. Tell the men. We'll sail south, and get in position for a
spring crossing back to China.'
Before they left, Kheim took Butterfly and rowed up to
the village's beach and stopped well offshore. Butterfly's father
spotted them and came down quickly, stood knee deep in the slack
tidal water and said something. His voice croaked, and Kheim saw
the pox blisters on him. Kheim's hands rowed the boat out a
stroke.
'What did he say?' he asked the girl.
'He said people are sick. People are dead.'
Kheim swallowed. 'Say to him, we brought a sickness with
us.'
She looked at him, not comprehending.
'Tell him we brought a sickness with us. By accident. Can
you say that to him? Say that.'
She shivered in the bottom of the boat.
Suddenly angry, Kheim said loudly to the Miwok headman,
'We brought a disease with us, by accident!'
Ta Ma stared at him.
'Butterfly, please tell him something. Say
something.'
She raised her head up and shouted something. Ta Ma took
two steps out, going waist deep in the water. Kheim rowed out
a couple of strokes, cursing. He was angry and there was no one to
be angry at.
'We have to leave!' he shouted. 'We're leaving! Tell him
that,' he said to Butterfly furiously. 'Tell him!'
She called out to Ta Ma, sounding distraught.
Kheim stood up in the boat, rocking it. He pointed at his
neck and face, then at Ta Ma. He mimicked distress, vomiting,
death. He pointed at the village and swept his hand as if erasing
it from a slate. He pointed at Ta Ma and gestured that he should
leave, that all of them should leave, should scatter. Not to other
villages but into the hills. He pointed at himself, at the girl
huddling in the boat. He mimed rowing out, sailing away. He pointed
at the girl, indicating her happy, playing, growing up, his teeth
clenched all the while.
Ta Ma appeared to understand not a single part of this
charade. Looking befuddled, he said something.
'What did he say?'
'He said, what do we do?'
Kheim waved at the bills again, indicating dispersion.
'Go!' he said loudly. 'Tell him, go away! Scatter!'
She said something to her father, miserably.
Ta Ma said something.
'What did he say, Butterfly? Can you tell me?'
'He said, fare well.'
The men regarded each other. Butterfly looked back and
forth between them, frightened.
'Scatter for two months!' Kheim said, realizing it was
useless but speaking anyway. 'Leave the sick ones and scatter.
After that you can regather, and the disease won't strike again. Go
away. We'll take Butterfly and keep her safe. We'll keep her on a
ship without anyone who has ever had smallpox. We'll take care of
her. Go!'
He gave up. 'Tell him what I said,' he asked Butterfly.
But she only whimpered and snivelled on the bottom of the boat.
Kheim rowed them back to the ship and they sailed away, out the
great mouth of the bay on the ebb tide, away to the south.
Butterfly cried often for the first three days after they
sailed, then ate ravenously, and after that began to talk
exclusively in Chinese. Kheim felt a stab every time he looked at
her, wondering if they had done the right thing to take her. She
would probably have died if they had left her, I Chen reminded
him. But Kheim wasn't sure even that was justification enough. And
the speed of her adjustment to her new life only made him more
uneasy. Was this what they were, then, to begin with? So tough as
this, so forgetful? Able to slip into whatever life was offered? It
made him feel strange to see such a thing.
One of his officers came to him. 'Peng isn't on board any
of the ships. We think he must have swum ashore and stayed with
them.'
Butterfly too fell ill, and I Chen sequestered her
in the bow of the flagship, in an airy nest under the bowsprit and
over the figurehead, which was a gold statue of Tianfei. He spent
many hours tending the girl through the six stages of the disease,
from the high fever and floating pulse of the Greater Yang, through
the Lesser Yang and Yang Brightness, with chills and fever coming
alternately; then into Greater Yin. He took her pulse every watch,
checked all her vital signs, lanced some of the blisters, dosed her
from his bags of medicines, mostly an admixture called Gift of the
Smallpox God, which contained ground rhinoceros horn, snow worms
from Tibet, crushed jade and pearl; but also, when it seemed she
was stuck in the Lesser Yin, and in danger of dying, tiny doses of
arsenic. The progress of the disease did not seem to Kheim to be
like the usual pox, but the sailors made the appropriate sacrifices
to the smallpox god nevertheless, burning incense and paper money
over a shrine that was copied on all eight of the ships.
Later, I Chen said that he thought being out on the
open sea had proven the key to her recovery. Her body lolled in its
bed on the groundswell, and her breathing and pulse fell into a
rhythm with it, he noticed, four breaths and six beats per swell,
in a fluttering pulse, over and over. This kind of confluence with
the elements was extremely helpful. And the salt air filled her
lungs with qi, and made her tongue less coated; he even fed her
little spoonfuls of ocean water, as well as all she would take of
fresh water, just recently removed from her home stream. And so she
recovered and got well, only lightly scarred by pox on her back and
neck.
They sailed south down the coast of the new island all
this while, and every day they became more amazed that they were
not reaching the southern end of it. One cape looked as if it would
be the turning point, but past it they saw the land curved south
again, behind some baked empty islands. Farther south they saw
villages on the beaches, and they knew enough now to identify the
bath temples. Kheim kept the fleet well offshore, but he did allow
one canoe to approach, and he had Butterfly try speaking to them,
but they didn't understand her, nor she them. Kheim made his dumb
show signifying sickness and danger, and the locals paddled quickly
away.
They began to sail against a current from the south, but
it was mild, and the winds were constant from the west. The fishing
here was excellent, the weather mild. Day followed day in a perfect
circle of sameness. The land fell away cast again, then ran south,
most of the way to the equator, past a big archipelago of low
islands, with good anchorages and good water, and seabirds with
blue feet.
They came at last to a steeply rising coastline, with
great snowy volcanoes in the distance, like Fuji only twice as big,
or more, punctuating the sky behind a steep coastal range, which
was already tall. This final giganticism put paid to anyone's
ability to think of this place as an island.
'Are you sure this isn't Africa?' Kheim said to
I Chen.
I Chen was not sure. 'Maybe. Maybe the people we
left up north are the only survivors of the Fulanchi, reduced to a
primitive state. Maybe this is the west coast of the world,
and we sailed past the opening to their middle sea in the night, or
in a fog. But I don't think so.'
'Then where are we?'
I Chen showed Kheim where he thought they were on
the long strips of their map; east of the final markings, out where
the map was entirely blank. But first he pointed to the far western
strip. 'See, Fulan and Africa look like this on their west sides.
The Muslim cartographers are very consistent about it. And Hsing Ho
calculated that the world is about seventy five thousand li
around. If he's right, we only sailed half as far as we should
have, or less, across the Dahai to Africa and Fulan.'
'Maybe he's wrong then. Maybe the world occupies more of
the globe than he thought. Or maybe the globe is smaller.'
'But his method was good. I made the same measurements on
our trip to the Moluccas, and did the geometry, and found he was
right.'
'But look!' Gesturing at the mountainous land before
them. 'If it isn't Africa, what is it?'
'An island, I suppose. A big island, far out in the
Dahai, where no one has ever sailed. Another world, like the real
one. An eastern one like the western one.'
'An island no one has ever sailed to before? That no one
ever knew about?' Kheim couldn't believe it.
'Well?' I Chen said, stubborn in the face of the
idea. 'Who else before us could have got here, and got back to tell
about it?'
Kheim took the point. 'And we're not back, either.'
'No. And no guarantee we will be able to do it. Could be
that Hsu Fu got here and tried to return, and failed. Maybe we'll
find his descendants on this very shore.'
'Maybe.'
Closing on the immense land, they saw a city on the
coast. It was nothing very big compared to back home, but
substantial compared to the tiny villages to the north. It was
mud coloured for the most part, but several gigantic buildings
in the city and behind it were roofed by gleaming expanses of
beaten gold. These were no Miwok!
So they sailed inshore warily, feeling unnerved, their
ships' cannons loaded and primed. They were startled to see the
primitive boats pulled up on the beaches fishing canoes like
those some of them had seen in the Moluccas, mostly two prowed
and made of bundled reeds. There were no guns to be seen; no sails;
no wharves or docks, except for one og pier that seemed to float,
anchored out away from the beach. It was perplexing to see the
terrestrial magnificence of the gold roofed buildings combined
with such maritime poverty. I--Chen said, 'It must have been an
inland kingdom to start with.'
'Lucky for us, the way those buildings look.'
'I suppose if the Han dynasty had never fallen, this is
what the coast of China would look like.'
A strange idea. But even mentioning China was a comfort.
After that they pointed at features of the town, saying 'That's
like in Cham,' or 'They build like that in Lanka,' and so forth;
and though it still looked bizarre, it was clear, even before they
made out people on the beach gaping at them, that it would be
people and not monkeys or birds populating the town.
Though they had no great hope that Butterfly would be
understood here, they took her near the shore with them
nevertheless, in the biggest landing boat. They kept the flintlocks
and crossbows concealed under their seats while Kheim stood in the
bow making the peaceful gestures that had won over the Miwok. Then
he got Butterfly to greet them kindly in her language, which she
did in a high, clear, penetrating voice. The crowd on the beach
watched, and some with hats like feathered crowns spoke to them,
but it was not Butterfly's language, nor one that any of them had
ever heard.
The elaborate headdresses of part of the crowd seemed
faintly military to Kheim, and so he had them row offshore a little
bit, and keep a lookout for bows or spears or any other weapons.
Something in the look of these people suggested the possibility of
an ambush.
Nothing of the sort happened. In fact, the next day when
they rowed in, a whole contingent of men, wearing checked tunics
and feathered headdresses, prostrated themselves on the beach.
Uneasily Kheim ordered a landing, on the lookout for trouble.
All went well. Communication by gesture, and quick basic
language lessons, was fair, although the locals seemed to take
Butterfly to be the visitors' leader, or rather talisman, or
priestess, it was impossible to say; certainly they venerated her.
Their mimed interchanges were mostly made by an older man in a
headdress with a fringe hanging over his forehead to his
eyes, and a badge extending high above the feathers. These
communications remained cordial, full of curiosity and good will.
They were offered cakes made of some kind of dense, substantial
flour; also huge tubers that could be cooked and eaten; and a weak
sour beer, which was all they ever saw the locals drink. Also a
stack of finely woven blankets, very warm and soft, made of a wool
from sheep that looked like sheep bred with camels, but were
clearly some entirely other creature, unknown to the real
world.
Eventually Kheim felt comfortable enough to accept an
invitation to leave the beach and visit the local king or emperor,
in the huge goldroofed palace or temple on the hilltop behind the
city. It was the gold that had done it, Kheim realized as he
prepared for the trip, still feeling uneasy. He loaded a short
flintlock and put it in a shoulder bag tucked under his arm, hidden
by his coat; and he left instructions with I Chen for a relief
operation if one proved necessary. Off they went, Kheim and
Butterfly and a dozen of the biggest sailors from the flagship,
accompanied by a crowd of local men in checked tunics.
They walked up a track past fields and houses. The women
in the fields carried their babies strapped to boards on their
backs, and they spun wool as they walked. They hung looms from
ropes tied to trees, to get the necessary tension to weave. Checked
patterns seemed the only ones they used, usually black and tan,
sometimes black and red. Their fields consisted of raised mounds,
rectangular in shape, standing out of wetlands by the river.
Presumably they grew their tubers in the mounds. They were flooded
like rice fields, but not. Everything was similar but different.
Gold here seemed as common as iron in China, while on the other
hand there was no iron at all to be seen.
The palace above the city was huge, bigger than the
Forbidden City in Beijing, with many rectangular buildings arranged
in rectangular patterns. Everything was arranged like their cloth.
Stone plinths in the courtyard outside the palace were carved into
strange figures, birds and animals all mixed up, painted all
colours, so that Kheim found it hard to look at them. He wondered
if the strange creatures represented on them would be found living
in the back country, or were their versions of dragon and phoenix.
He saw lots of copper, and some bronze or brass, but mostly gold.
The guards standing in rows around the palace held long spears
tipped with gold, and their shields were gold too; decorative, but
not very practical. Their enemies must not have had iron
either.
Inside the palace they were led into a vast room with one
wall open onto a courtyard, the other three covered in gold
filigree. Here blankets were spread, and Kheim and Butterfly and
the other Chinese were invited to sit on one.
Into the room came their emperor. All bowed and then sat
on the ground. The Emperor sat on a checked cloth next to the
visitors, and said something politely. He was a man of about forty
years, white toothed and handsome, with a broad forehead, high
prominent cheekbones, clear brown eyes, a pointed chin and a strong
hawkish nose. His crown was gold, and was decorated with small gold
heads, dangling in holes cut into the crown, like pirates' beads at
the gates of Hangzhou.
This too made Kheim uneasy, and he shifted his pistol
under his coat, looking around surreptitiously. There were no other
signs to trouble him. Of course there were hard looking men
there, clearly the Emperor's guard, ready to pounce if anything
threatened him; but other than that, nothing; and that seemed an
ordinary precaution to take when strangers were around.
A priest wearing a cape made of cobalt blue bird feathers
came in, and performed a ceremony for the Emperor, and after that
they feasted through the day, on a meat like lamb, and vegetables
and mashes that Kheim did not recognize. The weak beer was all they
drank, except for a truly fiery brandy. Eventually Kheim began to
feel drunk, and he could see his men were worse. Butterfly did not
like any of the flavours, and ate and drank very little. Out on the
courtyard, men danced to drums and reed pipes, sounding very like
Korean musicians, which gave Kheim a start; he wondered if these
people's ancestors had drifted over from Korea ages ago, carried on
the Kuroshio. Perhaps just a few lost ships had populated this
whole land, many dynasties before; indeed the music sounded like an
echo from a past age. But who could say? He would talk to
I Chen about it when he got back to the ship.
At sundown Kheim indicated their desire to return to
their ships. The Emperor only looked at him, and gestured to his
caped priest, and then rose. Everyone stood and bowed again. He
left the room.
When he had gone, Kheim stood and took Butterfly by the
hand, and tried to lead ber out the way they had come (although
he was not sure he could remember it); but the guards blocked them,
their goldtipped spears held crossways, in a position as ceremonial
as their dances had been.
Kheim mimed displeasure, very easy to do, and indicated
that Butterfly would be sad and angry if she were kept from their
ships. But the guards did not move.
So. There they were. Kheim cursed himself for leaving the
beach with such strange people. He felt the pistol under his coat.
One shot only. He would have to hope that I Chen could rescue
them. It was a good thing he had insisted the doctor stay behind,
as he felt I Chen would do the best job of organizing such an
operation.
The captives spent the night huddled together on their
blanket, surrounded by standing guards who did not sleep, but spent
their time chewing small leaves they took from shoulder bags tucked
under their chequered tunics. They watched bright eyed. Kheim
huddled around Butterfly, and she snuggled like a cat against him.
It was cold. Kheim got the others to crowd around, all of them
together, protecting her by a single touch or at least the
proximity of their warmth.
At dawn the Emperor returned, dressed like a giant
peacock or phoenix, accompanied by women wearing gold breast cones,
shaped uncannily like real breasts, with ruby nipples. The sight of
these women gave Kheim an absurd hope that they would be all right.
Then behind them entered the caped high priest, and a chequered
masked figure, whose headdress dangled everywhere with tiny gold
skulls. Some form of their death god, there was no mistaking it. He
was there to execute them, Kheim thought, and the realization
jolted him into a heightened state of awareness, in which all the
gold sheeted white in the sun, and the space they walked through
had an extra dimension of depth and solidity, the chequered people
as solid and vivid as festival demons.
They were led out into the misty horizontal light of
dawn, cast and uphill. Uphill all that day, and the next day too,
until Kheim gasped as he climbed, and looked back amazed from the
occasional ridge, down and down to the sea, which was a blue
textured surface, extremely flat and very far below. He had never
imagined he could get so far above the ocean, it was like flying.
And yet there were higher hills still ahead to the cast, and on
certain crests of the range, massive white volcanoes, like
super Fujis.
They walked up towards these. They were fed well, and
given a tea as bitter as alum; and then, in a musical ritual
ceremony, given little bags of the tea leaves, the same
ragged edged green leaves their guards had been chewing on the
first night. The leaves also were bitter to the taste, but they
soon numbed the mouth and throat, and after that Kheim felt better.
The leaves were a stimulant, like tea or coffee. He told Butterfly
and his men to chew theirs down as well. The thin strength that
poured through his nerves gave him the qi energy to think about the
problem of escape.
It did not seem likely that I Chen would be able to
get through the mud and gold city to follow them, but
Kheim could not stop hoping for it, a kind of furious hope, felt
every time he looked at Butterfly's face, unblemished yet by doubt
or fear; as far as she was concerned this was just the next stage
of a journey that was already as strange as it could get. This part
was interesting to her, in fact, with its bird--throat colours, its
gold and its mountains. She didn't seem affected by the height to
which they had climbed.
Kheim began to understand that clouds, which often now
lay below them, existed in a colder and less fulfilling air than
the precious salty soup they breathed on the sea surface. Once he
caught a whiff of that sea air, perhaps just the salt still in his
hair, and he longed for it as for food. Hungry for air! He
shuddered to think how high they were.
Yet they had not finished. They climbed to a ridge
covered by snow. The trail was pounded glistening into the hard
white stuff. They were given soft wood soled boots with fur on
the inside, and heavier tunics, and blankets with holes for the
head and arms, all elaborately checked, with small figures filling
small squares. The blanket given to Butterfly was so long it looked
as if she was wearing a Buddhist nun's dress, and it was made of
such fine cloth that Kheim grew suddenly afraid. There was another
child travelling with them, a boy Kheim thought, though he was not
sure; and this child too was dressed as finely as the caped
priest.
They came to a campsite made of flat rocks set on the
snow. They made a big fire in a sunken pit in this platform, and
around it erected a number of yurts. Their captors settled
on their blankets and ate a meal, followed by many ritual cups of
their hot tea, and beer and brandy, after which they performed a
ceremony to honour the setting sun, which fell into clouds scudding
over the ocean. They were well above the clouds now, yet above them
to the east a great volcano poked into the indigo sky, its snowy
flanks glowing a deep pink in the moments after sunset.
That night was frigid. Again Kheim held Butterfly, fear
waking him whenever she stirred. The girl even seemed to stop
breathing from time to time, but she always started again.
At dawn they were roused, and Kheim was thankful to be
given more of the hot tea, then a substantial meal, followed by
more of the little green leaves to chew; though these last were
handed to them by the executioner god.
They started up the side of the volcano while it was
still a grey snow slope under a white dawn sky. The ocean to the
west was covered by clouds, but they were breaking up, and the
great blue plate lay there far, far below, looking to Kheim like
his home village or his childhood.
It got colder as they ascended, and hard to walk. The
snow was brittle underfoot, and icy bits of it clinked and
glittered. It was extremely bright, but everything else was too
dark: the sky blue black, the row of people dim. Kheim's eyes
ran, and the tears were cold on his face and in his thin grey
whiskers. On he hiked, placing his feet carefully in the footsteps
of the guard ahead of him, reaching back awkwardly to hold
Butterfly's hand and pull her along.
Finally, after he had forgotten to look up for a while,
no longer expecting anything ever to change, the slope of the snow
laid back. Bare black rocks appeared, thrusting out of the snow
left and right, and especially ahead, where he could see nothing
higher.
Indeed, it was the peak: a broad jumbled wasteland of
rock like torn and frozen mud, mixed with ice and snow. At the
highest point of the tortured mass a few poles obtruded, cloth
streamers and flags flying from them, as in the mountains of Tibet.
Perhaps these were Tibetans then.
The caped priest and the executioner god and the guards
assembled at the foot of these rocks. The two children were taken
to the priest, guards restraining Kheim all the while. He stepped
back as if giving up, put his hands under his blanket as if they were cold, which they
were; they fumbled like ice for the handle of his flintlock. He
cocked the lock and pulled the pistol free of his coat, hidden only
under the blanket.
The children were given more hot tea, which they drank willingly.
The priest and his minions sang facing the sun, drums pounding like
the painful pulse behind Kheim's half blinded eyes. He had a
bad headache, and everything looked like a shadow of itself.
Below them on the snowy ridge, figures were climbing fast. They
wore the local blankets, but Kheim thought they looked like
I Chen and his men. Much farther below them, another group
straggled up in pursuit.
Kheim's heart was already pounding; now it rolled inside him like
the ceremonial drums. The executioner god took a gold knife out of
an elaborate carved wooden scabbard, and cut the little boy's
throat. The blood he caught in a gold bowl, where it steamed in the
sun. To the sound of the drums and pipes and sung prayers, the body
was wrapped in a mantle of the soft chequered cloth, and lowered
tenderly into the peak, in a crack between two great rocks.
The executioner and the caped priest then turned to Butterfly, who
was tugging uselessly to get away. Kheim pulled his pistol free of
the blanket and checked the flint, then aimed it with both hands at
the executioner god. He shouted something, then held his breath.
The guards were moving towards him, the executioner had looked his
way. Kheim pulled the trigger and the pistol boomed and blossomed
smoke, knocking Kheim two steps back. The executioner god flew
backwards and skidded over a patch of snow, bleeding copiously from
the throat. The gold knife fell from his opened hand.
All the onlookers stared at the executioner god, stunned; they
didn't know what had happened.
Kheim kept the pistol pointed at them, while he rooted in his belt
bag for charge, plunger, ball, wad. He reloaded the pistol right in
front of them, shouting sharply once or twice, which made them
jump.
Pistol reloaded, he aimed it at the guards, who fell back. Some
kneeled, others stumbled away. He could see I Chen and his
sailors toiling up the snow of the last slope. The caped priest
said something, and Kheim aimed his pistol carefully at him and
shot.
Again the loud bang of the explosion, like thunder in the car, and
the plume of white smoke jetting out. The caped priest flew back as
if struck by a giant invisible fist, tumbled down and lay
writhing in the snow, his cape stained with blood.
Kheim strode through the smoke to Butterfly. He lifted her away
from her captors, who quivered as if paralysed. He carried her in
his arms down the trail. She was only semi conscious; very
possibly the tea had been drugged.
He came to I Chen, who was huffing and puffing at the head of
a gang of their sailors, all armed with flintlocks, a pistol and
musket for each. 'Back to the ships,' Kheim ordered. 'Shoot any
that get in the way.'
Going down the mountain was tremendously easier than
going up had been, indeed it was a danger in that it felt so easy,
while at the same time they were still light headed and
half blinded, and so tired that they tended to slip, and more
and more as it warmed and the snow softened and smashed under their
feet. Carrying Butterfly, Kheim had his view of his footing
obscured as well, and he slipped often, sometimes heavily. But two
of his men walked at his sides when it was possible, holding him up
by the elbows when he slipped, and despite all they made good time.
Crowds of people gathered each time they approached one of the
high villages, and Kheim then gave over Butterfly to the men, so
that he could hold the pistol aloft for all to see. If the
crowds got in their way, he shot the man with the biggest
headdress. The boom of the shot appeared to frighten the onlookers
even more than the sudden collapse and bloody death of their
priests and headmen, and Kheim thought it was probably a
system in which local leaders were frequently executed for one
thing or another by the guards of the Emperor.
In any case, the people they passed seemed paralysed mostly by the
Chinese command of sound. Claps of thunder, accompanied by
instant death, as in a lightning strike -- that must have happened
often enough in these exposed mountains to give them an idea of
what the Chinese had mastered. Lightning in a tube.
Eventually Kheim gave Butterfly to his men, and marched down
heavily at their head, reloading his gun and firing at any crowd
close enough to hit, feeling a strange exultation rise in him, a
terrible power over these ignorant primitives who could be awed to
paralysis by a gun.
He was their executioner god made real, and he passed through
them as if they were puppets whose strings had been cut.
He stopped his crew late in the day, to seize food from a
village and eat it, then continued down again until nightfall. They
took refuge in a storage building, a big stone walled
wooden roofed barn, stuffed to the rafters with cloth, grain
and gold. The men would have killed themselves carrying gold on
their backs, but Kheim restricted them to one item apiece, either
jewellery or a single disc ingot. 'We'll all come back some day,'
he told them, I and end up richer than the Emperor.' He chose for
himself a hummingbird moth figured in gold.
Though exhausted, he found it hard to lie down, or even
to stop walking. After a nightmare interval, sitting
half asleep by Butterfly's side, he woke them all before dawn
and began the march downhill again, their guns all loaded and
ready.
As they descended to the coast it became apparent that
runners had passed them in the night, and warned the locals below
of the disaster on the summit. A fighting force of men held the
crossroads just above the great coastal city, shouting to the beat
of drums, brandishing clubs, shields, spears and pikes. The
descending Chinese were obviously outnumbered, the fifty men
I Chen had brought approaching some four or five hundred local
warriors.
'Spread out,' Kheim told his men. 'March right down the
road at them, singing "Drunk Again on the Grand Canal" Get all the
guns out front, and when I say stop, stop and aim at their leaders
whoever has the most feathers on their head. All of you
shoot together when I say fire, and then reload. Reload as fast as
you can, but don't shoot again unless you hear me say so. If I do,
fire and reload yet again.'
So they marched down the road, roaring the old drinking
song at the top of their lungs, then stopped and fired a volley,
and their flintlocks might as well have been a row of cannon, they
had such an effect: many men knocked down and bleeding, the
survivors among them running in a complete panic.
It had only taken one volley, and the coastal city was
theirs. They could have burned it to the ground, taken anything in
it; but Kheim marched them through the streets as quickly as
possible, still singing as loudly as they could, until they were on
the beach among the Chinese landing boats, and safe. They never
even had to fire a second time.
Kheim went to I Chen and shook his hand. 'Many
thanks,' he said to him formally before all the others. 'You saved
us. They would have sacrificed Butterfly like a lamb, and killed
the rest of us like flies.'
It seemed to Kheim only reasonable that the locals would
soon recover from the shock of the guns, after which they would be
dangerous in their numbers. Even now crowds were gathering at a
safe distance to observe them. So after getting Butterfly and most
of the men onto the ships, Kheim consulted with I Chen and
their ships' provision masters, to see what they were still lacking
for a voyage back across the Dahai. Then he took a big armed party
ashore one last time, and after the ships' cannons were fired at
the city, he and his men marched straight for the palace, singing
again and stepping to the beat of their drums. At the palace they
raced around the wall, and caught a group of priests and women
escaping at a gate on the other side, and Kheim shot one priest,
and had his men tie the others up.
After that he stood before the priests, and mimed his
demands. His head still pounded painfully, he remained floating in
the strange exhil aration of killing, and it was remarkable
how easy it was to convey by mime alone a fairly elaborate list of
demands. He pointed to himself and his men, then to the west, and
made one hand sail away on the wind of the other one. He held up
samples of food and the bags of tea leaves, indicated that these
were wanted. He mimed them being brought to the beach. He went to
the chief hostage and imitated untying him and waving farewell. If
the goods didn't arrive ... He pointed the gun at each hostage. But
if they did, the Chinese would release everyone and sail away.
He acted out each step of the process, looking the
hostages in the eyes and speaking only a little, as he judged it
would only be a distraction to their comprehension. Then he had his
men release all the women captured, and a few of the men without
headdresses, and sent them out with clear instructions to get the
required goods. He could tell by their eyes that they understood
exactly what they were to do.
After that he marched the hostages to the beach, and they
waited. That same afternoon men appeared in one of the main
streets, bags slung down their backs from lines hung around their
foreheads. They deposited these bags on the beach, bowing, and then
retreated, still facing the Chinese. Dried meat; grain cakes; the
little green leaves; gold discs and ornaments (though Kheim had not
asked for these); blankets and bolts of the soft cloth. Looking at
it all spread on the beach, Kheim felt like a tax collector, heavy
and cruel; but also relieved; powerful in a tenuous fashion only,
as it was by a magic he didn't understand or control. Above all he
felt content. They had what they needed to get home.
He untied the hostages himself, gestured for them to go.
He gave each of them a pistol ball, curling their unresponsive
fingers around them. 'We'll be back some day,' he said to them.
'Us, or people worse than us.' He wondered briefly if they would
catch smallpox, like the Miwok; his sailors had slept on the
locals' blankets at the palace.
No way to tell. The locals stumbled away, clutching their
pistol balls or dropping them. Their women stood at a safe
distance, happy to see that Kheim had kept his pantomimed promise,
happy to see their men freed. Kheim ordered his men into the boats.
They rowed out to the ships and sailed away from the big mountain
island.
After all that, sailing the Great Ocean felt very
familiar, very peaceful. The days passed in their rounds. They
followed the sun west, always west. Most days were hot and sunny.
Then for a month clouds grew every day and broke in the afternoons,
in grey thundershowers that quickly dissipated. After that the
winds always blew from the southeast, making their way easy. Their
memories of the great island behind them began to seem like dreams,
or legends they had heard about the realm of the asuras. If it
weren't for Butterfly's presence it would have been hard to believe
they had done all that.
Butterfly played on the flagship. She swung through the
rigging like a little monkey. There were hundreds of men on board,
but the presence of one little girl changed everything: they sailed
under a blessing. The other ships stayed close to the flagship in
the hope of catching sight of her, or being blessed by an
occasional visit. Most of the sailors believed she was the goddess
Tianfei, travelling with them for their own safety, and that this
was why the return voyage was going so much easier than the voyage
out had. The weather was kinder, the air warmer, the fish more
plentiful. Three times they passed small atolls, uninhabited, and
were able to take on coconuts and palm hearts, and once water. Most
importantly, Kheim felt, they were headed west, back home to the
known world. It felt so different from the voyage out that it
seemed strange it was the same activity. That orientation alone
could make such a difference! But it was hard to sail into the
morning sun, hard to sail away from the world.
Sailing, day after day. Sun rising at the stern, sinking at the
bow, drawing them on. Even the sun was helping them -- perhaps too
much -- it was now the seventh month, and infernally hot; then
windless for most of a month. They prayed to Tianfei,
ostentatiously not looking at Butterfly as they did so.
She played in the rigging, oblivious to their sidelong
glances. She spoke Chinese pretty well now, and had taught
I Chen all the Miwok she could remember. I Chen had
written down every word, in a dictionary that he thought might be
useful to subsequent expeditions to the new island. It was
interesting, he told Kheim, because usually he was just choosing
the ideogram or combination of ideograms that sounded most like the
Miwok word as spoken, and writing down as precise a definition of
its Miwok meaning as he could, given the source of information; but
of course when looking at the ideographs for the sounds it was
impossible not to hear the Chinese meanings for them as well, so
that the whole Miwok language became yet another set of homonyms to
add to the already giant number that existed in Chinese. Many
Chinese literary or religious symbols relied on pure accidents of
homonymity to make their metaphorical connection, so that one said
the tenth day of the month, shi, was the birthday of the
stone, shi; or a picture of a heron and lotus, lu and lian, by
homynym became the message 'may your path (lu) be always upward
(lian)'; or the picture of a monkey on the back of another one
could be read in a similar way as 'may you rank as a governor from
generation to generation'. Now to I Chen the Miwok words for
'going home' looked like wu ya, five ducks, while the Miwok for
'swim' looked like Peng zu, the legendary character who
had lived for eight hundred years. So he would sing 'five ducks
swimming home, it will only take eight hundred years', or 'I'm
going to jump off the side and become Peng zu', and Butterfly
would shriek with laughter. Other similarities in the two
languages' maritime words made I Chen suspect that Hsu Fus
expedition to the cast had made it to the ocean continent of
Ying zhou after all, and left there some Chinese words if
nothing else; if, indeed, the Miwok themselves were not the
descendants of his expedition.
Some men already spoke of returning to the new land,
usually to the golden kingdom in the south, to subdue it by
arms and take its gold back to the real world. They did not say, We
will do this, which would be bad luck, obviously, but
rather, if one were to do this. Other men listened to this talk
from a distance behind their eyes, knowing that if Tianfei allowed
them to reach home, nothing ever again would induce them to cross
the great ocean.
Then they became entirely becalmed, in a patch of ocean
devoid of rain, cloud, wind or current. It was as if a curse had
fallen on them, possibly from the loose talk of return for gold.
They began to bake. There were sharks in the water, so they could
not swim freely to cool off, but had to set a sail in the water
between two of the ships, and let it sink until they could jump off
into a pool, very warm, about chest deep. Kheim had Butterfly wear
a shift and let her jump in. To refuse her wish would have been to
astound and infuriate the crew. It turned out she could swim like
an otter. The men treated her like the goddess she was, and she
laughed to see them sporting like boys. It was a relief to do
something different, but the sail couldn't sustain the wetness and
bouncing on it, and gradually came apart. So they only did it
once.
The doldrums began to endanger them. They would run out
of water, then food. Possibly subtle currents continued to carry
them west, but I Chen was not optimistic. 'It's more likely
we've wandered into the centre of the big circular current, like a
whirlpool's centre.' He advised sailing south when possible, to get
back into both wind and current, and Kheim agreed, but there was no
wind to sail. It was much like the first month of their expedition,
only without the Kuroshio. Again they discussed putting out the
boats and rowing the ships, but the vast junks were too big to move
by oar power alone, and I Chen judged it dangerous to tear the
skin off the palms of the men when they were already so dried out.
There was no recourse but to clean their stills, and keep them in
the sun and primed all day long, and ration what water remained in
the casks. And keep Butterfly fully watered, no matter what she
said about doing like all the rest. They would have given her the
last cask in the fleet.
It had come to the point at which I Chen was
proposing that they save their dark yellow urine and mix it with
their remaining water supplies, when black clouds appeared from the
south, and it quickly became clear that their problem was going to
change very swiftly from having too little water to having too
much. Wind struck hard, clouds rolled over them, water fell in
sheets and the funnels were deployed over the casks, which refilled
almost instantly. Then it was a matter of riding out the storm.
Only junks as big as theirs were high enough and flexible enough to
survive such an onslaught for long; and even the Eight Great Ships,
desiccated above the water as they had been in the doldrums, now
swelled in the rain, snapping many of the ropes and pins holding
them together, so that riding out the storm became a continuous
drenched frantic stemming of leaks, and fixing of broken spars and
staves and ropes.
All this time the waves were growing bigger, until
eventually the ships were rising and falling as over enormous
smoking bills, rolling south to north at a harried but inexorable,
even majestic pace. In the flagship they shot up the face of these
and crested in a smear of white foam over the deck, after which
they had a brief moment's view of the chaos from horizon to
horizon, with perhaps two or three of the other ships visible,
bobbing in different rhythms and being blown away into the watery
murk. For the most part there was nothing to do but hunker down in
the cabins, drenched and apprehensive, unable to hear each other
over the roar of wind and wave.
At the height of the storm they entered the fish's eye,
that strange and ominous calm in which disordered waves sloshed
about in all directions, crashing into each other and launching
solid bolts of white water into the dark air, while all around them
low black clouds obscured the horizon. A typhoon, therefore, and
none was surprised. As in the yin yang symbol, there were dots
of calm at the core of the wind. It would soon return from the
opposite direction.
So they worked on repairs in great haste, feeling, as one
always did, that having got halfway through it they should be able
to reach the end. Kheim peered through the murk at the nearest ship
to them, which appeared to be in difficulty. The men crowded its
railing, staring longingly at Butterfly, some even crying out to
her. No doubt they thought their trouble resulted from the fact
they did not have her on board with them. Its captain shouted to
Kheim that they might have to cut down their masts in the second
half of the storm to keep from being rolled over, and that the
others should hunt for them if necessary, after it had passed.
But when the other side of the typhoon struck, things
went badly on the flagship as well. An odd wave threw Butterfly
into a wall awkwardly, and after that the fear in the men was palpable. They
lost sight of the other ships. The huge waves again were torn to
foam by the wind, and their crests crashed over the ship as if
trying to sink it. The rudder snapped off at the rudder post, and
after that, though they tried to get a yard over the side to
replace the rudder, they were in effect a hulk, struck in the side
by every passing wave. While men fought to get steerage and save
the ship, and some were swept overboard, or drowned in the lines,
I Chen attended to Butterfly. He shouted to Kheim that she had
broken an arm and apparently some ribs. She was gasping for breath,
Kheim saw. He returned to the struggle for steerage, and finally
they got a sea anchor over the side, which quickly brought their
bow around into the wind. This saved them for the moment, but even
coming over the bow the waves were heavy blows, and it took every
effort they could make to keep the hatches from tearing off and the
ship's compartments from filling. All done in an agony of
apprehension about Butterfly; men shouted angrily that she should
have been cared for better, that it was inexcusable that something
like this should happen. Kheim knew that was his
responsibility.
When he could spare a moment he went to her side, in the
highest cabin on the rear deck, and looked beseechingly at
I Chen, who would not reassure him. She was coughing up a
foamy blood, very red, and I Chen was sucking her throat clear
of it from time to time with a tube he stuck down her mouth. 'A rib
has punctured a lung,' he said shortly, keeping his eyes on her.
She meanwhile was conscious, wide--eyed, in pain but quiet. She
said only, 'What's happening to me?' After I Chen cleared her
throat of another mass of blood, he told ber what he had told
Kheim. She panted like a dog, shallow and fast.
Kheim went back into the watery chaos above decks. The
wind and waves were no worse than before, perhaps a bit better.
There were scores of problems large and small to attend to, and he
threw himself at them in a fury, muttering to himself, or shouting
at the gods; it didn't matter, no one could hear anything above
decks, unless it was shouted directly in their ears. 'Please,
Tianfei, stay with us! Don't leave us! Let us go home. Let us
return to tell the Emperor what we have found for him. Let the girl
live.'
They survived the storm: but Butterfly died the next
day.
There were only three ships that found each other and regathered
on the quiet blank of the sea. They sewed Butterfly's body in a
man's robe and tied two of the gold discs from the mountain empire
into it, and let it slide over the side into the waves. All the men
were weeping, even I Chen, and Kheim could barely speak the words
of the funeral prayer. Who was there to pray to? It seemed
impossible that after all they had gone through, a mere storm could
kill the sea goddess; but there she was, slipping under the waves,
sacrificed to the sea just as that island boy had been sacrificed
to the mountain. Sun or seafloor, it was all the same.
'She died to save us,' he told the men shortly. 'She gave
that avatar of herself to the storm god, so he would let us be. Now
we have to carry on to honour her. We have to get back home.'
So they repaired the ship as best they could, and endured
another month of desiccated life. This was the longest month of the
trip, of their lives. Everything was breaking down, on the ships,
in their bodies. There wasn't enough food and water. Sores broke
out in their mouths and on their skin. They had very little qi, and
could hardly eat what food was left.
Kheim's thoughts left him. He found that when thoughts
leave, things just did themselves. Doing did not need thinking.
One day he thought: sail too big cannot be lifted.
Another day he thought: more than enough is too much. Too much is
less. Therefore least is most. Finally he saw what the Daoists
meant by that.
Go with the way. Breathe in and out. Move with the
swells. Sea doesn't know ship, ship doesn't know sea. Floating does
itself. A balance in balance. Sit without thinking.
The sea and sky melded. All blue. There was no one doing,
nothing being done. Sailing just happened.
Thus, when a great sea was crossed, there was no one
doing it.
Someone looked up and noticed an island. It turned out to
be Mindanao, and after the rest of its archipelago, Taiwan, and all
the familiar landfalls of the Inland Sea.
The three remaining Great Ships sailed into Nanking
almost exactly twenty months after their departure, surprising all
the inhabitants of the city, who thought they had joined Hsu Fu at
the bottom of the sea. And they were happy to be home, no
doubt about it, and bursting with stories to tell of the amazing
giant island to the cast.
But any time Kheim met the eye of any of his men, he saw
the pain there. He saw also that they blamed him for her death. So
he was happy to leave Nanking and travel with a gang of officials
up the Grand Canal to Beijing. He knew that his sailors would
scatter up and down the coast, go their ways so they wouldn't have
to see each other and remember; only after years had passed would
they want to meet, so that they could remember the pain when it had
become so distant and faint that they actually wanted it back, just
to feel again they had done all those things, that life had held
all those things.
But for now it was impossible not to feel they had
failed. And so when Kheim was led into the Forbidden City, and
brought before the Wanli Emperor to accept the acclaim of all the
officials there, and the interested and gracious thanks of the
Emperor himself, he said only, 'When a great sea has been crossed,
there is no one to take credit.'
The Wanli Emperor nodded, fingering one of the gold disc
ingots they had brought back, and then the big hummingbird moth of
beaten gold, its feathers and antennae perfectly delineated with
the utmost delicacy and skill. Kheim stared at the Heavenly Envoy,
trying to see in to the hidden Emperor, the Jade Emperor inside
him. Kheim said to him, 'That far country is lost in time, its
streets paved with gold, its palaces roofed with gold. You could
conquer it in a month, and rule over all its immensity, and bring
back all the treasure that it has, endless forest and furs,
turquoise and gold, more gold than there is yet now in the world;
and yet still the greatest treasure in that land is already
lost.'
Snowy peaks, towering over a dark land. The first blinding crack
of sunlight flooding all. He could have made it then
everything was so bright, he could have launched himself into pure
whiteness at that moment and never come back, flowed out for ever
into the All. Release, release. You have to have seen a lot to want
release that much.
But the moment passed and he was on the black stage floor
of the bardo's hall of judgment, on its Chinese side, a nightmare
warren of numbered levels and legal chambers and bureaucrats
wielding lists of souls to be remanded to the care of meticulous
torturers. Above this hellish bureaucracy loomed the usual Tibet of
a dais, occupied by its menagerie of demonic gods, chopping up
condemned souls and chasing the pieces off to hell or a new life in
the realm of preta or beast. The lurid glow, the giant dais like
the side of a mesa towering above, the hallucinatorily colourful
gods roaring and dancing, their swords flashing in the black air;
it was judgment -- an inhuman activity -- not the pot calling the
kettle black, but true judgment, by higher authorities, the makers
of this universe. Who were the ones, after all, that had made
humans as weak and craven and cruel as they so often were -- so
that there was a sense of doom enforced, of loaded dice, karma
lashing out at whatever little pleasures and beauties the miserable
subdivine sentiences might have concocted out of the mud of their
existence. A brave life, fought against the odds? Go back as a dog!
A dogged life, persisting despite all? Go back as a mule, go back
as a worm. That's the way things work.
Thus Kheim reflected as he strode up through the mists in
a growing rage, as he banged through the bureaucrats, smashing them
with their own slates, their lists and tallies, until he caught
sight of Kali and her court, standing in a semi circle
taunting Butterfly, judging her -- as if that poor simple soul had
anything to answer for, compared to these butcher gods and their
cons of evil evil insinuated right into the heart of the
cosmos they themselves had made!
Kheim roared in wordless fury, and charged up and seized
a sword from one of the death goddess's six arms, and cut off a
brace of them with a single stroke; the blade was very sharp. The
arms lay scattered and bleeding on the floor, flopping about --
then, to Kheim's unutterable consternation, they were grasping the
floorboards and moving themselves crabwise by the clenching of the
fingers. Worse yet, new shoulders were growing back behind the
wounds, which still bled copiously. Kheim screamed and kicked them
off the dais, then turned and chopped Kali in half at the waist,
ignoring the other members of his jati who stood up there with
Butterfly, all of them jumping up and down and shouting 'Oh no,
don't do that Kheim, don't do that, you don't understand, you have
to follow protocol,' even I--Chen, who was shouting loudly over the
rest of them, 'At least we might direct our efforts at the dais
struts, or the vials of forgetting, something a little more
technical, a little less direct!' Meanwhile Kali's upper body
fisted itself around the stage, while her legs and waist staggered,
but continued to stand; and the missing halves grew out of the cut
parts like snail horns. And then there were two Kalis advancing on
him, a dozen arms flailing swords.
He jumped off the dais, thumped down on the bare boards
of the cosmos. The rest of his jati crashed down beside him, crying
out in pain at the impact. 'You got us in trouble,' Shen
whined.
'It doesn't work like that,' Butterfly informed him as
they panted off together into the mists. 'I've seen a lot of people
try. They lash out in fury and cut the hideous gods down, and how
they deserve it -- and yet the gods spring back up, redoubled in
other people. A karmic law of this universe, my friend. Like
conservation of yin and yang, or gravity. We live in a universe
ruled by very few laws, but the redoubling of violence by violence
is one of the main ones.'
'I don't believe it,' Kheim said, and stopped to fend off
the two Kalis now pursuing them. He took a hard swing and
decapitated one of the new Kalis. Swiftly another head grew back,
swelling on top of the gusher on the neck of the black body, and
the new white teeth of her new head laughed at him, while her
bloody red eyes blazed. He was in trouble, he saw; he was going to
be backed to pieces. For resisting these evil unjust absurd and
horrible deities he was going to be hacked to pieces and returned
to the world as a mule or a monkey or a maimed old geezer.
Transmutation
Now it so happened that as the time approached for the
great alchemist's red work to reach its culmination, in the final
multiplication, the projection of the sophic hydrolith into the
ferment, causing tincture -- that is to say, the transmuting of
base metals into gold -- the son in law of the alchemist,
one Bahram al Bokhara, ran and jostled through the bazaar of
Samarqand on last minute errands, ignoring the calls of his
various friends and creditors. 'I can't stop,' he called to them,
'I'm late!'
'Late paying your debts!' said Divendi, whose coffee
stall was wedged into a slot next to Iwang's workshop.
'True,' Bahram said, but stopped for a coffee. 'Always
late but never bored.'
'Khalid keeps you hopping.'
'Literally so, yesterday. The big pelican cracked during
a descension, and it all spilled right next to me -- vitriol of
Cyprus mixed with sal ammoniac.'
'Dangerous?'
'Oh my God. Where it splashed on my trousers the cloth
was eaten away, and the smoke was worse. I had to run for my
life!'
'As always.'
'So true. I coughed my guts out, my eyes ran all night.
It was like drinking your coffee.'
'I always make yours from the dregs.'
'I know,' tossing down the last gritty shot. 'So are you
coming tomorrow?'
'To see lead turned into gold? I'll be there.'
Iwang's workshop was dominated by its brick furnace.
Familiar sizzle and smell of bellowed fire, tink of hammer, glowing
molten glass, Iwang twirling the rod attentively: Bahram greeted
the glassblower and silversmith, 'Khalid wants more of the
wolf.'
'Khalid always wants more of the wolf.' Iwang continued
turning his blob of hot glass. Tall and broad and big faced, a
Tibetan by birth, but long a resident of Samarqand, he was one of
Khalid's closest associates. 'Did he send payment this time?'
'Of course not. He said to put it on his tab.'
Iwang pursed his lips. 'He's got too many tabs these
days.'
'All paid after tomorrow. He finished the seven hundred
and seventyseventh distillation.'
Iwang put down his work and went to a wall stacked with
boxes. He handed Bahram a small leather pouch, heavy with small
beads of lead. 'Gold grows in the earth,' he said. 'Al Razi
himself couldn't grow it in a crucible.'
'Khalid would debate that. And Al Razi lived a long
time ago. He couldn't get the heat we can now.'
'Maybe.' Iwang was sceptical. 'Tell him to be
careful.'
'Of burning himself?'
'Of the Khan burning him.'
'You'll be there to see it?'
Iwang nodded reluctantly.
The day of the demonstration came, and for a wonder the
great Khalid Ali Abu al Samarqandi seemed nervous; and Bahram
could understand why. If Sayyed Abdul Aziz Khan, ruler of the
khanate of Bokhara, immensely rich and powerful, chose to support
Khalid's enterprises, all would be well; but he was not a man you
wanted to disappoint. Even his closest adviser, his treasury
secretary Nadir Devanbegi, avoided distressing him at all costs.
Recently, for instance, Nadir had caused a new caravanserai to be
built on the east side of Bokhara, and the Khan had been brought
out for its opening ceremony, and being a bit inattentive by
nature, he had congratulated them for building such a fine
madressa; and rather than correct him on the point, Nadir had
ordered the complex turned into a madressa. That was the kind of
khan Sayyed Abdul Aziz was, and he was the khan to whom Khalid was
going to demonstrate the tincture. It was enough to make
Bahram's stomach tight and his pulse fast, and while Khalid sounded
like he always did, sharp and impatient and sure of himself, Bahram
could see that his face was unusually pale.
But he had worked on the projection for years, and
studied all the alchemical texts he could obtain, including many
bought by Bahram in the Hindu caravanserai, including 'The Book of
the End of the Search' by jildaki, and jabir Ibn Hayyam's 'Book of
Balances', as well as 'The Secret of Secrets', once thought to be
lost, and the Chinese text 'Reference Book for the Penetration of
Reality'; and Khalid had in his extensive workshops the mechanical
capacity to repeat the required distillations at high heat and very
good clarities, all seven hundred and seventy--seven times. Two
weeks earlier he had declared that his final efforts had borne
fruit, and now all was ready for a public demonstration, which of
course had to include regal witnesses to matter.
So Bahram hurried around in Khalid's compound on the
northern edge of Samarqand, sprawling by the banks of the Zeravshan
River, which provided power to the foundries and the various
workshops. The walls of the establishment were ringed by great
heaps of charcoal waiting to be burned, and inside there were a
number of buildings, loosely grouped around the central work area,
a yard dotted with vats and discoloured chemical baths. Several
different stinks combined to form the single harsh smell that was
particular to Khalid's place. He was the khanate's principal
gunpowder producer and metallurgist, among other things, and these
practical enterprises supported the alchemy that was his ruling
passion.
Bahram wove through the clutter, making sure the
demonstration area was ready. The long tables in the
open walled shops were crowded with an orderly array of
equipment; the walls of the shops were neatly hung with tools. The
main athanor was roaring with heat.
But Khalid was not to be found. The puffers had not seen
him; Bahram's wife Esmerine, Khalid's daughter, had not seen him.
The house at the back of the compound seemed empty, and no one
answered Bahram's calls. He began to wonder if Khalid had run away
in fear.
Then Khalid appeared out of the library next to his
study, the only room in the compound with a door that locked.
'There you are,' Bahram said. 'Come on, Father,
Al Razi and Mary the Jewess will be no help to you now. It's
time to show the world the thing itself, the projection.'
Khalid, startled to see him, nodded curtly. 'I was making
the last preparations,' he said. He led Bahram into the furnace
shed, where the geared bellows, powered by the waterwheel on the
river, pumped air into the roaring fires.
The Khan and his party arrived quite late, when much of
the afternoon was spent. Twenty horsemen thundered in, their finery
gleaming, and then a camel train fifty beasts long, all foaming at
the gallop. The Khan dismounted from his white bay and walked
across the yard with Nadir Devanbegi at his side, and several court
officials at their heels.
Khalid's attempt at a formal greeting, including the
presentation of a gift of one of his most cherished alchemical
books, was cut short by Sayyed Adbul Aziz. 'Show us,' the Khan
commanded, taking the book without looking at it.
Khalid bowed. 'The alembic I used is this one here,
called a pelican. The base matter is mostly calcinated lead, with
some mercurials. They have been projected by continuous
distillation and re distillation, until all the matter has
passed through the pelican seven hundred and seventy seven
times. At that point the spirit in the lion well, to put it
in more worldly terms, the gold condenses out at the highest
athanor heat. So, we pour the wolf into this vessel, and put that
in the athanor, and wait for an hour, stirring meanwhile seven
times.'
'Show us.' The Khan was clearly bored by the details.
Without further ado Khalid led them into the furnace
shed, and his assistants opened the heavy thick door of the
athanor, and after allowing the visitors to handle and inspect the
ceramic bowl, Khalid grabbed up tongs and poured the grey
distillate into the bowl, and placed the tray in the athanor and
slid it into the intense heat. The air over the furnace shimmered
as Sayyed Abdul Aziz's mullah said prayers, and Khalid watched the
second hand of his best clock. Every five minutes he gestured to
the puffers, who opened the door and pulled out the tray, at which
point Khalid stirred the liquid metal, now glowing orange, with his
ladle, seven times seven circles, and then back into the heat of
the fire. In the last minutes of the operation, the crackle of the
charcoal was the only sound in the yard. The sweating observers,
including many acquaintances from the town, watched the clock tick
out the last minute of the hour in a silence like that of
sufis in a trance of speechlessness, or like, Bahram thought
uneasily, hawks inspecting the ground far below.
Finally Khalid nodded to the puffers, and he himself
hefted the bowl off the tray with big tongs, and carried it to a
table in the yard, cleared for this demonstration. 'Now we pour off
the dross, great Khan,' paddling the molten lead out of the bowl
into a stone tub on the table. 'And at the bottom we see -- ah . .
.'
He smiled and wiped his forehead with his sleeve,
gestured at the bowl. 'Even when molten it gleams to the eye.'
At the bottom of the bowl the liquid was a darker red.
With a spatula Khalid carefully skimmed off the remaining dross,
and there at the bottom of the bowl lay a cooling mass of liquid
gold.
'We can pour it into a bar mould while it is still soft,'
Khalid said with quiet satisfaction. 'It looks to be perhaps ten
ounces. That would be one seventh of the stock, as predicted.'
Sayyed Abdul Aziz's face shone like the gold. He turned
to his secretary Nadir Devanbegi, who was regarding the ceramic
bowl closely.
Without expression, Nadir gestured for one of the Khan's
guards to come forward. The rest of them rustled behind the
alchemist's crew. Their pikes were still upright, but they were now
at attention.
'Seize the instruments,' Nadir told the head guard.
Three soldiers helped him take possession of all the
tools used in the operation, including the great pelican itself.
When they were all in hand, Nadir went to one guard and took up the
ladle Khalid had used to stir the liquid metals. In a sudden move
he smashed it down on the table. It rang like a bell. He looked
over at Sayyed Abdul Aziz, who stared at his secretary, puzzled.
Nadir gestured with his head to one of the pikemen, then put the
ladle on the table.
'Cut it.'
The pike came down hard, and the ladle was sliced just
above its scoop. Nadir picked up the handle and the scoop and
inspected them. He showed them to the Khan.
'You see -- the shaft is hollow. The gold was in the tube
inside the handle, and when he stirred, the heat melted the gold,
and it slid out and into the lead in the bowl. Then as he continued
to stir, it moved to the bottom of the bowl.'
Bahram looked at Khalid, shocked, and saw that it was true. His
father in law's face was white, and he was no longer
sweating. Already a dead man.
The Khan roared wordlessly, then leaped at Khalid and
struck him down with the book he had been given. He beat him with
the book, and Khalid did not resist.
'Take him!' Sayyed Abdul Aziz shouted at his soldiers.
They picked up Khalid by the arms and dragged him through the dust,
not allowing him to get to his feet, and threw him over a camel. In
a minute they were all gone from the compound, leaving the air
filled with smoke and dust and echoing shouts.
The Mercy of the Khan No one expected Khalid to be
spared after this debacle. His wife Fedwa was in a state of
mourning already, and Esmerine was inconsolable. All the work of
the yard stopped. Bahram fretted in the strange silence of the
empty workshops, waiting to be given the word that they could
collect Khalid's body. He realized he didn't know enough to run the
compound properly.
Eventually the call came; they were ordered to attend the
execution. Iwang joined Bahram for the trip to Bokhara and the
palace there. Iwang was both sad and irritated. 'He should have
asked me, if he was so short of cash. I could have helped him.'
Bahram was a little surprised at this, as Iwang's shop
was a mere hole in the wall of the bazaar, and did not seem so very
prosperous. But he said nothing. When all was said and done he had
loved his father in law, and the black grief he felt left
little room for thinking about Iwang's finances. The impending
violent death of someone that close to him, his wife's father --
she would be distraught for months, perhaps for years -- a man so
full of energy; the prospect emptied him of other thought, and left
him sick with apprehension.
The next day they reached Bokhara, shimmering in the
summer heat, its array of brown and sandy tones capped by its deep
blue and turquoise mosque domes. Iwang pointed at one
minaret. 'The Tower of Death,' he noted. 'They'll probably throw
him off that.'
The sickness grew in Bahram. They entered the cast gate
of the city and made their way to the palace. Iwang explained their
business. Bahram wondered if they too would be taken and killed as
accomplices. This had not occurred to him before, and he was
shaking as they were led into a room that opened onto the palace
grounds.
Nadir Devanbegi arrived shortly thereafter. He looked at
them with his usual steady gaze: a short elegant man, black goatee,
pale blue eyes, a sayyed himself, and very wealthy.
' You are said to be as great an alchemist as Khalid,'
Nadir said abruptly to Iwang. 'Do you believe in the philosopher's
stone, in projection, in all the so called red work? Can base
metals be transmuted to gold?'
Iwang cleared his throat. 'Hard to say, effendi. I cannot
do it, and the adepts who claimed they could, never said precisely
how in their writing. Not in ways that I can use.'
'Use,' Nadir repeated. 'That's a word I want to
emphasize. People like you and Khalid have knowledge that the Khan
might use. Practical things, like gunpowder that is more
predictable in power. Or stronger metallurgy, or more effective
medicine. These could be real advantages in the world. To waste
such abilities on fraud ... Naturally the Khan is very angry.'
Iwang nodded, looking down.
'I have spoken with him at length about this matter,
reminding him of Khalid's distinction as an armourer and alchemist.
His past contributions as master of--arms. His many other
services to the Khan. And the Khan in his wisdom has decided to
show a mercy that Mohammed himself must have approved.'
Iwang looked up.
'He will be allowed to live, if he promises to work for
the khanate on things that are real.'
' I am sure he will agree to that,' Iwang said. 'That is
merciful indeed.'
'Yes. He will of course have his right hand chopped off
for thievery, as the law requires. But considering the effrontery
of his crime, this is a very light punishment indeed. As he himself
has admitted.'
The punishment was administered later that day, a Friday, after
the market and before prayers, in the great plaza of Bokhara, by
the side of the central pool. A big crowd gathered to witness it.
They were in high spirits as Khalid was led out by guards from the
palace, dressed in white robes as if celebrating Ramadan. Many of
the Bokharis shouted abuse at Khalid, as a Samarqandi as well as a
thief.
He knelt before Sayyed Abdul Aziz, who proclaimed the
mercy of Allah, and of he himself, and of Nadir Devanbegi for
arguing to spare the miscreant's life for his heinous fraud.
Khalid's arm, looking from a distance like a bird's scrawny leg and
claw, was lashed to the executioner's block. Then a soldier hefted
a big axe overhead and dropped it on Khalid's wrist. Khalid's hand
fell from the block and blood spurted onto the sand. The crowd
roared. Khalid toppled onto his side, and the soldiers held him
while one applied hot pitch from a pot on a brazier, using a short
stick to plaster the black stuff to the end of the stump.
Bahram and Iwang took him back to Samarqand, laid out in
the back of Iwang's bullock cart, which Iwang had had built in
order to move weights of metal and glass that camels couldn't
carry. It bumped horribly over the road, which was a broad dusty
track worn in the earth by centuries of camel traffic between the
two cities. The big wooden wheels jounced in every dip and over
every hump, and Khalid groaned in the back, semi conscious and
breathing stertorously, his left hand holding his pallid, burned
right wrist. Iwang had forced an opium laced potion down him,
and if it hadn't been for his groans it would have seemed he was
asleep.
Bahram regarded the new stump with a sickened
fascination. Seeing the left hand clutching the wrist, he said to
Iwang, 'He'll have to eat with his left hand. Do everything with
his left hand. He'll be unclean for ever.'
'That kind of cleanliness doesn't matter.'
They had to sleep by the road, as darkness caught them
out. Bahram sat by Khalid, and tried to get him to eat some of
Iwang's soup. 'Come on, Father. Come on, old man. Eat something and
you'll feel better. When you feel better it'll be all right.' But
Khalid only groaned and rolled from side to side. In the darkness,
under the great net of stars, it seemed to Bahram that everything
in their lives had been ruined.
Effect of the Punishment
But as Khalid recovered, it seemed that he didn't see it
that way. He boasted to Bahram and Iwang about his behaviour during
his punishment: 'I never said a word to any of them, and I had
tested my limits in jail, to see how long I could hold my breath
without fainting, so when I saw the time was near I simply held my
breath, and I timed it so well that I was fainting anyway when the
stroke fell. I never felt a thing. I don't even remember it.'
'We do,' said Iwang, frowning.
'Well, it was happening to me,' Khalid said sharply.
'Fine. You can use the method again when they chop off
your head. You can teach it to us for when they throw us off the
Tower of Death.'
Khalid stared at him. 'You're angry with me, I see.'
Truculent and hurt in his feelings.
Iwang said, 'You could have got us all killed. Sayyed
Abdul would command it without a second thought. If it weren't for
Nadir Devanbegi, it might have happened. You should have talked to
me. To Bahram here, and to me. We could have helped you.'
' Why were you in such trouble, anyway?' asked Bahram,
embold ened by Iwang's reproaches. 'Surely the works here
make a lot of money for you.'
Khalid sighed, ran his stump over his balding head. He
got up and went to a locked cabinet, unlocked it and drew out a
book and a box.
'This came from the Hindu caravanserai two years ago,' he
told them, showing them the book's old pages. 'It's the work of
Mary the Jewess, a very great alchemist. Very ancient. Her formula
for projection was very convincing, I thought. I needed only the
right furnaces, and a lot of sulphur and mercury. So I paid a lot
for the book, and for the preparations. And once in debt to the
Armenians, it only got worse. After that, I needed the gold to pay
for the gold.' He shrugged with disgust.
'You should have said so,' Iwang repeated, glancing
through the old book.
'You should always let me do the trading at the
caravanserai,' Bahram added. 'They know you really want things,
while I am ignorant, and so trade from the strength of
indifference.'
Khalid frowned.
Iwang tapped the book. 'This is just warmed over
Aristotle. You can't trust him to tell you anything useful. I've
read the translations out of Baghdad and Sevilla, and I judge he's
wrong more often than he's right.'
'What do you mean?' Khalid cried indignantly. Even Bahram
knew Aristotle was the wisest of the ancients, the supreme
authority for all alchemists.
'Where is he not wrong?' Iwang said dismissively. 'The
least country doctor in China can do more for you than Aristotle
can. He thought the heart did the thinking, he didn't know it
pumped the blood he has no idea of the spleen or the
meridian lines, and he never says a word about the pulse or the
tongue. He did some fair dissections of animals, but never
dissected a human as far as I can tell. Come with me to the bazaar
and I can show you five things he got wrong, any Friday you
like.'
Khalid was frowning. 'Have you read Al Farudi's
"Harmony Between Aristotle and Plato"?'
'Yes, but that is a harmony that can't be made.
Al Farudi only made the attempt because he didn't have
Aristotle's "Biology". If he knew that work, he would see that for
Aristotle it all remains material. His four elements all try to
reach their levels, and as they try, our world results. Obviously
it's not that simple.' He gestured around at the bright dusty day
and the clangour of Khalid's shop, the mills, the waterworks
powering the big blast furnaces, the noise and movement. 'The
Platonists knew that. They know it is all mathematical. Things
happen by number. They should be called Pythagoreans, to be
accurate. They are like Buddhists, in that for them the world is
alive. As is obviously the case. A great creature of creatures. For
Aristotle and Ibn Rashd, it's more like a broken clock.'
Khalid grumbled at this, but he was not in a good
position to argue. His philosophy had been cut off with his
hand.
He was often in some pain, and smoked hashish and drank
Iwang's opiated potions to dull the pain, which also dulled his
wits, which dulled his spirits. He could not leap in to teach the
boys the proper uses of the machinery; he could not shake people's
hands, or cat with others, having only his unclean hand left to him; he was
permanently unclean. That was part of the punishment.
The realization of this, and the shattering of all his
philosophical and alchemical inquiries, finally caught up with him,
and cast him into a melancholia. He left his sleeping quarters late
in the mornings, and moped around the works watching all the
activity like a ghost of himself. There everything continued much
as it had before. The great mills wheeled on the river's current,
powering the ore stamps and the bellows of the blast furnaces. The
crews of workers came in directly after the morning prayers, making
their marks on the sheets that kept record of their work hours,
then scattering through the compound to shovel salt or sift
saltpetre, or perform any other of the hundred activities that
Khalid's enterprises demanded, under the supervision of the group
of old artisans who had helped Khalid to organize the various
works.
But all this was known, accomplished, routinized, and
meant nothing to Khalid any more. Wandering around aimlessly or
sitting in his study, surrounded by his collections like a magpie
in its nest with a broken wing, he would stare at nothing for
hours, or else page through his manuscripts, Al Razid and
jildaki and jami, looking at who knew what. He would flick a finger
against the objects of wonder that used to fascinate him so -- a
chunk of pitted coral, a unicorn horn, ancient Indian coins, nested
polygons of ivory and horn, a goblet made of a rhinoceros horn
chased with gold leaf, stone shells, a tiger legbone, a gold tiger
statue, a laughing Buddha made of some unidentified black material,
Nipponese netsuke, forks and crucifixes from the lost civilization
of Frengistan -- all these objects, which used to give him such
delight, and which he would discuss for hours in a manner that grew
tedious to his regulars, now only seemed to irritate him. He sat
amid his treasures and he was no longer on the hunt, as Bahram used
to think of it, seeking resemblances, making conjectures and
speculations. Bahram had not understood before how important this
was to him.
As his mood grew blacker, Bahram went to the sufi ribat
in the Registan, and asked Ali, the sufi master in charge of the
place, about it. 'Mowlana, he has been punished worse than he
thought at first. He's no longer the same man.'
'He is the same soul,' said Ali. 'You are simply seeing
another aspect of him. There is a secret core in everyone that not
even Gabriel can know by trying to know. Listen now. The intellect
derives from the senses, which are limited, and come from the body.
The intellect therefore is also limited, and it can never truly
know reality, which is infinite and eternal. Khalid wanted to know
reality with his intellect, and he can't. Now he knows that, and is
downcast. Intellect has no real mettle, you see, and at the first
threat, into a hole it scuttles. But love is divine. It comes from
the realm of the infinite, and is entrusted to the heart as a gift
from God. Love has no calculating in it. "God loves you" is the
only possible sentence! So it's love you must follow to the heart
of your father in law. Love is the pearl of an oyster
living in the ocean, and intellect lives on the shore and cannot
swim. Bring up the oyster, sew the pearl onto your sleeve for all
to see. It will bring courage to the intellect. Love is the king
that must rescue his coward slave. Do you understand?'
'I think so.'
'You must be sincere and open, your love must be bright
as the lightning flash itself! Then his inner consciousness might
see it, and be snatched from itself in a twinkling. Go, feel the
love course through you, and out to him.'
Bahram tried this strategy. Waking in his bed with
Esmerine, he felt the love rising in him, for his wife and her
beautiful body, the child after all of the mutilated old man he
regarded so fondly. Full of love, he would make his way through the
workshops or into town, feeling the cool of the springtime air on
his skin, and the trees around the pools would gleam dustily, like
great living jewels, and the intense white clouds would accentuate
the deep blue of the sky, echoed underneath by the turquoise and
cobalt tiles of the mosque domes.
Beautiful town on a beautiful morning, at the very centre
of the world and the bazaar its usual massed chaos of noise and
colour, all human intercourse there to be seen at once, and yet
pointless as an anthill, unless it was infused with love. Everyone
did what they did for love of the people in their lives, day after
day -- or so it seemed to Bahram on those mornings, as he took on
more of Khalid's old assignments at the compound -- and in the
nights too, as Esmerine enfolded him.
But he could not seem to convey this apprehension to
Khalid. The old man snarled at any expression of high spirits, much
less love, and became irritated at any gesture of affection, not
just from Bahram but from his wife Fedwa, or Esmerine, or
Bahram and Esmerine's children, Fazi and Laila, or anyone else. The
bustle of the workshops would surround them in the sunlight with
their clangour and stink, all the protocols of metalworking and
gunpowder making that Khalid had formulated going on before them as
if in a giant loud dance, and Bahram would make a gesture
encompassing it all and say, 'Love fills all this so full!' and
Khalid would snarl, 'Shut up! Don't be a fool!'
One day he slammed out of his study with his single hand
holding two of his old alchemical texts, and threw them into the
door of a blazing athanor. 'Complete nonsense,' he replied bitterly
when Bahram cried out for him to stop. 'Get out of my way, I'm
burning them all.'
'But why?' Bahram cried. 'Those are your books! Why, why,
why?'
Khalid took a lump of dusty cinnabar in his one hand, and
shook it before Bahram. 'Why? I'll tell you why! Look at this! All
the great alchemists, from jabir to al Razi to Ibn Sina, all
agree that all the metals are various combinations of sulphur and
mercury. Iwang says the Chinese and Hindu alchemists agree on this
matter. But when we combine sulphur and mercury, as pure as we can
make them, we get exactly this: cinnabar! What does that mean? The
alchemists who actually speak to this problem, who are very few I
might add, say that when they talk about sulphur and mercury, they
don't really mean the substances we usually call sulphur and
mercury, but rather purer elements of dryness and moisture, that
are like sulphur and mercury, but finer! Well!' He threw the chunk
of cinnabar across the yard at the river. 'What use is that? Why
even call them that? Why believe anything they say?' He waved his
stump at his study and alchemical workshop, and all the apparatus
littering the yard outside. 'It's all so much junk. We don't know
anything. They never knew what they were talking about.'
'All right, Father, maybe so, but don't burn the books!
There may be something useful in some of them, you need to make
distinctions. And besides, they were expensive.'
Khalid only snarled and made the sound of spitting.
Bahram told Iwang about this incident the next time he
was in town. 'He burned a lot of books. I couldn't talk him out of
it. I try to get him to see the love filling everything, but he
doesn't see it.'
The big Tibetan blew air through his lips like a camel.
'That approach will never work with Khalid,' he said. 'It's easy
for you to be full of love, being young and whole. Khalid is old
and one handed. He is out of balance, yin and yang are
disarranged. Love has nothing to do with it.' Iwang was no
sufi.
Bahram sighed. 'Well, I don't know what to do then. You
need to help me, Iwang. He's going to burn all his books and
destroy all his apparatus, and then who knows what will happen to
him.'
Iwang grumbled something inaudible.
'what?'
'I'll think it over. Give me some time.'
'There isn't much time. He'll break all the apparatus
next.'
Aristotle was Wrong
The very next day Khalid ordered the blacksmith
apprentices to move everything in the alchemical shops out into the
yard to be destroyed. He had a black and wild look as he watched it
all shed dust in the sunlight. Sand baths, water baths, descensory
furnaces, stills, cucurbits, flasks, alumbixes, alembics with
double or even triple spouts; all stood in a haze of antique dust.
The largest battery alembic had last been used for distilling
rose water, and seeing it Khalid snorted. 'That's the only thing we
could make work. All this stuff, and we made rose water.'
Mortars and pestles, phials, flasks, basins and beakers,
glass crystallizing dishes, jugs, casseroles, candle lamps,
naphtha lamps, braziers, spatulas, tongs, ladles, shears,
hammers, aludels, funnels, miscellaneous lenses, filters of hair,
cloth and linen: finally everything was out in the sun. Khalid
waved it all away. 'Burn it all, or if it won't burn, break it up
and throw it in the river.'
But just then Iwang arrived, carrying a small
glass and silver mechanism. He frowned when he saw the
display. 'Some of this you could at least sell,' he said to Khalid.
'Don't you still have debts?'
'I don't care,' Khalid said. 'I won't sell lies.'
'It's not the apparatus that lies,' Iwang said. 'Some of
this stuff could prove very useful.'
Khalid glared at him blackly. Iwang decided to change the
subject, and raised his device to Khalid's attention. 'I brought
you a toy that refutes all Aristotle.'
Surprised, Khalid examined the thing. Two iron balls sat
in an arna ture that looked to Bahram like one of the
waterwheel triphammers in miniature.
'Water poured here will weight the rocker, here, and the
two doors are one, and open at the same time. One side can't open
before the other, see?'
'Of course.'
'Yes, obvious, but consider, Aristotle says that a
heavier mass will fall faster than a lighter mass, because it has
more of the predilection to join the Earth. But look. Here are the
two iron balls, one big and one small, heavy and light. Place them
on the doors, set the device level, using a bubble level, high on
your outside wall, where there is a good distance to fall. A
minaret would be better, the Tower of Death would be better yet,
but even from your wall it will work.'
They did as he suggested, Khalid climbing the ladder
slowly to inspect the arrangement.
'Now, pour water in the funnel, and watch.'
The water filled the lower basin until the doors suddenly
fell open. The two balls fell. They hit the ground at the same
time.
'Ho,' Khalid said, and clambered down the ladder to
retrieve the balls and try it again, after hefting them, and even
weighing them precisely on one of his scales.
'You see?' Iwang said. 'You can do it with balls of
unequal size or the same size , it doesn't matter. Everything falls
at the same rate, except if it is so light and broad, like a
feather, that it floats down on the air.'
Khalid tried it again.
Iwang said, 'So much for Aristotle.'
'Well,' said Khalid, looking at the balls, then lofting
them in his left hand. 'He could be wrong about this and right
about other things.'
'No doubt. But everything he says has to be tested, if
you ask me, and also compared with what Hsing Ho and Al Razi
say, and the Hindus. Demonstrated to be true or false, in the full
light of day.'
Khalid was nodding. 'I would have some questions, I
admit.'
Iwang gestured at the alchemical equipment in the yard.
'It's the same for all this -- you could test them, see what's
useful and what's not.'
Khalid frowned. Iwang returned his attention to the
falling balls. The two men dropped a number of different items from
the device, chattering away all the while.
'Look, something has to be bringing them down,' Khalid
said at one point. 'Bringing them, forcing them, drawing them, what
have you.'
'Of course,' said Iwang. 'Things happen by causes. An
attraction must be caused by an agent, acting according to certain
laws. What the agent might be, however . . .'
'But this is true of everything,' Khalid said, muttering.
'We know nothing, that's what it comes down to. We live in
darkness.'
'Too many conjoined factors,' Iwang said.
Khalid nodded, hefting a carved block of ironwood in his
hand. 'I'm tired of it, though.'
'So we try things. You do something, you get something
else. It looks like a causal chain. Describable as a logical
sequence, even as a mathematical operation. So that you might say,
reality manifests itself thus. Without worrying too much about
defining what force it is.'
'Perhaps love is the force,' Bahram offered. 'The same
attraction as of persons to persons, extended between things in a
general way.'
'It would explain how one's member rises away from the
Earth,' Iwang said with a smile.
Bahram laughed, but Khalid said only, 'A joke. What I am
speaking of could not be less like love. It is as constant as the
stars in their places, a physical force.'
'The sufis say that love is a force, filling everything,
impelling everything.'
'The sufis,' Khalid said scornfully. 'Those are the last
people on Earth I would consult if I wanted to know how the world
works. They moon about love and drink lots of wine and spin
themselves. Bah! Islam was an intellectual discipline before the
sufis came along, studying the world as it is, we had Ibn Sina and
Ibn Rashd and Ibn Khaldun and all the rest, and then the sufis
appeared and there hasn't been a single Muslim philosopher or
scholar since then who has advanced our understanding of things by
a single whit.'
'They have too,' Bahram said. 'They've made it clear how
important love is in the world.'
'Love, oh yes, all is love, God is love, but if
everything is love and all is one with Allah, then why do they have
to get so drunk every day?'
Iwang laughed. Bahram said, 'They don't really, you
know.'
'They do! And the good fellowship halls fill up with good
fellows looking for a good time, and the madressas grow emptier,
and the khans give them less, and here we are in the year 1020
arguing over the ideas of the ancient Frengis, without a single
idea why things act the way they do. We know nothing! Nothing!'
'We have to start small,' Iwang said.
'We can't start small! Everything is all tied
together!'
'Well, then we need to isolate one set of actions that we
can see and control, and then study that, and see if we can
understand it. Then work onwards from there. Something like this
falling, just the simplest movement. If we understood movement, we
could study its manifestations in other things.'
Khalid thought about that. He had finally stopped
dropping things through the device.
'Come here with me,' Iwang said. 'Let me show you
something that makes me curious.'
They followed him towards the shop containing the big
furnaces. 'See how you obtain such hot fires now. Your waterworks
drive the bellows faster than any number of puffers ever could, and
the heat of the fire is accordingly higher. Now, Aristotle says
fire is trapped in wood, and released by heat. Fair enough, but why
does more air inake the fire burn hotter? Why does wind drive a
wildfire so? Does it mean air is essential to fire? Could we find
out? If we built a chamber in which the air was pulled out by the
bellows rather than pushed in, would the fire burn less?'
'Suck air out of a chamber?' Khalid said.
'Yes. Arrange a valve that lets air out but won't let it
back in. Pump out what's there, and then hold any replacement air
out.'
'Interesting! But what would remain in the chamber
then?'
Iwang shrugged. 'I don't know. A void? A piece of the
original void, perhaps? Ask the lamas about that, or your sufis. Or
Aristotle. Or just make a glass chamber, and look in it.'
' I will,' Khalid said.
'And motion is easiest of all to study,' Iwang said. 'We
can try all manner of things with motion. We can time this
attraction of things to the Earth. We can see if the speed is the
same up in the hills and down in the valleys. Things speed up as
they fall, and this might be measurable too. Light itself might be
measurable. Certainly the angles of refraction are constant, I've
measured those already.'
Khalid was nodding. 'First this reverse bellows, to empty
a chamber. Although surely it cannot be a true void that results.
Nothingness is not possible in this world, I think. There will be
something in there, thinner than air.'
'That is more Aristotle,' Iwang
said. Natureabhors the void." But what if it
doesn't? We will only know when we try.'
Khalid nodded. If he had had two hands he would have been
rubbing them together.
The three of them walked out to the waterworks. Here a
canal brought a hard flow from the river, its gliding surface
gleaming in the morning light. The water powered a mill, which
geared out to axles turning a bank of heavy metal working
hammers and stamps, and finally the rotating bellows handles that
powered the blast furnaces. It was a noisy place, filled with
sounds of falling water, smashed rock, roaring fire, singed air;
all the elements raging with transmutation, hurting their cars and
leaving a burnt smell in the air. Khalid stood watching the
waterworks for a while. This was his achievement, he was the one
who had organized all the artisans' skills into this enormous
articulated machine, so much more powerful than people or horses
had ever been. They were the most powerful people in all the
history of the world, Bahram thought, because of Khalid's
enterprise; but with a wave Khalid dismissed it all. He wanted to
understand why it worked.
He led the other two back to the shop. 'We'll need your
glassblowing, and my leather and iron workers,' he said. 'The valve
you mention could perhaps be made of sheep intestines.'
'It might have to be stronger than that,' said Iwang. 'A
metal gate of some sort, pressed into a leather gasket by the suck
of the void.'
'Yes.'
No Jinn in This Bottle
Khalid set his artisans to the task, and Iwang did the
glassblowing, and after a few weeks they had a two part
mechanism: a thick glass globe to be emptied, and a powerful pump
to empty it. There were any number of collapses, leaks and valve
failures, but the old mechanists of the compound were ingenious,
and attacking the points of failure, they ended up with five very
similar versions of the device, all very heavy. The pump was
massive and lathed to newly precise fits of plunger, tube and
valves; the glass globes were thick flasks, with necks even
thicker, and knobs on the inside surfaces from which objects could
be hung, to see what would happen to them when the air in the globe
was evacu ated. When they solved the leakage problems, they
had to build a rackand pinion device to exert enough force on
the pump to evacuate the final traces of air from the globe. Iwang
advised them not to create such a perfect void that they ended up
sucking in the pump, the compound, or perchance the whole world,
like jinni returning to their confinement; and as always, Iwang's
stone face did not give them any clue as to whether he was joking
or serious.
When they had the mechanisms working fairly reliably
(occasionally one would still crack its glass, or break a valve),
they set one on a wooden frame, and Khalid began a sequence of
trials, inserting things in the glass globes, pumping out the air,
and seeing what resulted. All philosophical questions on the nature
of what remained inside the globe after the air was removed, he now
refused to address. 'Let's just see what happens,' he said. 'It is
what it is.' He kept big blank paged books on the table beside
the apparatus, and he or his clerks recorded every detail of the
trials, timing them on his best clock.
After a few weeks of learning the apparatus and trying
things, he asked Iwang and Bahram to arrange a small party,
inviting several of the qadi and teachers from the madressas in the
Registan, particularly the mathematicians and astronomers of Sher
Dor Madressa, who were already involved in discussions of ancient
Greek and classical caliphate notions of physical reality. On the
appointed day, when all those invited had gathered in the
open walled workshop next to Khalid's study, Khalid introduced
the apparatus to them, describing how it worked and indicating what
they could all see, that he had hung an alarm clock from a knob
inside the glass globe, so that it swung freely at the end of a
short length of silk thread. Khalid cranked the piston of the
rack and pinion down twenty times, working hard with his
left arm. He explained that the alarm clock was set to go off at
the sixth hour of the afternoon, shortly after the evening prayers
would be sung from Samarqand's northernmost minaret.
'To be sure the alarm is truly sounding,' Khalid said,
'we have exposed the clapper, so that you can see it hitting the
bells. I will also introduce air back into the globe little by
little, after we have seen the first results, so you can hear for
yourself the effect.'
He was gruff and direct. Bahram saw that he wanted to
distance himself from the portentous, magical style he had affected
during his alchemical transmutations. He made no claims, spoke no
incantations. The memory of his last disastrous demonstration --
his fraud must have been in his mind, as it was in everyone
else's. But he merely gestured with his hand at the clock, which
advanced steadily towards six.
Then the clock began to spin on its thread, and the
clapper was visibly smashing back and forth between the little
brass bells. But there was no sound coming from the glass. Khalid
gestured: 'You might think that the glass itself is stopping the
sound, but when the air is let back into the flask, you will see
that it isn't so. First I invite you to put your car to the glass,
so you can confirm that there is no sound at all.'
They did so one by one. Then Khalid unscrewed a stopcock
that released a valve set in the side of the flask, and a brief
penetrating hiss was joined by the muted banging of the alarm,
which grew louder quickly, until it sounded much like an alarm
heard from an adjoining room.
'It seems there is no sound without air to convey it,'
Khalid commented.
The visitors from the madressa were eager to inspect the
apparatus, and to discuss its uses in trials of various sorts, and
to speculate about what, if anything, remained in the globe when
the air was pumped out. Khalid was adamant in his refusal to
discuss this question, preferring to talk about what the
demonstration seemed to be indicating about the nature of sound and
its transmission.
'Echoes might elucidate this matter in another way,' one
of the qadis said. He and all the other visiting witnesses were
bright eyed, pleased, intrigued. 'Something strikes air,
pushes it, and the sound is a shock moving through the air, like
waves across water. They bounce back, like waves in water bounce
when they strike a wall. It takes time for this movement to cross
the intervening space, and thus echoes.'
Bahram said, 'With the aid of an echoing cliff we could
perhaps time the speed of sound.'
'The speed of sound!' Iwang said. 'Very nice!'
'A capital idea, Bahram,' Khalid said. He checked to make
sure his clerk was noting all done or said. He unscrewed the
stopcock all the way and removed it, so that they all heard the
noisy clanging of the alarm as he reached into the flask to turn
off the device. It was strange that the clapper should have been so
silent before. He rubbed his scalp with his right wrist. 'I
wonder,' he said, 'if we could establish a speed for light too,
using the same principle.'
'How would it echo?' Bahram asked.
'Well, if it were aimed at a distant mirror, say ... a
lantern unveiled, a distant mirror, a clock that one could read
very precisely, or start and stop, even better ...'
Iwang was shaking his head. 'The mirror might have to be
very far away to give the recorder time to determine an interval,
and then the lantern flash would not be visible unless the mirror
were perfectly angled.'
'Make a person the mirror,' Bahram suggested. 'When the
person on the far hill sees the first lantern light, he reveals
his, and a person next to the first person times the appearance of
the second light.'
'Very good,' several people said at once. Iwang added,
'It may still be too fast.'
'It remains to be seen,' Khalid said cheerfully. 'A
demonstration will clarify the issue.'
With that Esmerine and Fedwa wheeled in the ice tray and
its 'demonstration of sherbets' as Iwang termed it, and the crowd
fell to, talking happily, Iwang speaking of the thin sound of
goraks in the high Himalaya where the air itself was thin, and so
on.
The Khan Confronts the Void
So Iwang brought Khalid back out of his black melancholy,
and Bahram saw the wisdom of Iwang's approach to the matter. Every
day now, Khalid woke up in a hurry to get things done. The
businesses of the compound were given over to Bahram and Fedwa and
the old hands heading each of the shops, and Khalid was distracted
and uninterested if they came to him with matters of that sort. All
his time was taken by conceiving, planning, executing and recording
his demonstrations with the void pump, and later with other
equipment and phenomena. They went to the great western city wall
at dawn when all was quiet, and timed the sound of wood blocks
slapped together and their returning echoes, measuring their
distance from the wall with a length of string one third of an li
long. Iwang did the calculations, and soon declared that the speed
of sound was something like two thousand li an hour, a speed that
everyone marvelled at. 'About fifty times faster than the fastest
horse,' Khalid said, regarding Iwang's figures happily.
'And yet light will be much faster,' Iwang predicted.
'We will find out.'
Meanwhile Iwang was puzzling over the figures. 'There
remains the question of whether sound slows down as it moves along.
Or speeds up for that matter. But presumably it would slow, if it
did anything, as the air resisted the shock.'
'Noise gets quieter the further away it is,' Bahram
pointed out. 'Maybe it gets quieter rather than slower.'
'But why would that be?' Khalid asked, and then he and
Iwang were into a deep discussion of sound, movement, causation and
action at a distance. Quickly Bahram was out of his depth, being no
philosopher, and indeed Khalid did not like the metaphysical aspect
of the discussion, and concluded as he always did these days: 'We
will test it.'
Iwang was agreeable. Ruminating over his figures, he
said, 'We need a mathematics that could deal not only with fixed
speeds, but with the speed of the change of a speed. I wonder if
the Hindus have considered this.' He often said that the Hindu
mathematicians were the most advanced in the world, very far ahead
of the Chinese. Khalid had long ago given him access to all
the books of mathematics in his study, and Iwang spent many hours
in there reading, or making obscure calculations and drawings, on
slates with chalk.
The news of their void pump spread, and they frequently
met with the interested parties in the madressas, usually the
masters teaching mathematics and natural philosophy. These meetings
were often contentious, but everyone kept to the ostentatiously
formal disputation style of the madressa's theolo ical debates.
Meanwhile the Hindu caravanserai frequently sheltered
booksellers, and these men called Bahram over to have a look at old
scrolls, leatheror wood bound books, or boxes of
loose leaved pages. 'Old One Hand will be interested in
what this Brahmagupta has to say about the size of the earth, I
assure you,' they would say grinning, knowing that Bahram could not
judge.
'This one here is the wisdom of a hundred generations of
Buddhist monks, all killed by the Mughals.'
'This one is the compiled knowledge of the lost Frengis,
of Archimedes and Euclid.'
Bahram would look through the pages as if he could tell,
buying for the most part by bulk and antiquity, and the frequent
appearance of numbers, especially Hindu numbers, or the Tibetan
ticks that only Iwang could decipher. If he thought Khalid and
Iwang would be interested, he haggled with a firmness based on
ignorance, 'Look this isn't even in Arabic or Hindi or Persian or
Sanskrit, I don't even recognize this alphabet! How is Khalid to
make anything of this?'
'Oh, but this is from the Deccan, Buddhists everywhere
can read it, your Iwang will be very happy to learn this!'
Or, 'This is the alphabet of the Sikhs, their last guru
invented an alphabet for them, it's a lot like Sanskrit, and the
language is a form of Punjabi,' and so on. Bahram came home with
his finds, nervous at having spent good money on dusty tomes
incomprehensible to him, and Khalid and Iwang would inspect them,
and either page through them like vultures, congratulating Bahram
on his judgment and haggling skills, or else Khalid would curse him
for a fool while Iwang stared at him, marvelling that he could not
identify a Travancori accounting book full of shipping invoices
(this was the Deccan volume that any Buddhist could read).
Other attention drawn by their new device was not so welcome.
One morning Nadir Devanbegi appeared at the gate with some of the
Khan's guards. Khalid's servant Paxtakor ushered them across the
compound, and Khalid, carefully impassive and hospitable, ordered
coffee brought to his study.
Nadir was as friendly as could be, but soon came to the
point. 'I argued to the Khan that your life be spared because you
are a great scholar, philosopher and alchemist, an asset to the
khanate, a jewel of Samarqand's great glory.'
Khalid nodded uncomfortably, looking at his coffee cup.
He lifted a finger briefly, as if to say, Enough, and then
muttered, 'I am grateful, effendi.'
'Yes. Now it is clear that I was right to argue for your
life, as word comes to us of your many activities, and wonderful
investigations.'
Khalid looked up at him to see if he were being mocked,
and Nadir lifted a palm to show his sincerity. Khalid looked down
again.
'But I came here to remind you that all these fascinating
trials take place in a dangerous world. The khanate lies at the
centre of all the trade routes in the world, with armies in all
directions. The Khan is concerned to protect his subjects from
attack, and yet we hear of cannon that would reduce our cities'
walls in a week or less. The Khan wishes you to help him with this
problem. He is sure you will be happy to bring him some small part
of the fruits of your learning, to help him to defend the
khanate.'
'All my trials are the Khan's,' Khalid said seriously.
'My every breath is the Khan's.'
Nadir nodded his acknowledgement of this truth. 'And yet
you did not invite him to your demonstration with this pump that
creates a void in the air.'
'I did not think he would be interested in such a small
matter.'
'The Khan is interested in everything.'
None of them could tell by Nadir's face whether he was
joking or not.
'We would be happy to display the void pump to him.'
'Good. That would be appreciated. But remember also that
he wishes specific help with cannonry, and with defence against
cannonry.'
Khalid nodded. 'We will honour his wish, effendi.'
After Nadir was gone, Khalid grumbled unhappily.
'Interested in everything! How can he say that and not laugh!'
Nevertheless he sent a servant with a formal invitation to the
Khan, to witness the new apparatus. And before the visit occurred
he had the whole compound at work, developing a new demonstration
of the pump which he hoped would impress the Khan.
When Sayyed Abdul Aziz and his retinue made their visit,
the globe that was to hold the void this time was made of two half
globes, one edge mortised to fit the other precisely, with a thin
oiled leather gasket placed between the two before the air was
pumped out of the space between them, and thick steel braces for
each globe, to which ropes could be tied.
Sayyed Abdul sat on his cushions and inspected the two
halves of the globe closely. Khalid explained to him: 'When the air
is removed, the two halves of the globe will adhere together with
great strength.' He placed the halves together, pulled them apart;
placed them together again, screwed the pump into the one that had
the hole for it, and gestured for Paxtakor to wind the pump out and
in and out again, ten times. Then he brought the device over to the
Khan, and invited him to try to pull the two halves of the globe
apart.
It could not be done. The Khan looked bored. Khalid took
the device out to the central yard of the compound, where two teams
of three horses each were held waiting. Their draft harnesses were
hooked to the two sides of the globe, and the horses led apart
until the globe hung in the air between them. When the horses were
steadied, still facing away from each other, the horseboys cracked
their whips, and the two teams of horses snorted and shoved and
skipped as they attempted to pull away; they skittered sideways,
shifted, struggled, and all the while the globe hung from the
quivering horizontal ropes. The globe could not be pulled apart;
even little charges made by the horse teams only brought them up
short, staggering.
The Khan watched the horses with interest, but the globe
he seemed to disregard. After a few minutes of straining, Khalid
had the horses stopped, and he unhooked the apparatus and brought
it over to the Khan and Nadir and their group. When he unscrewed
the stopcock, the air hissed back into the globe, and the two
halves came apart as easily as slices of an orange. Khalid stripped
out the smashed leather gasket.
'You see,' he said, 'it was the force of the air, or rather the
pull of the void, that kept the halves together so strongly.'
The Khan got up to leave, and his retainers rose with
him. It seemed he was almost falling asleep. 'So?' he said. 'I want
to blow my enemies apart, not hold them together.' With a wave of
his hand he left.
Inside the Night, Inside the Light
This unenthusiastic response on the part of the Khan
worried Bahram. No interest in an apparatus that had fascinated the
scholars of the madressa; instead, a command to discover some new
weapon or fortification that had eluded the hard search of all the
armourers of all the ages. And if they failed, the possible
punishments were only too easy to imagine. Khalid's absent hand
mocked them from its own kind of void. Khalid would stare at the
end of his wrist and say, 'Someday all of me will look like
you.'
Now he merely looked around the compound. 'Tell Paxtakor
to obtain new cannon from Nadir for testing. Three at each weight,
and all manner of powder and shot.'
'We have powder here.'
'Of course.' A withering glare: 'I want to see what they
have that is not ours.'
In the days that followed, he revisited all the old
buildings of the compounds, the ones he and his old ironmongers had
built when they were first making guns and gunpowder for the Khan.
In those days, before he and his men had followed the Chinese
system and connected the power of their waterwheel to the furnaces,
making their first riverpowered blast furnaces and freeing up their
crew of young puffers for other work, everything had been small and
primitive, the iron more brittle, everything they made rougher,
bulkier. The buildings themselves showed it. Now the gears of the
waterwheels whirred with all the power of the river, pouring into
the bellows and roaring as fire. The chemical pits steamed lemon
and lime in the sun, and the puffers packed boxes and ran camels
and moved immense mounds of charcoal around the yards.
Khalid shook his head at the sight of it all, and made a new
gesture, a kind of sweep and punch with his ghost hand. 'We need
better clocks. We can only make progress if our measurement of time
is more exact.'
Iwang puffed his lips when he heard this. 'We need more
understanding.'
'Yes, yes, of course. Who could dispute that in this
miserable world. But all the wisdom of the ages cannot tell us how
long it takes flashpowder to ignite a charge.'
When the days ended the great compound fell silent,
except for the grinding of the watermill on the canal. After the
resident workers had washed and eaten and said their last prayers
of the day, they went to their apartments at the river end of the
compound, and fell asleep. The town workers went home.
Bahram dropped onto his bed beside Esmerine, across the
room from their two small children, Fazi and Laila. Most nights he
was out as soon his head hit the silk of his pillow, exhausted.
Blessed slumber.
But often he and Esmerine woke some time after midnight,
and sometimes they lay there breathing, touching, whispering
conversations that were usually brief and disjointed, other times
the longest and deepest conversations they ever had; and if ever
they were to make love, now that the children were there to exhaust
Esmerine, it would be in the blessed cool and quiet of these
midnight hours.
Afterwards Bahram might get up and walk around the
compound, to see it in moonlight and check that all was well,
feeling the afterglow of love pulse in him; and usually on these
occasions he would see the lamplight in Khalid's study, and pad by
to find Khalid slumped over a book, or scribbling left handed
at his writing stand, or recumbent on his couch, in murmured
conversation with Iwang, both of them holding tubes of a narghile
wreathed by the sweet smell of hashish. If Iwang was there and the
men seemed awake, Bahram would sometimes join them for a while,
before he got sleepy again and returned to Esmerine. Khalid and
Iwang might be speaking of the nature of motion, or the nature of
vision, sometimes holding up one of Iwang's lenses to look through
as they talked. Khalid held the position that the eye received
small impressions or images of things, sent through the air to it.
He had found many an old philosopher, from China to Frengistan, who
held the same view, calling the little images 'eidola' or
'simulacra' or 'species' or 'image' or 'idol' or 'phantasm' or
'form' or 'intention' or 'passion' or ,similitude of the agent', or
'shadow of the philosophers', a name that made Iwang smile. He
himself believed the eye sent out projections of a fluid as quick
as light itself, which returned to the eye like an echo, with the
contours of objects and their colours intact.
Bahram always maintained that none of these explanations
was adequate. Vision could not be explained by optics, he would
say; sight was a matter of spirit. The two men would hear him out,
then Khalid would shake his head. 'Perhaps optics are not
sufficient to explain it, but they are necessary to begin an
explanation. It's the part of the phenomenon that can be tested,
you see, and described mathematically, if we are clever
enough.'
The cannons arrived from the Khan, and Khalid spent part
of every day out on the bluff over the curve in the river, shooting
them off with old jalil and Paxtakor; but by far the bulk of his
time was spent thinking about optics and proposing tests to Iwang.
Iwang returned to his shop, blowing thick glass balls with cut
sides, mirrors concave and convex, and big, perfectly polished
triangular rods, which were for him objects of almost religious
reverence. He and Khalid spent afternoon hours in the old man's
study with the door closed, having made a little hole in the south
wall letting in a chink of light. They put the prism over the hole,
and its straight rainbow shone on the walls or a screen they set
up. Iwang said there were seven colours, Khalid six, as he called
Iwang's purple and lavender two parts of the same colour. They
argued endlessly about everything they saw, at least at first.
Iwang made diagrams of their arrangement that gave the precise
angles each band of colour bent as it went through the prism. They
held up glass balls and wondered why the light did not fractionate
in these balls as it did in the prism, when everyone could see that
a sky full of minuscule clear balls, that is to say raindrops, hit
by low afternoon sunlight, created the towering rainbows that hung
east of Samarqand after a rainshower had passed. Many a time when
black storms had passed over the city, Bahram stood outside with
the two older men observing some truly beautiful rainbows, often
double rainbows, a lighter one arched over the brighter one; and
sometimes even a third very faint one above that. Eventually Iwang
worked up a law of refraction which he assured Khalid would
account for all the colours. 'The primary rainbow is produced by a
refraction as the light enters the raindrop, an internal reflection
at the back surfaces, and a second refraction out of the raindrop.
The secondary bow is created by light reflected two or three times
inside the raindrops. Now look you, each colour has its own index
of refraction, and so to bounce around inside the raindrop is to
separate each colour out from the others, with them appearing to
the eye always in their correct sequence, reversed in the secondary
because there is an extra bounce making it upside down, as in my
drawing here, see?'
'So if raindrops were crystalline, there would be no
rainbows.'
'That's right, yes. That's snow. If there was only
reflection, the sky might sparkle everywhere with white light, as
if filled with mirrors. Sometimes you see that in a snowstorm, too.
But the roundness of raindrops means there is a steady change in
the angle of incidence between zero and ninety degrees, and that
spreads the different rays to an observer here, who must always
stand at an angle from forty to fortytwo degrees off from the
incoming sunlight. The secondary one appears when the angle is
between fifty and a half degrees and fifty four and a half.
See, the geometry predicts the angles, and out here we measure,
using this wonderful sky viewer Bahram found for you at the Chinese
caravanserai, and it confirms, as precisely as hand can hold, the
mathematical prediction!'
'Well, of course,' Khalid said, 'but that's circular
reasoning. You get your angles of incidence by observation of a
prism, then confirm the angles in the sky by more observation.'
'But one was colours on the wall, the other rainbows in
the sky!'
'As above, so below.' This of course was a truism of the
alchemists, so there was a dark edge to Khalid's comment.
The current rainbow was waning as a cloud in the west
blocked the sun. The two old men did not notice, however, absorbed
as they were in their discussion. Bahram alone was left to enjoy
the vibrant colours arcing across the sky, Allah's gift to show
that he would never again drown the world. The two men jabbed
fingers at Iwang's chalkboard and Khalid's sky device.
'It's leaving,' Bahram said, and they looked up, slightly
annoyed to be interrupted. While the rainbow had been bright, the
sky under it had been distinctly lighter than the sky over it; now
the inside and outside were the same shade of slate blue again.
The rainbow left the world, and they squelched back to
the compound, Khalid cheering up with every step, many of them
right into puddles, as he was still staring at Iwang's
chalkboard.
'So -- so -- well. I must admit, it is as neat as a proof
of Euclid. Two refractions, two or three reflections -- rain and
sun, an observer to see -- and there you have it! The rainbow!'
'And light itself, divisible into a banding of colours,'
Iwang mused, travelling all together out of the sun. So bright it
is! And when it strikes anything at all, it bounces off and into an
eye, if there be an eye to see it, and whatever part of the band,
hmm, how would that work ... are the surfaces of the world all
variously rounded, if you could but look at them close enough..
.'
'It's a wonder things don't change colour when you move,'
Bahram said, and the other two went silent, until Khalid started
laughing.
'Another mystery! Allah preserve us! They will just keep
coming for ever, until we are one with God.'
This thought appeared to please him immensely.
He set up a permanent dark room in the compound, all
boarded and draped until it was much darker than his study had
been, with shuttered chinks in the east wall that could let in
small shafts of light, and many a morning he was in there with
assistants, running in and out, arranging demonstrations one way or
another. One he was pleased enough with to invite the scholars of
the Sher Dor Madressa to witness it, because it so neatly refuted
Ibn Rashd's contention that white light was whole, and the colours
created by a prism an effect of the glass. If this were so, Khalid
argued, then light twice bent would change colour twice. To test
this, his assistants allowed sunlight in through the wall, and a
first prism's array was spread across a screen in the centre of the
room. Khalid himself opened an aperture in the screen small enough
only to allow the red part of the little rainbow through it, into a
draped closet where it immediately encountered another prism,
directing it onto another screen inside the closet.
'Now, if the bend of refraction caused by itself the
change in colour, surely the red band would change at this second
refraction. But look: it remains red. Each of the colours holds
when put through a second prism.'
He moved the aperture slowly from colour to colour, to
demonstrate. His guests crowded around the door of the closet,
examining the results closely.
'What does this mean?' one asked.
'Well, this you must help me with, or ask Iwang. I am no
philosopher, myself. But I think it proves the change in colour is
not just a matter of bending in itself. I think it shows sunlight,
white light if you will, or full light, or simply sunlight, is
composed of all the individual colours travelling together.'
The witnesses nodded. Khalid ordered the room opened up,
and they retired blinking into the sun to have coffee and
cakes.
'This is wonderful,' Zahhar, one of Sher Dor's senior
mathematicians said, 'very illuminating, so to speak. But what does
it tell us about light, do you think? What is light?'
Khalid shrugged. 'God knows, but not men. I think only
that we have clarified (so to speak) some of light's behaviour. And
that behaviour has a geometrical aspect. It seems regulated by
number, you see. As do so many things in this world. Allah appears
to like mathematics, as you yourself have often said, Zahhar. As
for the substance of light, what a mystery! It moves quickly, how
quickly we do not know; it would be good to find out. And it is
hot, as we know by the sun. And it will cross a void, if indeed
there is any such thing as a void in this world, in a way that
sound will not. It could be that the Hindus are right and there is
another element besides earth, fire, air and water, an ether so
fine we do not see it, that fills the universe to a plenum and is
the medium of movement. Perhaps little corpuscles, bouncing off
whatever they strike, as in a mirror, but usually less directly.
Depending on what it strikes, a particular colour band is reflected
into the eye. Perhaps.' He shrugged. 'It is a mystery.'
The Madressas Weigh In
The colour demonstrations caused a great deal of
discussion and debate in the madressas, and Khalid learned during
this period never to speak of causes in any opinionated way, or to
impinge on the realm of the madressa scholars by speaking of
Allah's will, or any other aspect of the nature of reality. He
would only say, 'Allah gave us our intelligence to better
understand the glory of his work,' or, 'the world often works
mathematically. Allah loves numbers, and mosquitos in springtime,
and beauty.'
The scholars went away amused, or irritated, but in any
case in a ferment of philosophy. The madressas of Registan Square
and elsewhere in the city, and out at Ulug Bek's old observatory,
were buzzing with the new fashion of making demonstrations of
various physical phenomena, and Khalid's was not the only
mechanical workshop that could build an ever more complex array of
new machines and devices. The mathematicians of Sher Dor Madressa,
for instance, interested everyone with a surprising new mercury
scale, simple to construct a bowl containing a pool of
mercury, with a narrow tube of mercury, scaled at the top but not
the bottom, set upright in the liquid in the bowl. The mercury in
the tube dropped a certain distance, creating another mysterious
void in the gap left at the top of the tube; but the remainder of
the tube stayed filled with a column of mercury. The Sher Dor
mathematicians asserted that it was the weight of the world's air
on the mercury in the bowl that pushed down on it enough to keep
the mercury in the cylinder from falling all the way down into the
bowl. Others maintained it was the disinclination of the void in
the top of the tube to grow. Following a suggestion of Iwang's,
they took their device to the top of Snow Mountain, in the
Zeravshan Range, and all there saw that the level of mercury in the
tube had dropped, presumably because there was less weight of air
on it up there, two or three thousand hands higher than the city.
This was a great support for Khalid's previous contention that air
weighed on them, and a refutation of Aristotle, and al Farabi and
the rest of the Aristotelian Arabs, who claimed that the four
elements want to be in their proper places, high or low. This claim
Khalid ridiculed, at least in private. 'As if stones or the wind
could want to be some place or other, as a man does. It's really
nothing but circular definition again. "Things fall because they
want to fall", as if they could want. Things fall because they
fall, that's all it means. Which is fine, no one knows why things
fall, certainly not me, it is a very great mystery. All the seeming
cases of action at a distance are a mystery. But first we must say
so, we must distinguish the mysteries as mysteries, and proceed
from there, demonstrating what happens, and then seeing if
that leads us to any thoughts concerning the how or the why.'
The sufi scholars were still inclined to extrapolate from
any given demonstration to the ultimate nature of the cosmos, while
the mathematically inclined were fascinated by the purely numerical
aspects of the results, the geometry of the world as it was
revealed. These and other approaches combined in a burst of
activity, consisting of demonstrations and talk, and private work
on slates over mathematical formulations, and artisanal labour on
new or improved devices. On some days it seemed to Bahram that
these investigations had filled all Samarqand: Khalid's compound
and the others, the madressas, the ribat, the bazaars, the coffee
stalls, the caravanserai, where the traders would take the news out
to all the world ... it was beautiful.
The Chest of Wisdom
Out beyond the western wall of
the city, where the old Silk Road ran towards Bokhara, the
Armenians were quiet in their little caravanserai, tucked beside
the large and raucous Hindu one. The Armenians were cooking in the
dusk over their braziers. Their women were bare headed and
bold eyed, laughing among themselves in their own language.
Armenians were good traders, and yet reclusive for all that. They
trafficked only in the most expensive goods, and knew everything
about everywhere, it seemed. Of all the trading peoples, they were
the most rich and powerful. Unlike the Jews and Nestorians and
Zott, they had a little homeland in the Caucasus to which most of
them regularly returned, and they were Muslim, most of them, which
gave them a tremendous advantage across Dar al Islam
which was to say all the world, except for China, and India below
the Deccan. Rumours that they only pretended to be Muslim, and were
secretly Christians all the while, struck Bahram as envious
backstabbing by other traders, probably the tricky Zott, who had
been cast out of India long before (some said Egypt), and now
wandered the world homeless, and did not like the Armenians' inside
position in so many of the most lucrative markets and products.
Bahram wandered among their fires and lamplight, stopping to
chat and accept a swallow of wine with familiars of his, until an
old man pointed out the bookseller Mantuni, even older, a wizened
hunchbacked little man who wore spectacles that made his eyes
appear the size of lemons. His Turkic was basic and heavily
accented, and Bahram switched to Persian, which Mantuni
acknowledged with a grateful dip of the head. The old man indicated
a wooden box on the ground, filled entirely with books he had
obtained for Khalid in Frengistan. 'Will you be able to carry it?'
he asked Bahram anxiously.
'Sure,' Bahram said, but he had his own worry: 'How much
is this going to cost?'
'Oh no, it's already paid for. Khalid sent me off with
the funds, otherwise I would not have been able to afford to buy
these. They're from an estate sale in Damascus, a very old
alchemical family that came to an end with a hermit who had no
issue. See here, Zosimos' 'Treatise on Instruments and Furnaces",
printed just two years ago, that's for you. I've got the rest
arranged chronologically by date of composition, as you can see,
here is Jabir's "Sum of perfection", and his "Ten Books of
Rectification", and look, 'The Secret of Creation".'
This was a huge sheepskin bound volume. 'Written by
the Greek Apollonius. One of its chapters is the fabled "Emerald
Table",' tapping its cover delicately. 'That chapter alone is worth
twice what I paid for this whole collection, but they didn't know.
The original of 'The Emerald Table" was found by Sara the wife of
Abraham, in a cave near Hebron, some time after the Great Flood. It
was inscribed on a plate of emerald, which Sara found clasped in
the hands of the mummified corpse of Thrice greatest Hermes,
the father of all alchemy. The writing was in Phoenician
characters. Although I must admit I have read other accounts that
have it discovered by Alexander the Great. In any case here it is,
in an Arabic translation from the time of the Baghdad
caliphate.'
'Fine,' Bahram said. He wasn't sure Khalid would still be
interested in this stuff.
'You will also find "The Complete Biographies of the
immortals", a rather slender volume, considering, and "The Chest of
Wisdom", and a book by a Frengi, Bartholomew the Englishman, "On
the Properties of Things", also "The Epistle of the Sun to the
Crescent Moon", and "The Book of Poisons", perhaps useful,
and "The Great Treasure", and "The Document Concerning the Three
Similars", in Chinese '
'Iwang will be able to read that,' Bahram said. 'Thank
you.' He tried to pick up the box. It was as if filled with rocks,
and he staggered.
'Are you sure you'll be able to get it back to the city,
and safely?'
'I'll be fine. I'm going to take them to Khalid's, where
Iwang has a room for his work. Thanks again. I'm sure Iwang will
want to call on you to talk about these, and perhaps Khalid too.
How long will you be in Samarqand?'
'Another month, no more.'
'They'll be out to talk to you about these.'
Bahram hiked along with the box balanced on his head. He
took breaks from time to time to case his head, and fortify himself
with more wine. By the time he got back to the compound it was late
and his head was swimming, but the lamps were lit in Khalid's
study, and Bahram found the old man in there reading and dropped
the box triumphantly before him.
'More to read,' he said, and collapsed on a chair.
The End of Alchemy
Shaking his head at Bahram's drunkenness, Khalid began
going through the box, whistling and chirping. 'Same old crap,' he
said at one point. Then he pulled one out and opened it. 'Ah,' he
said, 'a Frengi text, translated from Latin to Arabic by an Ibn
Rabi of Nsara. Original by one Bartholomew the Englishman, written
some time in the sixth century. Let's see what he has to say, hmm,
hmm . . .' He read with the forefinger of his left hand leading his
eyes on a rapid chase over the pages. 'What' That's Ibn Sina
direct! ... And this too!' He looked up at Bahram. 'The alchemical
sections are taken right out of Ibn Sina!'
He read on, laughed his brief unamused laugh. 'Listen to
this! "Quicksilver", that's mercury, "is of so great virtue and
strength, that though thou do a stone of an hundred pound weigh
upon quicksilver of the weight of two pounds, the quicksilver anon
withstandeth the weight. -- 'What?'
'Have you ever heard such nonsense? If he was going to
speak of measures of weight at all, you'd think he would have the
sense to understand them.'
He read on. 'Ah,' he said after a while, 'Here he quotes
Ibn Sina directly. "Glass, as Avicenna saith, is among stones as a
fool among men, for it taketh all manner of colour and painting."
Spoken by a very mirrorglass of a man ... ha ... look, here is
a story that could be about our Sayyed Abdul Aziz. "Long time past,
there was one that made glass pliant, which might be amended and
wrought with an hammer, and brought a vial made of such glass
before Tiberius the Emperor, and threw it down on the ground, and
it was not broken, but bent and folded. And he made it right and
amended it with a hammer." We must demand this glass from Iwang!
"Then the Emperor commanded to smite off his head anon, lest that
this craft were known. For then gold should be no better than clay,
and all other metal should be of little worth, for certain if glass
vessels were not brittle, they should be accounted of more value
than vessels of gold." That's a curious proposition. I suppose
glass was rare in his time.' He stood up, stretched, sighed.
'Tiberiases, on the other hand, will always be common.'
Most of the other books he paged through quickly and
dropped back in the box. He did go through 'The Emerald Table' page
by page, enlisting Iwang, and later some of the Sher Dor
mathematicians, to help him test every sentence in it that
contained any tangible suggestion for action in the shops, or out
in the world at large. They agreed in the end that it was mostly
false information, and that what was true in it was the most
trivial of commonplace observations in metallurgy or natural
behaviour.
Bahram thought this might be a disappointment to Khalid,
but in fact, after all that had passed, he actually seemed pleased
at these results , even reassured. Suddenly Bahram understood:
Khalid would have been shocked if something magical had occurred,
shocked and disappointed, for that would have rendered irregular
and unfathomable the very order that he now assumed must exist in
nature. So he watched all the tests fail with grim satisfaction,
and put the old book containing the wisdom of Hermes
Trimestigus high on a shelf with all its brethren, and ignored them
from then on. After that it was only his blank books that he cared
about, filling them immediately after his demonstrations, and later
through the long nights; they lay open everywhere, mostly on the
tables and floors of his study. One cold night when Bahram was out
for a walk around the compound, he went into Khalid's study and
found the old man asleep on his couch, and he pulled a blanket over
him and snuffed most of the lamps, but by the light of the one left
burning, he looked at the big books open on the floor. Khalid's
lefthanded writing was jagged to the point of illegibility, a
private code, but the little sketched drawings were rather fine in
their abrupt way: a crosssection of an eyeball, a big cart, bands
of light, cannonball flights, birds' wings, gearing systems, lists
of many varieties of damasked steel, athanor interiors,
thermometers, altimeters, clockworks of all kinds, little stick
figures fighting with swords or hanging from giant spirals like
linden seeds, leering nightmare faces, tigers couchant or rampant,
roaring at the scribbles from the margins.
Too cold to look at any more pages, Bahram stared at the
sleeping old man, his father in law whose brain was so
crowded. Strange the people who surround us in this life. He
stumbled back to bed and the warmth of Esmerine.
The Speed of Light
The many tests of light in a
prism brought back to Khalid the question of how fast it moved, and
despite the frequent visits from Nadir or his minions, he could
only speak of making a demonstration to determine this speed.
Finally he made his arrangements for a test of the matter: they
were to divide into two parties, with lanterns in hand, and
Khalid's party would bring along his most accurate timing clock,
which now could be stopped instantly with the push of a lever which
blocked its movement. A preliminary trial had determined that
during the dark of the moon, the biggest lanterns' light could be
seen from the top of Afrasiab Hill to the Shamiana Ridge, across
the river valley, about ten h as the crow flies. Using small
bonfires blocked and unblocked by rugs would no doubt have extended
the maximum distance visible, but Khalid did not think it would be
necessary.
They therefore went out at midnight during the next dark
of the moon, Bahram with Khalid and Paxkator and several other
servants to Afrasiab Hill, Iwang and jalil and other servants to
the Shamiana Ridge. Their lanterns had doors that would drop open
in an oiled groove at a speed they had timed, and was as close to
an instantaneous reply as they could devise. Khalid's team would
reveal a light and start the clock; when Iwang's team saw the
light, they would open their lantern, and when Khalid's team saw
its light, they would stop the clock. A very straightforward
test.
It was a long walk to Afrasiab Hill, over the old east
bridge, up a track through the ruins of the ancient city of
Afrasiab, dim but visible in the starlight. The dry night air was
lightly scented with verbena and rosemary and mint. Khalid was in
good spirits, as always before a demonstration. He saw Paxtakor and
the servants taking pulls from a bag of wine and said, 'You suck
harder than our void pump, be careful or you'll suck the Buddhist
void into existence, and we will all pop into your bag.'
Up on the flat treeless top of the hill, they stood and
waited for Iwang's crew to reach Shamiana ridge, black against the
stars. The peak of Afrasiab Hill, when seen from Shamiana, had the
mountains of the Dzhizak Range behind it, so that Iwang would see
no stars on top of Afrasiab to confuse him, but merely the black
mass of the empty Dzhizaks.
They had left marker sticks on the hill's top pointing to
the opposite station, and now Khalid grunted impatiently and said,
'Let's see if they're there yet.'
Bahram faced Shamiana Ridge and dropped open the box
lantern's door, then waved it back and forth. In a moment they saw
the yellow gleam of Iwang's lantern, perfectly visible just below
the black line of the ridge. 'Good,' Khalid said. 'Now cover.'
Bahram pulled up his door, and Iwang's lantern went dark as
well.
Bahram stood on Khalid's left. The clock and lantern were
set on a folding table, and fixed together in an armature that
would open the door of the lantern and start the finger of the
clock in one motion. Khalid's forefinger was on the tab that would
stop the clock short. Khalid muttered 'Now,' and Bahram, his
heart pounding absurdly, flicked the armature tab down, and the
light on Iwang's lantern appeared on the Shamiana Ridge in that
very same moment. Surprised, Khalid swore and stopped the clock.
'Allah preserve us!' he exclaimed. 'I was not ready. Let's do it
again.'
They had arranged to make twenty trials, so Bahram merely
nodded while Khalid checked the clock by a shielded second lantern,
and had Paxtakor mark down the time, which was two beats and a
third.
They tried it again, and again the light appeared from
Iwang the same moment Bahram opened their lantern. Once Khalid
became used to the speed of the exchange, the trials all took less
than a beat. For Bahram it was as if he was opening the door on the
lantern across the valley; it was shocking how fast Iwang was, not
to mention the light. Once he even pretended to open the door,
pushing lightly then stopping, to see if the Tibetan was perhaps
reading his mind.
'All right,' Khalid said after the twentieth trial. 'It's
a good thing we're only doing twenty. We would get so good we would
begin to see theirs before we opened ours.'
Everyone laughed. Khalid had become snappish during the
trials themselves, but now he seemed content, and they were
relieved. They made their way down the hill to town talking loudly
and drinking from the wine bag, even Khalid, who very seldom drank
any more, though it had once been one of his chief pleasures. They
had tested their reflexes back in the compound, and so knew that
most of their trials had been timed at that very same speed, or
faster. 'If we throw out the first trial, and average the rest,
it's going to be about the same speed as our procedure itself.'
Bahram said, 'Light must be instantaneous.'
'Instantaneous motion? Infinite speed? I don't think
Iwang will ever agree to that notion, certainly not as a result of
this demonstration alone.'
'What do you think?'
'Me? I think we need to be farther apart. But we have
demonstrated that light is fast, no doubt of that.'
They traversed the empty ruins of Afrasiab by taking the
ancient city's main north--south road to the bridge. The servants
began to hurry ahead, leaving Khalid and Bahram behind.
Khalid was humming urimusically, and hearing it, remembering the
full pages of the old man's notebooks, Bahram said, 'How is it you
are so happy these days, Father?'
Khalid looked at him, surprised. 'Me? I'm not happy.'
'But you are!'
Khalid laughed. 'My Bahram, you are a simple soul.'
Suddenly he waved his right wrist with its stump under
Bahram's nose. 'Look at this, boy. Look at this! How could I be
happy with this? Of course I couldn't. It's dishonour, it's all my
stupidity and greed, right there for everyone to see and remember,
every day. Allah is wise, even in his punishments. I am dishonoured
for ever in this life, and will never be able to recover from it.
Never eat cleanly, never clean myself cleanly, never stroke Fedwa's
hair at night. That life is over. And all because of fear, and
pride. Of course I'm ashamed, of course I'm angry -- at Nadir, the
Khan, at myself, at Allah, yes Him too! At all of you! I'll never
stop being angry, never!'
'Ah,' Bahram said, shocked.
They walked along a while in silence, through the starlit
ruins.
Khalid sighed. 'But look you, youth -- given all that --
what am I supposed to do? I'm only fifty years old, I have some
time left before Allah takes me, and I have to fill that time. And
I have my pride, despite all. And people are watching me, of
course. I was a prominent man, and people enjoyed watching my fall,
of course they did, and they watch still! So what kind of story am
I going to give them next? Because that's what we are to other
people, boy, we are their gossip. That's all civilization is, a
giant mill grinding out gossip. And so I could be the story of the
man who rode high and fell hard, and had his spirit broken and
crawled off into a hole like a dog, to die as soon as he could
manage it. Or I could be the story of a man who rode high and fell
hard, and then got up defiant, and walked away in a new direction.
Someone who never looked back, someone who never gave the mob any
satisfaction. And that's the story I'm going to make them all eat.
They can fuck themselves if they want any other kind of a story out
of me. I'm a tiger, boy, I was a tiger in a previous existence, I
must have been, I dream about it all the time, stalking through
trees and hunting things. Now I have my tiger hitched to my
chariot, and off we go!' He skimmed his left hand off
towards the city ahead of them. 'This is the key, youth, you must
learn to hitch your tiger to your chariot.'
Bahram nodded. 'Demonstrations to make.'
'Yes! Yes!' Khalid stopped and gestured up at the spangle
of stars. 'And this is the best part, boy, the most marvellous
thing, because it is all so very damned interesting! It isn't just
something to while away the time, or to get away from this,' waving
his stump again, 'it's the only thing that matters! I mean, why are
we here, youth? Why are we here?'
'To make more love.'
'All right, fair enough. But how do we best love this
world Allah gave us? We do it by learning it! It's here, all of a
piece, beautiful every morning, and we go and rub it in the dust,
making our khans and our caliphates and such. It's absurd. But if
you try to understand things, if you look at the world and say why
does that happen, why do things fall, why does the sun come up
every morning and shine on us, and warm the air and fill the leaves
with green how does all this happen? What rules has Allah
used to make this beautiful world? Then it is all transformed. God
sees that you appreciate it. And even if He doesn't, even if you
never know anything in the end, even if it's impossible to know,
you can still try.'
'And you're learning a lot,' Bahram said.
'Not really. Not at all. But with a mathematician like
Iwang on hand, we can maybe work out a few simple things, or make
little beginnings to pass on to others. This is God's real work,
Bahram. God didn't give us this world for us to stand around in it
chewing our food like camels. Mohammed himself said, Pursue
learning even if it take you to China! And now with Iwang, we have
brought China to us. It makes it all the more interesting.'
'So you are happy, you see? just as I said.'
'Happy and angry. Happily angry. Everything, all at once.
That's life, boy. You just keep getting fuller, until you burst and
Allah takes you and casts your soul into another life later on. And
so everything just keeps getting fuller.'
An early cock crowed on the edge of the town. In the sky
to the east the stars were winking out. The servants reached
Khalid's compound ahead of them and opened up, but Khalid stopped
outside among the great piles of charcoal, looking around with
evident satisfaction. 'There's Iwang now,' he said quietly.
The big Tibetan slouched up to them like a bear, body
weary but a grin on his face.
'Well?' he said.
'Too fast to measure,' Khalid admitted.
Iwang grunted.
Khalid handed him the wine bag, and he took a long
swig.
'Light,' he said. 'What can you say?'
The eastern sky was filling with this mysterious
substance or quality. Iwang swayed side to side like a bear dancing
to music, as obviously happy as Bahram had ever seen him. The two
old men had enjoyed their night's work. Iwang's party had had a
night of mishaps, drinking wine, getting lost, falling in ditches,
singing songs, mistaking other lights for Khalid's lantern, and
then, during the tests, having no idea what kind of times were
being registered back on Afrasiab Hill, an ignorance which had
struck them as funny. They had become silly.
But these adventures were not the source of Iwang's good
humour rather it was some train of thought of his own, which had
put him under a description, as the sufis said, murmuring things in
his own language, hummed deep in his chest. The servants were
singing a song for the coming of dawn.
He said to Khalid and Bahram, 'Coming down the ridge I
was falling asleep on my feet, and thinking about your
demonstration cast me into a vision. Thinking of your light,
winking in the darkness across the valley, I thought, if I could
see all moments at once, each distinct and alone as the world
sailed through the stars, each that little bit different ... if I
moved through each moment as if through different rooms in space, I
could map the world's own travel. Every step I took down the ridge
was as it were a separate world, a slice of infinity made up of
that step's world. So I stepped from world to world, step by step,
never seeing the ground in the dark, and it seemed to me that if
there was a number that would bespeak the location of each
footfall, then the whole ridge would be revealed thereby, by
drawing a line from one footfall to the next. Our blind feet do it
instinctively in the dark, and we are equally blind to the ultimate
reality, but we could nevertheless grasp the whole by
regular touches. Then we could say this is what is there, or that,
trusting that there were no great boulders or potholes between
steps, and so the whole shape of the ridge would be known. With
every step I walked from world to world.'
He looked at Khalid. 'Do you see what I mean?'
'Maybe,' Khalid said. 'You propose to chart movement with
numbers.'
'Yes, and also the movement within movement, changes in
speed, you know, which must always be occurring in this world, as
there is resistance or encouragement.'
'Resistance of air,' Khalid said luxuriously. 'We live at
the bottom of an ocean of air. It has weight, as the mercury scales
have shown. It bears down on us. It carries the beams of the sun to
us.'
'Which warm us,' Bahram added.
The sun cracked the distant mountains to the east, and
Bahram said, 'All praise and thanks to Allah for the glorious sun,
sign in this world of his infinite love.'
'And so,' Khalid said, yawning hugely, 'to bed.'
A Demonstration of Flight
Inevitably, however, all their various activities brought
them another visit from Nadir Devanbegi. This time Bahram was in
the bazaar, sack over his shoulder, buying melons, oranges,
chickens and rope, when Nadir suddenly appeared before him with his
personal bodyguard. It was an event Bahram could not regard as a
coincidence.
'Well met, Bahram. I hear you are busy these days.'
'Always, effendi,' Bahram said, ducking his head. The two
bodyguards were eyeing him like falcons, wearing armour and
carrying long barrelled muskets.
'And these many fine activities must include many
undertaken for the sake of Sayyed Abdul Aziz Khan, and the glory of
Samarqand?'
'Of course, effendi.'
'Tell me about them,' Nadir said. 'List them for me, and
tell me how each one is progressing.'
Bahram gulped apprehensively. Of course Nadir had nabbed him in
a public place like this because he thought he would learn more
from Bahram than from Khalid or Iwang, and more in a public space,
where Bahram might be too flustered to prevaricate.
So he frowned and tried to look serious but foolish, not
really much of a stretch at this moment. 'They do much that I don't
understand, effendi. But the work seems to fall roughly into the
camps of weapons and of fortifications.'
Nadir nodded, and Bahram gestured at the melon market
they were standing beside. 'Do you mind?'
'Not at all,' Nadir said, following him in.
So Bahram went to the honey and muskmelon trays, and
began to lift some onto the scale. He was certainly going to get a
good deal for them with Nadir Devanbegi and his bodyguards in the
shop!
'In weapons,' Bahram improvised as he pointed out the red
melons to a sullen seller, 'we are working on strengthening the
metal of cannon barrels, so they can be both lighter and stronger.
Then again, we have been conducting demonstrations of the flight of
cannonballs in different conditions, with different gunpowders and
guns, you know, and recording them and studying the results, so
that one would be able to determine where precisely one's shots
would land.'
Nadir said, 'That would be useful indeed. Have they done
that?'
'They are working on it, effendi.'
'And fortifications?'
'Strengthening walls,' Bahram said simply. Khalid would
be furious to hear of all these promises Bahram was so rashly
making, but Bahram did not see any good way out of it, except to
make his descriptions as vague as possible, and hope for the
best.
'Of course,' Nadir said. 'Please do me the courtesy of
arranging one of these famous demonstrations for the court's
edification.' He caught Bahram's eye to emphasize this was not a
casual invitation. 'Soon.'
'Of course, effendi.'
'Something that will get the Khan's attention as well.
Something exciting to him.'
'Of course.'
Nadir gestured with a finger to his men, and they moved
off through the bazaar, leaving behind a swirling wake in the press
of the crowd.
Bahram heaved a deep breath, wiped his brow. 'Hey there,'
he said sternly to the seller, who was slipping a melon off the
scale.
'Not fair,' the seller said.
'True,' Bahram said, 'but a deal's a deal.'
The seller couldn't deny it; in fact he grinned under his
moustache as Bahram sighed again.
Bahram went back to the compound and reported the
exchange to Khalid, who growled to hear it, as Bahram knew he
would. Khalid finished eating his evening meal in silence, stabbing
chunks of rabbit out of a bowl with a small silver prong held in
his left hand. He put the prong down and wiped his face with a
cloth, rose heavily. 'Come to my study and tell me exactly what you
said to him.'
Bahram repeated the conversation as closely as he could,
while Khalid spun a leather globe on which he had tried to map the
world. Most of it he had left blank, dismissing the claims of the
Chinese cartographers he had studied, their golden islands swimming
about in the ocean to the east of Nippon, located differently on
every map. He sighed when Bahram finished. 'You did well,' he said.
'Your promises were vague, and they follow good lines. We can
pursue them more or less directly, and they may even tell us some
things we wanted to know anyway.'
'More demonstrations,' Bahram said.
'Yes.' Khalid brightened at the thought.
In the weeks that followed, the furore of activity in the
compound took a new turn. Khalid took out all the cannons he had
obtained from Nadir, and the loud booms of the guns filled their
days. Khalid and Iwang and Bahram and the gunpowder artisans from
the shop fired the big things west of the city on the plain, where
they could relocate the cannonballs, after shots aimed at targets
that were very seldom struck.
Khalid growled, picking up one of the ropes they used to
pull the gun back up to the mark. 'I wonder if we could stake the
gun to the ground,' he said. 'Strong ropes, thick stakes ... it
might make the balls fly farther.'
' We can try it.'
They tried all manner of things. At the end of the days
their ears rang with reverberations, and Khalid took to stuffing
them with cotton balls to protect them some little bit.
Iwang became more and more absorbed in the flights of the
cannonballs. He and Khalid conferred over mathematical formulas and
diagrams that Bahram did not understand. It seemed to Bahram they
were losing sight of the goal of the exercise, and treating the gun
merely as a mechanism for making demonstrations of motion, of speed
and the change of speed.
But then Nadir came calling with news. The Khan and his
retinue were to visit the next day, to witness improvements and
discoveries.
Khalid spent the entire night awake in his study, making
lists of demonstrations to be considered. The next day at noon
everyone congregated on the sunny plain beside the Zeravshan River.
A big pavilion was set up for the Khan to rest under while he
observed events.
He did so lying on a couch covered with silks, spooning
sherbet and talking with a young courtesan more than watching the
demonstrations. But Nadir stood by the guns and watched everything
very closely, taking the cotton out of his ears to ask questions
after every shot.
'As to fortifications,' Khalid replied to him at one
point, 'this is an old matter, solved by the Frengis before they
died. A cannonball will break anything hard.' He had his men shoot
the gun at a wall of dressed stone that they had cemented together.
The ball shattered the wall very nicely, and the Khan and his party
cheered, although as a matter of fact both Samarqand and Bokhara
were protected by sandstone walls much like the one that had just
fallen.
' Now,' Khalid said. 'See what happens when a ball of the
same size, from the same gun loaded with the same charge, strikes
the next target.'
This was an earthen mound, dug with great effort by
Khalid's expuffers. The gun was fired, the acrid smoke cleared; the
earthen mound stood unchanged, except for a barely visible scar at
its centre.
'The cannonball can do nothing. It merely sinks into the
earth and is swallowed up. A hundred balls would make no difference
to such a wall. They would merely become part of it.'
The Khan heard this and was not amused. 'You're
suggesting we pile earth all around Samarqand? Impossible! It would
be too ugly! The other khans and emirs would laugh at us. We cannot
live like ants in an anthill!'
Khalid turned to Nadir, his face a polite blank.
'Next?' Nadir said.
'Of course. Now see, we have determined that at the
distances a gun can cast a ball, it cannot shoot straight. The
balls are tumbling through the air, and they can spin off in any
direction, and they do.'
'Surely air cannot offer any significant resistance to
iron,' Nadir said, sweeping a hand in illustration.
'Only a little resistance, it is true, but consider that
the ball passes through more than two li of air. Think of air as a
kind of thinned water. It certainly has an effect. We can see this
better with light wooden balls of the same size, thrown by hand so
you can still see their movement. We will throw into the wind, and
you can see how the balls dart this way and that.'
Bahram and Paxtakor palmed the light wooden balls off,
and they veered into the wind like bats.
'But this is absurd!' the Khan said. 'Cannonballs are
much heavier, they cut through the wind like knives through
butter!'
Khalid nodded. 'Very true, great Khan. We only use these
wooden balls to exaggerate an effect that must act on any object,
be it heavy as lead.'
'Or gold,' Sayyed Abdul Aziz joked.
'Or gold. In that case the cannonballs veer only
slightly, but over the great distances they are cast, it becomes
significant. And so one can never say exactly what the balls will
hit.'
'This must ever be true,' Nadir said.
Khalid waved his stump, oblivious for the moment of how
it looked. 'We can reduce the effect quite a great deal. See how
the wooden balls fly if they are cast with a spin to them.'
Bahram and Paxtakor threw the balsam balls with a final
pull of the fingertips to impart a spin to them. Though some of
these balls curved in flight, they went farther and faster than the
palmed balls had. Bahram hit an archery target with five throws in
a row, which pleased him greatly.
'The spin stabilizes their flight through the wind,'
Khalid explained. 'They are still pushed by the wind, of course.
That cannot be avoided. But they no longer dart unexpectedly when
they are caught on the face by a wind. It is the same effect you
get by fletching arrows to spin.'
'So you propose to fletch cannonballs?' the Khan inquired
with a guffaw.
'Not exactly, your Highness, but yes, in effect. To try
to get the same kind of spin. We have tried two different methods
to achieve this. One is to cut grooves into the balls. But this
means the balls fly much less far. Another is to cut the grooves
into the inside of the gun barrel, making a long spiral down the
barrel, only a turn or a bit less down the whole barrel's length.
This makes the balls leave the gun with a spin.'
Khalid had his men drag out a smaller cannon. A ball was
fired from it, and the ball tracked down by the helpers standing
by, then marked with a red flag. It was farther away than the
bigger gun's ball, though not by much.
' It is not distance so much as accuracy that would be
improved,' Khalid explained. 'The balls would always fly straight.
We are working up tables that would enable one to choose the
gunpowder by type and weight, and weigh the balls, and thus, with
the same cannons, of course, always send the balls precisely where
one wanted to.'
'Interesting,' Nadir said.
Sayyed Abdul Aziz Khan called Nadir to his side. 'We're
going back to the palace,' said, and led his retinue to the
horses.
'But not that interesting,' Nadir said to Khalid. 'Try
again.'
Better Gifts for the Khan
'I suppose I should make the Khan a new suit of damasked
armour,' Khalid said afterwards. 'Something pretty.'
Iwang grinned. 'Do you know how to do it?'
'Of course. It's watered steel. Not very mysterious. The
crucible charge is an iron sponge called a wootz, forged into an
iron plate together with wood, which yields its ash into the mix,
and some water too. Some crucibles are placed in the furnace, and
when they are melted their contents are poured into molten cast
iron, at a temperature below that of complete fusion of the two
elements. The resulting steel is then etched with a mineral
sulphate of one kind or another. You get different patterns and
colours depending on which sulphate you use, and what kind of
wootz, and what kind of temperatures. This blade here,' he rose and
took down a thick curved dagger with an ivory handle, and a blade
covered with a dense pattern of crosshatchings in white and
dark grey, 'is a good example of the etching called "Mohammed's
Ladder". Persian work, reputed to be from the forge of the
alchemist Jundi Shapur. They say there is alchemy in it.' He
paused, shrugged.
'And you think the Khan . . .'
'If we systematically played with the composition of the
wootz, the structure of the cakes, the temperatures, the etching
liquid, then we would certainly find some new patterns. I like some
of the swirls I've got with very woody steel.'
The silence stretched out. Khalid was unhappy, that was
clear.
Bahram said, 'You could treat it as a series of
tests.'
'As always,' Khalid said, irritated. 'But in this case
you can only do things in ignorance of their causes. There are too
many materials, too many substances and actions, all mixed
together. I suppose it is all happening at a level too small to
see. The breaks you see after the casting look like crystalline
structures when they are broken. It's interesting, what happens,
but there's no way to tell why, or predict it ahead of time. This
is the thing about a useful demonstration, you see. It tells you
something distinct. It answers a question.'
' We can try to ask questions that steelwork can answer,'
Bahram suggested.
Khalid nodded, still dissatisfied. But he glanced at
Iwang to see what he thought of this.
Iwang thought it was a good idea in theory, but in
practice he too had a hard time coming up with questions to ask
about the process. They knew how hot to make the furnace, what ores
and wood and water to introduce, how long to mix it, how hard it
would turn out. All questions on the matter of practice were long
since answered, ever since damasking had been done in Damascus.
More basic questions of cause, which yet could be answered, were
hard to formulate. Bahram himself tried mightily, without a single
idea coming to him. And good ideas were his strength, or so they
always told him.
While Khalid worked on this problem, Iwang was getting
terrifically absorbed in his mathematical labours, to the exclusion
even of his glassblowing and silversmithing, which he left mostly
to his new apprentices, huge gaunt Tibetan youths who had appeared
without explanation some time before. He pored over his Hindu books
and old Tibetan scrolls, marking up his chalk slates and then
adding to the notes he saved on paper: inked diagrams, patterns of
Hindu numerals, Chinese or Tibetan or Sanskrit symbols or letters;
a private alphabet for a private language, or so Bahram thought. A
rather useless enterprise, disturbing to contemplate, as the paper
sheets seemed to radiate a palpable power, magical or perhaps just
mad. All those foreign ideas, arranged in hexagonal patterns of
number and ideogram; to Bahram the shop in the bazaar began to seem
the dim cave of a magus, fingering the hems of reality ...
Iwang himself brushed all these cobwebs aside. Out in the
sun of Khalid's compound he sat down with Khalid, and Zahhar and
Tazi from Sher Dor, and with Bahram shading them and looking over
their shoulders, he outlined a mathematics of motion, what he
called the speed of the speed.
'Everything is moving,' he said. 'That is karma. The
Earth revolves around the Sun, the Sun travels through the stars,
the stars too travel. But for the sake of study here, for
demonstrations, we postulate a realm of non movement. Perhaps
some such motionless void contains the universe, but it doesn't
matter; for our purposes these are purely mathematical dimensions,
which can be marked by vertical and horizontal, thusly, or by
length, breadth and height, if you want the three dimensions of the
world. But start with two dimensions, for simplicity's sake. And
moving objects, say a cannonball, can be measured against these two
dimensions. How high or low, how left or right. Placed as if on a
map. Then again, the horizontal dimension can mark time passed, and
the vertical, movement in a single direction. That will make for
curved lines, representing the passage of objects through the air.
Then, lines drawn tangent to the curve indicate the speed of the
speed. So you measure what you can, mark those measurements, and
it's like passing through rooms of a house. Each room has a
different volume, like flasks, depending on how wide and how tall.
That is to say, how far, in how much time. Quantities of movement,
do you see? A bushel of movement, a dram.'
'Cannonball flights could be described precisely,' Khalid
said.
'Yes. More easily than most things, because a cannonball
pursues a single line. A curved line, but not something like an
eagle's flight, say, or a person in his daily rounds. The mathematics for that
would be . . .' Iwang became lost, jerked, came back to them. 'What
was I saying?'
'Cannonballs.'
'Ah. Very possible to measure them, yes.'
'Meaning if you knew the speed of departure from the gun,
and the angle of the gun . . .'
'You could say pretty closely where it was going to land,
yes.'
'We should tell Nadir about this privately.'
Khalid worked up a set of tables for calculating cannon
fire, with artful drawings of the curves describing the flight of
shot, and a little Tibetan book filled with Iwang's careful
numerics. These items were placed in an ornate carved ironwood box,
encrusted with silver, turquoise and lapis, and brought to the
Khanaka in Bokhara, along with a gorgeous damasked breastplate for
the Khan. The steel rectangle at the centre of this breastplate was
a dramatic swirl of white and grey steel, with iron flecks very
lightly etched by a treatment of sulphuric acids and other
caustics. The pattern was called by Khalid the Zeravshan Eddies,
and indeed the swirl resembled a standing eddy in the river,
spinning off the foundation of the Dagbit Bridge whenever the water
was high. It was one of the handsomest pieces of metalwork Bahram
had ever seen, and it seemed to him that it, and the decorated box
filled with Iwang's mathematics, made for a very impressive set of
gifts for Sayyed Abdul Aziz.
He and Khalid dressed in their best finery for their
audience, and Iwang joined them in the dark red robes and conical
winged hat of a Tibetan monk, indeed a lama of the highest
distinction. So the presenters were as impressive as their
presents, Bahram thought; although once in the Registan, under the
vast arch of the gold--covered Tilla Karia Madressa, he felt less
imposing. And once in the company of the court he felt slightly
plain, even shabby, as if they were children pretending to be
courtiers, or, simply, bumpkins.
The Khan, however, was delighted by the breastplate, and
praised Khalid's art highly, even putting the piece on over his
finery and leaving it there. The box he also admired, while handing
the papers inside to Nadir.
After a few moments more they were dismissed, and Nadir
guided them to the Tilla Karia garden. The diagrams were very
interesting, he said as he looked them over; he wanted to inquire
more closely into them; meanwhile, the Khan had been informed by
his armourers that cutting a spiral into the insides of their
cannon barrels had caused one to explode on firing, the rest to
lose range. So Nadir wanted Khalid to visit the armourers and speak
to them about it.
Khalid nodded easily, though Bahram could see the thought
in his eyes; once again he would be taken away from what he wanted
to be doing. Nadir did not see this, though he watched Khalid's
face closely. In fact, he went on cheerfully to say how much the
Khan appreciated Khalid's great wisdom and craft, and how much all
the people of the Khanate and in Dar al Islam generally would
owe to Khalid if, as seemed likely, his efforts helped them to
stave off any further encroachments of the Chinese, reputed to be
on the march in the west borders of their empire. Khalid nodded
politely, and the men were dismissed.
Walking back along the river road, Khalid was irritated.
'This trip accomplished nothing.'
'We don't know yet,' Iwang said, and Bahram nodded.
'We do. The Khan is a . He sighed. 'And Nadir clearly
thinks of us as his servants.'
'We are all servants of the Khan,' Iwang reminded
him.
That silenced him.
As they came back towards Samarqand, they passed by the
ruins of old Afrasiab. 'If only we had the Sogdian kings again,'
Bahram said.
Khalid shook his head. 'Those are not the ruins of the
Sogdian kings, but of Markanda, which stood here before Afrasiab.
Alexander the Great called it the most beautiful city he ever
conquered.'
'And look at it now,' Bahram said. 'Dusty old
foundations, broken walls . . .'
Iwang said, 'Samarqand too will come to this.'
'So it doesn't matter if we are at Nadir's beck and
call?' Khalid snapped.
'Well, it too will pass,' Iwang said.
Jewels in the Sky
Nadir asked for more and more of Khalid's time, and
Khalid grew very restive. One time he went to Devanbegi with a
proposal to build a complete system of drains underneath both
Bokhara and Samarqand, to move the water of the scores of stagnant
pools that dotted both cities, especially Bokhara. This would keep
the water from becoming foul, and decrease the number of mosquitos
and the incidence of disease, including the plague, which the Hindu
caravans reported to be devastating parts of Sind. Khalid suggested
sequestering all travellers outside the city whenever they heard
such news, and causing delays in caravans that came from affected
areas, to be sure of cleanliness. A purification delay, analogous
to the spiritual purifications of Ramadan.
But Nadir ignored all these ideas. An underground system
of pipes, though common in Persia from before the invasions of the
Mongols, was too expensive now to contemplate. Khalid was being
asked for military aid, not physic. Nadir did not believe he knew
anything about physic.
So Khalid returned to his compound and put the whole
place to work on the Khan's artillery, making every aspect of the
cannons a matter for demonstrations, but without trying to learn
anything of primary causes, as he called them, except occasionally
in motion. He worked on metal strength with Iwang, and made use of
Iwang's mathematics to do cannonflight studies, and tried a number
of methods to cause the cannonballs to spiral reliably in
flight.
All this was done with reluctance and ill humour;
and only in the afternoon, after a nap and a meal of yoghurt, or
late in the evening, after smoking from one of his narghiles, did
he recover his equanimity, and pursue his studies with soap bubbles
and prisms, air pumps and mercury scales. 'If you can measure the
weight of air you should be able to measure heat, up to
temperatures far beyond what we can distinguish with our blisters
and ouches.'
Nadir sent his men by on a monthly basis to receive the
latest news of Khalid's studies, and from time to time dropped by
himself unannounced, throwing the compound into a flurry, like an
anthill hit by water. Khalid was polite at all times, but
complained to Bahram bitterly about the monthly request for news,
particularly since they had very little. 'I thought I escaped the
moon curse when Fedwa went through menopause,' he groused.
Ironically, these unwelcome visits were also losing him
allies in the madressas, as he was thought to be favoured by the
treasurer, and he could not risk telling them the real situation.
So there were cold looks, and slights in the bazaar and the mosque;
also, many examples of grasping obsequiousness. It made him
irritable, indeed sometimes he rose to a veritable fury of
irritability. 'A little power and you see how awful people
are.'
To keep him from plunging back into black melancholy,
Bahram scoured the caravanserai for things that might please him,
visiting the Hindus and the Armenians in particular, also the
Chinese, and coming back with books, compasses, clocks, and a
curious nested astrolabe, which purported to show that the six
planets occupied orbits that filled polygons that were
progressively simpler by one side, so that Mercury circled inside a
decagon, Venus a nonagon just large enough to hold the decagon,
Earth an octagon outside the nonagon, and so on up to Saturn,
circling in a big square. This object astonished Khalid, and caused
night--long discussions with Iwang and Zahhar about the disposition
of the planets around the sun.
This new interest in astronomy quickly superseded all
others in Khalid, and grew to a passion after Iwang brought by a
curious device he had made in his shop, a long silver tube, hollow
except for glass lenses placed in both ends. Looking through the
tube, things appeared closer than they really were, with their
detail more fine.
'How can that work?' Khalid demanded when he looked
through it. The look of surprise on his face was that of the
puppets in the bazaar, pure and hilarious. It made Bahram happy to
see it.
'Like the prism?' Iwang suggested uncertainly.
Khalid shook his head. 'Not that you can see things as
bigger, or closer, but that you can see so much more detail! How
can that be?'
'The detail must always be there in the light,' Iwang
said, I and the eye only powerful enough to discern part of it. I
admit I am surprised, but consider, most people's eyes weaken as
they age, especially for things close by. I know mine have.
I made my first set of lenses to use as spectacles, you know, one
for each eye, in a frame. But while I was assembling one I looked
through the two lenses lined up together.' He grinned, miming the
action. 'I was really very anxious to confirm that you two saw the
same things I saw, to tell the truth. I couldn't quite believe my
own eyes.'
Khalid was looking through the thing again.
So now they looked at things. Distant ridges, birds in
flight, approaching caravans. Nadir was shown the glass, and its
military uses were immediately obvious to him. He took one they had
made for him, encrusted with garnets, to the Khan, and word came
back that the Khan was pleased. That did not ease the presence of
the Khanate in Khalid's compound, of course; on the contrary, Nadir
mentioned casually that they were looking forward to the next
remarkable development out of Khalid's shop, as the Chinese were
said to be in a turmoil. Who knew where that kind of thing might
end?
'It will never end,' Khalid said bitterly when Nadir had
gone. 'It's like a noose that tightens with our every move.'
'Feed him your discoveries in little pieces,' Iwang
suggested. 'It will seem as if there are more of them.'
Khalid followed this advice, which gave him a little more
time, and they worked on all manner of things that it seemed would
help the Khan's troops in battle. Khalid indulged his interest in
primary causes mostly at night, when they trained the new spyglass
on the stars, and later that month on the moon, which proved to be
a very rocky, mountainous, desolate world, ringed by innumerable
craters, as if fired upon by the cannon of some super emperor.
Then on one memorable night they looked through the spyglass at
Jupiter, and Khalid said, 'By God it's a world too, clearly. Banded
by latitude and look, those three stars near it, they're
brighter than stars. Could they be moons of Jupiter's?'
They could. They moved fast, around Jupiter, and the ones
closer to Jupiter moved faster, just like the planets around the
sun. Soon Khalid and Iwang had seen a fourth one, and mapped all
four orbits, so that they could prepare new viewers to comprehend
the sight, by looking at the diagrams first. They made it all into
a book, another gift to the Khan -- a gift with no military use,
but they named the moons after the Khan's four oldest wives, and he
liked that, it was clear. He was reported to have said, 'Jewels in
the sky! For me!'
Who is the Stranger?
There were factions in town who did not like them. When
Bahram walked through the Registan, and saw the eyes watching him,
the conversations begun or ended by his passage, he saw that he was
part of a coterie or faction, no matter how innocuous his behaviour
had been. He was related to Khalid, who was allied with Iwang and
Zahhar, and together they formed part of Nadir Devanbegi's power.
They were therefore Nadir's allies, even if he had forced them to
it like wet pulp in a paper press; even if they hated him. Many
other people in Samarqand hated Nadir, no doubt even more than
Khalid did, as Khalid was under his protection, while these other
people were his enemies: relatives of his dead or imprisoned or
exiled foes, perhaps, or the losers of many earlier palace
struggles. The Khan had other advisers courtiers, generals,
relatives at court -- all jealous of their own share of his regard,
and envious of Nadir's great influence. Bahram had heard rumours
from time to time of palace intrigues against Nadir, but he
remained unaware of the details. The fact that their involuntary
association with Nadir could cause them trouble elsewhere struck
him as grossly unfair; the association itself was already trouble
enough.
One day this sense of hidden enemies became more
material: Bahram was visiting Iwang, and two qadi Bahram had never
seen before appeared in the door of the Tibetan's shop, backed by
two of the Khan's soldiers, and a small gaggle of ulema from the
Tilla Karia Madressa, demanding that Iwang produce his tax
receipts.
'I am not a dhimmi,' Iwang said with his customary
calm.
The dhimmi, or people of the pact, were those
non believers who were born and lived their lives in the
khanate, who had to pay a special tax. Islam was the religion of
justice, and all Muslims were equal before God and the law; but of
the lesser ones, women, slaves and the dhimmi, the dhimmi were the
ones who could change their status by a simple decision to
convert to true belief. Indeed there had been times in the past
when it had been 'the book or the sword' for all pagans, and only
people of the book Jews, Zoroastrians, Christians and Sabians
-- had been allowed to keep their faith, if they insisted on it.
Nowadays pagans of all sort were allowed to keep their various
religions, as long as they were registered with the qadis, and paid
the annual dhimma tax.
This was clear, and ordinary. Ever since the shiite
Safavids had come to the throne in Iran, however, the legal
position of dhimmi had worsened -- markedly in Iran, where the
shiite mullahs were so concerned with purity, but also in the
khanates to the east, at least sometimes. It was a matter for
discretion, really. As Iwang had once remarked, the uncertainty
itself was a part of the tax.
'You are not a dhimmi?' one of the qadi said,
surprised.
'No, I come from Tibet. I am mustamin.'
The mustamin were foreign visitors, permitted to live in
Muslim lands for specified periods of time.
'Do you have an aman?'
'Yes.'
This was the safe conduct pass issued to mustamin,
renewed by the Khanaka on an annual basis. Now Iwang brought a
sheet of parchment out of his back room, and showed it to the
qadis. There were a number of wax seals at the bottom of the
document, and the qadis inspected these closely.
'He's been here eight years!' one of them complained.
'That's longer than allowed by the law.'
Iwang shrugged impassively. 'Renewal was granted this
spring.'
A heavy silence ruled as the men checked the document's
seals again. 'A mustamin cannot own property,' someone noted.
'Do you own this shop?' the chief qadi asked, surprised
again.
'No,' Iwang said. 'Naturally not. Rental only.'
'Monthly?'
'Lease by year. After my aman is renewed.'
'Where are you from?'
'Tibet.'
'You have a house there?'
'Yes. In Iwang.'
'A family?'
'Brothers and sisters. No wives or children.'
'So who's in your house?'
'Sister.'
'When are you going back?'
A short pause. 'I don't know.'
'You mean you have no plans to return to Tibet.'
'No, I plan to return. But -- business has been good.
Sister sends raw silver, I make it into things. This is
Samarqand.'
'And so business will always be good! Why would you ever
leave? You should be dhimmi, you are a permanent resident here, a
nonbelieving subject of the Khan.'
Iwang shrugged, gestured at the document. That was
something Nadir had brought to the khanate, it occurred to Bahram,
something from deep in the heart of Islam: the law was the law.
Dhimmi and mustamin were both protected by contract, each in their
way.
'He is not even one of the people of the book,' one of
the qadi said indignantly.
'We have many books in Tibet,' Iwang said calmly, as if
he had misunderstood.
The qadi were offended. 'What is your religion?'
'I am Buddhist.'
'So you don't believe in Allah, you don't pray to
Allah.'
Iwang did not reply.
'Buddhists are polytheists,' one of them said. 'Like the
pagans Mohammed converted in Arabia.'
Bahram stepped before them. Thereis no
compulsion in religion",' he recited hotly. Toyou
your religion, to me my religion." That's what the Quran tells
us!'
The visitors stared at him coldly.
'Are you not Muslim?' one said.
'I certainly am! You would know it if you knew the Sher
Dor mosque! I've never seen you there -- where do you pray on
Friday?'
'Tilla Karia Mosque,' the qadi said, angry now.
This was interesting, as the Tilla Karia Madressa was the
centre for the Shiite study group, which was opposed to Nadir.
"'Al kufou millatun wahida",' one of them said; a
counter quote, as theologians called it. Unbelief is one
religion.
'Only digaraz can make complaint to the law,' Bahram
snapped back. Digaraz were those who spoke without grudge or
malice, disinterested Muslims. 'You don't qualify.'
'Neither do you, young man.'
'You come here! Who sent you? You challenge the law of
the aman, who gives you the right? Get out of here! You have no
idea what this man does for Samarqand! You attack Sayyed Abdul
himself here, you attack Islam itself! Get out!'
The qadis did not move, but something in their gazes had
grown more guarded. Their leader said, 'Next spring we will talk
again,' with a glance at Iwang's aman. With a wave of his hand that
was just like the Khan's, he led the others out and down the narrow
passage of the bazaar.
For a long while the two friends stood silently in the
shop, awkward with each other.
Finally Iwang sighed. 'Did not Mohammed set laws
concerning the way men should be treated in Dar al Islam?'
'God set them. Mohammed only transmitted them.'
'All free men equal before the law. Women, children,
slaves and unbelievers less under the law.'
'Equal beings, but they all have their particular rights,
protected by law.'
'But not as many rights as those of Muslim free men.'
'They are not as strong, so their rights are not so
burdensome. They are all people to be protected by Muslim free men,
upholding God's laws.'
Iwang pursed his lips. Finally he said, 'God is the force
moving in everything. The shapes things take when they move.'
'God is love moving through all,' Bahram agreed. 'The
sufis say this.'
Iwang nodded. 'God is a mathematician. A very great and
subtle mathematician. As our bodies are to the crude furnaces and
stills of your compound, so God's mathematics is to our
mathematics.'
'So you agree there is a god? I thought Buddha denied
there was any god.'
'I don't know. I suppose some Buddhists might say not.
Being springs out of the Void. I don't know, myself. If there is
only the Void enveloping all we see, where did the mathematics come
from? it seems to me it could be the result of something
thinking.'
Bahram was surprised to bear Iwang say this. And he could
not be quite sure how sincere Iwang was, given what had just
happened with the qadis from Tilla Karia. Although it made sense,
in that it was obviously impossible that such an intricate and
glorious thing as the world could have come to pass without some
very great and loving god to make it.
'You should come to the sufi fellowship, and listen to
what my teacher there says,' Bahram finally said, smiling at the
thought of the big Tibetan in their group. Although their teacher
would probably like it.
Bahram returned to the compound by way of the western
caravanserai, where the Hindu traders were camped in their smell of
incense and milktea. Bahram completed the other business he had
there, buying scents and bags of calcinated minerals for Khalid,
and then when he saw Dol, an acquaintance from Ladakh, he joined
him and sat with him and drank tea for a while, then rakshi,
looking over the trader's pallets of spices and small bronze
figurines. Bahram gestured at the detailed little statues. 'Are
these your gods?'
Dol looked at him, surprised and amused. 'Some are gods,
yes. This is Shiva -- this Kali, the destroyer -- this Ganesh.'
'An elephant god?'
'This is how we picture him. They have other forms.'
'But an elephant?'
'Have you ever seen an elephant?'
'No.'
'They're impressive.'
'I know they're big.'
'It's more than that.'
Bahram sipped his tea. 'I think Iwang might convert to
Islam.'
'Trouble with his aman?'
Dol laughed at Bahram's expression, urged him to drink
from the jar of rakshi.
Bahram obliged him, then persisted. 'Do you think it's
possible to change religions?'
'Many people have.'
'Could you? Could you say, There is only one god?'
Gesturing at the figurines.
Dol smiled. 'They are all aspects of Brahman, you know.
Behind all, the great God Brahman, all one in him.'
'So Iwang could be like that too. He might already
believe in the one great god, the God of Gods.'
'He could. God manifests in different ways to different
people.'
Bahram sighed.
Bad Air
He had just gone inside the compound gate, and was on his
way to tell Khalid about the incident at Iwang's, when the
door of the chemical shed burst open and men crashed out, chased by
a shouting Khalid and a dense cloud of yellow smoke. Bahram
turned and ran for the house, intending to grab Esmerine and the
children, but they were out and running already, and he followed
them through the main gate, everyone shrieking and then, as the
cloud descended on them, dropping to the ground and crawling away
like rats, coughing and hacking and spitting and crying.
They rolled down the hill, throats and eyes burning, lungs aching
from the caustic stink of the poisonous yellow cloud. Most of them
followed Khalid's lead and plunged their heads into the river,
emerging only to puff shallow breaths, and then dunk
themselves again. When the cloud had dispersed and he had recovered
a little, Khalid began to curse.
'What was it?' Bahram said, coughing still.
'A crucible of acid exploded. We were testing it.'
'For what?'
Khalid didn't answer. Slowly the caustic burn of their
delicate membranes cooled. The wet and unhappy crew straggled back
into the compound. Khalid set some of the men to clean up the shed,
and Bahram went with him into his study, where he changed his
clothes and washed, then wrote in his big book notes, presumably
about the failed demonstration.
Except it had not been completely a failure, or so Bahram began
to gather from Khalid's muttering.
'What were you trying to do?'
Khalid did not answer directly. 'It seems certain to me
that there are different kinds of air,' he said instead. 'Different
constituents, perhaps, as in metals. Only all invisible to the eye.
We smell the differences, sometimes. And some can kill, as at the
bottom of wells. It isn't an absence of air, in those cases, but a
bad kind of air, or part of air. The heaviest no doubt. And
different distillations, different burnings ... you can suppress or
stoke a fire ... Anyway, I thought that sal ammoniac and saltpetre
and sulphur mixed, would make a different air. And it did, too, but
too much of it, too fast. Like an explosion. And clearly a poison.'
He coughed uncomfortably. 'It is like the Chinese alchemists'
recipe for wan--jen ti, which Iwang says means "killer of
myriads". . I supposed I could show Nadir this reaction, and
propose it as a weapon. You could perhaps kill a whole army with
it.'
They regarded the thought silently.
'Well,' Bahram said, 'it might help him keep his own
position more secure with the Khan.'
He explained what he had witnessed at Iwang's.
'And so you think Nadir is in trouble at the court?'
'Yes.'
'And you think Iwang might convert to Islam?'
'He seemed to be asking about it.'
Khalid laughed, then coughed painfully. 'That would be
odd.'
'People don't like to be laughed at.'
'Somehow I don't think Iwang would mind.'
'Did you know that's the name of his town, Iwang?,
'No. Is it?'
'Yes. So he seemed to say.'
Khalid shrugged.
'It means we don't know his real name.'
Another shrug. 'None of us know our real names.'
Love the Size of the World
The autumn harvests came and passed, and the caravanserai
emptied for the winter, when the passes to the east would close.
Bahram's days were enriched by Iwang's presence at the sufi ribat,
where Iwang sat at the back and listened closely to all that the
old master Ali said, very seldom speaking, and then only to ask the
simplest questions, usually the meaning of one word or another.
There were lots of Arabic and Persian words in the sufi
terminology, and though Iwang's Sogdi Turkic was good, the
religious language was opaque to him. Eventually the master gave
Iwang a lexicon of sufi technical terms, or istilahat, by Ansari,
titled 'One Hundred Fields and Resting Places', which had an
introduction that ended with the sentence, 'The real essence of the
spiritual states of the sufis is such that expressions are not
adequate to describe it: nevertheless, these expressions are fully
understood by those who have experienced these states.'
This, Bahram felt, was the main source of Iwang's
problem: he had not experienced the states being described.
'Very possibly,' Iwang would agree when Bahram said this
to him. 'But how am I to reach them?'
'With love,' Bahram would say. 'You must love everything
that is, especially people. You will see, it is love that moves
everything.'
Iwang would purse his lips. 'With love comes hate,' he
would say. 'They are two sides of an excess of feeling. Compassion
rather than love, that seems to me the best way. There is no bad
obverse side to compassion.'
'Indifference,' Bahram suggested.
Iwang would nod, thinking things over. But Bahram
wondered if he could ever come to the right view. The fount of
Bahram's own love, like a powerful artesian spring in the hills,
was his feeling for his wife and children, then for Allah, who had
allowed him the privilege of living his life among such beautiful
souls -- not only the three of them, but Khalid and Fedwa and all
their relatives, and the community of the compound, the mosque, the
ribat, Sher Dor, and indeed all of Samarqand and the wide world,
when he was feeling it. Iwang had no such starting point,
being single and childless, as far as Bahram knew, and an
infidel to boot. How was he to begin to feel the more generalized
and diffuse loves, if the specific ones were not there for him?
'The heart which is greater than the intellect is not
that which beats in the chest.' So Ali would say. It was a matter
of opening his heart to God, and letting the love appear from there
first. Iwang was already good at calming himself, at paying
attention to the world in its quiet moments, sitting out at the
compound some dawns after he had spent the night on a couch in the
shops. Bahram once or twice joined him in these sittings, and once
he was inspired by a windless pure gold sky to recite from Rumi
'How silent it has become in the house of the heart!
The heart as hearth and home Has encompassed the
world.'
When Iwang finally responded, after the sun had broken
over the eastern ridges and flooded the valley with buttered light,
it was only to say, 'I wonder if the world is as big as Brahmagupta
said it was.'
'He said it was a sphere, right?'
'Yes, of course. You can see that out on the steppes,
when a caravan comes over the horizon heads first. We are on the
surface of a great ball.'
'The heart of God.'
No reply but the swaying head, which meant that Iwang did
not agree but did not want to disagree. Bahram desisted, and asked
about the Hindu's estimate of the size of the Earth, which was
clearly what interested Iwang now.
'Brahmagupta noticed that the sun shone straight down a
well in the Deccan on a certain day, and the next year he arranged
to be a thousand yoganda north of there, and he measured the
angle of the shadows, and used spherical geometry to calculate what
percentage of the circle that arc of a thousand yoganda was. Very
simple, very interesting.'
Bahram nodded; no doubt true; but they would only ever
see a small fraction of those yoganda, and here, now, Iwang was in
need of spiritual illumination. Or -- in need of love. Bahram
invited him to eat with his family, to observe Esmerine serve the
meals, and instruct the children in their manners. The children
were a pleasure all their own, their liquid eyes huge in their
faces as they stopped in their racing about to listen
impatiently to Esmerine's lectures. Their racing about the compound
was a pleasure as well. Iwang nodded at all this. 'You're a lucky
man,' he told Bahram.
'We are all lucky men,' Bahram replied. And Iwang
agreed.
The Goddess and the Law
Parallel to his new
religious studies, Iwang continued his investigations and
demonstrations with Khalid. They devoted the greater portion of
these efforts to their projects for Nadir and the Khan. They worked
out a long range signalling system for the army that used
mirrors and small telescopes; they also cast bigger and bigger
cannons, with giant waggons to haul them by horse or camel train
from one battlefield to the next.
'We will need cart roads for these, if we are ever to
move them,' Iwang noted. Even the great Silk Road itself was
nothing but a camel track for most of its length.
Their latest private investigation into causes concerned
a little telescope which magnified objects too small to be seen by
the eye alone. The astronomers from the Ulug Bek Madressa had
devised the thing, which could only be focused on a very narrow
slice of air, so that translucent items caught between two plates
of glass were best, lit by mirrored sunlight from below. Then new
little worlds appeared, right under their fingers.
The three men spent hours looking through this telescope
at pond water, which proved to be full of strangely articulated
creatures, all swimming about. They looked at translucently thin
slabs of stone, wood and bone; and at their own blood, which was
filled with blobs that were frighteningly like the animals in the
pond water.
'The world just keeps getting smaller,' Khalid marvelled.
'If we could draw the blood of those little creatures in our blood,
and put it under a lens even more powerful than this one, I have no
doubt that their blood would contain animalcules just like ours
does; and so on for those animals as well, and down to. . .'He
trailed off, awe giving him a dazed look. Bahram had never seen him
so happy.
'There is probably some smallest possible size of things,' Iwang
said practically. 'So the ancient Greeks postulated. The ultimate
particulates, out of which all else is constructed. No doubt
smaller than we will ever see.'
Khalid frowned. 'This is just a start. Surely stronger
lenses will be made. And then who knows what will be seen? Maybe it
will allow us to understand the composition of metals at last, and
work the transmutations.'
'Maybe,' Iwang allowed. He stared into the eye of the
lens, humming to himself. 'Certainly the little crystals in granite
are made clear.'
Khalid nodded, wrote notes in one of his notebooks. He
returned to the glass, then drew the shapes he saw on the page.
'The very small and the very large,' he said.
'These lenses are a great gift from God,' Bahram said,
'reminding us that it is all one world. One substance, all
interpenetrated with structure, but still one, big to small.'
Khalid nodded. 'Thus the stars may have their sway over
us after all. Maybe the stars are animals too, like these
creatures, could we only see them better.'
Iwang shook his head. 'All one, yes. It seems more and
more obvious. But not all animal, surely. Perhaps the stars are
more like rocks than these fine creatures.'
'The stars are fire.'
'Rocks, fire -- but not animals.'
'But all one,' Bahram insisted.
And both of the older men nodded, Khalid emphatically,
Iwang reluctantly, and with a low humming in his throat.
After that day it seemed to Bahram that Iwang was always
humming. He came to the compound and joined Khalid in his
demonstrations, and went with Bahram to the ribat and listened to
Ali's lectures, and whenever Bahram visited him in his shop he was
playing with numbers, or clicking a Chinese abacus back and forth,
and always distracted, always humming. On Fridays he came to the
mosque and stood outside the door, listening to the prayers and the
readings, facing Mecca and blinking at the sun, but never kneeling
or prostrating or praying; and always humming.
Bahram did not think he should convert. Even if he had to
move back to Tibet for a time and then return, it seemed clear to
Bahram that he was no Muslim. And so it would not be right.
Indeed, as the weeks passed he began to seem more strange
and foreign, rather than less; even more an unbeliever, performing
little demonstrations for himself that were like sacrifices to
light, or magnetism, or the void, or gravity. An alchemist,
precisely, but in an eastern tradition stranger than any sufi's, as
if he were not only reverting to Buddhism but going beyond it, back
to Tibet's older religion, Bon as Iwang called it.
That winter he sat in his shop with Bahram, before the
open fire of his furnace, hands extended to keep the fingers warm
as they poked out of the glove ends like his little babies, smoking
hashish from a longstemmed pipe and handling it to Bahram
occasionally, until the two men sat there watching the coals' film
dance over the hot orange underneath. One night, deep in a
snowstorm, Iwang went out to get more wood for the fire, and Bahram
looked over at a movement and saw an old Chinese woman sitting by
the stove, dressed in a red dress, with her hair pulled up in a
knot on top of her head. Bahram jerked; the old woman turned her
head and looked at him, and he saw her black eyes were filled with
stars. He promptly fell off his stool, and groped to his feet to
find her no longer there. When Iwang came back in the room and
Bahram described her, Iwang shrugged, smiled slyly: 'There
are lots of old women in this quarter of the city. This is where
the poor people live, among them the widows, who have to sleep in
their dead husbands' shops on the floor, on the sufferance of the
new owners, and do what they can to keep hunger from the door.'
'But the red dress -- her face -- her eyes!'
'That all sounds like the goddess of the stove, actually.
She appears next to the hearth, if you're lucky.'
'I'm not smoking any more of your hashish.'
Iwang laughed. 'If only that was all it took!'
Another frosty night, a few weeks alter, Iwang knocked on
the gate of the compound, and came in greatly excited -- drunk, one
would have said of another man -- a man possessed.
'Look!' he said to Khalid, taking him by his shortened
arm and pulling him into the old man's study. 'Look, I've worked it
out at last.'
'The philosopher's stone?'
'No no! Nothing so trivial! It's the one law, the law
above all the others. An equation. See here.'
He got out a slate and chalked on it rapidly, using the
alchemical symbols Khalid and he had decided on to mark quantities
that were different in different situations.
'Same above, same below, just as Bahram is always saying.
Everything is attracted to everything else by precisely this level
of attraction. Multiply the two masses attracting each other,
divide that by the square of the distance they are apart from each
other multiply by whatever speed away from the central body
there might be, and the force of the attraction results. Here --
try it with the planets' orbits around the sun, they all work. And
they travel in ellipses around the sun, because they all attract
each other as well as being pulled down to the sun, so the sun sits
at one focus of the ellipse, while the sum of all other attractions
make the other focus.' He was sketching furiously as he spoke, as
agitated as Bahram had ever seen him. 'It explains the
discrepancies in the observations out at Ulug Beg. It works for the
planets, the stars in their constellations no doubt, and the flight
of a cannonball over the Earth, and the movement of those little
animalcules in pondwater or in our blood!'
Khalid was nodding. 'This is the power of gravity itself,
portrayed mathematically.'
'Yes.'
'The attraction is in inverse proportion to the square of
the distance away.'
'Yes.'
'And it acts on everything.'
'I think so.'
'What about light?'
'I don't know. Light itself must have so little mass. If
any. But what mass it has, is being attracted to all other masses.
Mass attracts mass.'
'But this,' Khalid said, 'is again action at a
distance.'
'Yes.' Iwang grinned. 'Your universal spirit, perhaps.
Acting through some agency we don't know. Thus gravity, magnetism,
lightning.'
'A kind of invisible fire.'
'Or perhaps to fire as the tiniest animals are to us.
Some subtle force.
And yet nothing escapes it. Everything has it. We all
live within it.'
'An active spirit in all things.'
'Like love,' Bahram put in.
'Yes, like love,' Iwang agreed for once. 'In that without
it, all would be dead on Earth. Nothing would attract or repel, or
circulate, or change form, or live in any way, but merely lie
there, dead and cold.'
And then he smiled, he grinned outright, his smooth shiny
Tibetan cheeks dimpled by deep creases, his big horsey teeth
gleaming: 'And here we are! So it must be, do you see? It all moves
-- it all lives. And the force acts exactly in inverse proportion
to the distance between things.'
Khalid began, 'I wonder if this could help us to
transmute But the other two men cut him off: 'Lead into
gold! Lead into gold!' Laughing at him.
'It's all gold already,' Bahram said, and Iwang's eyes
suddenly gleamed, it was as if the goddess of the stove had filled
him, he pulled Bahram to him and gave him a rough wet woolly hug,
humming again.
'You're a good man, Bahram. A very good man you are.
Listen, if I believe in your love, can I stay here? Will it be
blasphemy to you, if I believe in gravity and love, and the oneness
of all things?'
Theories without Application
Make Trouble
Bahram's days became busier than ever, as was true for
everyone in the compound. Khalid and Iwang continued to debate the
ramifications of Iwang's great figure, and to run demonstrations of
all kinds, either testing it or investigating matters related to
it. But their investigations did little to help Bahram in his work
at the forge, it being difficult or impossible to apply the two
explorers' esoteric and highly mathematical arguments to the daily
effort to make stronger steel or more powerful cannons. To the
Khan, bigger was better, and he had heard of new cannons of the
Chinese Emperor, that dwarfed even the old giants left stranded in
Byzantium by the great plagues of the seventh century. Bahram was
trying to match these rumoured guns, and finding it hard to cast
them, hard to move them, and hard to fire them without causing them
to crack. Khalid and Iwang both had suggestions, but these did not
work out, and Bahram was left with the same old
trial and error that metallurgists had used for
centuries, always coming back to the idea that if he could only get
the molten iron hot enough, and of the right mix of feed stocks,
then the resulting metal of the cannon would be stronger. So it was
a matter of increasing the amount of the river's force applied to
the blast furnaces, to create temperatures that turned the melts
incandescent white, so brilliant it hurt to look at them. Khalid
and Iwang observed the scene at dusk, and argued till dawn about
the origins of such vivid light, released out of iron by heat.
All well and good, but no matter how much air they
blasted into the charcoal fire, causing the iron to run white as
the sun and liquid as water, or even thinner, the cannons that
resulted were just as prone to cracks as before. And Nadir would
appear, unannounced, aware of even the latest results. Clearly he
had his spies in the compound, and did not care if Bahram knew it.
Or wanted him to know it. And so he would show up, not pleased. His
look would say, More, and quickly! even as his words
reassured them that he was confident they were doing the best they
could, that the Khan was pleased with the flight tables. He would
say, 'The Khan is impressed by the power of mathematics to stave
off Chinese invaders,' and Bahram would nod unhappily, to indicate
he had got the message even if Khalid had studiously avoided seeing
it, and he would hold back from asking after the assurance of an
amun for Iwang the following spring, thinking it might be best to
trust to Nadir's good will at a better time, and go back to the
shop to try something else.
A New Metal, a New Dynasty, a New Religion
Just as a practical matter, then, Bahram was getting
interested in a dull grey metal that looked like lead on the
outside and tin on its interior.
There was obviously very much sulphur in the mercury --
if that whole description of metals could be credited -- and it
was, at first, so nondescript as to pass notice. But it was proving
in various little demonstrations and trials to be less brittle than
iron, more ductile than gold, and, in short, a different metal than
those mentioned by Al Razi and Ibn Sina, strange though that
was to contemplate. A new metal! And it mixed with iron to form a
kind of steel that seemed as if it would work well as cannon barrel
material.
'How could there be a new metal?' Bahram asked Khalid and
Iwang. 'And what should it be called? I can't just keep calling it
the grey stuff.'
'It's not new,' Iwang said. 'It was always there among
the rest, but we're achieving heats never before reached, and so it
expresses out.'
Khalid called it leadgold as a joke, but the stuck name
stuck for lack of another. And the metal, found now every time they
smelted certain bluish copper ores, became part of their
armoury.
Days passed in a fever of work. Rumours of war to the
east increased. In China, it was said, barbarians were again
crashing over the Great Wall, bringing down the rotten Ming dynasty
and setting that whole giant off in a ferment of violence that was
now rippling outwards from it. This time the barbarians came not
from Mongolia but Manchuria, northeast of China, and they were the
most accomplished warriors ever yet seen in the world, it was said,
and very likely to conquer and destroy everything in their path,
including Islamic civilization, unless something was done to make a
defence against them possible.
So people said in the bazaar, and Nadir too, in his more
circuitous way, confirmed that something was happening; and the
feeling of danger grew as the winter passed, and the time for
military campaigns came around again. Spring, the time for war and
for plague, the two biggest arms of six armed death, as Iwang
put it.
Bahram worked through these months as if a great
thunderstorm were always visible, just topping the horizon to the
east, moving backwards against the prevailing winds, portending
catastrophe. Such a painful edge this added to the pleasure he took
in his little family, and in the larger familial existence of the
compound: his son and daughter racing about or fidgeting at
prayers, dressed impeccably by Esmerine, and the very politest of
children, except when enraged, which both of them had a tendency to
become to a degree that astonished both their parents. It was one
of their chief topics of conversation, in the depths of the night,
when they would stir and Esmerine go out briefly to relieve
herself, then return and pull off her shift again, her breasts
silvery raindrops spilling down her ribs in the moonlight, over
Bahram's hands as he warmed them, in that somnolent world of second
watch sex that was one of the beautiful spaces of daily life, the
salvation of sleep, the body's dream, so much warmer and more
loving than any other part of the day that it was sometimes hard in
the mornings to believe it had really happened, that he and
Esmerine, so severe in dress and manner, Esmerine who ran the women
at their work as hard as Khalid had at his most tyrannical, and who
never spoke to Bahram or looked at him except in the most
businesslike way, as was only fitting and proper, had in fact been
transported together with him to whole other worlds of rapture, in
the depths of the night in their bed. As he watched her work in the
afternoons, Bahram thought: love changed everything. They were all
just animals after all, creatures God had made not much different
from monkeys, and there was no real reason why a woman's breasts
should not be like the udders on a cow, swinging together
inelegantly as she leaned forwards to work at one labour or
another; but love made them orbs of the utmost beauty, and
the same was true of the whole world. Love put all things under a
description, and only love could save them.
In searching for a provenance for this new 'leadgold',
Khalid read through some of the more informative of his old tomes,
and he was interested when he came on a passage in jabir Ibn
Hayyam's ancient classic 'The Book of Properties', penned in the
first years of the jihad, in which jabir listed seven metals,
namely gold, silver, lead, tin, copper, iron and kharsini, meaning
'Chinese iron' dull grey, silver when polished, known to the
Chinese themselves as paitung, or 'white copper'. The Chinese,
jabir wrote, had made mirrors of it capable of curing the eye
diseases of those who looked into them. Khalid, whose eyes got
weaker every year, immediately set to the manufacture of a little
mirror of their own leadgold, just to see. Jabir also suggested
kharsini made bells of a particularly melodious tone, and so Khalid
had the rest of the quantity they had on hand cast into bells, to
see if their tone was especially pretty, which might help secure
the identification of the metal. All agreed that the bells
tinkled very prettily; but Khalid's eyes did not improve after
looking into a mirror of the metal.
'Call it kharsini,' Khalid said. He sighed. 'Who knows
what it is? We don't know anything.'
But he continued to try various demonstrations, writing
voluminous commentaries on each test, through the nights and on to
many a sleepless dawn. He and Iwang pursued their studies. Khalid
directed Bahram and Paxtakor and jalil and the rest of his old
artisans in the shops to build new telescopes, and microscopes, and
pressure gauges, and pumps. The compound had become a place where
their skills in metallurgy and mechanical artisanry combined to
give them great power to make new things; if they could imagine
something, they could make some rude first approximation of it.
Every time the old artisans were able to make their moulds and
tools more exactly, it allowed them to set their tolerances finer
still, and thus as they progressed, anything from the intricacies
of clockwork to the massive strength of waterwheels or cannon
barrels could be improved. Khalid took apart a Persian carpetmaking
device to study all its little metal pieces, and remarked to Iwang
that combined with a rack and pinion, the device might be
fitted with stamps shaped like letters, instead of threaders, in
arrays that could be inked and then pressed against paper, and a
whole page thus written all at once, and repeated as many times as
one liked, so that books became as common as cannonballs. And Iwang
had laughed, and said that in Tibet the monks had carved just such
inkblocks, but that Khalid's idea was better.
Meanwhile Iwang worked on his mathematical concerns. Once
he said to Bahram, 'Only a god could have thought these things in
the first place. And then to have used them to embody a world! if
we trace even a millionth part of it, we may find out more than any
sentient beings have ever known through all the ages, and see
plainly the divine mind.'
Bahram nodded uncertainly. By now he knew that he did not
want Iwang to convert to Islam. It seemed false to God and to
Iwang. He knew it was selfishness to feel so, and that God would
take care of it. As indeed it seemed He already had, as Iwang no
longer was coming to the mosque on Fridays, or to the religious
studies at the ribat. God or Iwang, or both, had taken Bahram's
point. Religion could not be faked or used for worldly
purposes.
Dragon Bites World
Now when Bahram visited the caravanserai, he heard many
disquieting stories from the east. Things were in turmoil, China's
new Manchu dynasty was in an expansive temper; the new Manchu
Emperor, usurper that he was, was not content with the old and
fading empire he had conquered, but was determined to reinvigorate
it by war, extending his conquests into the rich rice kingdoms to
the south, Annam and Siam and Burma, as well as the parched
wastelands in the middle of the world, the deserts and mountains
separating China from the Dar, crossed by the threads of the Silk
Road. After crossing that waste they would run into India, the
Islamic khanates, and the Savafid empire. In the caravanserai it
was said that Yarkand and Kashgar were already taken -- perfectly
believable, as they had been defended for decades by the merest
remnants of the Ming garrisons, and by bandit warlords. Nothing lay
between the khanate of Bokhara and these wastelands but the Tarim
Basin and the Ferghana Mountains, and the Silk Road crossed those
in two or three places. Where caravans went, banners could
certainly follow.
And soon after that, they did. News came that Manchu
banners had taken Torugart Pass, which was the high point of one of
the silk routes, between Tashkent and the Takla Makan. Caravan
travel from the east would be disrupted for a little while at
least, which meant that Samarqand and Bokhara would go from being
the centrepoint of the great world exchange, to a largely useless
endpoint. It was a catastrophe for trade.
A final group of caravan people, Armenian, Zott, Jewish
and Hindu, turned up with this news. They had been forced to run
for their lives and leave their goods behind. Apparently the
Dzungarian Gate, between Sinkiang and the Khazakh steppe, was also
about to be taken. As the news raced through the caravanserai
ringing Samarqand, most of the caravans resting in them changed
their plans. Many decided to return to Frengistan, which though
full of petty taifa conflict, was at least Muslim entire, its
little khanates and emirates and sultanates trading between
themselves most of the time, even when fighting.
Such decisions as these would soon cripple Samarqand. As
an endpoint in itself it was nothing, the mere edge of Dar
al Islam. Nadir was worried, and the Khan in a rage. Sayyed
Abdul Aziz ordered the Dzungarian Gate retaken, and an expedition
sent to help defend the Khyber Pass, so that trade relations with
India at the least would remain secure.
Nadir, accompanied by a heavy guard, described these
orders very briefly to Khalid and Iwang. He presented the problem
as if it were somehow Khalid's fault. At the end of his visit, he
informed them that Bahram and his wife and children were to return
with Nadir to the Khanaka in Bokhara. They would be allowed to
return to Samarqand only when Khalid and Iwang devised a weapon
capable of defeating the Chinese.
'They will be allowed to receive guests at the palace.
You are welcome to visit them, or indeed join them there, though I
believe your work is best pursued here with all your men and
machines. If I thought you would work faster in the palace, I would
move you there too, believe me.'
Khalid glared at him, too angry to speak without
endangering them all.
'Iwang will move out here with you, as I judge him most
useful here. He will be given an extension on his aman in advance,
in recognition of his importance to matters of state. Indeed he is
forbidden to leave. Not that he could. The wakened dragon to the
east has already eaten Tibet. So you are taking on a godly task,
one that you can be proud to have been yoked to.'
He spared one glance for Bahram. 'We will take good care
of your family, and you will take good care of things here. You can
live in the palace with them, or here helping the work, whichever
you please.'
Bahram nodded, speechless with dismay and fear. 'I will
do both,' he managed to say, looking at Esmerine and the
children.
Nothing was ever normal again.
Many lives change like that -- all of a sudden, and for
ever.
A Weapon from God
In deference to Bahram's feelings, Khalid and Iwang
organized the whole compound as an armoury, and all their tests and
demonstrations were devoted to increasing the powers of the Khan's
army. Stronger cannon, more explosive gunpowder, spinning shot,
killer of myriads; also firing tables, logistical
protocols, mirror alphabets to talk over great distances; all this
and more they produced, while Bahram lived half in the Khanaka with
Esmerine and the children, and half out at the compound, until the
Bokhara Road became like the courtyard path to him, traversed at
all hours of the day and night, sometimes asleep on horses that
knew the way blind.
The increases they made in the Khan's war making
powers were prodigious; or would have been, if the commanders of
Sayyed Abdul's army could have been made to submit to Khalid's
instruction, and if Khalid had had the patience to teach them. But
both sides were too proud for accommodation, and though it seemed
to Bahram a critical failure on Nadir's part not to force the issue
and command the generals to obey Khalid, also not to spend more of
the Khan's treasury on hiring more soldiers with more experience,
nothing was done. Even the great Nadir Devanbegi had limits to his
power, which came down in the end to the sway of his advice over
the Khan. Other advisers had different advice, and it was possible
Nadir's power was in fact waning just at the moment it was most
needed, and despite Khalid and Iwang's innovations -- or, who knew,
perhaps even because of them. It was not as if the Khan had
distinguished himself for good judgment. And possibly his pocket
was not as bottomless as it had seemed back in the days when the
bazaars and caravanserai and building sites were all bustling like
beehives, and paying taxes.
So Esmerine seemed to suggest, though Bahram had mostly
to deduce this from ber looks and silences. She seemed to believe
they were spied upon at all times, even during their
sleepless hours in the dead of night, which was a rather terrible
thought. The children had taken to life in the palace as if falling
into some dream out of the Arabian Nights, and Esmerine did nothing
to disabuse them of this notion, although she of course knew
that they were prisoners, and their lives forfeit if the Khan
should happen to experience a fit of bad temper at the way things
were going at Khalid's, or to the cast, or anywhere else. So
naturally she avoided saying anything objectionable, and mentioned
only how well fed and kindly treated they were, how much the
children and she were thriving. Only the look in her eye when they
were alone told Bahram how afraid she was, and how much she wished
to encourage him to fulfil the Khan's desires.
Khalid of course knew all this without his daughter's
glances to tell him. Bahram could see him putting more and more
effort into improving the military capacity of the Khan, not only
by exerting himself in the armoury, but by trying to ingratiate
himself with the most amenable of the generals, and by making
suggestions discreet or direct on all manner of subjects, from the
renovation of the walls of the city, in keeping with his
demonstrations of the strength of raw earthworks, to plans for
welldigging and drainage of stale water in Bokhara and Samarqand.
All purely theoretical demonstrations went by the board in this
effort, with no time spent grumbling about it either. But progress
was uneven.
Rumours began to fly about the city like bats, sucking
the light out of the day. The Manchurian barbarians had conquered
Yunnan, Mongolia, Cham, Tibet, Annam and the eastern extensions of
the Mughal empire; every day it was somewhere different, somewhere
closer. There was no way to confirm any of these assertions, and
indeed they were often denied, either by direct contradiction, or
simply by the fact that caravans kept coming from some of those
regions, and the traders had seen nothing unusual, though they too
had heard rumours. Nothing was certain but that there was turmoil
to the east. The caravans certainly came less often, and included
not only traders but whole families, Muslim or Jewish or Hindu,
driven out by fear of the new dynasty, called the Qing.
Centuries old foreign settlements dissipated like frost in the
sun, and the exiles streamed west with the idea things would be
better in Dar al Islam, under the Mughals or the Ottomans or
in the taifa sultanates of Frengistan. No doubt true, as Islam was
lawful; but Bahram saw the misery on their faces, the destitution
and fear, the need for their men to angle and beg for provisions,
their goods for trade already depleted, and all the wide western
half of the world still before them to be traversed.
At least it would be the Muslim half of the world. But visits to
the caravanserai, once one of Bahram's favourite parts of the day,
now left him anxious and fearful, as intent as Nadir to see Khalid
and Iwang come up with ways to defend the khanate from
invasion.
' It's not us slowing things down,' Khalid said bitterly,
late one night in his study. 'Nadir himself is no great general,
and his influence over the Khan is shaky, and getting shakier. And
the Khan himself ' He blew through his lips.
Bahram sighed. No one could contradict it. Sayyed Abdul
Aziz was not a wise man.
'We need something both deadly and spectacular,' Khalid
said. 'Something both for the Khan and for the Manchu.' Bahram left
him looking at various recipes for explosives, and made the long
cold ride back to the palace in Bokhara.
Khalid arranged a meeting with Nadir, and came back
muttering that if all went well with the demonstration he had
proposed, Nadir would release Esmerine and the children back to the
compound. Bahram was elated, but Khalid warned him: 'It depends on
the Khan being pleased, and who knows what will impress such a
man.'
'What demonstration do you have in mind?'
'We must manufacture shells containing the Chinese
wai jen ti formula, shells that won't break on firing,
but will when they hit the ground.'
They tried out several different designs, and even the
demonstrations proved quite dangerous; more than once people had to
run for their lives. It would be a terrible weapon if it could be
made to work. Bahram hurried around all day every day, imagining
his family returned, Samarqand saved from infidels; surely if Allah
meant these things to be, then the weapon was a gift from Him. It
was not hard to overlook the terror of it.
Eventually they manufactured hollow flat backed
shells, pumped full of the liquid constituents of the ki I
ler of myriads, in two chambers separated by a tin wall.
A packet of flashpowder in the nose of the shell exploded on
contact, blowing the interior wall apart and mixing the
constituents of the gas.
They got them to work about eight times out of ten.
Another kind of shell, entirely filled with gunpowder and an
igniter, exploded on impact most deafeningly, scattering the shell
like fragmented bullets.
They made fifty of each, and arranged a demonstration out
on their test grounds by the river. Khalid bought a small herd of
broken nags from the gluemaker, with the promise of selling them
back ready for rendering. The ostlers staked these poor beasts out
at the extreme range of the test cannon, and when the Khan and his
courtiers arrived in their finery, looking somewhat bored by now
with this routine, Khalid kept his face turned away in as close to
a gesture of contempt as he could risk, pretending to attend busily
to the gun. Bahram saw that this would not do, and went to Nadir
and Sayyed Abdul Aziz and made obeisances and pleasantries,
explaining the mechanism of the weapon, and introducing Khalid with
a little flourish as the old man approached, sweating and puffing.
'
Khalid declared the demonstration ready. The Khan flicked
a hand casually, his characteristic gesture, and Khalid gave the
sign to the men at the gun, who applied the match. The cannon
boomed and expelled white smoke, rolled back. Its barrel had been
set at a fairly high angle, so that the shell would come down hard
on its tip. The smoke swirled, all stared down the plain at the
staked horses; nothing happened; Bahram held his breath A puff of
yellow smoke exploded among the horses, and they leapt away from
it, two pulling out their stakes and galloping off, a few falling
over when the ropes pulled them back. All the while the smoke
spread outwards as from an invisible brushfire, a thick
mustard yellow smoke, obscuring the horses as it passed over
them. It covered one that had burst its tether but charged by
accident back into a tendril of the cloud; this was the one they
could see rear up in the mist, fall and struggle wildly to get back
on its feet, then collapse, twitching.
The yellow cloud cleared slowly, drifting away downvalley
on the prevailing wind, seeming heavy and clinging long in the
hollows of the ground. There lay two dozen dead horses, scattered
in a circle that encompassed two hundred paces at least.
'If there was an army in that circle,' Khalid said,
'then, most excellent servant of the one true God, Supreme Khan,
they would be just as dead as those horses. And you could have a
score of cannon loaded with such shells, or a hundred. And no army
ever born could conquer Samarqand.'
Nadir, looking faintly shocked, said, 'What if the wind
changed its course and blew our way?'
Khalid shrugged. 'Then we too would die. It is important
to make small shells, that can be fired a long distance, and always
downwind, if possible. The gas does disperse, so if the wind was
mildly towards you, it might not matter much.'
The Khan himself looked startled at the demonstration,
but more and more pleased, as at a new form of fireworks; it was
hard to be sure with him. Bahram suspected that he sometimes
pretended to be oblivious to things, in order to make a veil
between himself and his advisers.
Now he nodded to Nadir, and led his court off on the road
to Bokhara.
'You have to understand,' Khalid reminded Bahram on the
way back to the compound, 'there are men in that very group around
the Khan who want to bring Nadir down. For them it doesn't matter
how good our weapon is. The better the worse, in fact. So it's not
just a matter of them being utter simpletons.'
These Things Happened
The next day Nadir was out with his full guard, and they
had with them Esmerine and the children. Nadir nodded brusquely at
Bahram's fulsome thanks and then said to Khalid, 'The poison air
shells may become necessary, and I want you to compile as many as
you can, five hundred at least, and the Khan will reward you
accordingly on his return, and he makes promise of that reward in
advance, by the return of your family.'
'He's going away?'
'The plague has appeared in Bokhara. The caravanserai and
the bazaars, the mosques and madressas and the Khanaka are all
closed. The crucial members of the court will accompany the Khan to
his summer residence. I will be making all his arrangements for him
from there.
Look to yourselves. If you can leave the city and still
do your work, the Khan does not forbid it, but he hopes you can
close yourself up here in your compound, and carry on. When the
plague passes we can reconvene.'
'And the Manchu?' Khalid asked.
'We have word that they too have been struck. As you
might expect. It may be they have brought it with them. They may
even have sent their sick among us to pass along the infection. It
would be little different than casting poisoned air on an
enemy.'
Khalid coloured at that but said nothing. Nadir left,
clearly on his way to other tasks necessary before his flight from
Samarqand. Khalid slammed the gate shut after him, cursed him under
his breath. Bahram, ecstatic at the unexpected return of Esmerine
and the children, hugged them until Esmerine cried out that he
would crush them. They wept with joy, and only later, in the midst
of shutting the compound off from the city, something they had done
successfully ten years before when a plague of distemper had passed
through the city, losing only one servant who had slipped into town
to see his girlfriend and never come back -- only later did Bahram
see that his daughter Laila was red cheeked, with a hectic
flush, and lying listlessly on a chest of drawers.
They put her in a room with a bed. Esmerine's face was
pinched with fear. Khalid decreed that Laila be sequestered there,
and fed and kept in drink from the door, by poles and net bags and
plates and gourds that were not to be returned to the rest of them.
But Esmerine hugged the little girl, of course, before all this
regime was introduced, and the next day in their bedroom Bahram saw
her red cheeks, and how she groaned awake and lifted her arms, and
there were the tokens in her armpits, hard yellow protuberances
emerging from the skin, even (he seemed to see as she put down her
arm) faceted as if they were carbuncles, or as if she was turning
to jewels from the inside.
After that they were a sickhouse, and Bahram spent his
days nursing the others, running about all hours of the day and
night, in a fever of a different kind to that of the sick ones,
urged by Khalid never to touch or come within the breath of his
stricken family. Sometimes Bahram tried, sometimes he didn't,
holding them as if he could clasp them to this world. Or drag them
back into it, when the children died.
Then the adults started dying too, and they were locked
out of the town as a sickhouse rather than a safe house. Fedwa died
but Esmerine held on; Khalid and Bahram took turns caring for her,
and Iwang joined them in the compound.
One night Iwang and Khalid had Esmerine breathe on a
glass, and they looked at the moisture through their
small lens, and said little. Bahram looked briefly and
glimpsed the host of little dragons, gargoyles, bats and other
creatures. He could not look again, but knew they were doomed.
Esmerine died and Khalid showed the tokens that same
hour. Iwang could not rise from his couch in Khalid's workshop, but
studied his own breath and blood and bile through the smallscope,
trying to make a clear record of the disease's progress through
him. One night as he lay there gasping he said in his low voice,
'I'm glad I did not convert. I know you did not want it. And now I
would be a blasphemer, for if there is a God I would want to rebuke
Him for this.'
Bahram said nothing. It was a judgment, but of what? What
had they done? Were the gas shells an affront to God?
'Old men live to be seventy,' Iwang said. 'I'm just over
thirty. What will I do with those years?'
Bahram couldn't think. 'You said we return,' he said
dully.
'Yes. But I liked this life. I had plans for this
life.'
He lingered on his couch but could take no food, and his
skin was very hot. Bahram did not tell him that Khalid had died
already, very swiftly, felled by grief or anger at the loss of
Fedwa and Esmerine and the children -- as if by apoplexy rather
than plague. Bahram only sat with the Tibetan in the silent
compound.
At one point Iwang croaked, 'I wonder if Nadir knew they
were infected, and gave them back to kill us.'
'But why?'
'Perhaps he feared the killer of myriads. Or
some faction of the court. He had other considerations than us. Or
it might have been someone else. Or no one.'
'We'll never know.'
'No. The court itself might be gone by now. Nadir, the
Khan, all of them.'
'I hope so,' Bahram's mouth said.
Iwang nodded. He died at dawn, wordless and
struggling.
Bahram got all the compound's survivors to put cloths
over their faces and move the bodies into a closed workshop beyond
the chemical pits. He was so far outside himself that the movements
of his numb limbs surprised him, and he spoke as if he were someone
else. Do this do that. Let's eat. Then, carrying a big pot
to the kitchen, he felt the lump in his armpit, and sat down as if
the tendons in the back of his knees had been cut, thinking: I
guess it's my turn now.
Back in the Bardo
Well, it was, as might be imagined after an end like
that, a very discour aged and dispirited little jati that
huddled together on the black floor of the bardo this time around.
Who could blame them? Why should they have had any will to
continue? It was hard to discern any reward for virtue, any forward
progress -- any dharmic justice of any kind. Even Bahram could not
find the good in it, and no one else even tried. Looking back down
the vale of the ages at the endless recurrence of their reincarnations,
before they were forced to drink their vials of
forgetting and all became obscure to them again, they could see no
pattern at all to their efforts; if the gods had a plan, or even a
set of procedures, if the long train of transmigrations was
supposed to add up to anything, if it was not just mindless
repetition, time itself nothing but a succession of chaoses, no one
could discern it; and the story of their transmigrations, rather
than being a narrative without death, as the first experiences of
reincarnation perhaps seemed to suggest, had become instead a
veritable charnel house. Why read on? Why pick up their book from
the far wall where it has been thrown away in disgust and pain, and
read on? Why submit to such cruelty, such bad karma, such bad
plotting?
The reason is simple: these things happened. They
happened countless times, just like this. The oceans are salt with
our tears. No one can deny that these things happened.
And so there is no choice in the matter. They cannot
escape the wheel of birth and death, not in the experience of it,
or in the contemplation of it afterwards; and their anthologist,
Old Red Ink himself, must tell their stories honestly, must deal in
reality, or else the stories m can nothing. And it is crucial that
the stories mean something.
So. No escape from reality: they sat there, a dozen sad
souls, huddled together at a far corner of the great stage of the
hall of judgment. It was dim, and cold. The perfect white light had
lasted this time for only the briefest of moments, a flash like the
eyeball exploding; after that, here they were again. Up on the dais
the dogs and demons and black gods capered, in a hazy mist that
shrouded all, that damped all sound.
Bahram tried, but could think of nothing to say. He was
still stunned by the events of their last days in the world; he was
still ready to get up and go out and start another day, on another
morning just like all the rest. Deal with the crisis of an invasion
from the east, the taking of his family, if that was what it meant
-- whatever problems the day happened to bring, trouble, crisis,
sure, that was life. But not this. Not this already. Salt tears of
timely death, alum tears of untimely death: bitterness filled the
air like smoke. I liked that life! I had plans for that life!
Khalid sat there just as Khalid always had, as if
ensconced in his study thinking over some problem. The sight gave
Bahram a deep pang of regret and sorrow. All that life, gone. Gone,
gone, gone altogether beyond . . . The past is gone. Even if you
can remember it, it's gone. And even at the time it was happening
Bahram had known how he had loved it, he had lived in a state of
nostalgia for the present, every day of it.
Now gone.
The rest of the jati sat or sprawled on the cheap wooden
floor around Khalid. Even Sayyid Abdul looked distraught, not just
sorry for himself, but distraught for them all, sad to have left
that turbulent but oh so interesting world.
An interval passed; a moment, a year, an age, the kalpa
itself, who could tell in such a terrible place?
Bahram took a deep breath, exerted himself, sat up.
'We're making progress,' he announced firmly.
Khalid snorted. 'We are like mice to the cats.' He
gestured up at the stage, where the grotesqueries continued to
unfold. 'They are petty arseholes, I say. They kill us for sport.
They don't die and they don't understand.'
'Forget them,' Iwang advised. 'We're going to have to do
this on our own.
'God judges, and sends us out again,' Bahram said. 'Man
proposes, God disposes.'
Khalid shook his head. 'Look at them. They're a bunch of
vicious children playing. No one leads them, there is no god of
gods.'
Bahram looked at him, surprised. 'Do you not see the one
enfolding all the rest, the one we rest within? Allah, or Brahman,
or what have you, the one only true God of Gods?'
'No. I see no sign of him at all.'
'You aren't looking! You've never looked yet! When you
look, you will see it. When you see it, everything will change for
you. Then it will be all right.'
Khalid scowled. 'Don't insult us with that fatuous
nonsense. Good Lord, Allah, if you are there, why have you
inflicted me with this fool of a boy!' He kicked at Bahram. 'It's
easier without you around! You and your damned all right! It's not
all right! It's a fucking mess! You only make it worse with that
nonsense of yours! Did you not see what just happened to us, to
your wife and children, to my daughter and grandchildren? It's not
all right! Start from that, if you will! We may be in a
hallucination here, but that's no excuse for being delusional!'
Bahram was hurt by this. 'It's you who give up on
things,' he protested. 'Every time. That's what your cynicism is --
you don't even try. You don't have the courage to carry on.'
' The hell I don't. I've never given up yet. I'm just not
willing to go at it babbling lies. No, it's you who are the one who
never tries. Always waiting for me and Iwang to do the hard things.
You do it for once! Quit babbling about love and try it yourself
one time, damn it! Try it yourself, and see how hard it is to keep
a sunny face when you're looking at the truth of the situation eye
to eye.'
'Ho!' said Bahram, stung. 'I do my part. I have always
done my part. Without me none of you would be able to carry on. It
takes courage to keep love at the centre when you know just as well
as anyone else the real state of things! It's easy to get angry,
anyone can do that. It's making good that's the hard part, it's
staying hopeful that's the hard part! it's staying in love that's
the hard part.'
Khalid waggled his left hand. 'All very well, but it only
matters if the truth is faced and fought. I'm sick of love and
happiness I want justice.'
'So do W 'All right, then show me. Show me what
you can do this next time out in the miserable world, something
more than happy happy.'
'I will then!'
'Good.'
Heavily Khalid pulled himself up, and limped over to
Sayyid Abdul Aziz, and without any warning kicked him sprawling
across the stage. 'And you!' he roared. 'What is your EXCUSE! Why
are you always so bad? Consistency is no excuse, your CHARACTER is
NO EXCUSE!'
Sayyid glared up at him from the floor, sucking on a torn
knuckle. Daggers in his stare: 'Leave me alone.'
Khalid made as if to kick him again, then gave up on it.
'You'll get yours,' he promised. 'One of these days, you'll get
yours.'
'Forget about him,' Iwang advised. 'He's not the real
problem, and he'll always be part of us. Forget about him, forget
about the gods. Let's concentrate on doing it ourselves. We can
make our own world.'
One night can change the world.
The Doorkeepers sent runners out with strings of wampum,
announcing a council meeting at Floating Bridge. They wanted to
raise to chiefdom the foreigner they called Fromwest. The fifty
sachems had agreed to the meeting, as there was nothing unusual
about it. There were many more chiefs than sachems, and the title
died with the man, and each nation was free to choose its own,
depending on what happened on the warpath and in the villages. The
only unusual feature of this raising up was the foreign birth
of the candidate, but he had been living with the Doorkeepers for
some time, and word had spread through the nine nations and the
eight tribes that he was interesting.
He had been rescued by a war party of Doorkeepers who had
run far to the west to inflict another shock on the Sioux, the
western people bordering the Hodenosaunee. The warriors had come on
a Sioux torture, the victim hung by his chest from hooks, and a
fire building under him. While waiting for their ambush to set, the
warriors had been impressed by the victim's speech, which was in a
comprehensible version of the Doorkeeper dialect, as if he had seen
them out there.
The usual behaviour while being tortured was a passionate
laughter in the faces of one's enemies, to show that no pain
inflicted by man can triumph over the spirit. This foreigner hadn't
been like that. Calmly he remarked to his captors, in Doorkeeper
rather than Sioux: 'You are very incompetent torturers. What wounds
the spirit is not passion, for all passion is encouragement. As you
hate me you help me. What really hurts is to be ground like acorns
in a grinding hole. Where I come from they have a thousand devices
to tear the flesh, but what hurts is their indifference. Here you
remind me I am human and full of passion, a target of passion. I am
happy to be here. And I am about to be rescued by warriors much
greater than you.'
The Senecans lying in ambush had taken this as an
undeniable sign to attack, and with warwhoops they had descended on
the Sioux and scalped as many as they could catch, while taking
particular care to rescue the captive who had spoken so eloquently,
and in their own tongue.
How did you know we were there? they asked him.
Suspended as high as he was, he said, he had seen their
eyes out in the trees.
And how do you know our language?
There is a tribe of your kinsmen on the west coast of
this island, who moved there long ago. I learned your language from
them.
And so they had nursed him and brought him home, and he
lived with the Doorkeepers and the Great Hill People, near Niagara,
for several moons. He went on the hunt and the warpath, and word of
his accomplishments had spread through the nine nations, and many
people had met him and been impressed. No one was surprised at his
nomination to chief.
The council was set for the hill at the head of
Canandaigua Lake, where the Hodenosaunee had first appeared in the
world, out of the ground like moles.
Hill People, Granite People, Flint Owners and Shirt
Weavers, who came up out of the south two generations before,
having had bad dealings with the people who had come over the sea
from the east, all walked west on the Long House Trail, which
extends across the league's land from east to west. They encamped
at some distance from the Doorkeepers' council house, sending
runners to announce their arrival, according to the old ways. The
Senecan sachems confirmed the day of the council, and repeated
their invitation.
On the appointed morning before dawn, people rose and
gathered their rolls, and hunched around fires and a quick meal of
burnt corn cakes and maple water. It was a clear sky at dawn, with
only a trace of receding grey cloud to the east, like the finely
embroidered hems of the coats the women were donning. The
mist on the lake swirled as if twisted by sprites skating over the
lake, to join a sprite council matching the human one, as often
occurred. The air was cool and damp, with no hint of the oppressive
heat that was likely to arrive in the afternoon.
The visiting nations trooped onto the water meadows at
the lakeshore and gathered in their accustomed places. By the time
the sky lightened from grey to blue there were already a few
hundred people there to listen to the Salute to the Sun, sung by
one of the old Senecan sachems.
The Onondagas nations keep the council brand, and also
the wampum into which the laws of the league have been talked, and
now their powerful old sachem, Keeper of the Wampum, rose and
displayed in his outstretched hands the belts of wampum, heavy and
white. The Onondagas are the central nation, their council fire the
seat of the league's councils. Keeper of the Wampum trod a
pedestrian dance around the meadow, chanting something most of them
heard only as a faint cry.
A fire was kindled at the centrepoint, and pipes passed
around. The Mohawks, Onondagas and Senecans, brother to each other
and father to the other six, settled west of the fire; the Oncidas,
Cayugas and Tuscaroras sat to the east; the new nations, Cherokee,
Shawnee and Choctaw, sat to the south. The sun cracked the horizon;
its light flooded the valley like maple water, pouring over
everything and making it summer yellow. Smoke curled, grey and
brown turned to one. A morning without wind, and the wisps on the
lake burned away. Birds sang from the forest canopy to the east of
the meadow.
Out of the arrows of shadow and light walked a short,
broad shouldered man, barefoot and dressed only in a runner's
waist belt. He had a round face, very flat. A foreigner. He walked
with his hands together, looking down humbly, and came through the
junior nations to the central fire, there offering his open palms
to Honowenato, Keeper of the Wampum.
Keeper said to him, 'Today you become a chief of the
Hodenosaunee. At these occasions it is customary for me to read the
history of the league as recalled by the wampum here, and to
reiterate the laws of the league that have given us peace for many
generations, and new nations joining us from the sea to the
Mississippi, from the Great Lakes to the Tennessee.'
Fromwest nodded. His chest was marked deeply by the puckered
scars of the Sioux hooking ceremony. He was as solemn as an owl. 'I
am more than honoured. You are the most generous of nations.'
'We are the greatest league of nations under heaven,'
Keeper said. 'We live here on the highest land of Longer House,
with good routes down in all directions.
'In each nation there are the eight tribes, divided in
two groups. Wolf, Bear, Beaver and Turtle; then Deer, Snipe, Heron
and Hawk. Each member of the Wolf tribe is brother and sister to
all other Wolves, no matter what nation they come from. The
relationship with other Wolves is almost stronger than the relation
with those of one's nation. It is a cross relation, like warp
and weft in basket weaving and cloth making. And so we are one
garment. We cannot disagree as nations, or it would tear the fabric
of the tribes. Brother cannot fight brother, sister cannot fight
sister.
'Now, Wolf, Bear, Beaver and Turtle, being brother and
sister, cannot intermarry. They must marry out of Hawk, Heron, Deer
or Snipe.'
Fromwest nodded at each pronouncement of Keeper, made in
the heavy, ponderous tones of a man who had laboured all his life
to make this system work, and to extend it far and wide. Fromwest
had been declared a member of the Hawk tribe, and would play with
the Hawks in the morning's lacrosse match. Now he watched Keeper
with a hawk's intensity, taking in the irascible old man's every
word, oblivious to the growing crowd at the lakeside. The crowd in
turn went about its own affairs, the women at their fires preparing
the feast, some of the men setting out the lacrosse pitch on the
biggest water meadow.
Finally Keeper was done with his recital, and Fromwest
addressed all in earshot.
'This is the great honour of my life,' he said loudly and
slowly, his accent strange but comprehensible. 'To be taken in by
the finest people of the Earth is more than any poor wanderer could
hope for. Although I did hope for it. I spent many years crossing
this great island, hoping for it.'
He bowed his head, hands together.
'A very unassuming man,' remarked Iagogeh, the One Who
Hears, wife of Keeper of the Wampum. 'And not so young either. It
will be interesting to bear what he says tonight.'
'And to see how he does in the games,' said Tecarnos, or
Dropping Oil, one of Iagogeh's nieces.
'Tend the soup,' said Iagogeh.
'Yes, Mother.'
The lacrosse field was being inspected by the field
judges for rocks and rabbit holes, and the tall poles of the gates
were set up at either end of the field. As always, the games set
the Wolf, Bear, Beaver and Turtle tribes against Deer, Snipe, Hawk
and Heron. The betting was active, and wagered goods were laid out
by the managers in neat rows, mostly personal items of
ornamentation, but also flints, flutes, drums, bags of tobacco and
pipes, needles and arrows, two flintlock pistols and four
muskets.
The two teams and the referees gathered at midfield, and
the crowd bordered the green field and stood on the hill
overlooking it. The day's match was to be a ten on--ten, so
five passes through the gate would win. The head referee listed the
main rules, as always: no touching the ball with hand, foot, limb,
body or head; no deliberate hitting of opponents with the ball
bats. He held up the round ball, made of deerskin filled with sand,
about the size of his fist. The twenty players stood ten to a side,
defending their goals, and one from each side came forward to
contest the dropped ball that would start the match. To a great
roar from the crowd the referee dropped the ball and retreated to
the side of the field, where he and the others would watch for any
infraction of the rules.
The two team leaders fenced madly for the ball, the
hooped nets at the end of their bats scraping the ground and
knocking together. Though hitting another person was forbidden,
striking another player's bat with yours was allowed; it was a
chancy play, however, as a mistaken strike on flesh would give the
hit player a free shot at the gate. So the two players whacked away
until the Heron scooped the ball up and flicked it back to one of
his team mates, and the running began.
Opponents ran at the ball carrier, who twisted
through them as long as he could, then passed the ball with a flick
of his bat into the net of one of his team mates. If the ball
fell to the ground then most of the players nearby converged on it,
bats clattering violently as they struggled for possession. Two
players from each team stood back from this scrum, on defence in
case an opponent caught up the ball and made a dash for the
gate.
Soon enough it became clear that Fromwest had played lacrosse
before, presumably among the Doorkeepers. He was not as young as
most of the other players, nor as fleet as the fastest runners on
each side, but the fastest were set guarding each other, and
Fromwest had only to face the biggest of the Bear Wolf Beaver
Turtle team, who could counter his low and solid mass with body
checks, but did not have Fromwest's quickness. The foreigner held
his bat in both hands like a scythe, out low to the side or before
him, as if inviting a slash that would knock the ball free. But his
opponents soon learned that such a slash would never land, and if
they tried it, Fromwest would spin awkwardly and be gone, stumbling
forwards quite quickly for a big short man. When other opponents
blocked him, his passes to open teammates were like shots from a
bow; they were if anything perhaps too hard, as his team mates
had some trouble catching his throws. But if they did, off to the
gate they scampered, waving their bats to confuse the final gate
guard, and screaming along with the excited crowd. Fromwest never
shouted or said a word, but played in an uncanny silence, never
taunting the other team or even meeting their eyes, but watching
either the ball or, it seemed, the sky. He played as if in a
trance, as if confused; and yet when his team mates were
tracked down and blocked, he was always somehow open for a pass, no
matter how hard his guard, or soon guards, ran to cover him.
Surrounded teammates, desperately keeping their bat free to throw
the ball out, would find Fromwest there in the only direction the
ball could be thrown, stumbling but miraculously open, and they
would flip it out to him and he would snare the ball dextrously and
be off on one of his uncertain runs, cutting behind people and
across the field at odd angles, wrong headed angles, until he
was blocked and an opportunity to pass opened, and one of his hard
throws would flick over the grass as if on a string. It was a
pleasure to watch, comical in its awkward look, and the crowd
roared as the Deer Snipe Hawk Heron team threw the ball past the
diving guardian and through the gate. Seldom had a first score
happened faster.
After that the Bear Wolf Beaver Turtle team did what it
could to stop Fromwest, but they were puzzled by his strange
responses, and could not defend well against him. If they ganged up
on him, he passed out to his fast young team--mates, who were
growing bolder with their success. If they tried to cover
him singly, he weaved and bobbed and stumbled in seeming confusion
past his guard, until he was within striking distance of the gate,
when he would spin, suddenly balanced, his bat at knee height, and
with a turn of the wrist launch the ball through the gate like an
arrow. No one there had ever seen such hard throws.
Between scores they gathered on the sidelines to drink
water and maple water. The Bear Wolf Beaver Turtle team conferred
grimly, made substitutions. After that an 'accidental' bat blow to
Fromwest's head gashed his scalp and left him covered with his own
red blood, but the foul gave him a free shot, which he converted
from near midfield, to a great roar. And it did not stop his weird
but effective play, nor gain his opponents even a glance from him.
Iagogeh said to her niece, 'He plays as if the other team were
ghosts. He plays as if he were out there by himself, trying to
learn how to run more gracefully.' She was a connoisseur of the
game, and it made her happy to see it.
Much more quickly than was normal, the match was four to
one in favour of the junior side, and the senior tribes gathered to
discuss strategy. The women gave out gourds of water and maple
water, and Iagogeh, a Hawk herself, sidled next to Fromwest and
offered him a water gourd, as she had seen earlier that that was
all he was taking.
'You need a good partner now,' she murmured as she
crouched beside him. 'No one can finish alone.'
He looked at her, surprised. She pointed with a gesture
of her head at her nephew Doshoweh, Split the Fork. 'He's your
man,' she said, and was off.
The players regathered at midfield for the drop, and the
Bear Wolf Beaver Turtle team left behind only a single man to
defend. They got the ball, and pressed west with a fury born of
desperation. Play went on for a long time, with neither side
gaining advantage, both running madly up and down the field. Then
one of the Deer Snipe Hawk Herons hurt his ankle, and Fromwest
called on Doshoweh to come out.
The Bear Wolf Beaver Turtle team pressed forward again,
pushing at the new player. But one of their passes came too near
Fromwest, who snagged it out of the air while leaping over a fallen
man. He flipped it to Doshoweh and all converged on the youngster,
who looked frightened and vulnerable; but he had the presence of
mind to make a long toss downfield, back to Fromwest, already
running at full speed. Fromwest caught the toss and everyone took
off in pursuit of him. But it seemed he had an extra turn of speed
he had never yet revealed, for no one could catch up to him before
he reached the eastern gate, and after a feint with body and bat he
spun and fired the ball past the guardian and far into the woods,
to end the match.
The crowd erupted with cheers. Hats and bags of tobacco
filled the air and rained down on the field. The contestants lay
flat on their backs, then rose and gathered in a great hug,
overseen by the referees.
Afterwards Fromwest sat on the lakeshore with the others.
'What a relief,' he said. 'I was getting tired.' He allowed some of
the women to wrap his head wound in an embroidered cloth, and
thanked them, face lowered.
In the afternoon the younger ones played the game of
throwing javelins through a rolling hoop. Fromwest was invited to
try it, and he agreed to make one attempt. He stood very still, and
threw with a gentle motion, and the javelin flew through the hoop,
leaving it rolling on. Fromwest bowed and gave up his place. 'I
played that game when I was a boy,' he said. 'It was part of the
training to become a warrior, what we called a samurai. What the
body learns it never forgets.'
Iagogeh witnessed this exhibit, and went to her husband
Keeper of the Wampum. 'We should invite Fromwest to tell us more
about his country,' she said to him. He nodded, frowning a little
at her interference as he always did, even though they had
discussed every aspect of the league's affairs, every day for forty
years. That was the way Keeper was, irritable and glowering; but
all because the league meant so much to him, so that Iagogeh
ignored his demeanour. Usually.
The feast was readied and they set to. As the sun dropped
into the forest the fires roared bright in the shadows, and the
ceremonial ground between the four cardinal fires became the scene
of hundreds of people filing past the food, filling their bowls
with spiced hominy and corncakes, bean soup, cooked squash, and
roasted meat of deer, elk, duck and quail. Things grew quiet as
people ate. After the main course came popcorn and strawberry jelly
sprinkled with maple sugar, usually taken more slowly, and a great
favourite with the children.
During this sunset feast Fromwest wandered the grounds, a
goose drumstick in hand, introducing himself to strangers and
listening to their stories, or answering their questions. He
sat with his team mates' families and recalled the triumphs of
the day on the lacrosse field. 'That game is like my old job,' he
said. 'In my country warriors fight with weapons like giant
needles. I see you have needles, and some guns. These must have
come from one of my old brothers, or the people who come here from
over your eastern sea.'
They nodded. Foreigners from across the sea had
established a forti fied village down on the coast, near the
entrance of the big bay at the mouth of the East River. The needles
had come from them, as well as tomahawk blades of the same
substance, and guns.
'Needles are very valuable,' Iagogeh said. 'just ask
Needle breaker.'
People laughed at Needle breaker, who grinned with
embarrassment.
Fromwest said, 'The metal is melted out of certain rocks,
red rocks that have the metal mixed in them. If you make a fire hot
enough, in a big clay oven, you could make your own metal. The
right kind of rocks are just south of your league's land, down in
the narrow curved valleys.' He drew a rough map on the ground with
a stick.
Two or three of the sachems were listening along with
Iagogeh. Fromwest bowed to them. 'I mean to speak to the council of
sachems about these matters.'
'Can a clay oven hold fires hot enough?' Iagogeh asked,
inspecting the big leatherpunch needle she kept on one of her
necklaces.
'Yes. And the black rock that burns, burns as hot as
charcoal. I used to make swords myself. They're like scythes, but
longer. Like blades of grass, or lacrosse bats. As long as the
bats, but edged like a tomahawk or a blade of grass, and heavy,
sturdy. You learn to swing them right' he swished a hand backhanded
before them -- 'and off with your head. No one can stop you.'
Everyone in earshot was interested in this. They could
still see him whipping his bat around him, like an elm seed
spinning down on the wind.
'Except a man with a gun,' the Mohawk sachem Sadagawadeh,
Even Tempered, pointed out.
'True. But the important part of the guns are tubes of
the same metal.'
Sadagawadeh nodded, very interested now. Fromwest
bowed.
Keeper of the Wampum had some Neutral youths round up the
other sachems, and they wandered around the grounds until they
found all fifty. When they returned Fromwest was sitting in a
group, holding out a lacrosse ball between thumb and forefinger. He
had big square hands, very scarred.
I Here, let me mark the world on this. The world is
covered by water, mostly. There are two big islands in the world
lake. Biggest island is on opposite side of world from here. This
island we are on is big, but not as big as big island. Half as big,
or less. How big the world lakes, not so sure.'
He marked the ball with charcoal to indicate the islands
in the great world sea. He gave Keeper the lacrosse ball. 'A kind
of wampum.'
Keeper nodded. 'Like a picture.'
'Yes, a picture. Of the whole world, on a ball, because
the world is a big ball. And you can mark it with the names of the
islands and lakes.'
Keeper didn't look convinced, but what he was put off by,
Iagogeh couldn't tell. He instructed the sachems to get ready for
the council.
Iagogeh went off to help with the clean up. Fromwest
brought bowls over to the lakeside to be washed.
'Please,' Iagogeh said, embarrassed. 'We do that.'
'I am no one's servant,' Fromwest said, and continued to
bring bowls to the girls for a while, asking them about their
embroidery. When he saw Iagogeh had drawn back to sit down on a bit
of raised bank, he sat on the bank beside her.
As they watched the girls, he said, 'I know that
Hodenosaunee wisdom is such that the women decide who marries
whom.'
Iagogeh considered this. 'I suppose you could say
that.'
'I am a Doorkeeper now, and a Hawk. I will live the rest
of my days here among you. I too hope to marry some day.'
'I see.' She regarded him, looked at the girls. 'Do you
have someone in mind?'
'Oh no!' he said. 'I would not be so bold. That is for
you to decide. After your advice concerning lacrosse players, I am
sure you will know best.'
She smiled. She looked at the festive dress of the girls,
aware or unaware of their elders' presence. She said, 'How many
summers have you seen?'
'Thirty five or so, in this life.'
'You have had other lives?'
'We all have. Don't you remember?'
She regarded him, unsure if he was serious. 'No.'
'The memories come in dreams, mostly, but sometimes when
something happens that you recognize.'
' I've had that feeling.'
'That's what it is.'
She shivered. It was cooling down. Time to get to the
fire. Through the net of leafy branches overhead a star or two
winked. 'Are you sure you don't have a preference?'
' None. Hodenosaunee women are the most powerful women in
this world. Not just the inheritance and the family lines, but
choosing the marriage partnerships. That means you are deciding who
comes back into the world.'
She scoffed at that: 'If children were like their
parents.' The offspring she and Keeper had had were all very
alarming people.
'The one that comes into the world was there waiting. But
many were waiting. Which one comes depends on which parents.'
'Do you think so? Sometimes, when I watched mine -- they
were only strangers, invited into the Long House.'
'Like me.'
'Yes. Like you.'
Then the sachems found them, and took Fromwest to his
raising up.
Iagogeh made sure the cleaning was near its finish, then
went after the sachems, and joined them to help prepare the new
chief. She combed his straight black hair, much the same as hers,
and helped him tie it up the way he wanted, in a topknot. She
watched his cheery face. An unusual man.
He was given appropriate waist and shoulder belts, each a
winter's work for some skilful woman, and in these he suddenly
looked very fine, a warrior and a chief, despite his flat round
face and hooded eyes. He did not look like anyone she had ever met,
certainly not like the one glimpse she had had of the foreigners
who had come over the eastern sea to their shores. But she was
beginning to feel he was familiar anyhow, in a way that made her
feel peculiar.
He looked up at her, thanking her for her help. When she
met his gaze she felt some odd sense of recognition.
Some branches and several great logs were thrown on the
central fire, and the drums and turtleshell rattles grew loud as
the fifty sachems of the Hodenosaunee gathered in their great
circle for the raising up. The crowd drew in behind them,
manoeuvring and then sitting down so all could see, forming a kind
of broad valley of faces.
The raising up ceremony for a chief was not long
compared to that of the fifty sachems. The sponsoring sachem
stepped forward and announced the nomination of the chief. In this
case it was Big Forehead, of the Hawk tribe, who stood forth and
told them all again the story of Fromwest, how they had come across
him being tortured by the Sioux, how he had been instructing the
Sioux in the superior methods of torture found in his own country;
how he already spoke an unfamiliar version of the Doorkeeper
dialect, and how it had been his hope to come visit the people of
the Long House before his capture by the Sioux. How he had lived
among the Doorkeepers and learned their ways, and led a band of
warriors far down the Ohio River to rescue many Senecan people
enslaved by the Lakotas, guiding them so that they were able to
effect the rescue and bring them home. How this and other actions
had made him a candidate for chiefdom, with the support of all who
knew him.
Big Forehead went on to say that the sachems had
conferred that morning, and approved the choice of the Doorkeepers,
even before Fromwest's display of skill in lacrosse. Then with a
roar of acclamation Fromwest was led into the circle of sachems,
his flat face shiny in the firelight, his grin so broad that his
eyes disappeared in their folds of flesh.
He held out a hand, indicating he was ready to make his
speech. The sachems sat on the beaten ground so that the whole
congregation could see him. He said, 'This is the greatest day of
my life. Never as long as I live will I forget any moment of this
beautiful day. Let me tell you now how I came to this day. You have
beard only part of the story. I was born on the island Hokkaido, in
the island nation Nippon, and grew up there as a young monk and
then a samurai, a warrior. My name was Busho.
'In Nippon people arranged their affairs differently. We
had a group of sachems with a single ruler, called the Emperor, and
a tribe of warriors were trained to fight for the rulers, and make
the farmers give part of their crops to them. I left the service of
my first ruler because of his cruelty to his farmers, and
became a ronin, a warrior without tribe.
' I lived like that for years, wandering the mountains of
Hokkaido and Honshu as beggar, monk, singer, warrior. Then all
Nippon was invaded by people from farther west, on the great island
of the world. These people, the Chinese, rule half the other side
of the world, or more. When they invaded Nippon no great kamikaze
storm wind came to sink their canoes, as always had happened
before. The old gods abandoned Nippon, perhaps because of the Allah
worshippers who had taken over its southernmost islands. In any
case, with the water passable at last, they were unstoppable. We
used banks of guns, chains in the water, fire, ambush in the night,
swimming attacks over the inner sea, and we killed a great many of
them, fleet after fleet, but they kept coming. They established a
fort on the coast we could not eject them from, a fort protecting a
long peninsula, and in a month they had filled that peninsula. Then
they attacked the whole island at once, landing on every west beach
with thousands of men. All the people of the Hodenosaunee league
would have been but a handful in that host. And though we fought
and fought, back up into the hills and mountains where only we knew
the caves and ravines, they conquered the flatlands, and Nippon, my
nation and my tribe, was no more.
'By then I should have died a hundred times over, but in
every battle some fluke or other would save me, and I would prevail
over the enemy at hand, or slip away and live to fight another
time. Finally there were only scores of us left in all Honshu, and
we made a plan, and joined together one night and stole three of
the Chinese transport canoes, huge vessels like many floating long
houses tied together. We sailed them cast under the command of
those among us who had been to Gold Mountain before.
'These ships had cloth wings held up on poles to catch
the wind, like you may have seen the foreigners from the east use,
and most winds come from the west, there as here. So we sailed east
for a few moons, and when the winds were bad drifted on a great
current in the sea.
'When we reached Gold Mountain we found other Nipponese
had arrived there before us, either by months, or years, or scores
of years. There were great--grandchildren of settlers there,
speaking an older form of Nipponese. They were happy to see a band
of samurai land, they said we were like the legendary fifty--three
ronin, because Chinese ships had already arrived, and sailed into
the harbour and shelled the villages with their great guns, before
leaving to return to China to tell their emperor that we were there
to be put to the needle,' poking to show how death from a giant
needle would take place, his mimicry horribly suggestive.
'We resolved to help our tribes there defend the place
and make it a new Nippon, with the idea of eventually returning to
our true home. But a few years later the Chinese appeared again,
not on ships coming in through the Gold Gate, but on foot from the
north, with a great army, building roads and bridges as they went,
and speaking of gold in the hills. Once again the Nipponese were
exterminated like rats in a granary, sent reeling south or east,
into a waste of steep mountains where only one in ten survived.
, When the remnants were safely hidden away in caves and
ravines, I resolved that I would not see the Chinese overrun Turtle
Island as they are overrunning the great world island to the west,
if I could help it. I lived with tribes and learned some language,
and over the years I made my way east, over deserts and great
mountains, a bare waste of rock and sand held so high up to the sun
that it is cooked everywhere and the ground is like burned corn, it
crunches underfoot. The mountains are enormous rock peaks with
narrow canyons leading through them. On the broad eastern slope of
these mountains are the grasslands beyond your rivers, covered with
great herds of buffalo, and tribes of people who live off them in
encampments. They move north or south with the buffalo, wherever
they go. These are dangerous people, always fighting each other
despite their plenty, and I took care to hide myself when I
travelled among them. I walked cast until I came on some slave
farmers who were from the Hodenosaunee, and from what they told me,
in a language that to my surprise I could already understand, the
Hodenosaunee were the first people I had heard of who might be able
to defeat the invasion of the Chinese.
'So I sought the Hodenosaunee, and came here, sleeping
inside logs, and creeping about like a snake to see what I could of
you. I came up the Ohio and explored all around this land, and
rescued a Senecan slave girl and learned more words from her, and
then one day we were captured by a Sioux war party. It was the
girl's mistake, and she fought so hard they killed her. And they
were killing me too, when you arrived and saved me. As they
were testing me, I thought, a Senecan war party will rescue you --
there is one out there even now. There are their eyes, reflecting
the firelight. And then you were there.'
He threw out his arms, and cried, 'Thank you, people of
the Long House!' He took tobacco leaves from his waist belt and
tossed them gracefully into the fire. 'Thank you Great Spirit, One
Mind holding us all.'
'Great Spirit,' murmured all the people together in
response, feeling their concourse.
Fromwest took a long ceremonial pipe from Big Forehead,
and filled it with tobacco very carefully. As he crumbled the
leaves into the bowl he continued his speech.
'What I saw of your people astonished me. Everywhere else
in the world, guns rule. Emperors put the gun to the heads of
sachems, who put it to warriors, who put it to farmers, and they
all together Put it to the women, and only the Emperor and some
sachems have any say in their affairs. They own the land like you
own your clothes, and the rest of the people are slaves of one kind
or another. In all the world there are perhaps five or ten of these
empires, but fewer and fewer as they run into each other, and fight
until one wins. They rule the world, but no one likes them, and
when the guns aren't pointed at them, people go away or rebel, and
all is violence of one against another, of man against man, and men
against women. And despite all that, their numbers grow, for they
herd cattle, like elk, who provide meat and milk and leather. They
herd pigs, like boars, and sheep and goats, and horses that they
ride on, like little buffalo. And so their numbers are grown huge,
more than the stars in the sky. Between their tame animals and
their vegetables, like your three sisters, squash and beans and
corn, and a corn they call rice, that grows in water, they can feed
so many that in each of your valleys, they might have living as
many people as all the Hodenosaunee together. This is true, I have
seen it with my own eyes. On your own island it is already
beginning, on the far western coast, and perhaps on the eastern
coast as well.'
He nodded at them all, paused to pluck a brand from the
fire and light the filled pipe. He handed the smoking instrument to
Keeper of the Wampum, and continued as the sachems each took one
great puff from the pipe.
'Now, I have watched the Hodenosaunee as closely as a child
watches its mother. I see how sons are brought up through their
motherline, and cannot inherit anything from their fathers, so that
there can be no accumulation of power in any one man. There can be
no emperors here. I have seen how the women choose the marriages
and advise all aspects of life, how the elderly and orphans are
cared for. How the nations are divided into the tribes, woven so
that you are all brothers and sisters through the league, warp and
weft. How the sachems are chosen by the people, including the
women. How if a sachem were to do something bad they would be cast
out. How their sons are nothing special, but men like any other
men, soon to marry out and have sons of their own who will leave,
and daughters who will stay, until all have their say. I have seen
how this system of affairs brings peace to your league. It is, in
all this world, the best system of rule ever invented by human
beings.'
He raised his hands in thanksgiving. He refilled the pipe
and got it burning again, and shot a plume of smoke into the
greater smoke rising from the fire. He cast more leaves on the
fire, and gave the pipe to another sachem in the circle, Man
Frightened, who indeed at this moment appeared a little awed. But
the Hodenosaunee reward skills in oratory as well as skills in war,
and now all listened happily as Fromwest continued.
'The best government, yes. But look you -- your island is
so bountiful in food that you do not have to make tools to feed
yourselves. You live in peace and plenty, but you have few tools,
and your numbers have not grown. Nor have you metals, or weapons
made of metal. This is how it has happened; you can dig deep in the
earth and find water, but why should you when there are streams and
lakes everywhere? This is the way you live.
'But the big island's people have fought each other for
many generations, and made many tools and weapons, and now they can
sail across the great seas on all sides of this island, and land
here. And so they are coming, driven as the deer by crowds of
wolves behind. You see it on your cast coast, beyond Beyond the
Opening. These are people from the other side of the same great
island I escaped, stretching halfway around the world.
'They will keep coming! And I will tell you what will
happen, if you do not defend yourselves in this island of yours.
They will come, and they will build more forts on the coast,
as they have begun to do already. They will trade with you, cloth
for furs -- cloth! cloth for the right to own this land as
if it were their clothing. When your warriors object, they will
shoot you with guns, and bring more and more warriors with guns,
and you will not be able to oppose them for long, no matter how
many of them you kill, for they have as many people as grains of
sand on the long beaches. They will pour over you like
Niagara.'
He paused to let that potent image sink in.
He raised his hands. 'It does not have to happen that
way. A people as great as the Hodenosaunee, with its wise women and
its wily warriors, a nation that every single person would gladly
die for, as if for family -- a people like this can learn to
prevail over empires, empires in which only the emperors truly
believe.
'How can we? you ask. How can we stop Niagara's water
from falling?'
He made another pause, refilling the pipe and casting
more tobacco on the fire. He passed the pipe out beyond the ring of
sachems.
'Here is how. Your league is expandable, as you have
shown already by the inclusion of the Shirt Weavers, the Shawnee,
the Choctaw and the Lakota. You should invite all the neighbouring
nations to join you, then teach them your ways, and tell them of
the danger from the big island. Each nation can bring its own skill
and devotion to the defence of this island. If you work together,
the invaders will never be able to make headway into the depths of
the great forest, which is nearly impenetrable even without
opposition.
'Also, and most importantly, you need to be able to make
your own guns.'
Now the attention of the crowd was fixed very closely.
One of the sachems held up for all to regard the musket he had
obtained from the coast. Wooden stock, metal barrel, metal trigger
and sparking apparatus, holding a flint. It looked sleek and
unearthly in the orange firelight, gleaming like their faces,
something born not made.
But Fromwest pointed at it. 'Yes. Like that. Fewer parts
than any basket. The metal comes from crushed rocks put in a fire.
The pots and moulds to hold the melted metal are made of yet harder
metal, that doesn't melt any more. Or in clay. Same with the rod
you wrap a sheet of hot metal around, to make the barrel of the
gun. The fire is made hot enough by using charcoal and coal for
fuel, and blowing on the fire with bellows. Also, you can stick a
wheel spinning in the river's flow, that will squeeze a bellows
open and closed with the force of a thousand men.'
He went into a description of this process that appeared
to be mostly in his own language. The something did something to
the something. He illustrated by blowing on a glowing branch end
held before his mouth, till it burst back into yellow flame.
'Bellows are like deerskin bags, squeezed over and over
in wooden hands, wooden walls on a hinge,' flapping his hands
vigorously. 'The devices can be pushed by the river. All work can
be linked to the power of the rivers flowing by, and greatly
increased. Thus the river's power becomes yours. Niagara's power
becomes yours to command. You can make metal discs with toothed
edges, connect them to the river, and cut through trees like
sticks, cut trees longways into planks for houses and boats.' He
gestured around them. 'A forest covers the whole eastern half of
Turtle Island. Numberless trees. You could make anything. Great
ships to cross the great seas, to bring the fight to their shores.
Anything. You could sail there and ask their people if they want to
be slaves of an empire, or a tribe woven into the league.
Anything!'
Fromwest paused for another toke on the pipe. Keeper of
the Wampum took the opportunity to say, 'You speak always of
struggle and fighting. But the foreigners on the coast have been
most friendly and solicitous. They trade, they give us guns for
furs, they do not shoot us, or fear us. They speak of their god as
if it is none of our concern.'
Fromwest nodded. 'So it will be, until you look around
you, and find there are foreigners all around you, in your valleys,
in forts on your hilltops, and insisting that they own the land of
their farm as if it were their tobacco pouch, and willing to shoot
anyone who kills an animal there, or cuts a tree. And at that point
they will say their law rules your law, because there are more of
them and they have more guns. And they will have permanently armed
warriors, ready to go on the warpath for them anywhere in the whole
world. And then you will be running north to try to escape them,
leaving this land here, the highest land on Earth.'
He wiggled upwards to show how high. Many laughed despite
their consternation. They had watched him take three or four giant
pulls on the pipe, and they had all taken a puff themselves by now,
so they knew how high he must be feeling. He was leaving
them now, they could see it. He began to speak as from a great
distance away, from inside his spirit, or out among the stars.
'They will bring disease. Many of you will die of fevers,
and infections coming as if from nowhere, spreading from person to
person. The diseases eat you from within, like mistletoe, growing
everywhere inside you. Tiny parasites inside you, big parasites
outside you, people living from your work even though they stay on
the other side of the world, making you do it by the force of laws
and guns. Laws like mistletoe! There to support the luxuries of an
emperor around the world. So many of them that they will be able to
cut down all the trees in the forest.'
He took a deep breath, and shook his head like a dog to
get out of that dark place.
'Well!' he cried. 'So! You must live as if you are
already dead! Live as if you are warriors already captured, do you
understand? The foreigners on the coast must be resisted, and
confined to a harbour town, if you can do it. War will come
eventually, no matter what you do. But the later it comes the more
you can prepare for it, and hope to win it. Defending a home is
easier than conquering the other side of the world, after all. So
we might succeed! Certainly we must try, for all the generations
that come after us!'
Another long inhalation on the pipe.
'Therefore, guns! Guns big and small! Gunpowder.
Sawmills. Horses. With these things alone, we could do it. And
messages on birchbark. A particular mark for each sound in the
languages. Make the mark, make the sound. Easy. So talk like this
can go on all the time, at great distances in space and time,
between speakers and listeners. These things are being done all
over the other side of the world. Listen, your island is isolated
from the other by such great seas, that you have been as on another
world, all the ages since the Great Spirit made people. But now the
others are coming here! To resist them you have only your
understanding, your spirit, your courage, and the arrangement of
your nation, like the warp and weft of your baskets, so much
stronger than any mere gathering of reeds. Stronger than guns!'
Suddenly he looked up and shouted it to the eastern
stars. 'Stronger than guns!' To the western stars: 'Stronger than
guns!' To the northern stars: 'Stronger than guns!' To the southern
stars: 'Stronger than guns!'
Many cried out with him.
He waited for silence again.
'Each new chief is allowed to ask the council of sachems,
gathered to honour his raising up, consideration of some point of
policy. I now ask the sachems to look at the matter of the
foreigners on the cast coast, and at opposing them, by harnessing
river power, and making guns, and pursuing a general campaign
against them. I ask the sachems to pursue our own power over our
affairs.'
He put his hands together and bowed.
The sachems stood.
Keeper said, 'That is more than one proposal. But we will
take the first one into consideration, and that will cover the
rest.'
The sachems gathered in small bunches and began to
confer, Pounds the Rock talking fast as always, making a case for
Fromwest, Iagogeh could tell.
All of them are required to be of one mind in decisions
like this. The sachems of each nation divide into classes of two or
three men each, and these talk in low voices to each other, very
concentrated on each other. When they decide the view their class
will take, one of them joins representatives from the other classes
in their nation four for the Doorkeepers and the Swampers.
These also confer for a while, while the sachems finished with
their work consult with the pipe. Soon one sachem from each nation
expresses that view to the other eight, and they see where they
stand.
On this night, the conference of the eight
representatives went on for a long time, so long that people began
to look at them curiously. A few years before, when conferring over
how to deal with the foreigners on the east coast, they had not
been able to come to a unanimous view, and nothing then had been
done. By accident or design, Fromwest had brought up again one of
the most important and unresolved problems of their time.
Now it was somewhat similar. Keeper called a halt to the
conference, and announced to the people, 'The sachems will meet
again in the morning. The matter before them is too large to
conclude tonight, and we don't want to delay the dancing any
longer.'
This met with general approval. Fromwest bowed deeply to
the sachems, and joined the first knot of dancers, who led with the
turtleshell rattles. He took a rattle and shook it
vigorously side to side, as oddly as he had swung his lacrosse bat.
There was a fluid quality to his moves, very unlike the
Hodenosaunee warriors' dancing, which looked something like attacks
with tomahawks, extremely agile and energetic, leaping up into the
air over and over, singing all the while. A sheen of sweat quickly
covered their bodies, and their singing was punctuated by hard
sucks for air. Fromwest regarded these gyrations with an admiring
grin, shaking his head to indicate how beyond his abilities these
dancers were; and the crowd, pleased that there was something he
was not good at, laughed and joined in the dance. Fromwest shuffled
to the back, dancing with the women, like the women, and the string
of dancers went around the fire, around the lacrosse field, and
back to the fire. Fromwest stepped out of the snake, and took
ground tobacco leaves from his pouch and placed a small amount on
the tongue of each passer by, including Iagogeh and all the
dancing women, whose graceful shuffling would long outlast the
leaping warriors. 'Shaman's tobacco,' he explained to each person.
'Shaman gift, for dancing.' It had a bitter taste, and many drank
some maple water afterwards to dispel it. The young men and women
continued dancing, their limbs blurring in the bonfire's light,
more robust and burnished than before. The rest of the crowd,
younger or older, danced slightly in place as they wandered,
talking over the events of the day. Many gathered around those who
were inspecting Fromwest's lacrosse ball map of the world,
which seemed to glow in the firelit night as if burning a little at
its heart.
'Fromwest,' Iagogeh said after a while, 'what was in that
shaman tobacco?'
Fromwest said, 'I lived with a nation to the west who
gave it to me. Tonight of all nights the Hodenosaunee need to take
a vision quest together. A spirit voyage, as it always is. This
time all out of the long house together.'
He took up a flute given to him, and put his fingers
carefully on the stops, then played a sequence of notes, then a
scale. 'Ha!' he said, and looked closely at it. 'Our holes are set
in different places! I'll try anyway.'
He played a song so piercing they were all dancing on the
sound of it together, like birds. Fromwest winced as he played,
until at last his face grew peaceful, and he played reconciled to
the new scale.
When he was done he looked again at the flute. 'That was
"Sakura",' he said. 'The holes for "Sakura", but it came out something
else. No doubt everything I say to you comes out changed in a
similar fashion. And your children will take what you do and change
it yet again. So it will not matter much what I say tonight, or you
do tomorrow.'
One of the girls danced by holding an egg painted red,
one of their toys, and Fromwest stared after her, startled by
something. He looked around, and they saw that the cut on his head
had started to bleed again. His eyes rolled, and he slumped as if
struck, and dropped the flute. He shouted something in another
language. The crowd grew quiet, and those nearest him sat on the
ground.
'This has happened before,' he declared in a stranger's
voice, slow and grinding. 'Oh yes -- now it all comes back!' A
faint cry, or moan. 'Not this night, repeated exactly, but a
previous visit. Listen we live many lives. We die and then
come back in another life, until we have lived well enough to be
done. Once before I was a warrior from Nippon -- no -- from China!
' He paused, thinking that over. 'Yes. Chinese. And it was my
brother, Peng. He crossed Turtle Island, rock by rock, sleeping in
logs, fighting a bear in her den, all the way here to the top, to
this very encampment, this council house, this lake. He told me
about it after we died.' He howled briefly, looked around as if
searching for something, then ran off to the bone house.
Here the bones of the ancestors are stored after the
individual burials have exposed them long enough to the birds and
gods to have cleansed them white. They are stacked neatly in the
bone house under the hill, and it is not a place people visit
during dances, and rarely ever.
But shamans are notoriously bold in these matters, and
the crowd watched the bone house needling light through the chinks
in its bark walls, sparking as Fromwest moved his torch here and
there. A huge groaning shout from him, rising to a scream,
'Ahhhhhhhhhhhh!' and he emerged holding his torch up to illuminate
a white skull, which he was jabbering at in his language.
He stopped by the fire and held up the skull to them.
'You see it's my brother! It's me!' He moved the broken
skull beside his face, and it looked out at them from its empty eye
sockets, and indeed it seemed a good match for his head. This
caused everyone to stop still and listen to him again.
'I left our ship on the west coast, and wandered inland
with a girl.
East always, to the rising sun. I arrived here just as
you were meeting in council like this, to decide on the laws you
live by now. The five nations had quarrelled, and then been called
together by Daganoweda for a council to decide how to end the
fighting in these fair valleys.'
This was true; this was the story of how the Hodenosaunee
had begun.
I Daganoweda, I saw him do it! He called them together
and proposed a league of nations, ruled by sachems, and by the
tribes cutting across the nations, and by the old women. And all
the nations agreed to it, and your league of peace was born in that
meeting, in the first year, and has stayed as designed by the first
council. No doubt many of you were there too, in your previous
lives, or perhaps you were on the other side of the world,
witnessing the monastery that I grew up in being built. Strange the
ways of rebirth. Strange the ways. I was here to protect your
nations from the diseases we were certain to bring. I did not bring
you your marvellous government, Daganoweda did that with all the
rest of you together, I knew nothing of that. But I taught you
about scabbing. He brought the scabs, and taught you to make a
shallow scratch and put some scab in the cut, and save some of the
scab that formed, and to go through the smallpox rituals, the diet
and the prayers to the smallpox god. Oh that we can heal ourselves
on this Earth! And thus in the sky.'
He turned the skull to him and looked inside it. 'He did
this and no one knew,' he said. 'No one knew who he was, no one
remembers this act of mine, no record of it exists, except in my
mind, intermittently, and in the existence of all the people here
who would have died if I had not done it. This is what the human
story is, not the emperors and the generals and their wars, but the
nameless actions of people who are never written down, the good
they do for others passed on like a blessing, just doing for
strangers what your mother did for you, or not doing what she
always spoke against. And all that carries forward and makes us
what we are.'
The next part of his address was in his own language, and
went on for some time. Everyone watched attentively as he spoke to
the skull in his hand, and caressed it. The sight held all in its
spell, and when he stopped to listen so raptly to the skull
speaking back to him, they seemed to hear it too, more words in his
own birdlike speech. Back and forth they spoke, and briefly
Fromwest wept. It was a shock when he turned to speak to them
again, in his weird Senecan: 'The past reproaches us! So
many lives. Slowly we change, oh so slowly. You think it doesn't
happen, but it does. You ' using the skull to point at Keeper
of the Wampum -- 'you could never have become sachem when I knew
you last, 0 my brother. You were too angry, but now you are not.
And you '
Pointing the skull at Iagogeh, who felt her heart skip
within her 'You would never have known before what to do with your
great power, 0 my sister. You would never have been able to teach
Keeper so much.
'We grow together, as the Buddha told us would happen.
Only now can we understand and take on our burden. You have the
finest government on this Earth, no one else has understood that
all are noble, all are part of the One Mind. But this is a burden
too, do you see? You have to carry it -- all the unborn lives to
come depend on you! Without you the world would become a nightmare.
The judgment of the ancestors' swinging the skull around like a
pipe to be smoked, gesturing wildly at the bone house. His head
wound was bleeding freely now and he was weeping, sobbing, the
crowd watching him open mouthed, travelling out now with him
into the sacred space of the shaman.
'All the nations on this island are your will be
brothers, your will be sisters. This is how you should greet
them. Hello, will be brother! How fare you? They will
recognize your soul as theirs. They will join you as their elder
brother, showing them the way forward. Struggle between brothers
and sisters will cease, and the league of the Hodenosaunee will be
joined by nation after nation, tribe after tribe. When the
foreigners arrive in their canoes to take your land, you can face
them as one, resist their attacks, take from them what is useful
and reject what is harmful, and stand up to them as equals on this
Earth. I see now what will happen in the time to come, I see it! I
see it! I see it! I see it! The people I will become dream now and
speak back to me, through me, they tell me all the world's people
will stand before the Hodenosaunee in wonder at the justice of its
government. The story will move from long house to long house, to
everywhere people are enslaved by their rulers, they will speak to
each other of the Hodenosaunee, and of a way things could be, all
things shared, all people given the right to be a part of
the running of things, no slaves and no emperors, no conquest and
no submission, people like birds in the sky. Like eagles in the
sky! Oh bring it, oh come the day, oh oooooooooooohhhhhhh . .
.'
Fromwest paused then, sucking in air. Iagogeh approached
him and tied a cloth around his head, to staunch the bleeding from
his wound. He reeked of sweat and blood. He stared right through
her, then looked up at the night sky and said 'Ah,' as if the stars
were birds, or the twinkling of unborn souls. He stared at the
skull as if wondering how it got there in his hand. He gave it to
Iagogeh, and she took it. He stepped towards the young warriors,
sang feebly the first part of one of the dance songs. This released
the men from the spell cast over them, and they leapt to their
feet, and the drumming and rattling picked up again. Quickly the
dancers surrounded the fire.
Fromwest took the skull back from Iagogeh. She felt as if
she was giving him his head. He walked slowly back to the bone
house, weaving like a drunk, looking smaller with every weary step.
He went inside without a torch. When he came out his hands were
free, and he took a flute given him, and returned to the edge of
the dance. There he swayed feebly in place and played with the
other musicians, tootling rhythmically with no particular melody.
Iagogeh shuffled in the dance, and when she passed him she pulled
him back into the line, and he followed her.
'That was good,' she said. 'That was a good story you
told.'
'Was it?' he said. 'I don't remember.'
She was not surprised. 'You were gone. Another Fromwest
spoke through you. It was a good story.'
'Did the sachems think so?'
'We'll tell them to think so.'
She led him through the crowd, testing the look of him
against one maid or another who had occurred to her as
possibilities. He did not react to any of these pairings, but only
danced and breathed through his flute, looking down or into the
fire. He appeared drained and small, and after more dancing Iagogeh
led him away from the fire. He sat down crosslegged, playing the
flute with his eyes closed, adding wild trills to the music.
In the time before dawn the fire crumbled to a great
mound of grey coals, glowing orangely here and there. Many people
had gone into the Onondagas long house to sleep, and many others
were curled like dogs in their blankets on the grass under the
trees. Those still awake sat in circles by the fire, singing songs
or telling stories while they waited for dawn, tossing a branch on
the fire to watch it catch and blaze.
Iagogeh wandered the lacrosse field, tired but buzzing in
her limbs from the dance and the tobacco. She looked for Fro mwest,
but he was not to be found, in long house, on meadow, in the
forest, in the bone house. She found herself wondering if the whole
marvellous visitation had been only a dream they had shared.
The sky to the east was turning grey. Iagogeh went down
to the lakeshore, to the women's area, beyond a small forested spit
of land, thinking to wash before anyone else was around. She took
off her clothes, all but her shift, and walked out into the lake
until she was thigh deep, then washed herself.
Across the lake she saw a disturbance. A black head in
the water, like a beaver. It was Fromwest, she decided, swimming
like a beaver or an otter in the lake. Perhaps he had become an
animal again. His head was preceded by a series of ripples in the
water. He breathed like a bear.
She had been still for some time, and when he put his
feet on the bottom, down by the spit where it was muddy, she turned
and stood facing him. He saw her and froze. He was wearing only his
waist belt, as in the game. He put his hands together, bowed
deeply. She sloshed slowly towards him, off the sand bottom and
onto soft mud.
'Come,' she said quietly. 'I have chosen for you.'
He regarded her calmly. He looked much older than he had
the day before. 'Thank you,' he said, and added something from his
tongue. A name, she thought. Her name.
They walked onshore. Her foot hit a snag and she put a
hand on his offered forearm, decorously, to balance herself. On the
bank she dried herself with her fingers and dressed, while he
retrieved his clothes and did likewise. Side by side they walked
back to the fire, past the humming dawn watchers, through the knots
of sleeping bodies. Iagogeh stopped before one. Tecarnos, a young
woman, not a girl, but unmarried. Sharptongued and funny,
intelligent and full of spirit. In sleep she did not reveal much of
this, but one leg was stretched out gracefully, and under her
blanket she looked strong.
'Tecarnos,' Iagogeh said softly. 'My daughter. Daughter
of my eldest sister. Wolf tribe. A good woman. People rely on
her.'
Fromwest nodded, hands again pressed together before him,
watching her. 'I thank you.'
'I'll talk to the other women about it. We'll tell
Tecarnos, and the men.'
He smiled, looked around him as if seeing through
everything. The wound on his forehead looked raw and was still
seeping watery blood. The sun blinked through the trees to the
cast, and the singing back by the fires was louder.
She said, 'You two will bring more good souls into the
world.'
'We can hope.'
She put her hand on his arm, as she had when they emerged
from the lake. 'Anything can happen. But we ' meaning the two
of them, or the women, or the Hodenosaunee -- 'we will make the
best chance we can. That's all you can do.'
'I know.' He looked at her hand on his arm, at the sun in
the trees. 'Maybe it will be all right.'
Iagogeh, the teller of this tale, saw all these things
herself.
Thus it was that many years later, when the jati had again
convened in the bardo, after years of work fighting off the
foreigners living at the mouth of the East River, fighting to hold
together their peoples in the face of all the devastating new
diseases that struck them, making alliances with Fromwest's people
embattled in like fashion on the west coast of their island, doing
all they could to knit together the nations and to enjoy life in
the forest with their kin and their tribes, Fromwest approached
Keeper of the Wampum and said to him proudly, 'You have to admit
it, I did what you demanded of me, I went out in the world and
fought for what was right! And we did some good again!'
Keeper put a hand to the shoulder of his young brother as
he approached the great edifice of the bardo's dais of judgment,
and said, 'Yes, you performed well, youth. We did what we
could.'
But already he was looking ahead at the bardo's enormous
towers and battlements, wary and unsatisfied, focused on the tasks
ahead. Things in the bardo seemed to have become even more Chinese
since their last time there, like all the rest of the realms,
perhaps, or perhaps it was just a coincidence having to do with
their angle of approach, but the great wall of the dai's was broken
up into scores of levels, leading into hundreds of chambers, so
that it looked somewhat like the side of a beehive.
The bureaucrat god at the entryway to this warren, one
Biancheng by name, handed out guidebooks to the process facing them
above, thick tomes all entitled 'The Jade Record', each hundreds of
pages long, filled with detailed instructions, and with descriptions,
illustrated copiously, of the various punishments they could expect
to suffer for the crimes and effronteries they had committed in
their most recent lives.
Keeper took one of these thick books and without
hesitation swung it like a tomahawk, knocking Biancheng over his
paper laden desk. Keeper looked around at the long lines of
souls waiting their turn to be judged, and saw them staring at him
amazed, and he shouted at them, 'Riot! Revolt! Rebel! Revolution!'
and without waiting to see what they did, led his little jati into
a chamber of mirrors, the first room on their passage through the
process of judgment, where souls were to look at themselves and see
what they really were.
'A good idea,' Keeper admitted, after stopping in the
middle and staring at himself, seeing what no one else could see.
'I am a monster,' he announced. 'My apologies to you all. And
especially to you, Iagogeh, for putting up with me this last time,
and all the previous times. And to you, youth,' nodding at Busho.
'But nevertheless, we have work to do. I intend to tear this whole
place down.' And he began looking around the room for something to
throw at the mirrors.
'Wait,' Iagogeh said. She was reading her copy of 'The
Jade Record', skimming pages rapidly. 'Frontal assaults are
ineffective, as I recall. I'm remembering things. We have to go at
the system itself. We need a technical solution ... Here. Here's
just the thing: just before we're sent back into the world, the
Goddess Meng administers to us a vial of forgetting.'
'I don't remember that,' Keeper said.
'That's the point. We go into each life ignorant of our
pasts, and so we struggle on each time without learning anything
from the times before. We have to avoid that if we can. So listen,
and remember: when you are in the hundred and eight rooms of this
Meng, don't drink anything! If they force you to, then only pretend
to drink it, and spit it out when you are released.' She read on.
'We emerge in the Final River, a river of blood, between this realm
and the world. If we can get there with our minds intact, then we
might be able to act more effectively.'
'Fine,' Keeper said. 'But I intend to destroy this place
itself.'
'Remember what happened last time you tried that,' Busho
warned him, getting into the corner of the chamber so he could see
the reflection of the reflections. Some things were coming back to
him as Iagogeh had spoken. 'When you took a sword to the goddess of
death, and she redoubled on you with each stroke.'
Keeper frowned, trying to recall. Outside there was a
roaring, shouts, sounds of gunfire, boots running. Irritated,
distracted, he said, 'You can't be cautious at times like this, you
have to fight evil whenever the chance comes.'
'True, but cleverly. Little steps.'
Keeper regarded him sceptically. He held his thumb and
forefinger together in the air. 'That small?' He grabbed up
Iagogeh's book and threw it at one wall of the mirrors. One of them
cracked, and a shriek came from behind the wall.
'Stop arguing,' Iagogeh said. 'Pay attention now.'
Keeper picked the book back up and they hurried through
close little rooms, moving higher and higher, then lower again,
then higher, always up or down stairs in multiples of seven or
nine. Keeper abused several more functionaries with the big book.
Pounds the Rocks kept slipping into side rooms and getting
lost.
Finally they reached the hundred and eight chambers of
Meng, the Goddess of Forgetting. Everyone had to pass through a
different one of the chambers, and drink the cup of the
wine that was not wine set out for them. Guards
who did not look as if they would notice the slap of a book, be it
ever so thick, stood at every exit to enforce this requirement;
souls were not to return to life too burdened or advantaged by
their pasts.
'I refuse,' Keeper shouted; they could all hear it from
the nearby rooms. 'I don't remember this ever being required
before!'
'That's because we're making progress,' Busho tried to
call to him. 'Remember the plan, remember the plan.'
He himself took up his vial, happily fairly small, and
faked swallowing its sweet contents with an exaggerated gulp,
tucking the liquid under his tongue. It tasted so good he was
sorely tempted to swallow it down, but resisted and only let a
little seep to the back of his tongue.
Thus when his guard tossed him out into the Final River
with the rest, he spat out what he could of the not wine, but
he was disoriented nevertheless. The other members of the jati
thrashed likewise in the shallows, choking and spitting, Straight
Arrow giggling drunkenly, totally oblivious. Iagogeh rounded them
up, and Keeper, no matter what he had forgotten, had not
lost his main purpose, which was to wreak havoc however he could.
They half swum, half floated across the red stream to the
far shore.
There, at the foot of a tall red wall, they were hauled
out of the river by two demon gods of the bardo,
Life is short and Death by gradations. Overhead
a banner hanging down the side of the wall displayed the message,
'To be a human is easy, to live a human life is hard; to desire to
be human a second time is even harder. If you want release from the
wheel, persevere.'
Keeper read the message and snorted. 'A second time --
what about the tenth? What about the fiftieth?' And with a roar he
shoved Deathby gradations into the river of blood. They had
spat enough of Meng's not wine of forgetting in the stream
that the god guard quickly forgot who had shoved him, and what his
job was, and how to swim.
But the others of the jati saw what Keeper had done, and
their purpose came back ever more clearly to their consciousness.
Busho shoved the other guard into the stream: 'Justice!' he shouted
after the suddenly absent minded swimmer. 'Life is short
indeed!'
Other guards appeared upstream on the bank of the Final
River, hurrying towards them. The members of the jati acted
quickly, and for once like a team; by twisting and tangling the
banner hanging down the wall, they made it into a kind of rope they
could use to pull themselves up the Red Wall. Busho and Keeper and
Iagogeh and Pounds the Rock and Straight Arrow and Zig zag and
all the rest hauled themselves up to the top of the wall, which was
broad enough to sprawl onto. There they could catch their breath,
and have a look around: back down into the dark and smoky bardo,
where a struggle even more chaotic than usual had broken out; it
looked like they had started a general revolt; and then forward,
down onto the world, swathed in clouds.
'It looks like that time when they took Butterfly up that
mountain to sacrifice her,' Keeper said. 'I remember that now.'
'Down there we can make something new,' Iagogeh said.
'It's up to us. Remember!'
And they dived off the wall like drops of rain.
One. A Case of Soul theft
The widow Kang was extremely punctilious about the
ceremonial aspects of her widowhood. She referred to herself
always as wei wang ren, 'the person who has not yet died'. When her
sons wanted to celebrate her fortieth birthday she demurred, saying
'This is not appropriate for one who has not yet died.' Widowed at
the age of thirty five, just after the birth of her third son,
she had been cast into the depths of despair; she had loved her
husband Kung Xin very much. She had dismissed the idea of suicide,
however, as a Ming affectation. A truer interpretation of
Confucian duty made it clear that to commit suicide was to abandon
one's responsibilities to one's children and
parents in law, which was obviously out of the question.
Widow Kang Tongbi was instead determined to remain celibate past
the age of fifty, writing poetry and studying the classics and
running the family compound. At fifty she would be eligible
for certification as a chaste widow, and would receive a
commendation in the Qianlong Emperor's elegant calligraphy, which
she planned to frame and place in the entrance to her home. Her
three sons might even build a stone arch in her honour.
Her two older sons moved around the country in the
service of the imperial bureaucracy, and she raised the
youngest while continuing to run the family household left in
Hangzhou, now reduced in number to her son Shih, and the servants
left behind by her older sons. She oversaw the sericulture that was
the principal support for the household, as her older sons
were not yet in a position to send much money home, and the whole
process of silk production, filature and embroidery was under her
command. No house under a district magistrate was ruled with any
more iron hand. This too honoured Han learning, as women's work in
the better households, usually hemp and silk manufacture, was
considered a virtue long before Qing policies revived official
support for it.
Widow Kang lived in the women's quarters of the small
compound, which was located near the banks of the Chu River. The
outer walls were stuccoed, the inner walls wood shingle, and the
women's quarters, in the innermost reach of the property, were
contained in a beautiful white square building with a tile roof,
filled with light and flowers. In that building, and the workshops
adjacent to it, Widow Kang and her women would weave and embroider
for at least a few hours every day, and often several more, if the
light was good. Here too Widow Kang had her youngest son recite the
parts of the classics he had memorized at her command. She would
work at the loom, flicking the shuttle back and forth, or in the
evening simply spin thread, or work at the larger patterns of
embroidery, all the while running Shih through the Analects, or
Mencius, insisting on perfect memorization, just as the examiners
would when the time came. Little Shih was not very good at it, even
compared to his older brothers, who had been only minimally
acceptable, and often he was reduced to tears by the end of the
evening; but Kang Tongbi was relentless, and when he was done
crying, they would get back to it. Over time he improved. But he
was a nervous and unhappy boy.
So no one was happier than Shih when the ordinary routine
of the household was interrupted by festivals. All three of the
Bodhisattva Guanyin's birthdays were important holidays for his
mother, especially the main one, on the nineteenth day of the sixth
month. As this great festival approached, the widow would relent in
ber strict lessons, and make her preparations: proper reading,
writing of poetry, collection of incense and food for the indigent
women of the neighbourhood; these activities were added, to ber
already busy days. As the festival approached she fasted, and
abstained from any polluting actions ' including becoming angry, so
that she stopped Shih's lessons for the time, and offered
sacrifices in the compound's little shrine.
The old man in the moon tied red threads Around our legs
when we were babies.
We met and married; now you are gone. Ephemeral life is
like water flowing; Suddenly we have been separated by death all
these years. Tears well up as an early autumn begins. The one who
has not yet died is dreamed of By a distant ghost. A crane flies, a
flower falls; Lonely and desolate, I set aside my needlework And
stand in the courtyard to count the geese Who have lost their
flocks. May Bodhisattva Guanyin Help me get through these chill
final years.
When the day itself came they all fasted, and in the
evening joined a big procession up the local hill, carrying
sandalwood in a cloth sack, and twirling banners, umbrellas and
paper lanterns, following their temple group's flag, and the big
pitchy torch leading the way and warding off demons. For Shih the
excitement of the night march, added to the cessation of his
studies, made for a grand holiday, and he walked behind his mother
swinging a paper lantern, singing songs and feeling happy in a way
usually impossible for him.
'Miao Shan was a young girl who refused her father's
order to marry,' his mother told the young women walking ahead of
them, although they had all heard the story before. 'In a rage he
committed her to a monastery, then he burned the monastery down. A
bodhisattva, Dizang Wang, took her spirit to the Forest of Corpses,
where she helped the unsettled ghosts. After that she went down
through the levels of hell, teaching the spirits there to rise
above their suffering, and she was so successful that Lord Yama
returned her as the Bodhisattva Guanyin, to help the living learn
these good things while they are still alive, before it's too late
for them.'
Shih did not listen to this oft heard tale, which he
could not make sense of. It did not seem like anything in his
mother's life, and he didn't understand her attraction to it.
Singing, firelight and the strong smoky smells of incense all
converged at the shrine on the top of the hill. Up there the
Buddhist abbot led prayers, and people sang and ate small
sweets.
Long after moonset they trooped back down the hill and
along the river path home, still singing songs in the windy
darkness. Everyone from the household moved slowly along, not only
because they were tired, but to accommodate Widow Kang's mincing
stride. She had very small beautiful feet, but got around almost as
well as the big flat footed servant girls, by using a quick
step and a characteristic swivel of the hips, a gait that no one
ever commented on.
Shih wandered ahead, still nursing his last candle's
guttering, and by its light he glimpsed movement against their
compound wall: a big dark figure, stepping awkwardly in just the
way his mother did, so that he thought for a moment it was her
shadow on the wall.
But then it made a sound like a dog whimpering, and Shih
jumped back and shouted a warning. The others rushed forward, Kang
Tongbi at their fore, and by torchlight they saw a man in ragged
robes, dirty, hunched over, staring up at them, his frightened eyes
big in the torchlight.
'Thief!' someone shouted.
'No,' he said in a hoarse voice. 'I am Bao Ssu. I'm a
Buddhist monk from Soochow. I'm just trying to get water from the
river. I can hear it.' He gestured, then tried to limp away towards
the river sound.
'A beggar,' someone else said.
But sorcerers had been reported west of Hangzhou, and now
Widow Kang held her lantern so close to his face that he had to
squint.
'Are you a real monk, or just one of the hairy ones that
hide in their temples!'
'A true monk, I swear. I had a certificate, but it was
taken from me by the magistrate. I studied with Master Yu of the
Purple Bamboo Temple.' And he began to recite the Diamond Sutra, a
favourite of women past a certain age.
Kang inspected his face carefully in the lamplight. She
shuddered palpably, stepped back. 'Do I know you?' she said to
herself. Then to him: 'I know you!'
The monk bowed his head. 'I don't know how, lady. I come
from Soochow. Perhaps you've visited there?'
She shook her head, still disturbed, peering intently
into his eyes. 'I know you,' she whispered.
Then to the servants she said, 'Let him sleep by the back
gate. Guard him, and we'll find out more in the morning. It's too
dark now to see a man's nature.'
In the morning the man had been joined by a boy just a
few years younger than Shih. Both were filthy, and were busy
sifting the compost for the freshest scraps of food, which they
wolfed down. They regarded the members of the household at the gate
as warily as foxes. But they could not run away; the man's ankles
were both swollen and bruised.
'What were you questioned for?' Kang asked sharply.
The man hesitated, looking down at the boy. 'My son and I
were travelling through on our way back to the Temple of the Purple
Bamboo Grove, and apparently some young boy had his queue clipped
about that time.'
Kang hissed, and the man looked her in the eye, one hand
up. 'We're no sorcerers. That's why they let us go. But my name is
Bao Ssu, fourth son of Bao Ju, and a beggar they had in hand for
cursing a village headmaster was questioned, and he named a
sorcerer he said he had met, called Bao Ssu ju. They thought I
might be that man. But I'm no soulstealer. Just a poor monk and his
son. In the end they brought the beggar back in, and he confessed
he had made it all up, to stop his questioning. So they let us
go.
Kang regarded them with undiminished suspicion. It was a
cardinal rule to stay out of trouble with the magistrates; so they
were guilty of that, at the least.
'Did they torture you too?' Shih asked the boy.
'They were going to,' the boy replied, 'but they gave me
a pear instead, and I told them Father's name was Bao Ssu ju.
I thought it was right.'
Bao kept watching the widow. 'You don't mind if we get
water from the river?'
'No. Of course not. Go.' And she watched him while the
man limped down the path to the river.
'We can't let them inside, she decided. 'And Shih, don't
you go near them. But they can keep the gate shrine. Until winter
comes that will be better than the road for them, I suppose.'
This did not surprise Shih. His mother was always
adopting stray cats and castaway concubines; she helped to maintain
the town orphanage, and stretched their finances by supporting the
Buddhist nuns. She often spoke of becoming one herself. She wrote
poetry: 'These flowers I walk on hurt my heart,' she would recite
from one of her day poems. 'When my days of rice and salt are
over,' she would say, 'I'll copy out the sutras and pray all day.
But until then we had all better get to the day's work!'
So, after that the monk Bao and his boy became fixtures
at the gate, and around that part of the river, in the bamboo
groves and the shrine hidden in the thinning forest there. Bao
never regained a normal walk, but he was not quite as hobbled as on
the night of Guanyin's enlightenment day, and what he could not do
his son Xinwu, who was strong for his size, did for both of them.
On the next New Year's Day they joined the festivities, and Bao had
managed to obtain a few eggs and colour them red, so that he
could give them out to Kang and Shih and other members of the
household.
Bao presented the eggs with great seriousness: 'Ge Hong
related that the Buddha said the cosmos is egg shaped, and the
Earth like Giving red eggs: this was a south China custom,
called 'sending happiness for the new year'.
Possibly the author
means to suggest the monk Bao had lied about his place of
origin.
As he gave one to Shih he said,
'Here, put it longways in your hand, and try to crush it.'
Shih looked startled, and Kang objected: 'It's too
pretty.'
'Don't worry, it's strong. Go ahead, try to crush it.
I'll clean it up if you can.'
Shih squeezed gingerly, turning his head aside, then
harder. He squeezed until his forearm was taut. The egg held. Widow
Kang took it from him and tried it herself. Her arms were very
strong from embroidery, but the egg stood fast.
'You see,' Bao said. 'Eggshell is weak stuff, but the
curve is strong. People are like that too. Each person weak, but
together strong.'
After that, on religious festival days Kang would often
join Bao outside the gate, and discuss the Buddhist scriptures with
him. The rest of the time she ignored the two, concentrating on the
world inside the walls.
Shih's studies continued to go badly. He did not seem to
be able to understand arithmetic beyond addition, and could not
memorize the classics beyond a few words at the start of each
passage. His mother found his study sessions intensely frustrating.
'Shih, I know you are not a stupid boy. Your father was a brilliant
man, your brothers are solid thinkers, and you have always been
quick to find reasons why nothing is ever your fault, and
why everything has to be your way. Think of equations as excuses,
and you'll be fine! But all you do is think of ways not to think of
things!'
Before this kind of scorn, poured on in sharp tones, no
one could stand. It was not just Kang's words, but the way she said
them, with a cutting edge and a crow's voice; and the curl of her
lip, and the blazing, self righteous glare -- the way she
looked right into you as she flailed you with her words -- no one
could face it. Wailing miserably as always, Shih retreated from
this latest withering blast.
Not long after that scolding, he came running back from
the market, wailing in earnest. Shrieking, in fact, in a full fit
of hysterics. 'My queue, my queue, my queue!'
It had been cut off. The servants shouted in
consternation, all was an uproar for a moment, but it was cut as
short as Shih's little pigtail stub by his mother's grating voice:
'Shut up all of you!'
She seized Shih by the arms and put him down on the
window seat where she had so often examined him. Roughly she
brushed away his tears and petted him. 'Calm yourself, calm down.
Calm down! Tell me what happened.'
Through convulsive sobs and hiccoughs he got the story
out. He had stopped on the way home from the market to watch a
juggler, when hands had seized him across the eyes, and a cloth had
been put across his face, covering both mouth and eyes. He had felt
dizzy then and had collapsed, and when he picked himself off the
ground, there was no one there, and his queue was gone.
Kang watched him intently through the course of his tale,
and when he had finished and was staring at the floor, she pursed
her lips and went to the window. She looked out at the
chrysanthemums under the old gnarled juniper for a long time.
Finally her head servant, Pao, approached her. Shih was led off to
have his face washed and get some food.
'What shall we do?' Pao asked in a low voice.
Kang heaved a heavy sigh. 'We'll have to report it,' she
said darkly. 'If we didn't, it would surely become known anyway,
from the servants talking at the market. And then it would look as
if we were encouraging rebellion.'
'Of course,' Pao said, relieved. 'Shall I go and inform the
magistrate now?'
For the longest time there was no reply. Pao stared at
Widow Kang, more and more frightened. Kang seemed under a malignant
enchant ment, as if she were even at that moment fighting
soul stealers for the soul of her son.
'Yes. Go with Zunli. We will follow with Shih.'
Pao left. Kang wandered the household, looking at one
object after another, as if inspecting the rooms. Finally she went
out of the compound front gate, slowly down the river
path.
The Qing dynasty forced all Ilan Chinese men to shave
their foreheads and wear a queue, in the Manchurian manner, to show
submission of the Hans to their Manchu emperors. In the years
before the White Lotus conspiracy, Han bandits began to cut their
queues off as a mark of rebellion.
On the bank under the great oak tree she found Bao and
his boy Xinwu, just where they always were.
She said, 'Shih has had his queue cut.'
Bao's face went grey. Sweat sprang on his brow.
Kang said, 'We take him to the magistrate presently.'
Bao nodded, swallowing. He glanced at Xinwu.
'If you want to go on a pilgrimage to some far shrine,'
Kang said harshly, 'we could watch your son.'
Bao nodded again, face stricken. Kang looked at the river
flowing by in the afternoon light. The band of sun on water made
her squint.
'If you go,' she added, they will be sure you did
it.'
The river flowed by. Down the bank Xinwu threw stones in
the water and yelled at the splashes.
'Same if I stay,' Bao said finally.
Kang did not reply.
After a time Bao called Xinwu over, and told him that
because he had to go on a long pilgrimage, Xinwu was to stay with
Kang and Shih and their household.
'When will you be back?' Xinwu asked.
'Soon.'
Xinwu was satisfied, or unwilling to think about it.
Bao reached out and touched Kang's sleeve. 'Thank
you.'
'Go. Be careful not to get caught.'
'I will. If I can I'll send word to the Temple of the
Purple Bamboo Grove.'
'No. If we don't hear from you, we will know you are
well.'
He nodded. As he was about to take his leave, he
hesitated. 'You know, lady, all beings have lived many lives. You
say we have met before, but before the festival of Guanyin, I never
came near here.'
'I know.'
'So it must be that we knew each other in some other
life.'
'I know.' She glanced at him briefly. 'Go.'
He limped off upstream on the bank path, glancing around
to see if there were any witnesses. Indeed there were fisherfolk on
the other bank, their straw hats bright in the sun.
Kang took Xinwu back to the house, then got in a sedan
chair to take the snivelling Shih to town and the magistrate's
offices.
The magistrate looked as displeased as Widow Kang had
been to have this kind of matter thrown in his lap. But like her,
he could not afford to ignore it, and so he interviewed Shih,
angrily, and had him lead them all to the spot in town where it had
happened. Shih indicated a place on the path next to a copse of
bamboo, and just out of sight of the first stalls of the market in
that district. No one habitually there had seen Shih or any unusual
strangers that morning. It was a complete dead end.
So Kang and Shih went home, and Shih cried and complained
that he felt sick and could not study. Kang stared at him and gave
him the day off, plus a healthy dose of powdered gypsum mixed with
the gallstones of a cow. They heard nothing from Bao or the
magistrate, and Xinwu fitted in well with the household's servants.
Kang let Shih be for a time, until one day she got angry at him and
seized what was left of his queue and yanked him into his
examination seat, saying 'Stolen soul or not, you are going to pass
your exams!' and stared down at his catlike face, until he muttered
the lesson for the day before his queue had been cut, looking sorry
for himself, and implacable before his mother's disdain. But she
was more implacable still. If he wanted dinner he had to learn.
Then news came that Bao had been apprehended in the
mountains to the west, and brought back to be interrogated by the
magistrate and the district prefect. The soldiers who brought the
news wanted Kang and Shih down at the prefecture immediately; they
had brought a palanquin to carry them in.
Kang hissed at this news, and returned to her rooms to dress
properly for the trip. The servants saw that her hands were
shaking, indeed her whole body trembled, and her lips were white
beyond the power of gloss to colour them. Before she left her room
she sat down before the loom and wept bitterly. Then she stood and
redid her eyes, and went out to join the guards.
At the prefecture Kang descended from the chair and
dragged Shih with her into the prefect's examination chamber. There
the guards would have stopped her, but the magistrate called her
in, adding ominously, 'This is the woman who was giving him
shelter.'
Shih cringed at this, and looked at the officials from
behind Kang's embroidered silk gown. Along with the magistrate and
prefect were several other officials, wearing robes striped with
arm bands and decorated with the insignia squares of very
high ranking officials: bear, deer, even an eagle.
They did not speak, however, but only sat in chairs
watching the magistrate and prefect, who stood by the unfortunate
Bao. Bao was clamped in a wooden device that held his arms up by
his head. His legs were tied into an ankle press.
The ankle press was a simple thing. Three posts rose from
a wooden base; the central one, between Bao's ankles, was fixed to
the base. The other two were linked to the middle one at about
waist height by an iron dowel rod that ran through all three,
leaving the outer two loose, though big bolts meant they could only
move outwards so far. Bao's ankles were secured to either side of
the middle post; the lower ends of the outer posts were pressing
against the outsides of Bao's ankles. The upper ends had been
pressed apart from the middle post by wooden wedges. All was
already as tight as could be; any further taps on top of the wedges
by the magistrate with his big mallet would press on Bao's ankles
with enormous leverage.
'Answer the question!' the magistrate roared, leaning
down to shout in Bao's face. He straightened up, walked back slowly
and gave the nearest wedge a sharp tap with his mallet.
Bao howled. Then: 'I'm a monk! I've been living with my
boy by the river! I can't walk any farther! I don't go
anywhere!'
'Why are there scissors in your bag?' the prefect
demanded quietly. 'Scissors, powders, books. And a bit of a
queue.'
'That's not hair! That's my talisman from the temple, see
how it's braided! Those are scriptures from the temple -- ah!'
'It is hair,' the prefect said, looking at it in the
light.
The magistrate tapped again with his mallet.
'It isn't my son's hair,' the widow Kang interjected,
surprising everyone. 'This monk lives near our house. He doesn't go
anywhere but to the river for water.'
'How do you know?' the prefect asked, boring into Kang
with his gaze. 'How could you know?'
'I see him there at all hours. He brings our water, and
some wood. He has a boy. He watches our shrine. He's just a poor
monk, a beggar. Crippled by this thing of yours,' she said,
gesturing at the ankle press.
'What is this woman doing here?' the prefect asked the
magistrate.
The magistrate shrugged, looking angry. 'She's a witness
like any other.'
' I didn't call for witnesses.'
'We did,' said one of the officials from the governor.
'Ask her more.'
The magistrate turned to her. 'Can you vouch for the
presence of this man on the nineteenth day of last month?'
'He was at my property, as I said.'
'On that day in particular? How can you know that?'
'Guanyin's annunciation festival was the next day, and
Bao Ssu here helped us in our preparations for it. We worked all
day at preparing for the sacrifices.'
Silence in the room. Then the visiting dignitary said
sharply, 'So you are a Buddhist?'
Widow Kang regarded him calmly. 'I am the widow of Kung
Xin, who was a local yamen before his death. My sons Kung Yen and
Kung Yi have both passed their examinations, and are serving the
Emperor at Nanjing and '
'Yes yes. But are you Buddhist, I asked.'
'I follow the Han ways,' Kang said coldly.
The official questioning her was a Manchu, one of the
Qianlong Emperor's high officers. He reddened slightly now. 'What
does this have to do with your religion?'
'Everything. Of course. I follow the old ways, to honour
my husband and parents and ancestors. What I do to occupy the hours
before I rejoin my husband is of no importance to anyone else, of
course. It is only the spiritual work of an old woman, one who has
not yet died. But I saw what I saw.' 'How old are you?'
'Forty one sui.'
'And you spent all day on the nineteenth day of the ninth
month with this beggar here.'
Age in Chinese reckoning was calculated by taking the
lunar year of one's birth as year one, and adding a year at each
lunar New Year's Day.
'Enough of it to know he could not have gone to
the town market and back. Naturally I worked at the loom in the
afternoon.'
Another silence in the chamber. Then the Manchu official
gestured to the magistrate irritably.
'Question the man further.'
With a vicious glance at Kang, the magistrate leaned over
to shout down at Bao, 'Why do you have scissors in your bag!'
'For making talismans.'
The magistrate tapped the wedge harder than before, and
Bao howled again.
'Tell me what they were really for! Why was there a queue
in your bag?' With hard taps at each question.
Then the prefect asked the questions, each accompanied by
a tap of the mallet from the angry magistrate, and continuous
gasping groans from Bao.
Finally, scarlet and sweating, Bao cried, 'Stop! Please
stop. I confess. I'll tell you what happened.'
The magistrate rested his mallet on the top of one wedge.
'Tell us.'
'I was tricked by a sorcerer into helping them. I didn't
know at first what they were. They said if I didn't help them then
they would steal my boy's soul.'
'What was his name, this sorcerer?'
'Bao Ssu nen, almost like mine. He came from
Soochow, and he had lots of confederates working for him. He would
fly all over China in a night. He gave me some of the stupefying
powder and told me what to do. Please, release the press, please.
I'm telling you everything now. I couldn't help doing it. I had to
do it for the soul of my boy.'
'So you did cut queues on the nineteenth day of last
month.'
'Only one! Only one, please. When they made me. Please,
release the press a little.'
The Manchu official lifted his eyebrows at Widow Kang.
'So you were not with him as much as you claimed. Perhaps it's
better for you that way.'
Someone tittered.
Kang said in her sharp hoarse bray, 'Obviously this is
one of those confessions we have heard about, coerced by the ankle
press. The whole soul stealing scare is based on such forced
confessions, and all it does is cause panic among the servants and
the workers. Nothing could be worse service of the Emperor
'Silence!'
'You send up these reports and cause the Emperor endless
worry and then when a more competent investigation is made the
string of forced lies is revealed 'Silence!'
'You are transparent from above and below! The Emperor
will see it!'
The Manchu official stood and pointed at Kang. 'Perhaps
you would like to take this sorcerer's place in the press.'
Kang was silent. Shih trembled beside her. She leaned on
him and pushed forward one foot until it stood outside her gown,
shod in a little silk slipper. She stared the Manchu in the
eye.
'I have already withstood it.'
'Remove this demented creature from the examination,' the
Manchu said tightly, his face a dark red. A woman's foot, exposed
during the examination of a crime as serious as soul
stealing: it was beyond all regulation.
No woman of breeding ever referred to her feet or
revealed them in public. This was a bold person!
'I am a witness,' Kang said, not moving.
'Please,'Bao called out to her. 'Leave, lady.
Do what the magistrate says.' He could barely twist far
enough to look at her. 'It will be all right.'
So they left. On the way home in the guard's palanquin
Kang wept, knocking aside Shih's comforting hands.
'What's wrong, Mother? What's wrong?,
'I have shamed your family. I have destroyed my husband's
fondest hopes.'
Shih looked frightened. 'He's just a beggar.'
'Be quiet!' she hissed. Then she cursed like one of the
servants. 'That Manchu! Miserable foreigners! They're not even
Chinese. Not true Chinese. Every dynasty begins well, cleansing the
decay of the fallen one before it. But then their turn for
corruption comes. And the Qing are there. That's why they're so
concerned with queue clipping. That's their mark on us, their
mark on every Chinese man.'
'But that's the way it is, Mother. You can't change
dynasties!'
'No. Oh, I am ashamed! I have lost my temper. I never
should have gone there. I only added to the blows against poor
Bao's ankles.'
At home she went to the women's quarters. She fasted,
worked at her weaving all the hours she was awake, and would not
talk with anyone.
Then news came that Bao had died in prison, of a fever
that had nothing to do with his interrogation, or so said the
jailers. Kang threw herself into her room, weeping, and would not
come out. When she did, days later, she spent all her waking hours
weaving or writing poems, and she ate at the loom and her writing
desk. She refused to teach Shih, or even to speak to him, which
upset him, indeed frightened him more than anything she might have
said. But he enjoyed playing down by the river. Xinwu was required
to stay away from him, and was cared for by the servants.
My poor monkey dropped its peach The new moon forgot to
shine. No more climbing in the pine tree No little monkey on its
back. Come back as a butterfly And I will be your dream.
One day not long after that, Pao brought Kang a small
black queue, found buried in the mulberry compost by a servant who
had been turning the muck. It was cut at an angle that matched the
remnant at the back of Shih's head.
Kang hissed at the sight, and went into Shih's room and
slapped him hard on the car. He howled, crying 'What? What?'
Ignoring him, Kang went back to the women's quarters, groaning, and
took up a pair of scissors and slashed through all the silk
cloth stretched over the frames for embroidering. The servant girls
cried out in alarm, no one could believe their eyes. The mistress
of the house had gone mad at last. Never had they seen her weep so
hard, not even when her husband died.
Later she ordered Pao to say nothing about what had been
found. Eventually all the servants found out about the discovery
anyway, and Shih lived shunned in his own house. He did not seem to
care.
But from that time, Widow Kang stopped sleeping at night.
Often she called to Pao for wine. 'I've seen him again,' she would
say. 'He was a young monk this time, in different robes. A huihui.
And I was a young queen. He saved me, then we ran off together. Now
his ghost is hungry, and he wanders between the worlds.'
They put offerings for him outside the gate, and at the
windows. Still Kang woke the house with her sleeping cries, like a
peacock's, and sometimes they would find her sleepwalking in
between the buildings of the compound, speaking in strange tongues
and even in voices not her own. It was established practice never
to wake someone walking in their sleep, to avoid startling the
spirit and causing it to become confused and not find its way back
to its body. So they went in front of her, moving furniture so she
would not hurt herself, and they pinched the rooster to make it
crow early. Pao tried to get Shih to write to his older brothers
and tell them what was happening, or at least to write down what
his mother was saying at night, but Shih wouldn't do it.
Eventually Pao told Shih's eldest brother's head
servant's sister about it, at the market when she was visiting
Hangzhou, and after that word eventually got to the eldest
brother, in Nanjing. He did not come; he could not get away from
his duties.
Note that if it had been his father sick at home, or
beset by ghosts, he would certainly have been given leave to
go.
He did, however, have a Muslim scholar visiting him, a
doctor from the frontier, and as this man had a professional
interest in possessions such as Widow Kang's, he came a few months
later to visit her.
Two. The Remembering
Kang Tongbi received the visitor in the rooms
off the front courtyard devoted to entertaining guests, and sat
watching him closely as he explained who he was, in a clear if
strangely accented Chinese. His name was Ibrahim ibn Hasam. He was
a small, slight man, about Kang's height and build,
white haired. He wore reading glasses all the time, and his
eyes swam behind the lenses like pond fish. He was a true hui,
originally from Iran, though he had lived in China for most of the
Qianlong Emperor's reign, and like most long term foreigners
in China, had made a lifelong commitment to stay there.
'China is my home,' he said, which sounded odd with his
accent. He nodded observantly at her expression. 'Not a pure Han,
obviously, but I like it here. Actually I am soon moving back to
Langzhou, to live among people of my faith. I think I have learned
enough studying with Liu Zhi to be of service to those wishing for
a better understanding between Muslim Chinese and Han Chinese. That
is my hope, anyway.'
Kang nodded politely at this unlikely quest. 'And you
have come here to ... ?'
He bowed. 'I have been assisting the governor of the
province in these reported cases of . . .'
'Soul stealing?' Kang said sharply.
'Well. Yes. Queue cuttings, in any case. Whether
they are a matter of sorcery, or merely of rebellion against the
dynasty, is not so very easy to determine. I am a scholar for the
most part, a religious scholar, but I have also been a student of
the medical arts, and so I was summoned to see if I could
bring any light to bear on the matter. I have also studied cases of
possession of the soul. And other things like that.'
Kang regarded him coldly. He hesitated before continuing.
'Your eldest son informs me that you have suffered some incidents
of this kind.'
'I know nothing about them,' she said sharply. 'My
youngest son's queue was cut, that I am aware of. It has been
investigated with no particular result. As for the rest, I am
ignorant. I sleep, and have woken up a few times cold, and not in
my bed. Elsewhere in the household, in fact. My servants tell me
that I have been saying things they don't understand. Speaking
something that is not Chinese.'
His eyes swam. 'Do you speak any other languages,
madam?'
'Of course not.'
'Excuse me. Your son said you were extremely
well educated.'
'My father was pleased to educate me in the classics
along with his sons.'
'You have the reputation of being a fine poet.'
Kang did not reply, but coloured slightly.
'I hope I shall have the privilege of reading some of
your poems. They could help me in my work here.'
'Which is?'
'Well -- to cure you of these visitations, if such is
possible. And to aid the Emperor in his inquiry into the
queue clippings.'
Kang frowned and looked away.
Ibrahim sipped his tea and waited. He seemed to have the
ability to wait more or less indefinitely.
Kang gestured to Pao to refill his tea cup. 'Proceed,
then.'
Ibrahim bowed from his seat. 'Thank you. Perhaps we can
start by discussing this monk who died, Bao Ssu.'
Kang stiffened in her wall seat.
'I know it is difficult,' Ibrahim murmured. 'You care
still for his son.'
'Yes.'
'And I am told that when he arrived you were convinced
that you knew him from somewhere else.'
'Yes, that's right. But he said he came from Soochow, and
had never been here before. And I have never been to Soochow. But I
felt that I knew him.'
'And did you feel the same way about his boy?'
'No. But I feel the same about you.'
She clapped her hand over her mouth.
'You do?' Ibrahim watched her.
Kang shook her head. 'I don't know why I said that! It
just came out.'
'Such things sometimes do.' He waved it off. 'But this
Bao, who did not recognize you. Shortly after he arrived, there
were incidents reported. Queue chopping, people's names
written on pieces of paper and placed under wharf pilings about to
be driven in that sort of thing. Soulstealing
activities.'
Kang shook her head. 'He had nothing to do with that. He
spent every day by the river, fishing with his son. He was a simple
monk, that's all. They tortured him to no purpose.'
'He confessed to queue clipping.'
'On the ankle press he did! He would have said anything,
and so would anyone else! It's a stupid way to investigate such
crimes. It makes them spring up everywhere, like a ring of poison
mushrooms.'
'True,' the man said. He took a sip of tea. 'I have often
said so myself. And in fact it's becoming clear that that is what
has happened here, in the present situation.'
Kang looked at him grimly. 'Tell me.'
'Well.' Ibrahim looked down. 'Monk Bao and his boy were
first brought in for questioning in Anchi, as he may have told you.
They had been begging by singing songs outside the village
headman's house. The headman gave them a single piece of steamed
bread, and Bao and Xinwu were apparently so hungry that Bao cursed
the headman, who decided they were bad characters, and repeated his
order for them to be off. Bao cursed him again before leaving, and
the headman was so angry he had them arrested and their bags
searched. They found some writings and medicines, and scissors
'Same as they found here.'
'Yes. And so the headman had them tied to a tree and
beaten with chains. Nothing more was learned, however, and yet the
two were pretty badly hurt. So the headman took part of a false
queue worn by a bald guard in his employ, and put it in Bao's bag
and sent him along to the prefecture for examination with the ankle
press.'
'Poor man,' Kang exclaimed, biting her lip. 'Poor
soul.'
'Yes.' Ibrahim took another sip. 'So, recently the
governor general began looking into these incidents by
order of the Emperor, who is very concerned. I've helped somewhat
in the investigation -- not with any questionings examining
physical evidence, like the false queue, which I showed was made of
several different kinds of hair. So the headman was questioned, and
told the whole story.'
'So it was all a lie.'
'Indeed. And in fact all the incidents can be traced back
to an origin in a case similar to Bao's, in Soochow
'Monstrous.' except for the case of your son Shih.'
Kang said nothing. She gestured, and Pao refilled the tea
cups.
After a very long silence, Ibrahim said, 'No doubt
hooligans in town took advantage of the scare to frighten your
boy.'
Kang nodded.
'And also,' he went on, 'if you have been experiencing
possessions by spirits possibly he, also .
She said nothing.
'Do you know of any oddities . .
For a long time they sat together in silence, sipping
tea. Finally Kang said, 'Fear itself is a kind of possession.'
'Indeed.'
They sipped tea for a while more.
'I will tell the governor general that there is
nothing to worry about here.'
'Thank you.'
Another silence.
'But I am interested in any subsequent manifestations of
... anything out of the ordinary.'
'Of course.'
'I hope we can discuss them. I know of ways to
investigate such things.'
'Possibly.'
Soon after, the hui doctor ended his visit.
After he was gone, Kang wandered the compound from room
to room, trailed by the worried Pao. She looked into Shih's room,
now empty, his books on their shelves unopened. Shih had gone down
to the riverside, no doubt to be with his friend Xinwu.
Kang looked in the women's quarters, at the loom on which so
much of their fortune resided; and the writing stand, ink block,
brushes, stacks of paper.
Geese fly north against the moon. Sons grow up and leave.
In the garden, my old bench. Some days I'd rather have rice and
salt. Sit like a plant, neck outstretched: Honk, honk! Fly
away!
Then on to the kitchens, and the garden under the old
juniper. Not a word did she say, but retired to her bedroom in
silence.
That night, however, cries again woke the household. Pao
rushed out ahead of the other servants, and found Widow Kang
slumped against the garden bench, under the tree. Pao pulled her
mistress's open night shift over her breast and hauled her up onto
the bench, crying 'Mistress Kang!' because her eyes were open wide;
yet they saw nothing of this world. The whites were visible all the
way around, and she stared through Pao and the others, seeing other
people and muttering in tongues. 'In challa, in challa', a babble
of sounds, cries, squeaks, 'urn mana pada hum'; and all in voices
not hers.
'Ghosts!' squealed Shih, who had been wakened by the
fuss. 'She's possessed!'
' Quiet please,' hissed Pao. 'We must return her to her
bed still asleep.'
She took one arm, Zunli took the other, and as gently as
they could, they lifted her. She was as light as a cat, lighter
than she ought to have been. 'Gently,' Pao said as they bumped her
over the sill and laid her down. Even as she lay there she popped
back up like a puppet, and said, in something like her own voice,
'The little goddess died despite all.'
Pao sent word to the hui doctor of what had occurred, and
a note came back with their servant, requesting another interview.
Kang snorted and dropped the note on the table and said nothing.
But a week later the servants were told to prepare lunch for a
visitor, and it was Ibrahim ibn Hasam who appeared at the gate,
blinking behind his spectacles.
Kang greeted him with the utmost formality, and led him
into the parlour, where the best porcelain was laid out for
a meal.
After they had eaten and were sipping tea, Ibrahim nodded
and said, 'I am told that you suffered another attack of
sleepwalking.'
Kang coloured. 'My servants are indiscreet.'
'I'm sorry. It's just that this may pertain to my
investigation.'
'I recall nothing of the incident, alas. I woke to a very
disturbed household.'
'Yes. Perhaps I could ask your servants what you said
while under the ... under the spell?'
'Certainly.'
'Thank you.' Another seated bow, another sip. 'Also . . .
I was wondering if you might agree to help me attempt to reach this
... this other voice inside you.'
'How do you propose to do this?'
'It is a method developed by the doctors of
al Andalus. It involves a kind of meditation on an object, as
in a Buddhist temple. An examiner helps to put the meditating
subject under a description, as they call it, and then the inner
voices sometimes will speak with the examiner.'
'Like soul stealing, then?'
He smiled. 'No stealing is involved. It is mainly
conversation, you see. Like calling the spirit of someone absent,
even to themselves. Like the soul calling done in your
southern cities. Then when the meditation ends, all returns to
normal.'
'Do you believe in the soul, doctor?'
'Of course.'
'And in soul stealing?'
'Well.' Long pause. 'This concept has to do with a
Chinese understanding of the soul, I think. Perhaps you can clarify
it for me. Do you make a distinction between the hun, the spiritual
soul, and the po, or bodily soul?'
'Yes, of course,' Kang said. 'It is an aspect of
yin yang. The hun soul belongs to the yang, the
po soul to the yin.'
Ibrahim nodded. 'And the hun soul, being light and
active, volatile, is the one that can separate from the living
person. Indeed it does separate, every night in sleep, and returns
on waking. Normally.'
'Yes.'
'And if by chance, or design, it does not return, this is
a cause of illness, especially in children's illnesses, like colic,
and in various forms of sleeplessness, madness and the like.'
'Yes.' Now the widow Kang was not looking at him.
'And the hun is the soul that the soul stealers
supposedly roaming the countryside are after. Chiao hun.'
'Yes. Obviously you don't believe this.'
'No no, not at all. I reserve judgment for what is shown.
I can see the distinction being made, no doubt of that. I myself
travel in dreams -- believe me, I travel. And I have treated
unconscious patients, whose bodies continue to function well, in
the pink of health you might say, while they lie there on their bed
and never move, no, not for years. I cleaned her face -- I was
washing her eyelashes, and all of a sudden she said, "Don't do
that." After sixteen years. No, I have seen the hunsoul go and
return, I think. I think it is like most matters. The Chinese have
certain words, certain concepts and categories, while Islam has
other words, naturally, and slightly different categories, but on
closer inspection these can all be correlated and shown to be one.
Because reality is one.'
Kang frowned, as if perhaps she did not agree.
'Do you know the poem by Rumi Balkhi, "I Died As
Mineral"? No? It is by the voice of the sufis, the most spiritual
of Muslims.' He recited: 'Died as mineral and came back as
plant, Died as plant and came back as animal, Died as animal and
came back a man. Why should I fear? When have I ever lost by dying?
Yet once more I shall die human, To soar with angels blessed above.
And when I sacrifice my angel soul I shall become what no mind ever
conceived.
'That last death I think refers to the hun soul,
moving away from the po soul to some transcendence.'
Kang was thinking it over. 'So, in Islam you believe that
souls come back? That we live many lives, and are
reincarnated?'
Ibrahim sipped his green tea. 'The Quran says, "God
generates beings, and sends them back over and over again, till they return
to Him. -- 'Really!' Now Kang regarded Ibrahim with
interest. 'This is what we Buddhists believe.'
Ibrahim nodded. 'A sufi teacher I have followed, Sharif
Din Maneri, said to us, "Know for certain that this work has been
before thee and me in bygone ages, and that each person has already
reached a certain stage. No one has begun this work for the first
time. -- Kang stared at Ibrahim, leaning from her wall
seat towards him. She cleared her throat delicately. 'I remember
bits of these sleepwalking spells,' she admitted. 'I often seem to
be some other person. Usually a young woman, a -- a queen, of some
far country, in trouble. I have the impression it was long ago, but
it is all confused. Sometimes I wake with the sense of a year or
more having passed. Then I come fully into this world again, and it
all falls apart, and I can recall nothing but an image or two, like
a dream, or an illustration in a book, but less whole, less ... I'm
sorry. I can't make it clear.'
'But you can,' Ibrahim said. 'Very clear.'
'I think I knew you,' she whispered. 'You and Bao, and my
son Shih, and Pao, and certain others. I ... it's like that moment
one sometimes feels, when it seems that whatever is happening has
already happened before, in just the same way.'
Ibrahim nodded. 'I have felt that. Elsewhere in the
Quran, it says, "I tell you of a truth, that the spirits which now
have affinity will be kindred together, although they all meet in
new persons and names. -- 'Truly?' Kang exclaimed.
'Yes. And elsewhere again, it says, "His body falls off
like the shell of a crab, and he forms a new one. The person is
only a mask which the soul puts on for a season, wears for its
proper time, and then casts off, and another is worn in its
stead. -- Kang stared at him, mouth open. 'I can
scarcely believe what I am hearing,' she whispered. 'There has been
no one I can tell these things. They think me mad. I am known now
as a . . .'
Ibrahim nodded and sipped his tea. 'I understand. But I
am interested in these things. I have had certain -- intimations,
myself. Perhaps then we can try the process of putting you under a
description, and see what we can learn?'
Kang nodded decisively. 'Yes.'
Because he wanted darkness, they settled on a window seat in the
reception hall, with its window shuttered and the doors closed. A
single candle burned on a low table. The lenses of his glasses
reflected the flame. The house had been ordered to be silent, and
faintly they could hear dog barks, cart wheels, the general hum of
the city in the distance, all very faint.
Ibrahim took Widow Kang by the wrist, very loosely,
fingers cool and light against her pulse, at which sensation her
pulse quickened; surely he could feel it. But he had her look into
the candle flame, and he spoke in Persian, Arabic and Chinese: low
chanting, with no emphasis of tone, a gentle murmur. She had never
heard such a voice.
'You are walking in the cool dew of the morning, all is
peaceful, all is well. In the heart of the flame the world unfolds
like a flower. You breathe in the flower, slowly in, slowly out.
All the sutras speak through you into this flower of light. All is
centred, flowing up and down your spine like the tide. Sun, moon,
stars in their places, wheeling around us, holding us.'
In like manner he murmured on and on, until Kang's pulse
was steady at all three levels, a floating, hollow pulse, ber
breathing deep and relaxed. She truly appeared to Ibrahim to have
left the room, through the portal of the candle flame. He had never
had anyone leave him so quickly.
'Now,' he suggested, 'you travel in the spirit world, and
see all your lives. Tell me what you see.'
Her voice was high and sweet, unlike her usual voice. 'I
see an old bridge, very ancient, across a dry stream. Bao is young,
and wears a white robe. People follow me over the bridge to a . . .
a place. Old and new.'
'What are you wearing?'
'A long ... shift. Like night garments. It's warm. People
call out as we pass.'
'What are they saying?'
'I don't understand it.'
'Just make the sounds they make.'
'In sha ar am. In sha ar am. There are people on horses.
Oh there you are. You too are young. They want something.
People cry out. Men on horses approach. They're coming fast. Bao
warns me ' She shuddered. 'Ah!' she said, in her usual voice.
Her pulse became leathery, almost a spinning bean pulse. She shook her head hard,
looked up at Ibrahim. 'What was that? What happened?'
'You were gone. Seeing something else. Do you
remember?'
She shook her head.
'Horses?'
She closed her eyes. 'Horses. A rider. Cavalry. I was in
trouble!'
'Hmm.' He released her wrist. 'Possibly so.'
'What was it?'
He shrugged. 'Perhaps some ... Do you speak any -- no.
You said already that you did not. But in this hun travel, you
seemed to be hearing Arabic.'
'Arabic?'
'Yes. A common prayer. Many Muslims would recite it in
Arabic, even if that was not their language. But .
She shuddered. 'I have to rest.'
'Of course.'
She looked at him, her eyes filling with tears. 'I ...
can it be why me, though ' She shook her head and her
tears fell. 'I don't understand why this is happening!'
He nodded. 'We so seldom understand why things
happen.'
She laughed shortly, a single 'Ho!' Then: 'But I like to
understand.'
'So do I. Believe me; it is my chief delight. Rare as it
is.' A small smile, or grimace of chagrin, offered for her to
share. A shared understanding, of their solitary frustration at
understanding so little.
Kang took a deep breath and stood. 'I appreciate your
assistance. You will come again, I trust?'
'Of course.' He stood as well. 'Anything, madam. I feel
that we have just begun.'
She was suddenly startled, looking through him. 'Banners
flew, do you remember?'
'What?'
'You were there.' She smiled apologetically, shrugged.
'You too were there.'
He was frowning, trying to understand her. 'Banners . .
.' He seemed lost himself for a while. 'I . . .' He shook his head.
'Maybe. I recall it used to be, when I saw banners, as a child in
Iran, it would mean so much to me. More than could be explained. As
if I was flying.'
'Come again, please. Perhaps your bun soul too can be
called forth.' He nodded, frowning still, as if still in pursuit of
a receding thought, a banner in memory. Even as he said his
farewells and left, he was still distracted.
He returned within the week, and they had another session
'inside the candle' as Kang called it. From the depths of her
trance she burst into speech that neither of them understood -- not
Ibrahim as it happened, nor Kang when he read back to her what he
had written down.
He shrugged, looking shaken. 'I will ask some colleagues.
Of course it may be some language totally lost to us now. We must
concentrate on what you see.'
'But I remember nothing! Or very little. As you recall
dreams, that slip away on waking.'
'When you are actually inside the candle, then. I must be
clever, ask the right questions.'
'But if I don't understand you? Or if I answer in this
other tongue?'
He nodded. 'But you seem to understand me, at least
partly. There must be translation in more than one realm. Or there
may be more to the hun soul than has been suspected. Or the
tendril that keeps you in contact with the travelling hun--soul
conveys other parts of what you know. Or it is the po soul
that understands.' He threw up his hands: who could say.
Then something struck her, and she put her hand to his
arm. 'There was a landslide!'
They stood together in silence. Faintly the air
quivered.
He went away puzzled, distracted. At every departure he
left bemused, and at every return he was fairly humming with ideas,
with anticipation of their next voyage into the candle.
'A colleague in Beijing thinks it may be a form of Berber
that you are speaking. At other times, Tibetan. Do you know these
places? Morocco is at the other end of the world, the west end of
Africa, in the north. It was Moroccans who repopulated al Andalus
when the Christians died.'
'Ah,' she said, but shook her head. 'I was always
Chinese, I am sure. It must be an old Chinese dialect.'
He smiled, a rare and pleasant sight. 'Chinese in your
heart, perhaps. But I think our souls wander the whole world, life
to life.'
'In groups?'
'People's destinies intertwine, as the Quran says. Like
threads in your embroideries. Moving together like the travelling
races on Earth the Jews, the Christians, the Zotti. Remnants
of older ways, left without a home.'
'Or the new islands across the Eastern Sea, yes? So we
might have lived there too, in the empires of gold?'
'Those may be Egyptians of ancient times, fled west from
Noah's flood. Opinion is divided.'
'Whatever they are, I am certainly Chinese through and
through. And always have been.'
He regarded her with a trace of his smile in his eye. 'It
does not sound like Chinese that you speak when inside the candle.
And if life is inextinguishable, as it seems it might be, you may
be older than China itself.'
She took a deep breath, sighed. 'Easy to believe.'
The next time he came to put her under a description, it
was night, so they could work in silence and darkness; so that the
candle flame, the dim room and the sound of his voice would be all
that seemed to exist. It was the fifth day of the fifth month, an
unlucky day, the day of the festival of hungry ghosts, when those
poor preta who had no living descendants were honoured and given
some peace. Kang had said the Surangama Sutra, which
expounded the rulai zang, a state of empty mind, tranquil
mind, true mind.
She made the purification of the house rituals, and
fasted, and she asked Ibrahim to do the same. So when the
preparations were finally finished, they sat alone in the stuffy
dark chamber, watching a candle burn. Kang entered into the
flame almost the moment Ibrahim touched her wrist, her pulse
flooding, a yin in yang pulse. Ibrahim watched her closely.
She muttered in the language he could not understand, or perhaps
another language yet. There was a sheen on her forehead, and she
seemed distraught.
The Surangama Sutra: spuriously Sanskrit, originally
written in Chinese and titled 'Lengyan jing'. The awareness it
describes, changzhi, is sometimes called Buddha nature, or
tathagatagarbha, or 'mind ground'. The sutra claims that devotees
can be 'suddenly awakened' to this state of high awareness.
The flame of the candle shrank down to the size of a
bean. Ibrahim swallowed hard, holding off fear, squinting with the
effort.
She stirred, her voice grew more agitated.
'Tell me in Chinese,' he said gently. 'Speak
Chinese.'
She groaned, muttered. Then she said, very clearly, 'My
husband died. They wouldn't -- they poisoned him, and they wouldn't
accept a queen among them. They wanted what we had. Ah!' And she
began again to speak in the other language. Ibrahim fixed her
clearest words in mind, then saw that the candle's flame had grown
again, but past its normal height, rising so high that the room
grew hot and stifling, and he feared for the paper ceiling. 'Please
be calm, 0 spirits of the dead,' he said in Arabic, and Kang cried
out in the voice not hers,
'No! No! We're trapped!' and then she was sobbing, crying
her heart out. Ibrahim held her by the arms, gently squeezing her,
and suddenly she looked up at him, seeming awake, and her eyes grew
round. 'You were there! You were with us, we were trapped by an
avalanche, we were stuck there to die!'
He shook his head: 'I don't remember She struggled
free and slapped him hard on the face. His spectacles flew across
the room, she jumped on him and held him by the throat as if to
strangle him, eyes locked on his, suddenly so much smaller. 'You
were there!' she shouted. 'Remember! Remember!'
In her eyes he seemed to see it happen. 'Oh!' he said,
shocked, looking through her now. 'Oh my God. Oh . . .'
She released him, and he sank to the floor. He patted it
as if searching for his glasses. Inshallah, inshallah.' He groped
about, looked up at her. 'You were just a girl . . .'
'Ah,' she said, and collapsed onto the floor beside him.
She was weeping now, eyes running, nose running. 'It's been so
long. I've been so alone.' She sniffed hard, wiped her eyes. 'They
keep killing us. We keep getting killed.'
'That's life,' he said, wiping his own eyes once. He
collected himself. 'That's what happens. Those are the ones you
remember. You were a black boy, once, a beautiful black boy, I can
see you now. And you were my friend once, old men together. We
studied the world, we were friends. Such a spirit.'
The candle flame slowly dropped back to its normal
height. They sat beside each other on the floor, too drained to
move.
Eventually Pao knocked hesitantly on the door, and they
started guiltily, though they had both been lost in their
own thoughts. They got up and sat in the window seats, and Kang
called out to Pao to bring some peach juice. By the time she came
with it they were both composed; Ibrahim had relocated his
spectacles, and Kang had opened the window shutter to the night
air. The light of a clouded half moon added to the glow of the
candle flame.
Hands still shaking, Kang sipped some peach juice,
nibbled on a plum. Her body too was trembling. 'I'm not sure I can
do that any more,' she said, looking away. 'It's too much.'
He nodded. They went into the compound garden, and sat in
the cool of the night under the clouds, eating and drinking. They
were hungry. The scent of jasmine filled the dark air. Though they
did not speak, they seemed companionable.
I am older than China itself I walked in the jungle
hunting for food Sailed the seas across the world Fought in the
long war of the asuras. They cut me and I bled. Of course. Of
course. No wonder my dreams are so wild, No wonder I feel so tired.
No wonder I am always Angry. Clouds mass, concealing a thousand
peaks; Winds sweep, colouring ten thousand trees. Come to me
husband and let us live The next ten lives together.
The next time Ibrahim visited, his face was solemn, and
he was dressed more finely than they had seen before, in the garb
of a Muslim cleric, it seemed.
After the usual greetings when they were alone again in
the garden, he stood and faced her. 'I must return to Gansu,' he
said. 'I have family matters I must attend to. And my sufi master
has need of me in his madressa. I've put it off as long as I could,
but I have to go.'
Kang looked aside. 'I will be sorry.'
'Yes. I also. There is much still to discuss.'
Silence.
Then Ibrahim stirred and spoke again. 'I have thought of a way
to solve this problem, this separation between us, so unwished for,
which is that you should marry me -- accept my proposal of marriage
and marry me, and bring you and your people with you out with me,
to Gansu.'
The widow Kang looked utterly astonished. Her mouth hung
open.
'Why -- I cannot marry. I am a widow.'
Ibrahim said, 'But widows may remarry. I know the Qing
try to discourage it, but Confucius says nothing at all against it.
I have looked, and checked with the best experts. People do
it.'
'Not respectable people!'
He narrowed his eyes, looking suddenly Chinese. 'Respect
from whom?'
She looked away. 'I cannot marry you. You are hui, and I
am one who has not yet died.'
'The Ming emperors ordered all hui to marry good Chinese
women, so that their children would be Chinese. My mother was a
Chinese woman.'
She looked up, surprised again. Her face was flushed.
'Please,' he said, hand out. 'I know it's a new idea. A
shock. I'm sorry. Please think about it, before you make your final
reply. Consider it.'
She straightened up and faced him formally. 'I will
consider it.'
A flick of the hand indicated her desire to be left
alone, and with a truncated farewell, ended by a phrase in another
language, spoken most intently, he made his way out of the
compound.
After that, the widow Kang wandered through her
household. Pao was out in the kitchen, ordering the girls about,
and Kang asked ber to come and speak to her in the garden. Pao
followed her out, and Kang told her what had happened, and Pao
laughed.
'Why do you laugh!,' Kang snapped. 'Do you think I care
so much for a testimonial from a Qing Emperor! That I
should lock myself in this box for the rest of my life, for
the sake of a paper covered with vermilion ink?'
Pao froze, first startled, then frightened. 'But,
Mistress Kang Gansu . . .'
'You know nothing about it. Leave me.'
After that no one dared to speak to ber. She wandered the
house like a hungry ghost, acknowledging no one. She scarcely
spoke. She visited the shrine at the Temple of the Purple
Bamboo Grove, and recited the Diamond Sutra five times, and went
home with her knees hurting. The poem of Li Anzi, 'Sudden View of
Years' came to her mind: Li Anzi: the mother of two
successful officials, who reared them alone as a widow.
Sometimes all the threads on the loom Suggest the carpet
to come. Then we know that our children to be Hope for us
in the bardo. For them we weave until our arms grow tired.
She had the servants carry her to the magistrate's
building, where she had them set down the sedan chair, and did not
move for an hour. The men could just see her face behind the gauze
of the window curtain. They took her home without her ever having
emerged.
The next day she had them carry her to the cemetery,
though it was not a festival day, and under the empty sky she
shuffled about with her peculiar gait, sweeping the graves of all
the family ancestors, then sitting at the foot of her husband's
grave, head in her hands.
The next day she went down to the river on her own,
walking the entire way, crimping along, looking at trees, ducks,
the clouds in the sky. She sat on the riverbank, as still as if she
were in one of the temples.
Xinwu, was down there as he almost always was, trailing
his fishing pole and bamboo basket. He brightened at the sight of
her, showed her the fish he had caught. He sat by her, and they
watched the great brown river flow past, glossy and compact. He
fished, she sat and watched.
'You're good at that,' she said, watching him flick the
line out into the stream.
'My father taught me.' After a time: 'I miss him.'
'I do too.' Then: 'Do you think ... I wonder what he
would think.'
After another pause: 'If we move west, you must come with
us.'
She invited Ibrahim to return, and when he came, Pao led
him into the reception hall, which Kang had ordered filled with
flowers.
He stood before ber, head bowed.
'I am old,' she told him. 'I have passed through all the life
stages. I am one who has not yet died. I cannot go
backwards. I cannot give you any sons.'
The life stages: milk teeth, hair--pinned up,
marriage, children, rice and salt, widowhood.
'I understand,' he murmured. 'I too am old. Still
-- I ask your hand in marriage. Not for sons, but for me.'
She regarded him, her colour rising.
'Then I accept your offer of marriage.'
He smiled.
After that the household was as if caught in a whirlwind.
The servants, though highly critical of the match, nevertheless had
to work all day every day to make the place ready in time for the
fifteenth day of the sixth month, the midsummer time traditionally
favoured for starting travel. Kang's elder sons disapproved of the
match, of course, but made plans to attend the wedding anyway. The
neighbours were scandalized, shocked beyond telling, but as they
were not invited, there was no way for them to express this to the
Kang household. The widow's sisters at the temple congratulated her
and wished her well. 'You can bring the wisdom of the Buddha to the
hui,' they told her. 'It will be very useful for all.'
So they were married in a small ceremony attended by all Kang's
sons, and only Shih was less than congratulatory, pouting most of
the morning in his room, a fact Pao did not even report to Kang.
After the ceremony, held in the garden, the party spread down to
the river, and though small, it was determinedly cheery. After that
the household was packed up, its furniture and goods loaded in
carts either destined for their new home in the west, or else for
the orphanage that Kang had helped establish in town, or for her
elder sons.
When all was ready, Kang took a last walk through the household,
stopping to stare into the bare rooms, oddly small now.
This square fathom has held my life. Now the goose flies away,
Chased by a Phoenix from the west. How could one life encompass
such change. Truly we live more lives than one.
Soon she came out and climbed into the sedan chair. 'It is
already gone,' she said to Ibrahim. He handed her a gift, an egg
painted red: happiness in the new year. She bowed her head. He
nodded, and directed their little train to begin the journey
west.
Three. Waves Slap Together
The trip took over a month. The roads and tracks they
followed were dry, and they made good time. Partly this was because
Kang asked to ride in a cart rather than be carried in a palanquin
or smaller chair. At first the servants were convinced this
decision had caused some discord in the new couple, for Ibrahim
took to riding in the covered cart with Kang, and they heard the
arguing between them go on sometimes for whole days on end. But Pao
walked close enough one afternoon to catch the drift of what they
were saying, and she came back to the others relieved. 'It's only
religion they're debating. A real pair of intel lectuals,
those two.'
So the servants travelled on, reassured. They went up to
Kaifeng, stayed with some of Ibrahim's Muslim colleagues there,
then followed the roads paralleling the Wei River, west to Xian in
Shaanxi, then over hard passes in dry hills, to Lanzhou.
By the time they arrived, Kang was amazed beyond
amazement. 'I can't believe there is so much world,' she would say
to Ibrahim. 'So much China! So many fields of rice and barley, so
many mountains, so empty and wild. Surely we should have crossed
the world by now.'
'Scarcely a hundredth part of it, according to the
sailors.'
'This outlandish country is so cold and dry, so dusty and
barren. How will we keep a house clean here, or warm? It's like
trying to live in hell.'
'Not that bad, surely.'
'Is this really Lanzhou, the renowned city of the west?
This little brown windblown mudbrick village?'
'Yes. It's growing quite rapidly, actually.'
'And we are to live here?'
'Well, I have connections here, and in Xining, a bit
farther to the west. We could settle in either place.'
'Let me see Xining before we decide. It must be better
than this.'
Ibrahim said nothing, but ordered their little caravan
on. More days of travel, as the seventh month passed, and storm
clouds rolled overhead almost every day, never quite breaking on
them. Under these low ceilings the sere broken hills looked even
more inhospitable than before, and except in the irrigated,
terraced central flats of the long narrow valleys, there was no
more agriculture to be seen. 'How do people live here?' Kang asked.
'How do they eat?'
'They herd sheep and goats,' Ibrahim said. 'Sometimes
cattle. It's like this all over, west of here, all the way across
the dry heart of the world.'
'Astonishing. It's like travelling back in time.'
Finally they came to Xining, another little walled
mudbrick town, huddling under shattered mountainsides, in a high
valley. A garrison of imperial solders manned the gates, and some
new wooden barracks had been thrown up under the town walls. A big
caravanserai stood empty, as it was too late in the year to start
travelling. Beyond it several walled ironworks used what little
power the river provided to run their stamps and forges.
'Ugh!' Kang said. 'I did not think Lanzhou could be
beaten for dust, but I was wrong.'
'Wait for your decision,' Ibrahim requested. 'I want you
to see Qinghai Lake. It's just a short journey farther.'
'Surely we will fall off the edge of the world.'
'Come see.'
Kang agreed without argument; indeed, it seemed to Pao
that she was actually enjoying these insanely dry and barbarous
regions, or at least enjoying her complaining about them. The
dustier the better, her face seemed to say, no matter what words
she spoke.
A few more days west on a bad road brought them through a
draw to the shores of Qinghai Lake, the sight of which took speech
away from all of them. By chance they had arrived on a day of wild,
windy weather, with great white clouds floored by blue grey
embroidery charging overhead, and these clouds were reflected in
the lake's water, which in sunlight was just as blue green as
the name of the lake would suggest. To the west the lake extended
right off to the horizon; the curve of its visible shores was a
bank of green hills. Out here in this brown desolation, it was like
a miracle.
Kang got out of the cart and walked slowly down to the
pebbled shore, reciting the Lotus Sutra, and holding up her hands
to feel the hard rush of the wind on her palms. Ibrahim gave her
some time to herself, then joined her.
'Why do you weep?' he inquired.
Sothis is the great lake,"' she
recited,
NowI can at last comprehend The
immensity of the universe; My life has gained new meaning! But
think of all the women Who never leave their own courtyards, Who
must spend their whole lives Without once enjoying a sight like
this. --
Ibrahim bowed. 'Indeed. Whose poem is this?'
She shook her head, dashing the tears away. 'That was
Yuen, the wife of Shen Fu, on seeing the T'ai Hu. The Great
Lake! What would she have thought if she saw this one! It is
part of "Six Chapters from a Floating Life". Do you know it? No.
Well. What can one say?'
'Nothing.'
'Indeed.' She turned to him, put her hands together.
'Thank you, husband, for showing me this great lake. It is truly
magnificent. Now I can settle, let us live wherever you please.
Xining, Lanzhou, the other side of the world, where once we met in
a previous life wherever you like. It is all the same to
me.' And she leaned weeping against his side.
For the time being, Ibrahim decided to settle the
household in Lanzhou. This gave him better access to the Gansu
Corridor, and therefore the routes to the west, as well as the
return routes to the Chinese interior. Also, the madressa he had
had the closest contact with in his youth had moved to Lanzhou,
forced there from Xining by pressure from newly arrived western
Muslims.
They set up their household in a new mudbrick compound by
the banks of the Tao River, close to where it joined the Yellow
River. The Yellow River's water was indeed yellow, a completely
opaque sandy roiling yellow, precisely the colour of the hills to
the west out of which it sprang. The Tao River was a bit clearer
and more brown.
The household was bigger than Kang's old place in
Hangzhou, and she quickly set up the women's quarters in a back
building, staking out a garden in the ground around it, and
demanding potted trees to begin the process of landscaping. She
also wanted a loom, but Ibrahim pointed out that silk thread would
be unavailable here, as there were neither mulberry groves nor
filatures. If she wanted to continue weaving, she would have to
learn to work wool. With a sigh she agreed, and began the process
on hand looms. Embroidering silk cloth that was already made
also occupied them.
Ibrahim meanwhile went to work meeting with his old
associates in the Muslim schools and fellowships, and with the new
Qing officials of the town, thereby beginning the process of
sorting out and assisting the new political and religious
situations in the area, which had changed, apparently, since he had
last been home. In the evenings he would sit with Kang on the
verandah overlooking the muddy yellow river and explain it to her,
answering her endless questions.
'To simplify slightly, ever since Ma Laichi came back
from Yemen, bearing texts of religious renewal and rectification,
there has been conflict within the Muslims of this part of the
world. Understand that Muslims have lived here for centuries,
almost since the beginning of Islam, and at this distance from
Mecca and the other centres of Islamic learning, various
beterodoxies and error were introduced. Ma Laichi wanted to reform
these, but the old umma here brought suit against him in the Qing
civil court, accusing him of huozhong.'
Kang looked severe, no doubt remembering the effects of
such delusion back in the inte rior.
Deluding the people, a serious offence anywhere in
China.
'Eventually the governor general out here, Paohang
Guangsi, dismissed the suit. But that did not end matters. Ma
Laichi proceeded to convert the Salars to Islam they are a
people out here who speak a Turkic language, and live on the roads.
They are the ones you see in the white caps, who do not look
Chinese.'
'Who look like you.'
Ibrahim frowned. 'A little, perhaps. Anyway, this made
people nervous, as the Salars are considered dangerous people.'
'I can see why -- they look like it.'
'These people who look like me. But no matter. Anyway,
there are many other forces in Islam, sometimes in conflict. A new
sect called the Naqshabandis are trying to purify Islam by a return
to more orthodox older ways, and in China they are led by Aziz Ma
Mingxin, who, like Ma Laichi, spent many years in Yemen and Mecca,
studying with Ibrahim ibn Hasa al Kurani, a very great shaikh
whose teachings are spread now all over the Islamic world.
'Now, these two great shaikhs came back here from Arabia
with reforms in mind, after studying with the same people, but
alas, they are different reforms. Ma Laichi believed in the silent
recital of prayer, called dhikri, while Ma Mingxin, being younger,
studied with teachers who believed prayers could be chanted aloud
as well.'
'This seems a minor difference to me.'
'Yes.' When Ibrahim looked Chinese it meant he was amused
by his wife.
'In Buddhism we allow both.'
'True. But they mark deeper divisions, as often happens.
Anyway, Ma Mingxin practises jahr prayer, meaning spoken aloud.
This Ma Laichi and his followers dislike, as it represents a new
and even purer reli gious revival coming to this area. But
they can't stop them coming. Ma Mingxin has the support of the
Black Mountain sufis who control both sides of the Pamirs, so more
of them are coming in here all the time, escaping the battles
between Iran and the Ottomans, and between the Ottomans and the
Fulanis.'
'It sounds like such a trouble.'
'Yes, well, Islam is not so well organized as Buddhism,'
which made Kang laugh. Ibrahim continued: 'But it is a
trouble, you are right. The split between Ma Laichi and Ma Mingxin
could be fatal to any hope of unity in our time. Ma Laichi's
Khafiya cooperate with the Qing, you see, and they call the jahriya
practices superstitious, and even immoral.'
'Immoral?'
'Dancing and suchlike. Rhythmic motion during prayers --
even the praying aloud.'
'It sounds fairly ordinary to me. Celebrations are
celebrations, after all.'
'Yes. So the jahriya counter by accusing the Khafiya of
being a cult of personality around Ma Laichi. And they accuse him
of excessive tithing, implying his whole movement is simply a ploy
for power and wealth. And in collaboration with the Emperor against
other Muslims as well.'
'Trouble.'
'Yes. And everyone out here has weapons, you see, usually
guns, because as you noted on our journey out, hunting is still an
important source of food here. So each little mosque has its
militia ready to join a scrape, and the Qing have bolstered their
garrisons to try to deal with all this. The Qing so far have backed
the Khafiya, which they translate as Old Teaching, and the jahriya
they call the New Teaching, which makes them bad by definition, of
course. But what is bad for the Qing dynasty is precisely what
appeals to the young Muslim men. There is a lot that is new out
there. West of the Black Mountains things are changing fast.'
'As always.'
'Yes, but faster.'
Kang said slowly, 'China is a country of slow
change.'
'Or, depending on the temperament of the Emperor, no
change at all. In any case, neither Khafiya or jahriya can
challenge the strength of the Emperor.'
'Of course.'
'As a result, they fight each other a lot. And because
the Qing armies now control the land all the way to the Pamirs,
land that once was composed of independent Muslim emirates, the
jahriya are convinced that Islam must be returned to its roots, in
order to retake what was once a part of Dar al Islam.'
'Unlikely, if the Emperor wants it.'
'Yes. But most of those who say these things have never
even visited the interior, much less lived there like you and me.
So they cannot know the power of China. They only see these little
garrisons, the soldiers spread out by the tens and scores over this
immense land.'
Kang said, 'That would make a difference. Well. You seem to have
brought me out to a land filled with qi.'
'I hope it will not be too bad. What is needed, if you
ask me, is a comprehensive history and analysis that will
show the basic underlying identity of the teachings of Islam and
Confucius.'
qi: in this case 'malign energy'. Sometimes translated as
'vital essence' or 'psych ophysical stuff', or 'bad
vibrations'.
Kang's eyebrows shot up. 'You think so?'
'I am sure of it. It is my task. It has been for twenty
years now.'
Kang composed her face. 'You will have to show me this
labour.'
'I would like that very much. And perhaps you can help me
with the Chinese version of it. I intend to publish it in Chinese,
Persian, Turkic, Arabic, Hindi, and other languages, if I can find
translators.'
Kang nodded. 'I will help it happily, if my ignorance
does not prevent it.'
The household became settled, with everyone's routine
established much as it had been before. The same celebrations and
festivals were held by the small crowd of Han Chinese exiled to
this remote region, who worked on festival days to build temples on
the bluffs overlooking the river. To these festivals were added the
Muslim holy days, major events for most of the town's
occupants.
Every month more Muslims came in from the west. Muslims;
Confucians; a few Buddhists, these usually Tibetan or Mongolian;
almost no Daoists. Mainly Lanzhou was a town of Muslims and Han
Chinese, co existing uneasily, though they had been doing it
for centuries, only mixing in the occasional cross marriage.
This twofold nature of the region was an immediate
problem for Kang's arrangements concerning Shih. If he was going to
continue his studies for the government examinations, it was time
to start him with a tutor. He did not want to do this. One
alternative was to study in one of the local madressas, thus in
effect converting to Islam. This of course was unthinkable -- to
Widow Kang. Shih and Ibrahim seemed to consider it within the realm
of possibility. Shih tried to extend the time given him to make up
his mind. I'm only seven, he said. Turn east or west, Ibrahim said.
Both said to the boy, You can't just do nothing.
Kang insisted he continue his studies for the imperial
service examinations. 'This is what his father would have
wanted.' Ibrahim agreed with the plan, as he considered it likely
they would return to the interior some day, where passing the exams
was crucial to one's hopes of advancement.
Shih, however, did not want to study anything. He claimed
an interest in Islam, which Ibrahim could not help but approve, if
warily. But Shih's childish interest was in the Jahriya mosques,
filled with chanting, song, dancing, sometimes drinking and
self flagellation. These direct expressions of faith trumped
any possible intellectualism, and not only that, they often led to
exciting fights with Khafiya youth.
'The truth is he likes whatever course allows him the
least work,' Kang said darkly. 'He must study for the examination,
no matter if he turns Muslim or not.'
Ibrahim agreed to this, and Shih was forced by both of
them to attend to his studies. He grew less interested in Islam as
it became clear that if he chose that path, he would merely add
another course of study to his workload.
It should not have been so hard for him to devote himself
to books and scholarship, for certainly it was the dominant
activity in the household. Kang had taken advantage of the move
west to gather all the poems in her possession into a single trunk,
and now she was leaving most of the wool work and embroidery to the
servant girls, and spending her days going through these thick
sheaves of paper, re reading her own voluminous bundles of
poems, and also those of the friends, family and strangers she had
collected over the years. The well off respectable women of
south China had written poems compulsively for the whole of the
Ming and Qing dynasties, and now, going through her small sample of
them, numbering twenty six thousand or so, Kang spoke to
Ibrahim of the patterns she was beginning to see in the choice of
topics: the pain of concubinage, of physical enclosure and
restriction (she was too discreet to mention the actual forms this
sometimes took, and Ibrahim studiously avoided looking at her feet,
staring her hard in the eye); the grinding repetitive work of the
years of rice and salt; the pain and danger and exaltation of
childbirth, the huge primal shock of being brought up as the
precious pet of her family, only to be forced to marry, and in that
very instant become something like a slave to a family of
strangers. Kang spoke feelingly of the permanent sense of rupture
and dislocation caused by this basic event of women's lives: 'It is
like living through a reincarnation with one's mind intact, a death
and rebirth in a lower world, as both hungry ghost and beast of
burden, while still holding full memory of the time when you were
queen of the world! And for the concubines it's even worse, descent
down through the realms of beast and preta, into hell itself. And
there are more concubines than wives.'
Ibrahim would nod, and encourage her to write on these
matters, and also to collect the best of the poems she had in her
possession, into an anthology like Yun Zhu's 'Correct Beginnings',
recently published in Nanjing. 'As she says herself in her
introduction,' Ibrahim pointed out, Foreach one I
have recorded, there must be ten thousand I have omitted." And how
many of those ten thousand were more revealing than hers, more
dangerous than hers?'
'Nine thousand and nine hundred,' Kang replied, though
she loved Yun Zhu's anthology very much.
So she began to organize an anthology, and Ibrahim helped
by asking his colleagues back in the interior, and to the west and
south, to send any women's poems they could obtain. Over time this
process grew, like rice in the pot, until whole rooms of their new
compound were filled with stacks of paper, carefully marked by Kang
as to author, province, dynasty and the like. She spent most of her
time on this work, and appeared completely absorbed in it.
Once she came to Ibrahim with a sheet of paper. 'Listen,'
she said, voice low and serious. 'It's by a Dai Lanying, and
called, "On the Night Before Giving Birth to My First Child".' She
read: Onthe night before I first
gave birth
The ghost of the old monk Bai Appeared before me. He said,
With your permission, Lady, I will come back As your child. In
that moment I knew reincarnation was real. I said,
What have you been, what kind of person are you Thus to replace
the soul already in me?
He said, I have been yours before I've followed you through all
the ages Trying to make you happy. Let me in And I will try
again. -- Kang looked at Ibrahim, who nodded. 'It must
have happened to her as it happened to us,' he said. 'Those are the
moments that teach us something greater is going on.'
When she took breaks from her labours as an anthologist,
Kang Tongbi also spent a fair number of her afternoons out in the
streets of Lanzhou. This was something new. She took a servant
girl, and two of the biggest servant men in their employ,
heavy bearded Muslim men who wore short curved swords in their
belts, and she walked the streets, the riverbank strand, the
pathetic city square and the dusty markets around it, and the
promenade on top of the city wall that surrounded the old part of
town, giving a good view over the south shore of the river. She
bought several different kinds of 'butterfly shoes' as they were
called, which fitted her delicate little feet and yet extended out
beyond them, to make the appearance of normal feet, and --
depending on their design and materials -- provide her with some
extra support and balance. She would buy any butterfly shoes she
found in the market that had a different design to those she
already owned. None of them seemed to Pao to help her walking very
much -- she was still slow, with her usual short and crimping gait.
But she preferred walking to being carried, even though the town
was bare and dusty, and either too hot or too cold, and always
windy. She walked observing everything very closely as she made her
slow way along.
'Why have you given up sedan chairs?' Pao complained one
day as they trudged home.
Kang only said, 'I read this morning, "Great principles
are as weighty as a thousand years. This floating life is as light
as a grain of rice. -- 'Not to me.'
'At least you have good feet.'
'It's not true. They're big but they hurt anyway. I can't
believe you won't take the chair.'
'You have to have dreams, Pao.'
'Well, I don't know. As my mother used to say, "A painted
rice cake doesn't satisfy hunger. -- 'The monk Dogen heard
that expression, and replied by saying, "Without painted hunger you
never become a true person. -- Every year for the
spring equinoctial festivals of Buddhism and Islam, they made a
trip out to Qinghai Lake, and stood on the shore of the great
bluegreen sea to renew their commitment to life, burning incense
and paper money, and praying each in their own way. Exhilarated by
the sights of the journey, Kang would return to Lanzhou and throw
herself into her various projects with tremendous intensity.
Before, in Hangzhou, her ceaseless activity had been a wonder to
the servants; now it was a terror. Every day she filled with what
normal people would do in a week.
Ibrahim meanwhile continued to work away at his great
reconciliation of the two religions, colliding now in Gansu right
before their eyes. The Gansu Corridor was the great pass between
the east and west halves of the world, and the long caravans of
camels that had headed cast to Shaanxi or west to the Pamirs since
time immemorial were now joined by immense trains of
oxen hauled wagons, coming mostly from the west, but also from
the east. Muslim and Chinese alike settled in the region, and
Ibrahim talked to the leaders of the various factions, and
collected texts and read them, and sent letters to scholars all
over the world, and wrote his books for many hours every day. Kang
helped him in this work, as he helped her in hers, but as the
months passed, and they saw the increasing conflict in the region,
her help more and more took the form of criticism, of pressure on
his ideas -- as he sometimes pointed out, when he felt a little
tired or defensive.
Kang was remorseless, in her usual way. 'Look,' she would
say, 'you can't just talk your way out of these problems.
Differences are differences! Look here, your Wang Daiyu, a most
inventive thinker, takes great trouble to equate the Five Pillars
of the Islamic Faith with the Five Virtues of Confucianism.'
'That's right,' Ibrahim said. 'They combine to make the
Five Constants, as he calls them, true everywhere and for everyone,
unchanging. Creed in Islam is Confucius's benevolence, or ren.
Charity is yi, or righteousness. Prayer is li, propriety, fasting
is shi, knowledge. And pilgrimage is xin, faith in humankind.'
Kang threw her hands up. 'Listen to what you are saying!
These concepts have almost nothing to do with each other!
Charity is not righteousness, not at all! Fasting is not knowledge!
And so it is no surprise to find that your teacher from the
interior, Liu Zhi, identifies the same Five Pillars of Islam not
with the Five Virtues, but with the Five Relationships, the Wugang
not the Wuchang! And he too has to twist the words, the concepts,
beyond all recognition to make the correspondences between the two
groups fit. Two different sets of bad results! If you pursue the
same course they did, then anything can be matched to
anything.'
Ibrahim pursed his lips, looking displeased, but he did
not contradict her. Instead he said, 'Liu Zhi made a distinction
between the two ways, as well as finding their similarities. For
him, the Way of heaven, tiando, is best expressed by Islam, the Way
of Humanity, rendao, by Confucianism. Thus the Quran is the sacred
book, but the Analects express the principles fundamental to all
humans.'
Kang shook her head again. 'Maybe so, but the mandarins
of the interior will never believe that the sacred Book of Heaven
came from Tiangfang. How could they, when only China matters to
them? The Middle Kingdom, halfway between heaven and earth; the
Dragon Throne, home of the Jade Emperor -- the rest of the world is
simply the place of barbarians, and could not possibly be the
origin of something as important as the sacred book of Heaven.
Meanwhile, turning to your shaikhs and caliphs in the west, how can
they ever accept the Chinese, who do not believe at all in their
one god? This is the most important aspect of their faith!' And she
muttered, 'As if there could ever only be one god.'
Again Ibrahim looked troubled. But he insisted: 'The
fundamental way is the same. And with the empire extending
westwards, and more Muslims coming east, there simply must be some
kind of synthesis. We will not be able to get along without
it.'
Kang shrugged. 'Maybe so. But you cannot mix oil and
vinegar.'
'Ideas are not chemicals. Or, they are like the Daoists'
mercury and sulphur, combining to make every kind of thing.'
'Please don't tell me you plan to become an
alchemist.'
'No. Only in the realm of ideas, where the great
transmutation remains to be made. After all, look at what the
alchemists have accomplished in the world of matter. All the new
machines, the new things . . .'
'Rock is much more malleable than ideas.'
'I hope not. You must admit, there have been other great
collisions of civilizations before, making a synthetic culture. In
India, for instance, Islam invaders conquered a very ancient Hindu
civilization, and the two have often been at war since, but the
prophet Nanak brought the values of the two together, and that is
the Sikhs, who believe in Allah and karma, in reincarnation and in
divine judgment. He found the harmony beneath the discord, and now
the Sikhs are among the most powerful groups in India. Indeed,
India's best hope, given all its wars and troubles. We need
something like that here.'
Kang nodded. 'But maybe we have it already. Maybe it has
been here all along, before Mohammed or Confucius, in the form of
Buddhism.'
Ibrahim frowned, and Kang laughed her short unhumorous
laugh. She was teasing him while at the same time she was serious,
a combination very common in her dealings with her new husband.
'You must admit, the material is at hand. There are more
Buddhists out here in these wastelands than anywhere else.'
He muttered something about Lanka and Burma.
'Yes yes,' she said. 'Also Tibet, Mongolia, the Annamese,
the Thais and Malays. Always they are there, you notice, in the
border zone between China and Islam. Already there. And the
teachings are very fundamental. The most fundamental of all.'
Ibrahim sighed. 'You will have to teach me.'
She nodded, pleased.
In that year, the forty third year of the reign of
the Qianlong Emperor, an influx of Muslim families greater than
ever before came in from the west on the old Silk Road, speaking
all manner of languages and including women and children, and even
animals. Whole villages and towns had emptied and their occupants
headed east, apparently, driven by intensifying wars between the
Iranians, Afghans and Kazakhs, and the civil wars of Fulan. Most of
the new arrivals were Shiites, Ibrahim said, but there were many
other kinds of Muslims as well, Naqshabandis, Wahhabis, different
kinds of sufis ... As Ibrahim tried to explain it to Kang, she
pursed her lips in disapproval. 'Islam is as broken as a vase
dropped on the floor.'
Later, seeing the violent reaction to the newcomers from
the Muslims already ensconced in Gansu, she said, 'It's like
throwing oil on a fire. They will end up all killing each
other.'
She did not sound particularly distressed. Shih was again
asking to study in a jahriya qong, claiming that his desire to
convert to Islam had returned, which she was sure represented only
laziness at his studies, and an urge to rebellion that was
troubling in one so young. Meanwhile she had had ample opportunity
to observe Muslim women in Lanzhou, and while before she had often
complained that Chinese women were oppressed by men, she now
declared that Muslim women had it far worse. 'Look at that,' she
said to Ibrahim one day on their riverside verandah. 'They are
hidden like goddesses behind their veils, but treated like cows.
You can marry as many as you like of them, and so none of them have
any family protection. And there's not a single one of them who can
read. It's disgraceful.'
'Chinese men take concubines,' Ibrahim pointed out.
'Nowhere is it a good thing to be a woman,' Kang replied
irritably. 'But concubines are not wives, they don't have the same
family rights.'
'So things are only better in China if you are
married.'
'This is true everywhere. But not to be able to read,
even the daughters of the rich and educated men! To be cut off from
literature, to be unable to write letters to your birth family . .
.'
This was something Kang never did, but Ibrahim did not
mention that. He only shook his head.
'It was far worse for women before Mohammed brought Islam
to the world.'
'That says very little. How bad it must have been before,
and that was over a thousand years ago, correct? What barbarians
they must have been. By then Chinese women had enjoyed two thousand
years of secure privileges.'
Ibrahim was frowning at this, looking down. He did not
reply.
All over Lanzhou they saw signs of change. The iron mines
of Xinjiang fuelled the foundries being built upstream and down
from the town, and the new influx of potential foundry workers made
possible many more expansions, in ironworks and construction more
generally. One of the main products of these foundries was cannon,
and so the town garrison was beefed up, the Green Standard Chinese
guards supplemented by Manchu horsemen. The foundries were under
permanent order to sell all their guns to the Qianlong, so that the
weaponry flowed only east towards the interior. As most of the
workers were Muslim -- and dirty work it was -- quite a few guns
made their way west in defiance of the imperial edict. This caused
more military surveillance, larger garrisons of Chinese, more
Manchu banners, and increased friction between local workers and
the Qing garrison. It was not a situation that could last.
The longer term residents could only watch things
degenerate. There was nothing any one individual could do. Ibrahim
continued to work for a good relationship between the hui and the
Emperor, but this made him enemies among the new arrivals, intent
on revival and jihad.
In the midst of all this trouble, Kang told Pao one day
that she found herself to be pregnant. Pao was shocked, and Kang
herself appeared to be stunned.
'An abortion might be arranged,' Pao whispered, looking
the other way.
Kang politely declined. 'I will have to be an old mother.
You must help me.'
'Oh we will, I will.'
Ibrahim too was surprised by the news, but he adjusted
quickly. 'It will be good to see a child come of our union. Like
our books, but alive.'
'It might be a daughter.'
'If Allah wills it, who am I to object?'
Kang studied his face closely, then nodded and went
away.
Now she seldom went out into the streets, and then only
by day, and in a chair. After dark it would be too dangerous in any
case. No respectable people remained out after dark now, only gangs
of young men, often drunk, jahriya or Khafiya or neither, though
usually it was the jahriyas spoiling for a fight. The babblers
versus the deafmutes, as Kang said contemptuously.
Indeed, it was intra Muslim battling that caused the
first great disaster of the troubles, or so Ibrahim judged. Hearing
of the fighting between jahriya and Khafiya, a banner
arrived with a high Qing official,
A banner: a horse detachment of up to a thousand men.
Xirizhu, who joined Yang Shiji, the town's prefect.
Ibrahim came back from a meeting with these men deeply
troubled.
'They, don't understand,' he said. 'They talk about
insurrection, but no one out here is thinking of the great
enterprise, how could they be?
We are so far from the interior that people out here
barely know what China is. It is only local quarrelling, but they
come out here thinking they are bound for real war.'
The great enterprise: dynastic replacement.
Despite Ibrahim's reassurances, the new officials had Ma
Mingxin arrested. Ibrahim shook his head gloomily. Then the new
banners marched out into the countryside to the west. They met with
the Salar jahriya chief, Su Forty three, at Baizhuangzi. The
Salars had concealed their weapons, and they claimed to be
adherents of the Old Teaching. Hearing this, Xinzhu announced to
them he intended to eliminate the New Teaching, and Su's men
promptly attacked the company and stabbed both Xinzhu and Yang
Shiji to death.
When the news of this violence got back to Lanzhou with
the Manchu horsemen who had managed to escape the assault, Ibrahim
groaned with frustration and anger. 'Now it really is
insurrection,' he said. 'Under Qing law, it will go very bad for
all concerned. How could they be so stupid?'
A large force arrived soon thereafter, and was attacked
by Su Forty three's band; and after that, more imperial troops
arrived. In response Su Forty three and an army of two
thousand men attacked Hezhou, then crossed the river on pifaci and
camped right outside Lanzhou itself. All of a sudden they were
indeed in a war.
Pilaci: hide rafts that for centuries had allowed people
to cross the Yellow, Wei and Tao Rivers.
The Qing authorities who had survived the jahriya ambush
had Ma Mingxin shown on the town walls, and his followers cried out
to see his chains, and prostrated themselves, crying 'Shaikh!
Shaikh!' audibly from across the river and from the hilltops
overlooking the town. Having thus identified the rebels' leader
definitively, the authorities had him hauled down off the wall and
beheaded.
When the jahriya learned what had happened they were
frantic for revenge. They had no equipment for a proper siege of
Lanzhou, so they built a fort on a nearby hill, and began
systematically to attack any movement into or out of the city
walls. The Qing officials in Beijing were informed of the
harassment, and they reacted angrily to this assault on a
provincial capital, and sent out imperial Commissioner Agui, one of
the Qianlong's senior military governors, to pacify the region.
This he failed to do, and life in Lanzhou grew lean and
cold. Finally Agui sent Hushen, his chief military officer, back to
Beijing, and when he came back out with new imperial orders, he
called up a very large armed militia of Gansu Tibetans, also
Alashan Mongols, and all the men from the other Green Standard
garrisons in the region. Such ferocious huge men now walked the
streets of the town that it seemed it was only a big barracks.
'It's an old Han technique,' Ibrahim said with some bitterness.
'Pit the non Hans against each other out on the frontier, and
let them kill each other.'
Thus reinforced, Agui was able to cut off the water
supply from the jahriyas' hilltop fort across the river, and the
tables were turned; besieger became besieged, as in a game of go.
At the end of three months, word came into town that the final
battle had occurred, and Su Forty three and every single one
of his thousands of men had been killed.
Ibrahim was gloomy at this news. 'That won't be the end
of it. They'll want revenge for Ma Mingxin, and for those men. The
more the jahriya are put down, the more young Muslim men will turn
to them. The oppression itself makes the rebellion!'
'It's like the soul stealing craze,' Kang noted.
Ibrahim nodded, and redoubled his efforts on his books.
It was as though if he could only reconcile the two civilizations
on paper, the bloody battles happening all around them would come
to an end. So he wrote many hours each day, ignoring the meals set
on his table by the servants. His conversations with Kang were
extensions of his day's thought; and conversely, what his wife said
to him in these conversa tions was often quickly incorporated
into his books. No one else's opin ions were so important to
him. Kang would curse the young Muslim fighters, and say, 'You
Muslims are too religious, to kill and die as you are doing, and
all for such puny differences in dogma, it's crazy!'
'Mohammed Meets Confucius': presumably the work in five
volumes published in the sixtieth year of the Qianlong as
'Reconciliation of the Philosophies of Liu Zhi and Ma Mingxin'.
And soon thereafter Ibrahim's writing in the
immensely long study that Kang had nicknamed 'Mohammed Meets
Confucius' included the following passage: When observing
the tendency towards physical extremism in Islam, ranging from
fasting, whirling and self flagellation, all the way up
to jihad itself, one wonders at its causes, which may be several,
including the words of Mohammed sanctioning jihad, the early
history of Islamic expansion, the harsh and otherworldly desert
landscapes that have been the home of so many Muslim societies,
and, perhaps most importantly, the fact that for Islamic peoples
the religious language is by definition Arabic, and therefore a
second language to the great majority of them. This has fateful
consequences, because one's native tongue is always grounded in a
physical reality by vocabulary, grammar, logic, and metaphors,
images and symbols of all kinds, many of them buried and forgotten
in names themselves; but in the case of Islam, instead of having a
physical reality attached to it linguistically, its sacred language
is detached from all that, for most believers, by its secondary and
translated quality, its only partly learned nature, so
that it conveys only abstract concepts, removed from the world,
conveying the devout into a world of ideas abstracted and detached
from the life of the senses and the physical realities of life,
creating the possibility and even the likelihood of extremism
resulting from a lack of perspective, a lack of grounding. To give
a good example of the kind of linguistic process I mean: Muslims
who have Arabic as a second language do not 'have their feet on the
ground'; their behaviour is all too often directed by abstract
thought, floating alone in the empty space of language. We need the
world. Each situation must be placed in its setting to be
understood. Possibly, therefore, our religion should be taught
mostly in the vernacular tongues, the Quran translated into all the
languages of Earth; or else better instruction in Arabic be given
to all; although taking this road might entail requiring Arabic to
become the first language of all the world, not a practical project
and likely to be regarded as another aspect of jihad . . .
Another time, when Ibrahim was writing about the theory
of dynastic cycles, which was held in common by both Chinese and
Islamic historians and philosophers, his wife had brushed it all
aside like a piece of botched embroidery: 'That's just thinking of
history as if it were the seasons of a year. It's a most
simple--minded metaphor. What if they are nothing at all alike,
what if history meanders like a river for ever, what then?'
And soon afterwards Ibrahim wrote
in his 'Commentary on the Doctrine of the Great Cycle in History':
Ibn Khaldun, the most influential of Muslim historians,
speaks of the great cycle of dynasties in his 'Muqaddimah', and
most of the Chinese historians identify a cyclic pattern in history
as well, beginning with the Han historian Dong Zhongshw in his
'Luxuriant Dew of the Spring and Autumn Annals', a system which
indeed was an elaboration of Confucius himself, and which was
elaborated in its turn by Kang Yuwei, who in his 'Commentary on the
Evolution of Rites' speaks of the Three Ages, each of which,
Disorder, Small Peace and Great Peace, go through internal
rotations of disorder, small peace and great peace, so that the
three become nine, and then eighty one when these are
recombined, and so on. And Hindu religious cosmology, which so far
is that civilization's only statement on history as such, speaks
also of great cycles, first the kalpa which is a day of Brahma,
said to be 4,320,000,000 years long, divided into fourteen
manvantaras, each of which is divided into seventy one
maha yugas, length 3,320,000 years. Each maha yuga or
Great Age is divided into four ages, Sarya yuga, the age of
peace, Treta yuga, Dvaparayuga and Kali yuga, said to be
our current age, an age of decline and despair, awaiting renewal.
These spans of time, so vastly greater than those of the other
civilizations, seemed to many earlier commentators excessive, but
it must be said that, the more we learn of the antiquity of the
Earth, with stone seashells found on mountaintops, and layers of
rock deposits enjambed perpendicularly to each other, and so on,
the more the introspections of India seem to have pierced through
the veil of the past most accurately to the true scale of
things.
But in all of them, in any case, the cycles are only
observed by ignoring most of what has been recorded as actually
happening in the past, and are very probably theories based on the
turning of the year and the return of the seasons, with
civilizations seen as leaves on a tree, going through a cycle of
growth and decay and new growth. It may be that history itself has
no such pattern to it, and that civilizations each create a unique
fate that cannot be read into a cyclic pattern without doing damage
to what really happened in the world.
Thus the extremely rapid spread of Islam seems to support
no particular cyclic pattern, while its success perhaps resulted
from it proposing not a cycle but a progress towards God, a
very simple message resisting the great urge to elaboration
that fills most of the world's philosophies in favour of
comprehensibility by the masses.
Kang Tongbi was also writing a great deal at this time,
compiling her anthologies of women's poetry, arranging them into
groups and writing commentaries on what they meant in the
aggregate. She also began, with her husband's help, a 'Treatise on
the History of the Women of Hunan', in which her thoughts very
often reflected, or commented on, those of her husband, just as his
did hers; so that later scholars were able to collate the writings
of the two during their Lanzhou years, and construct of them a kind
of ongoing dialogue or duct.
Kang's opinions were her own, however, and often would
not have been agreed with by Ibrahim. Later that year, for
instance, frustrated by the irrational nature of the conflict now
tearing the region apart, and fearful of greater conflict to come,
feeling as if they were living under a great storm cloud about to
burst on them, Kang wrote in her 'Treatise':
So you see systems of thought and religion coming out of
the kinds of societies that invented them. The means by which
people feed themselves determine how they think and what they
believe. Agricultural societies believe in rain gods and seed gods
and gods for every manner of thing that might affect the harvest
(China). People who herd animals believe in a single shepherd god
(Islam). In both these kinds of cultures you see a primitive notion
of gods as helpers, as big people watching from above, like parents
who nevertheless act like bad children, deciding capriciously whom
to reward and whom not to, on the basis of craven sacrifices made
to them by the humans dependent on their whim. The religions that
say you should sacrifice or even pray to a god like that, to ask
them to do something material for you, are the religions of
desperate and ignorant people. It is only when you get to the more
advanced and secure societies that you get a religion ready to face
the universe honestly, to announce there is no clear sign of
divinity, except for the existence of the cosmos in and of itself,
which means that everything is holy, whether or not there be a god
looking down on it.
Ibrahim read this in manuscript and shook his head, sighing. 'I
have married one wiser than myself,' he said to his empty room. 'I
am a lucky man. But sometimes I wish that I had chosen to study not
ideas, but things. Somehow I have drifted outside the range of my
talent.'
Every day news of more Qing suppression of Muslims came
to them. Supposedly the Old Teaching was favoured over the New
Teaching, but ignorant and ambitious officials arrived from the
interior, and mistakes were made more than once. Ma Wuyi, for
instance, the successor to Ma Laichi, not to Ma Mingxin, was
ordered to move with his adherents west to Tibet. Old Teaching to
new territory, people said, shaking their heads at the bureaucratic
mistake, which was sure to get people killed . It became the third
of the Five Great Errors of the suppression campaign. And the
disorder grew.
Eventually a Chinese Muslim named Tian Wu rallied the
jahriyas openly, to revolt and free themselves from Beijing. This
happened just north of Gansu, and so everyone in Lanzhou stockpiled
again for war.
Soon the banners came, and like everything else the war
had to move through the Gansu Corridor to get from east to west. So
though much of the fighting took place far away in eastern Gansu,
the news of it in Lanzhou was constant, as was the movement of
troops through town.
Kang Tongbi found it unnerving to have the major battles
of this revolt happening east of them, between them and the
interior. It was several weeks before the Qing army managed to put
down Tian Wu's force, even though Tian Wu had been killed almost
immediately. Soon after that, news came that Qing general Li Shiyao
had ordered the slaughter of over a thousand jahriya women and
children in east Gansu.
Ibrahim was in despair. 'Now all the Muslims in China are
jahriya in their hearts.'
'Maybe so,' Kang said cynically, 'but I see it doesn't
keep them from accepting jahriya lands confiscated by the
government.'
But it was also true that jahriya orders were springing
up everywhere now, in Xizang, Turkestan, Mongolia, Manchuria, and
all the way south to distant Yunnan. No other Muslim sect had ever
attracted so many adherents, and many of the refugees streaming in
from the wars to the far west became jahriya the moment they
arrived, happy after the confusions of Muslim civil war to join a
straightforward jihad against infidels.
Even during all this trouble, in the evenings Ibrahim and
the heavily pregnant Kang would retire to their verandah and watch
the Tao River flow into the Yellow River. They talked over the news
and their day's work, comparing poems or religious texts, as if
these were the only things that really mattered. Kang tried to
learn the Arabic alphabet, which she found difficult, but
instructive.
'Look,' she would say, 'there is no way to mark the
sounds of Chinese in this alphabet, not really. And no doubt the
same is true the other way around!' She gestured at the rivers'
confluence. 'You have said the two peoples can mix like the waters
of these two rivers. Maybe so. But see the ripple line where
the two meets. See the clear water, still there in the yellow.'
'But a hundred li downstream . Ibrahim suggested.
'Maybe. But I wonder. Truly, you must become like these
Sikhs you talk about, who combine what is best from the old
religions, and make something new.'
'What about Buddhism?' Ibrahim asked. 'You say it has
already changed Chinese religion completely. How can we apply it to
Islam as well?'
She thought about it. 'I'm not sure it's possible. The
Buddha said there are no gods, rather that there are sentient
beings in everything, even clouds and rocks. Everything holy.'
Ibrahim sighed. 'There has to be a god. The universe
could not arise from nothing.'
'We don't know that.'
'I believe Allah made it. But now, it may be that it is
up to us. He gave us free will to see what we would do. Again,
Islam and China may have two parts of the whole truth. Perhaps
Buddhism has another part. And we must find whole sight. Or all
will be desolation.'
Darkness fell on the river.
'You must raise Islam to the next level,' Kang said.
Ibrahim shuddered. 'Sufism has been trying to do that for
centuries. The sufis try to rise up, the Wahhabis drag them back
down, claiming there can be no improvement, no progress. And here
the Emperor crushes both!'
'Not so. The Old Teaching has standing in imperial law,
the books by your Liu Zhu are in the imperial collection of sacred
texts. It's not like with the Daoists. Even Buddhism finds no
favour with the Emperor, compared to Islam.'
'So it used to be,' Ibrahim said. 'As long as it stayed
quiet, out here in the west. Now these young hotheads are inflaming
the situation, wrecking all chance of co--existence.'
There was nothing Kang could say to that. It was what she
had been saying all along.
Now it was fully dark. No prudent citizen would be out in
the streets of the rude little town, walled through it was. It was
too dangerous.
News arrived with a new influx of refugees from the west.
The Ottoman sultan had apparently made alliances with the steppes
emirates north of the Black Sea, descendant states of the Golden
Horde that had only recently come out of anarchic conditions, and
together they had defeated the armies of the Safavid empire,
shattering the Shlite stronghold in Iran and continuing east into
the disorganized emirates of central Asia and the silk roads. The
result was chaos all the across the middle of the world, more war
in Iraq and Syria, widespread famine and destruction; although it
was said that with the Ottoman victory, peace might come to the
western half of the world. Meanwhile, thousands of Shiites Muslims
were headed cast over the Pamirs, where they thought sympathetic
reformist states were in power. They did not seem to know that
China was there.
'Tell me more about what the Buddha said,' Ibrahim would
say in the evenings on the verandah. 'I have the impression it is
all very primitive and self concerned. You know: things are
the way they are, one adapts to that, focuses on oneself. All is
well. But obviously things in this world are not well. Can Buddhism
speak to that? Is there an "ought to" in it, as well as an
"is"?'
Ifyou want to help others,
practise compassion. If you want to help yourself, practise
compassion." This the Tibetans' Dalai Lama said. And Buddha himself
said to Sigala, who worshipped the six directions, that the noble
discipline would interpret the six directions as parents, teachers,
spouse and children, friends, servants and employees, and religious
people. All these should be worshipped, he said. Worshipped, do you
understand? As holy things. The people in your life! Thus daily
life becomes a form of worship, do you see? It's not a matter of
praying on Friday and then the rest of the week terrorizing the
world.'
'This is not what Allah calls for, I assure you.'
'No. But you have your jihads, yes? And now it seems the
whole of Dar al Islam is at war, conquering each other or
strangers. Buddhists never conquer anything. In the Buddha's ten
directives to the Good King, non violence, compassion and
kindness are the matter of more than half of them. Asoka was laying
waste to India when he was young, and then he became Buddhist, and
never killed another man. He was the good king personified.'
'But not often imitated.'
'No. But we live in barbarous times. Buddhism spreads by
people converting out of their own wish for peace and right action.
But power condenses around those willing to use force. Islam will
use force, the Emperor will use force. They will rule the world. Or
fight over it, until it is all destroyed.'
Another time she said, 'What I find interesting is that
of all these religious figures of ancient times, only the Buddha
did not claim to be a god, or to be talking to God. The others all
claim to be God, or God's son, or to be taking dictation from God.
Whereas the Buddha simply said, there is no God. The universe
itself is holy, human beings are sacred, all the sentient beings
are sacred and can work to be enlightened, and one must only pay
attention to daily life, the middle way, and give thanks and
worship in daily action. It is the most unassuming of religions.
Not even a religion, but more a way to live.'
'What about these statues of Buddha I see everywhere, and
the worship in the Buddhist temples? You yourself spend a great
deal of time at prayer.'
'Partly the Buddha is revered as the exemplary man.
Simple minds might have it otherwise, no doubt. But these are
mostly people who worship everything that moves, and Buddha is just
one god among many others. They miss the point. In India they made
him an avatar of Vishnu, an avatar who is deliberately trying to
mislead people away from the proper worship of Brahman, isn't that
right? No, many people miss the point. But it is there for all to
see, if they would.'
'And your prayers?'
'I pray to see things better.'
Quickly enough the jahriya insurrection was crushed, and the
western part of the empire apparently at peace. But now there were
deep seated forces, driven underground, that were working all
the while for a Muslim rebellion. Ibrahim feared that even the
Great Enterprise was no longer out of the question. People spoke of
trouble in the interior, of Han secret societies and brotherhoods,
dedicated to the eventual overthrow of the Manchu rulers and a
return to the Ming dynasty. So even Han Chinese could not be
trusted by the imperial government; the dynasty was Manchu after
all, outsiders, and even the extremely punctilious Confucianism of
the Qianlong Emperor could not obscure this basic fact of the
situation. If the Muslims in the western part of the empire
revolted, there would be Chinese in the interior and the south
coast who would regard it as an opportunity to pursue their own
rebellion; and the empire might be shattered. Certainly it seemed
that the sheng shi, the peak of this particular dynastic cycle (if
there were any such thing) had passed.
This danger Ibrahim memorialized to the Emperor
repeatedly, urging him to infold the Old Teaching even more firmly
into imperial favour, making Islam one of the imperial religions in
law as well as fact, as China in the past had infolded Buddhism and
Daoism.
No reply ever came to these memoranda, and judging by the
contents of the beautiful vermilion calligraphy brushed at the
bottom of other petitions returned from the Emperor to Lanzhou, it
seemed unlikely that Ibrahim's would be received any more
favourably. 'Why am I surrounded by knaves and fools?' one imperial
commentary read. 'The coffers have been filling with gold and
silver from Yingzhou for every year of our rule, and we have never
been more prosperous.'
He had a point, no doubt; and knew more about the empire
than anyone else. Still, Ibrahim persevered. Meanwhile more
refugees came pouring east, until the Gansu Corridor, Shaarixi, and
Xining were all crowded with new arrivals -- all Muslim, but not
necessarily friendly towards each other, and oblivious of their
Chinese hosts. Lanzhou appeared to be prospering, the markets were
jammed, the mines and foundries and smithies and factories were all
pouring out armaments, and new machinery of all kinds, threshers,
power looms, carts; but the ramshackle west end of town now
extended along the bank of the Yellow River for many li, and both
banks of the Tao River were slums, where people lived in tents, or
in the open air. No one in town recognized the place any
more, and everyone stayed behind locked doors at night, if they
were prudent.
Child of mine coming into this world Be careful where you
take yourself. So many ways for things to go wrong; Sometimes I
grow afraid. If only we lived in the Age of Great Peace I could be
happy to see your innocent face Watching the geese fly south in the
fall.
Once Kang was helping Ibrahim clean up the clutter of
books and paper, inkstones and brushes in his study, and she
stopped to read one of his pages.
'History can be seen as a series of collisions of
civilizations, and it is these collisions that create progress and
new things. It may not happen at the actual point of contact, which
is often racked by disruption and war, but behind the lines of
conflict, where the two cultures are most trying to define
themselves and prevail, great progress is often made very swiftly,
with works of permanent distinction in arts and technique. Ideas
flourish as people try to cope, and over time the competition
yields to the stronger ideas, the more flexible, more generous
ideas. Thus Fulan, India and Yingzhou are prospering in their
disarray, while China grows weak from its monolithic nature,
despite the enormous infusion of gold from across the Dahai. No
single civilization could ever progress; it is always a matter of
two or more colliding. Thus the waves on the shore never rise
higher than when the backwash of some earlier wave falls back into
the next one incoming, and a white line of water jets up to a
startling height. History may not resemble so much the seasons of a
year, as waves in the sea, running this way and that, crossing,
making patterns, sometimes a triple peak, a very Diamond Mountain
of cultural energy, for a time.'
Kang put the sheet down, looked at her husband fondly.
'If only it were true,' she said to herself.
'What?' He looked up.
'You are a good man, husband. But it may be you have
taken on an impossible task, out of your goodness.'
Then, in the forty sixth year of the Qianlong Emperor's
reign, rain fell for all of the third month. Everywhere the land
was flooded, just at the time when Kang Tongbi was nearing her
confinement. Whether general rebellion across the west broke out
because of the misery caused by the floods, or was calculatedly
initiated to take advantage of the disaster's confusion, no one
could say. But Muslim insurgents attacked town after town, and
while Shiite and Wahhabi and Jahriya and Khafiya factions murdered
each other in mosque and alleyway, Qing banners too went down
before the furious attacks of the rebels. It became so serious that
the bulk of the imperial army was rumoured to be heading west; but
meanwhile the devastation was widespread, and in Gansu the food
began to run out.
Lanzhou was again besieged, this time by a coalition of
immigrant Muslim rebels of all sects and national origins.
Ibrahim's household did everything it could to protect the mistress
of the house in her late pregnancy. But even this high in its
watershed, the Yellow River had risen dangerously with the rains,
and being located at the confluence of the Yellow and the Tao made
things worse for their compound. The town's high bluff began to
look not so high. It was a frightening sight to see the rivers
risen so startlingly, brown and foaming at the very tops of their
banks. Finally, on the fifteenth day of the tenth month, when an
imperial army was a day's march downstream, and relief of the siege
therefore almost in sight, the rain fell harder than ever, and the
rivers rose and spilled over their banks.
Someone, rebels everyone assumed, chose this worst of all
moments to break the dam upstream on the Tao River, sending an
immense muddy flow of water ripping down the watershed, over the
Tao's already overtopped banks, rushing into the Yellow River and
even backing up the larger stream, so that all was brown water,
spreading up into the hills on each side of the narrow river
valley. By the time the imperial army arrived the whole of Lanzhou
was covered with a sheet of dirty brown water, to knee height, and
rising still.
Ibrahim had already gone out to meet the imperial army,
taken there by the governor of Lanzhou to consult with the new
command, and to help them find rebel authorities to negotiate with.
So as the water rose inexorably around the walls of Ibrahim's
compound, there were only the women of the household and a few
servants to deal with the flood.
The compound wall and sandbags at the gates appeared to
be adequate to protect them, but then word of the broken dam and
its surge of water was shouted into the compound by people
departing for higher ground.
'Come quickly,' Zunli cried. 'We must get to higher
ground too. We must leave now!'
Kang Tongbi ignored him. She was busy stuffing trunks
with her papers and with Ibrahim's. There were rooms and rooms full
of books and papers, as Zunli exclaimed when he saw what she was
doing. There wasn't time to save them all.
'Then help me,' Kang grated, working at a furious
clip.
'How will we move it all?'
'Put the boxes in the sedan chair, quickly.'
'But how will you go?'
'I will walk! Go! Go! Go!'
They stuffed boxes. 'This isn't right,' Zunli protested,
looking at Kang's rounded form. 'Ibrahim would want you to leave.
He wouldn't worry about these books!'
'Yes he would!' she shouted. 'Pack! Get the rest in here
and pack!'
Zunli did what he could. A wild hour of racing around in
a pure panic had him and the other servants exhausted, but Kang
Tongbi was just getting started.
Finally she relented, and they hurried out the front gate
of the compound, sloshing immediately into knee high brown
water that poured into the compound until they closed the gate
against it. It was a strange sight indeed to see the whole town
become a shallow foamy brown lake. The sedan chair was piled so
full with books and papers that it took all the servants jammed
together under the hoist bars to lift and move it. A low,
hair raising boom of moving water shook the air. The foaming
brown lake that covered both rivers and the town extended into the
hills on all sides, and Lanzhou itself was completely awash. The
servant girls were crying, filling the air with shrieks, shouts,
screams. Pao was nowhere to be seen. Thus it was that only a
mother's ears heard a single boy crying out.
Kang realized: she had forgotten her own son. She turned
and hopped back inside the gate that had been pushed open by water,
unnoticed by the servants staggering under the loaded sedan
chair.
She splashed through rushing water to Shih's room: the compound
itself was already floored by the opaque brown flood.
Shih had apparently been hiding under his bed, and the
water had flushed him out and onto it, where he curled tip
terrified. 'Help! Mother, help me!'
'Come quickly then!'
'I can't! I can't!'
'I can't carry you, Shih. Come on! The servants are all
gone, it's just you and me now!'
'I can't!' And he began to wail, balled up on his bed
like a threeyear old.
Kang stared at him. Her right hand even jerked towards
the gate, as if leaving ahead of the rest of her. She snarled then,
grabbed the boy by the ear and jerked him howling to his feet.
'Walk or I'll tear your ear off, you hui!'
'I'm not the hui! Ibrahim is the hui! Everyone out here
is hui! Ow!' And he howled as she twisted his ear almost off his
head. She dragged him like that through the flooding household to
the gate.
As they passed out the gate a surge of water, a low wave,
washed into them waist high on her, chest high on him. When
it passed the level of the flood stayed higher. They were now
thigh deep in water. The roar was much greater than before.
They couldn't hear each other. No servants were in sight.
Higher ground stood at the end of the lane leading south,
and the city wall was there as well, so Kang sloshed that way,
looking for ber servants. She stumbled and cursed; one of her
butterfly shoes had been sucked away in the tow of water. She
kicked the other one off, proceeded barefoot. Shih seemed to have
fainted, or gone catatonic, and she had to put an arm under his
knees, and lift him up and carry him, resting him on the top shelf
of her pregnant belly. She shouted angrily for her servants, but
could not even hear herself. She slipped once and cried out to
Guanyin, She Who Hears Cries.
Then she saw Xinwu, swimming towards her like an otter
with arms, serious and determined. Behind him Pao was wading
towards her, and Zunli. Xinwu pulled Shih away from Kang and
whacked him on his reddened car. 'That way!' Xinwu shouted loudly
at Shih, pointing out the city wall. Kang was surprised to see Shih
almost run towards it, leaping out of the water time after time. Xinwu stood at
her side and helped her slosh up the lane. She was like a canal
barge being towed upstream, bow waves lapping at her distended
waist. Pao and Zunli joined them and helped her, Pao crying and
shouting 'I went ahead to check the depth, I came back and thought
you were in the chair!' while Zunli was saying something to the
effect that they thought she had gone ahead with Pao. The usual
confusion.
On the city wall the other servants were urging them on,
staring upstream white--eyed with fright. Hurry! their mouths
mouthed. Hurry!
At the foot of the wall the brown water was streaming
hard by. Kang struggled against the flow awkwardly, slipping on her
little feet. People lowered a wooden ladder from the top of the
city wall, and Shih scampered up it. Kang started to climb. She had
never climbed a ladder before, and Xinwu and Pao and Zunli pushing
her from below did not really help. It was hard getting her feet to
curl over the submerged rungs; indeed her feet were not as long as
the rungs were wide. She could get no purchase. Now she could see
out of the corner of her eye a big brown wave, filled with things,
smashing along the wall, sweeping it clean of ladders and
everything else that had been leaned against it. She pulled herself
up by the arms and pegged her foot down onto a dry rung.
Pao and Zunli shoved her up from below, and she was
lifted bodily onto the top of the city wall. Pao and Zunli and
Xinwu shot up beside her. The ladder was pulled up after them just
as the big wave swept by.
Many people had taken refuge up on the wall, as it now
formed a sort of long island in the flood. People on a pagoda
rooftop nearby waved to them. Everyone on the wall was staring at
Kang, who rearranged her gown and pulled her hair out of her face
with her fingers, checking to see that everyone from her compound
was there. Briefly she smiled. It was the first time any of them
had ever seen her smile.
By the time they were reunited with Ibrahim, late that
same day, having been rowed to a hill to the south and above the
flooded town, Kang was done with smiling. She pulled Ibrahim down
next to her, and they sat there in the chaos of people. 'Listen to
me,' she said, hand on her belly, 'if this is a daughter we have
here 'I know,' Ibrahim said.
' If this is a daughter we have been given -- there
will be no more footbinding.'
Four. The Afterlife
Many years later, an age later, two
old people sat on their verandah watching the river flow. In their
time together they had discussed all things, they had even written
a history of the world together, but now they seldom spoke, except
to note some feature of the waning day. Very rarely did they talk
about the past, and they never spoke at all of that time they had
sat together in a dark room, diving into the light of the candle,
and seeing there strange glimpses of former lives. It was too
disturbing to recall the awe and terror of those hours. And besides
the point had been made, the knowledge gained. That they had known
each other ten thousand years: of course. They were an old married
couple. They knew, and that was enough. There was no need to delve
deeper into it.
This too is the bardo; or nirvana itself. This is the
touch of the eternal.
One day, then, before going out to the verandah to enjoy
the sunset hour with his partner, the old man sat before his blank
page all the long afternoon, thinking, looking at the stacks of
books and manuscripts that walled his study. Finally he took
up his brush and wrote, performing the strokes very slowly.
This is what his wife had taught him to see.
'Wealth and the Four Great Inequalities'
The scattered records and broken ruins of the Old World
tell us that the earliest civilizations arose in China, India,
Persia, Egypt, the Middle West, and Anatolia. The first farmers in these fertile regions
taught themselves farming and storage methods that created harvests
beyond the needs of the day. Very quickly soldiers, supported by
priests, took power in each region, and their own numbers grew,
gathering these new abundant harvests largely into their own hands,
by means of taxes and direct seizures. Labour divided into the
groups described by Confucius and the Hindu caste system, the
warriors, priests, artisans and farmers. With this division of
labour the subjugation of farmers by warriors and priests was
institutionalized, a subjugation that has never ended. This was the
first inequality.
In this division of civilized labor, if it had not
happened earlier, men established a general domination over women.
It may have happened during the earlier ages of bare subsistence,
but there is no way to tell; what we can see with our own eyes, is
that in farming cultures women labour both at home and in the
fields. In truth the farming life requires work from all. But from
early on, women did as men required. And in each family, the
control of legal power resembled the situation at large: the king
and his heir dominated the rest. These were the second and the
third inequalities, of men over women and children.
The next small age saw the beginning of trade between the
first civilizations, and the silk roads connecting China, Bactria,
India, Persia, the Middle West, Rome and Africa moved the surplus
harvests around the Old World. Agriculture responded to the new
chances to trade, and there was a great rise in the production of
bulk cereals and meats, and specialized crops like olives, wine and
mulberry trees. The artisans also made new tools, and with them
more powerful farming implements, and ships. Trading groups and
peoples began to undermine the monopoly on power of the first
military priest empires, and money began to replace land as
the source of ultimate power. All this happened much earlier than
Ibn Khaldun and the Maghribi historians recognized. By the time of
the classical period, around 1200 bH, the changes brought by trade
had unsettled the old ways and spread and deepened the first three
inequalities, raising many questions about human nature. The great
classical religions came into being precisely to attempt to answer
these questions Zoroastrianism in Persia, Buddhism in India,
and the rationalist philosophers in Greece. But no matter their
metaphysical details, each civilization was part of a world
transferring wealth back and forth,
back and forth, eventually to the elite groups; these movements
of wealth became the driving force of change in human affairs -- in
other words, of history. Gathered wealth gathered more wealth.
From the classical period to the discovery of the New
World (say 1200 bH to 1000 aH), trade therefore made the Middle
West the focal point of the Old World, and much wealth ended up
there. At about the midpoint of this period, as the dates indicate,
Islam appeared, and very quickly it came to dominate the world.
Very likely there were some underlying economic reasons for this
phenomenon; Islam, perhaps by chance but perhaps not, appeared in
the 'centre of the world', the area sometimes called the Isthmus
Region, bounded by the Persian Gulf, the Red Sea, the
Mediterranean, the Black Sea and the Caspian Sea. All the trade
routes necessarily knotted here, like dragon arteries in a feng
shui analysis. So it is not particularly surprising that for a time
Islam provided the world with a general currency, the dinar, and a
generally used language, Arabic. But it was also a religion, indeed
it became almost the universal religion, and we must understand
that its appeal as a religion arose partly from the fact that in a
world of growing inequalities, Islam spoke of a realm in which all
were equal -- all equal before God no matter their age, gender,
occupation, race or nationality. Islam's appeal lay in this, that
inequality could be neutralized and done away with in the most
important realm, the eternal realm of the spirit.
Meanwhile, however, trade in food and in luxury goods
continued all across the Old World, from al Andalus to China,
in animals, timber and metals, cloth, glass, writing materials,
opium, medicines and, more and more as the centuries passed, in
slaves. The slaves came chiefly from Africa; and they became more
important because there was more labour to be done, while at the
same time the mechanical improvements allowing for more powerful
tools had not yet been made, so that all this new work had to be
accomplished by animal and human effort alone. So, added to the
subjugation of farmers, women, and the family, was this fourth
inequality, of race or group, leading to the subjugation of the
most powerless peoples to slavery. And the unequal accumulation of
wealth by the elites continued.
The discovery of the New World has only accelerated these
processes, providing both more wealth and more slaves. The trade
routes themselves have moved substantially from land to sea, and
Islam no longer controls the crossroads as it did for a
thousand years. The main centre of accumulation has shifted to
China; indeed, China may have been the centre all along. It has
always had the most people; and from ancient times people
everywhere else have traded for Chinese goods. Rome's trade balance
with China was so poor that it lost a million ounces of silver a
year to China. Silk, porcelain, sandalwood, pepper -- Rome and all
the rest of the world sent their gold to China for these products,
and China grew rich. And now that China has taken control of the
west coasts of the New World, it has also begun to enjoy a direct
infusion of huge amounts of gold and silver, and slaves. This
doubled gathering of wealth, both by trade of manufactured goods
and by direct extraction, is something new, a kind of cumulation of
accumulations.
So it seems apparent that the Chinese are the rising
dominant power in the world, in competition with the previous
dominant power, Dar al Islam, which still exerts a powerful
attraction to people hoping for justice before God, if no longer
much expecting it on Earth. India then exists as a third culture
between the other two, a go between and influence on both,
while also of course influenced by both. Meanwhile the primitive
New World cultures, newly connected to the bulk of humanity,
immediately subjugated by them, struggle to survive.
So. To a very great extent human history has been the
story of the unequal accumulation of harvested wealth, shifting
from one centre of power to another, while always expanding the
four great inequalities. This is history. Nowhere, as far as I
know, has there ever been a civilization or moment when the wealth
of the harvests, created by all, has been equitably distributed.
Power has been exerted wherever it can be, and each successful
coercion has done its part to add to the general inequality, which
has risen in direct proportion to the wealth gathered; for wealth
and power are much the same. The possessors of the wealth in effect
buy the armed power they need to enforce the growing inequality.
And so the cycle continues.
The result has been that while a small percentage of
human beings have lived in a wealth of food, material comfort and
learning, those not so lucky have been the functional equivalent of
domestic beasts, in harness to the powerful and well off,
creating their wealth for them but not benefiting from it
themselves. If you happen to be a young black farm girl, what can
you say to the world, or the world to you? You exist under all four
of the great inequalities, and will live a shortened life of
ignorance, hunger and fear. Indeed it only takes one of the great
inequalities to create such conditions.
So it must be said that the majority of humans ever to
have lived, have existed in conditions of immiseration and
servitude to a small minority of wealthy and powerful people. For
every emperor and bureaucrat, for every caliph and qadi, for every
full rich life, there have been ten thousand of these stunted,
wasted lives. Even if you grant a minimal definition of a full
life, and say that the strength of spirit in people, and the
solidarity among people, have given many and many of the world's
poor and powerless a measure of happiness and achievement amidst
their struggle, still, there are so many who have lived lives
destroyed by immiseration that it seems impossible to avoid
concluding that there have been more lives wasted than fully
lived.
All the world's various religions have attempted to
explain or mitigate these inequalities, including Islam, which
originated in the effort to create a realm in which all are equal;
they have tried to justify the inequalities in this world. They all
have failed; even Islam has failed; the Dar al Islam is as
damaged by inequality as anywhere else. Indeed I now think that the
Indian and Chinese description of the afterlife, the system of the
six lokas or realms of reality -- the devas, asuras, humans,
beasts, pretas, and inhabitants of hell -- is in fact a
metaphorical but precise description of this world and the
inequalities that exist in it, with the devas sitting in luxury and
judgment on the rest, the asuras fighting to keep the devas in
their high position, the humans getting by as humans do, the beasts
labouring as beasts do, the homeless preta suffering in fear at the
edge of bell, and the inhabitants of hell enslaved to pure
immiseration.
My feeling is that until the number of whole lives is
greater than the number of shattered lives, we remain stuck in some
kind of prehistory, unworthy of humanity's great spirit. History as
a story worth telling will only begin when the whole lives
outnumber the wasted ones. That means we have many generation s to
go before history begins. All the inequalities must end; all the
surplus wealth must be equitably distributed. Until then we are
still only some kind of gibbering monkey, and humanity, as we
usually like to think of it, does not yet exist.
To put it in religious terms, we are still indeed in the
bardo, waiting to be born.
The old woman read the pages her husband had given her,
walking up and down their long verandah, full of agitation. When
she had finished, she put her hand on his shoulder. The day was
coming to its end; the sky in the west was indigo, a new moon
resting in it like a scythe. The black river flowed below them. She
went to her own writing stand, at the far end of the verandah, and
took up her brush, and in quick blind strokes filled a page.
Two wild geese fly north in the twilight. One bent lotus
droops in the shallows. Near the end of this existence Something
like anger fills my breast; A tiger: next time I will hitch it To
my chariot. Then watch me fly. No more hobbling on these bad feet.
Now there is nothing left to do But scribble in the dusk and watch
with the beloved Peach blossoms float downstream. Looking back at
all the long years All that happened this way and that I think I
liked most the rice and the salt.
Chapter One. The Fall of Konstantiniyye
The Ottoman Sultan Caliph Selim the Third's doctor,
Ismail ibn Mani al Dir, began as an Armenian qadi who studied
law and medicine in Konstantiniyye. He rose quickly through the
ranks of the Ottoman bureaucracy by the efficacy of his
ministrations, until eventually the Sultan required him to tend one
of the women of his seraglio. The harem girl recovered under
Ismail's care, and shortly thereafter Sultan Selim too was cured by
Ismail, of a complaint of the skin. After that the Sultan made
Ismail the chief doctor of the Sublime Porte and its seraglio.
Ismail then spent his time slipping about unobtrusively
from patient to patient, continuing his medical education as
doctors do, by practising. He did not attend court functions. He
filled thick books with case studies, recording symptoms,
medicines, treatments and results. He attended the janissaries'
inquisitions as required, and kept notes there as well.
The Sultan, impressed by his doctor's dedication and
skill, took an interest in his case studies. The bodies of all the
janissaries he had executed in the counter--coup of the year 1202
were put at Ismail's disposal, and the religious ban on autopsy and
dissection declared invalid for this case of executed criminals. A
lot of work had to be completed quickly, even with the bodies on
ice, and indeed the Sultan participated in several of the
dissections himself, asking questions at every cut. He was quick to
see and suggest the advantages of vivisection.
One night in the year 1207, the Sultan called his doctor
to the palace in the Sublime Porte. One of his old stablehands was
dying, and Selim had had him made comfortable on a bed placed on
one balance of a large scale, with weights of gold piled on the
other balance, so that the two big pans hung level in the middle of
the room.
As the old man lay on his bed wheezing, the Sultan ate a
midnight meal and watched. He told the doctor that he was sure this
method would allow them to determine the presence of the soul, if
one existed, and its weight.
Ismail stood at the side of the stablehand's elevated
bed, fingering the old man's wrist gently. The old man's breaths
weakened, became gasps. The Sultan stood and pulled Ismail back,
pointing to the scale's extremely fine fulcrum. Nothing was to be
disturbed.
The old man stopped breathing. 'Wait,' the Sultan
whispered. 'Watch.'
They watched. There were perhaps ten people in the room.
It was perfectly silent and still, as if all the world had stopped
to witness the test.
Slowly, very slowly, the balance tray holding the dead
man and his bed began to rise. Somebody gasped. The bed rose and
hung in the air overhead. The old man had lightened.
'Take away the very smallest weight from the other tray,'
the Sultan whispered. One of his bodyguards did so, removing a few
flakes of gold leaf. Then some more. Finally the tray holding the
dead man in the air began to descend, until it drifted below the
height of the other one. The bodyguard put the smallest flake back
on. Skilfully he rebalanced the scale. The man at dying had lost a
quarter grain of weight.
'Interesting!' the Sultan declared in his normal voice.
He returned to his repast, gesturing to Ismail. 'Come, cat. Then
tell me what you think of these rabble from the cast, whom we hear
are attacking us.'
The doctor indicated that he did not have an opinion.
'Surely you have heard things,' the Sultan encouraged
him. 'Tell me what you have heard.'
'Like everyone else, I have heard they come from the
south of India,' Ismail said obediently. 'The Mughals have been
defeated by them. They have an effective army, and a navy that
moves them around and shells coastal cities. Their leader styles
himself the Kerala of Travancore. They have conquered the Safavids,
and attacked Syria and Yemen '
'This is all old news,' the Sultan interrupted. 'What I
require of you,
Ismail, is explanation. How have they managed to
accomplish these things?'
Ismail said, 'I do not know, Excellency. The few letters
I have received from medical colleagues to the east do not discuss
military matters. I gather their army moves quickly, I have heard a
hundred leagues a day.'
'A hundred leagues! How is that possible?'
'I do not know. One of my colleagues wrote of treating
burn wounds. I hear their armies spare those they capture, and set
them to farm in areas they have conquered.'
'Curious. They are Hindu?'
'Hindu, Buddhist, Sikh -- I get the impression they
practise some mix of these three faiths, or some kind of new
religion, made up by this sultan of Travancore. Indian gurus often
do this, and he is apparently that kind of leader.'
Sultan Selim shook his head. 'Eat,' he commanded, and
Ismail took up a cup of sherbet. 'Do they attack with Greek fire,
or the black alchemy of Samarqand?'
'I don't know. Samarqand itself has been abandoned, I
understand, after years of plague, and then earthquakes. But its
alchemy may have been developed further in India.'
'So we are being attacked by black magic,' reflected the
Sultan, looking intrigued.
'I cannot say.'
'What about this navy of theirs?'
'You know more than I, Excellency. I have heard they sail
into the eye of the wind.'
'More black magic!'
'Machine power, Excellency. I have a Sikh correspondent
who told me that they boil water in scaled pots, and force the
steam through tubes, like bullets out of guns, and the steam pushes
against paddles like a river pushing a waterwheel, and thus the
ships are rowed forwards.'
'Surely that would only move them backwards in the
water.'
'They could call that forwards, Excellency.'
The Sultan stared suspiciously at his doctor. 'Do any of
these ships blow up?'
'It seems as if they might, if something goes wrong
Selim considered it. 'Well, this should be most interesting!
If a cannonball hits one of their boiler pots, it should blow up
the whole ship!'
'Very possibly.'
The Sultan was pleased. 'It will make for good target
practice. Come with me.'
He led his usual train of retainers out of the room:
bodyguard of six, cook and waiters, astronomer, valet and the Chief
Black Eunuch of the Seraglio, all trailing him and the doctor, whom
the Sultan held by the shoulder. He brought Ismail through the Gate
of Felicity into his harem without a word to its guards, leaving
his retainers behind to figure out yet again who was intended to
follow him into the seraglio. In the end only a waiter and the
Chief Black Eunuch entered.
In the seraglio all was gold and marble, silk and velvet,
the walls of the outer rooms covered with religious paintings and
icons from the age of Byzantium. The Sultan gestured to the Black
Eunuch, who nodded to a guard at the far door.
One of the harem concubines emerged, trailed by four
maids: a whiteskinned red--headed young woman, her naked body
glowing in the gaslight jets. She was not an albino, but rather a
naturally pale skinned person, one of the famous white slaves
of the seraglio, among the only known survivors of the vanished
Firanjis. They had been bred for several generations by the Ottoman
sultans, who kept the line pure. No one outside the seraglio ever
saw the women, and no one outside the Sultan's palace ever saw the
men used for breeding.
This young woman's hair was a gold burnished red,
her nipples pink, ber skin a translucent white that revealed blue
veins under it, especially in her breasts, which were slightly
engorged. The doctor reckoned her three months pregnant. The Sultan
did not appear to notice; she was his favourite, and he still had
her every day.
The familiar routine unfolded. The odalisque walked to
the draped area of her bed, and the Sultan followed, not bothering
to pull the curtains. The ladies in waiting helped the
woman to cushion herself properly, held her arms out, her legs
spread and pulled up. Selim said 'Ah yes,' and went to the bed. He
pulled his erect member from his pantaloons and covered her. They
rocked together in the usual fashion, until with a shudder and a
grunt the Sultan finished and sat beside her, stroking her belly
and legs.
He looked over at Ismail as a thought occurred to him.
'What is it like now where she came from?' he asked.
The doctor cleared his throat. 'I don't know,
Excellency.'
'Tell me what you have heard.'
'I have heard that Firanja west of Vienna is mainly
divided between Andalusis and the Golden Horde. The Andalusis
occupy the old Frankish lands and the islands north of it. They are
Sunni, with the usual sufi and Wahhabi elements fighting for the
patronage of the emirs. The east is a mix of Golden Horde and
Safavid client princes, many of them Shiites Many sufi orders. They
also have occupied the offshore islands, and the Roman peninsula,
though it is mostly Berber and Maltese.'
The Sultan nodded. 'So they prosper.'
'I don't know. It rains there more than on the steppes,
but there are mountains everywhere, or hills. There is a plain on
the north coast where they grow grapes and the like.
Al Andalus and the Roman peninsula do well, I gather. North of
the mountains it is harder. It's said the lowlands are still
pestilential.'
'Why is that? What happened there?'
'It's damp and cold all the time. So it is said.' The
doctor shrugged. 'No one knows. It could be that the pale skin of
the people there made them more susceptible to plague. That's what
Al Ferghana said.'
'But now good Muslims live there, with no ill
effects.'
'Yes. Balkan Ottomans, Andalusis, Safavids, the Golden
Horde. All Muslim, except perhaps for some Jews and Zotts.'
'But Islam is fractured.' The Sultan thought it over,
brushing the odalisque's red pubic hair with his palm. 'Tell me
again, where did this girl's ancestors come from?'
'The islands off the north coast of Frankland,' the
doctor ventured. 'England. They were very pale there, and some of
the outermost islands escaped the plague, and their people were
discovered and enslaved a century or two later. It is said they
didn't even know anything had changed.'
'Good land?'
'Not at all. Forest or rock. They lived on sheep or fish.
Very primitive, almost like the New World.'
'Where they have found much gold.'
'England was known more for tin than gold, as I
understand it.'
'How many of these survivors were taken?'
'I have read a few thousand. Most died, or were bred into
the general populace. You may have the only purebreds left.'
'Yes. And this one is pregnant by one of their men, I'll
have you know. We care for the men as carefully as we do the women,
to keep the line going.'
'Very wise.'
The Sultan looked at his Black Eunuch. 'I'm ready for
Jasmina now.'
In came another girl, very black, her body almost twin to
that of the white girl, though this one was not pregnant. Together
they looked like chess pieces. The black girl replaced the white
one on the bed. The Sultan stood and went to her.
'Well, the Balkans are a sorry place,' he mused, 'but
farther west may be better. We could move the capital of the empire
to Rome, just as they moved theirs here.'
'Yes. But the Roman peninsula is fully repopulated.'
'Venice too?'
'No. Still abandoned, Excellency. It is often flooded,
and the plague was particularly bad there.'
Sultan Selim pursed his lips. 'I don't -- ah -- I don't
like the damp.'
'No, Excellency.'
'well, we will have to fight them here. I will tell the
troops that their souls, the most precious quarter grain of them,
will rise up to the Paradise of Ten Thousand Years if they die in
defence of the Sublime Porte. There they will live like I do here.
We will meet these invaders down at the straits.'
'Yes, Excellency.'
'Leave me now.'
But when the Indian navy appeared it was not in the
Aegean, but in the Black Sea, the Ottoman Sea. Little black ships
crowding the Black Sea, ships with waterwheels on their sides, and
no sails, only white plumes of smoke pouring out of chimneys
topping black deckhouses. They looked like the furnaces of an
ironworks, and it seemed they should sink like stones. But they
didn't. They puffed down the relatively unguarded Bosporus,
blasting shore batteries to pieces, and anchored offshore the
Sublime Porte. From there they fired explosive shells into
Topkapi Palace, also into the mostly ceremonial batteries defending
that side of the city, long neglected as there had been no one
to attack Konstantiniyye for centuries. To have appeared in the
Black Sea -- no one could explain it.
In any case there they were, shelling the defences until
they were pounded into silence, then firing shot after shot into
the walls of the palace, and the remaining batteries across the
Golden Horn, in Pera. The populace of the city huddled indoors, or
took refuge in the mosques, or left the city for the countryside
outside the Theodosian walls; soon the city seemed deserted, except
for some young men out to watch the assault. More of these appeared
in the streets as it began to seem that the iron ships were not
going to bombard the city, but only Topkapi, which was taking a
terrific beating despite its enormous impregnable walls.
Ismail was called into this great artillery target by the
Sultan. He boxed up the mass of papers that had accumulated in the
last few years, all the notes and records, sketches and samples and
specimens. He wished he could make arrangements to send it all out
to the medical madressa in Nsara, where many of his most faithful
correspondents lived and worked; or even to the hospital in
Travancore, home of their assailants, but also of his other most
faithful group of medical correspondents.
There was no way now to arrange such a transfer, so he
left them in his rooms with a note on top describing the contents,
and walked through the deserted streets to the Sublime Porte. It
was a sunny day; voices came from the big blue mosque, but other
than that only dogs were to be seen, as if Judgment Day had come
and Ismail been left behind.
Judgment Day had certainly come for the palace; shells
struck it every few minutes. Ismail ducked inside the outer gate
and was taken to the Sultan, whom he found seemingly exhilarated by
events, as if at a fair: Selim the Third stood on Topkapi's highest
bartizan, in full view of the fleet bombarding them, watching the
action through a long silver telescope.
'Why doesn't the iron sink the ships?' he asked Ismail.
'They must be as heavy as treasure chests.'
'There must be enough air in the hulls to make them
float,' the doctor said, apologetic at the inadequacy of this
explanation. 'If their hulls were punctured, they would surely sink
faster than wooden ships.'
One of the ships fired, erupting smoke and seemingly sliding
backwards in the water. Their guns shot forwards, one per ship.
Fairly little things, like big bay dhows, or giant water bugs.
The shot exploded down the palace wall to their left.
Ismail felt the jolt in his feet. He sighed.
The Sultan glanced at him. 'Frightened?'
'Somewhat, Excellency.'
The Sultan grinned. 'Come, I want you to help me decide
what to take. I need the most valuable of the jewels.' But then he
spotted something in the sky. 'What's that?' He clapped the
telescope to his eye. Ismail looked up; there was a dot of red in
the sky. It drifted on the breeze over the city, looking like a red
egg. 'There's a basket hanging under it!' the Sultan exclaimed,
'and people in the basket!' He laughed. 'They know how to make
things fly in the sky!'
Ismail shaded his eyes. 'May I use the spyglass,
Excellency?'
Under white, puffy clouds, the red dot floated towards
them. 'Hot air rises,' Ismail said, shocked as it became clear to
him. 'They must have a brazier in the basket with them, and the hot
air from its fire rises up into the bag and is caught there, and so
the whole thing rises up and flies.'
The Sultan laughed again. 'Wonderful!' He took the glass
back from Ismail. 'I don't see any flames, though.'
'It must be a small fire, or they would burn the bag. A
brazier using charcoal, you wouldn't see that. Then when they want
to come down, they damp the fire.'
'I want to do that,' the Sultan declared. 'Why didn't you
make one of these for me?'
'I didn't think of it.'
Now the Sultan was in especially high spirits. The red
floating bag was floating their way.
'We can hope the winds carry it elsewhere,' Ismail
remarked as he watched it.
'No!' the Sultan cried. 'I want to see what it can
do.'
He got his wish. The floating bag drifted over the
palace, just under the clouds, or between them, or even
disappearing inside one, which gave Ismail the strongest sense yet
that it was flying in the air like a bird. People in the air like
birds!
'Shoot them down!' the Sultan was shouting
enthusiastically. 'Shoot the bag!'
The palace guards tried, but the cannon that were left
standing on the broken walls could not be elevated high enough to
fire at it. The musketeers shot at it, the flat cracks of their
muskets followed by shouts from the Sultan. The acrid smoke of
gunpowder filled the grounds, mixing with the smells of citrus and
jasmine and pulverized dust. But as far as any of them could tell,
no one hit bag or basket. Judging by the minute faces looking down
from the basket's edge, wrapped in heavy woollen scarves it
appeared, Ismail thought they were perhaps out of range, too high
to be hit. 'The bullets probably won't go that far up,' he
said.
And yet they would never be too high to drop things on
whatever lay below. The people in the basket appeared to wave at
them, and then a black dot dropped like a stooping hawk, a hawk of
incredible compaction and speed, crashing right into the roof of
one of the inner buildings, exploding and sending shards of tile
clattering all over the courtyard and garden.
The Sultan was shouting ecstatically. Three more
gunpowder bombs dropped onto the palace, one on a wall where
soldiers surrounded one of the big guns, killing them with much
damage.
Ismail's ears hurt more from the Sultan's roars than from
the explo sions. He pointed to the iron ships. 'They're
coming in.'
The ships were close onshore, launching boats filled with
men. The bombardment from other ships continued during the
disembarking, more intense than ever; their boats were going to
land uncontested at a section of the city walls they had blasted
down. 'They'll be here soon,' Ismail ventured. Meanwhile the
floating bag and basket had drifted west, past the palace and over
the open fields beyond the city wall.
'Come on,' Selim said suddenly, grabbing Ismail by the
arm. 'I need to hurry.'
Down broken marble stairs they ran, followed by the
Sultan's immediate retinue. The Sultan led the way into the warren
of rooms and passageways deep beneath the palace.
Down here oil lamps barely illuminated chambers filled
with the loot of four Ottoman centuries, and perhaps Byzantine
treasure as well, if not Roman or Greek, or Hittite or Sumerian;
all the riches of the world, stacked in room after room. One was
filled entirely with gold, mostly in the form of coins and bars;
another with Byzantine devotional art; another with old weapons;
another with furniture of rare woods and furs, another with chunks
of coloured rock, worthless as far as Ismail could tell. 'There
won't be time to go through all this,' he pointed out, trotting
behind the Sultan.
Selim just laughed. He swept through a long gallery or
warehouse of paintings and statues to a small side room, empty
except for a line of bags on a bench. 'Bring these,' he ordered his
servants as they caught up; then he was off again, sure of his
course.
They came to staircases descending through the rock
underlying the palace: a strange sight, smooth marble stairs
dropping through a craggy rock hole into the bowels of the Earth.
The city's great cisterncavern lay some way to the south and east,
as far as Ismail knew; but when they came down into a low natural
cave, floored by water, they found a stone dock, and moored to it,
a long narrow barge manned by imperial guards. Torches on the dock
and lanterns on the barge illuminated the scene. Apparently they
were in a side passage of the cistern cavern, and could row
into it.
Selim indicated to Ismail the roof around the stairwell,
and Ismail saw that explosives were packed into crevices and
drilled holes; when they were off and some distance away, this
entrance would presumably be demolished, and some part of the
palace grounds might fall onto it; in any case their escape route
would be obscured, and pursuit made impossible.
Men busied themselves with loading the barge, while the
Sultan inspected the charges. When they were ready to leave he
himself lit their fuses, grinning happily. Ismail stared at the
sight, which had the lamplit quality of some of the Byzantine icons
they had passed in the treasure hoards. 'We'll join the Balkan
army, and cross the Adriatic into Rome,' the Sultan announced.
'We'll conquer the West, then come back to smite these infidels for
their impudence!'
The bargemen cheered on cue from their officers, sounding
like thousands in the echoing confinement of the underground lake
and its sky of rock. The Sultan took the acclaim with open arms,
then stepped onto the barge, balanced by three or four of his men.
No one saw Ismail turn and dash up the doomed stairs to a different
destiny.
Chapter Two. Travancore
More bombs had been rigged by the Sultan's bodyguards to
blow up the cages in the palace zoo, and when Ismail climbed back
up the stairs and re emerged into the air, he found the
grounds in chaos, invaders and defenders alike running around
chasing or fleeing from elephants, lions, cameleopards and
giraffes. A pair of black rhinoceroses, looking like boars out of a
nightmare, charged about bleeding through crowds of shouting,
shooting men. Ismail raised his hands, fully expecting to be shot,
and thinking escape with Selim might have been all right after
all.
But no one was being shot except the animals. Some of the
palace guard lay dead on the ground, or wounded, and the rest had
surrendered and were under guard, and much less trouble than the
animals. For now it looked as if massacre of the defeated was not
part of the invaders' routine, just as rumour had had it. In fact
they were hustling their captives out of the palace, as booms were
shaking the ground, and plumes of smoke shooting out of windows and
stairwells, walls and roofs collapsing: the rigged explosions and
the maddened beasts made it prudent to vacate Topkapi for a
while.
They were regathered to the west of the Sublime Porte,
just inside the Theodosian Wall, on a parade ground where the
Sultan had surveyed his troops and done some riding. The women of
the seraglio, in full chador, were surrounded by their eunuchs and
a wall of guards. Ismail sat with the household retinue that
remained: the astronomer, the ministers of various administrative
departments, cooks, servants and so on.
The day passed and they got hungry. Late in the afternoon
a group of the Indian army came among them with bags of flatbread.
They were small dark--skinned men.
'Your name, please?' one of them asked Ismail.
'Ismail ibn Mani al Dir.'
The man drew his finger down a sheet of paper, stopped,
showed another of them what he had found.
The other one, now looking like an officer, inspected
Ismail. 'Are you the doctor, Ismail of Konstantiniyye, who has
written letters to Bhakta, the abbess of the hospital of
Travancore?'
'Yes,' Ismail said.
'Come with me, please.'
Ismail stood and followed, devouring the bread he had
been given as he went. Doomed or not, he was famished; and there
was no sign that he was being taken out to be shot. Indeed the
mention of Bhakta's name seemed to indicate otherwise.
In a plain but capacious tent a man at a desk was
interviewing pris oners, none of whom Ismail recognized. He
was led to the front, and the interviewing officer looked at him
curiously, and said in Persian, 'You are high on the list of people
required to report to the Kerala of Travancore.'
'I am surprised to hear it.'
'You are to be congratulated. This appears to be at the
request of Bhakta, abbess of the Travancori hospital.'
'A correspondent of many years' standing, yes.'
'All is explained. Please allow the captain here to lead
you to the ship departing for Travancore. But first, one question;
you are reported to be an intimate of the Sultan's. Is this
true?'
'It was true.'
'Can you tell us where the Sultan has gone?'
'He and his bodyguard have absconded,' Ismail said. 'I
believe they are headed for the Balkans, with the intention of
re establishing the Sultanate in the West.'
'Do you know how they escaped the palace?'
'No. I was left behind, as you see.'
Their machine ships ran by the heat of fires, as Ismail
had heard, burning in furnaces that boiled water, the steam then
forced by pipes to push paddlewheels, encased by big wooden
housings on each side of the bull. Valves controlled the
amount of steam going to each wheel, and the ship could turn on a
single spot. Into the wind it thumped along, bouncing awkwardly
over and through waves, throwing spray high over the ship. When the
winds came from behind, the crew raised small sails, and the ship
was pushed forwards in the usual way, but with an extra impulse
provided by the two wheels. They burned coal in the furnaces, and
spoke of coal deposits in the mountains of Iran that would supply
their ships till the end of time.
'Who made the ships?' Ismail asked.
'The Kerala of Travancore ordered them built. Ironmongers
in Anatolia were taught to make the furnaces, boilers and
paddlewheels. Shipbuilders in the ports at the east end of the
Black Sea did the rest.'
They landed at a tiny harbour near old Trebizond, and
Ismail was included in a group that rode south and east through
Iran, over range after range of dry hills and snowy mountains, into
India. Everywhere there were short dark skinned troops wearing
white, on horseback, with many wheeled cannon prominently placed in
every town and at every crossroads. All the towns looked undamaged,
busy, prosperous. They changed horses at big fortified changing
stations run by the army, and slept at these places as well. Many
stations were placed under hills where bonfires burned through the
night; blocking the light from these fires transmitted messages
over great distances, all over the new empire. The Kerala was in
Delhi, he would be back in Travancore in a few weeks; the abbess
Bhakta was in Benares, but due back in Travancore in days. It was
conveyed to Ismail that she was looking forward to meeting him.
Ismail, meanwhile, was finding out just how big the world
was. And yet it was not infinite. Ten days of steady riding brought
them across the Indus. On the green west coast of India, another
surprise: they boarded iron carts like their iron ships, with iron
wheels, and rode them on causeways that held two parallel iron
rails, over which the carts rolled as smoothly as if they were
flying, right through the old cities so long ruled by the Mughals.
The causeway of the iron rails crossed the broken edge of the
Deccan, south into a region of endless groves of coconut palms, and
they rolled by the power of steam as fast as the wind, to
Travancore, on the southwesternmost shore of India.
Many people had moved to this city following the recent imperial
successes. After rolling slowly through a zone of orchards and
fields filled with crops Ismail did not recognize, they came to the
edges of the city. The outskirts were crowded with new buildings,
encampments, lumber yards, holding facilities: indeed for many
leagues in all directions it seemed nothing but construction
sites.
Meanwhile the inner core of the city was also being
transformed. Their train of linked iron carts stopped in a big yard
of paired rails, and they walked out of a gate into the city
centre. A white marble palace, very small by the standards of the
Sublime Porte, had been erected there in the middle of a park which
must have replaced much of the old city centre. The harbour this
park overlooked was filled with all manner of ships. To the south
could be seen a shipyard building new vessels; a mole was being
extended out into the shallow green seas, and the enclosed water,
in the shelter of a long low island, was as crowded with ships as
the inner harbour, with many small boats sailing or being rowed
between them. Compared to the dusty torpor of Konstantiniyye's
harbours, it was a tumultuous scene.
Ismail was taken on horseback through the bustling city
and down the coast farther, to a grove of palm trees behind a broad
yellow beach. Here walls surrounded an extensive Buddhist
monastery, and new buildings could be seen a long way through the
grove. A pier extended out from the seaside buildings, and several
fire powered ships were docked there. This was apparently the
home of the famous hospital of Travancore.
Inside the monastery grounds it was windless and calm.
Ismail was led to a dining room and given a meal, then invited to
wash off the grime of his travel. The baths were tiled, the water
either warm or cool, depending on which pool he preferred, and the
last ones were under the sky.
Beyond the baths stood a small pavilion on a green lawn,
surrounded by flowers. Ismail donned a clean brown robe he was
offered, and padded barefoot across the cut grass to the pavilion,
where an old woman was in conversation with a number of others.
She stopped when she saw them, and Ismail's guide
introduced him.
'Ah. A great pleasure,' the woman said in Persian. 'I am
Bhakta, the abbess here, and your humble correspondent.' She stood
and bowed to Ismail, hands together. Her fingers were twisted, her
walk stiff; it looked to Ismail like arthritis. 'Welcome to
our home. Let me pour you some tea, or coffee if you prefer.'
'Tea will be fine,' Ismail said.
'Bodhisattva,' a messenger said to the abbess, 'we will
be visited by the Kerala on the next new moon.'
'A great honour,' the abbess said. 'The moon will be in
close conjunction with the morning star. Will we have time to
complete the mandalas?'
'They think so.'
'Very good.'
The abbess continued to sip her tea.
'He called you bodhisattva?' Ismail ventured.
The abbess grinned like a girl. 'A sign of affection,
with no basis in reality. I am simply a poor nun, given the honour
of guiding this hospital for a time, by our Kerala.'
Ismail said, 'When we corresponded, you did not mention
this. I thought you were simply a nun, in something like a madressa
and hospital.'
'For a long time that was the case.'
'When did you become the abbess?'
'In your year, what would it be, 1194. The previous abbot
was a Japanese lama. He practised a Japanese form of Buddhism,
which was brought here by his predecessor, with many more monks and
nuns, after the Chinese conquered Japan. The Chinese persecute even
the Buddhists of their own country, and in Japan it was worse. So
they came here, or first to Lanka, then here.'
'And they made studies in medicine, I take it.'
'Yes. My predecessor in particular had very clear sight,
and a great curiosity. Generally we see as if it were night, but he
stood in the light of morning, because he tested the truth of what
we say we know, in regularized trials. He could sense the strengths
of things, the force of movement, and devise tests of them in
trials of various kinds. We are still walking through the doors he
opened for us.'
'Yet I think you have been following him into new
places.'
'Yes, more is always revealed, and we have been working
hard since he left that body. The great increase in shipping has
brought us many useful and remarkable documents, including some
from Firanja. It's becoming clear to me that the island England was
a sort of Japan about to happen, on the other side of the
world. Now they have a forest uncut for centuries, regrown over the
ruins, and so they have wood to trade, and they build ships
themselves. They bring us books and manuscripts found in the ruins,
and scholars here and all around Travancore have learned the
languages and translated the books, and they are very interesting.
People like the Master of Henley were more advanced than you might
think. They advocated efficient organization, good accounting,
auditing, the use of trial and record to determine yields -- in
general, to run their farms on a rational basis, as we do here.
They had waterpowered bellows, and could get their furnaces white
hot, or high yellow at least. They were even concerned with the
loss of forest in their time. Henley calculated that one furnace
could burn all the tress within a yoganda's radius, in only forty
days.'
'Presumably that will be happening again,' Ismail
said.
'No doubt even faster. But meanwhile, it's making them
rich.'
'And here?'
'Here we are rich in a different fashion. We help the
Kerala, and he extends the reach of the kingdom every month, and
within its bounds, all tends to improvement. More food is grown,
more cloth made. Less war and brigandage.'
After tea Bhakta showed him around the grounds. A lively
river ran through the centre of the monastery, and its water ran
through four big wooden mills and their wheels, and a big sluice
gate at the bottom end of a catchment pond. All around this rushing
stream was green lawn and palm trees, but the big wooden halls
built next to the mills on both banks hummed and clanked and
roared, and smoke billowed out of tall brick chimneys rising out of
them.
'The foundry, ironworks, sawmill and manufactory.'
'You wrote of an armoury,' Ismail said, 'and a gunpowder
facility.'
'Yes. But the Kerala did not want to impose that burden
on us, as Buddhism is generally against violence. We taught his
army some things about guns, because they protect Travancore. We
asked the Kerala about this -- we told him it was important to
Buddhists to work for good, and he promised that in all the lands
that came under his control, he would impose a rule of laws that
would keep the people from violence or evil dealing. In effect, we
help him to protect people. Of course one is,
suspicious of that, seeing what rulers do, but this one
is very interested in law. In the end he does what he likes, of
course. But he likes laws.'
Ismail thought of the nearly bloodless aftermath of the
conquest of Konstantiniyye. 'There must be some truth in it, or I
would not be alive.'
'Yes, tell me about that. It sounded as if the Ottoman
capital was not so vigorously defended.'
'No. But that is partly because of the vigour of the
assault. People were unnerved by the fireships, and the flying bags
overhead.'
Bhakta looked interested. 'Those were our doing, I must
admit. And yet the ships do not seem that formidable.'
'Consider each ship to be a mobile artillery
battery.'
The abbess nodded. 'Mobility is one of the Kerala's
watchwords.'
'As well it might be. In the end mobility prevails, and
all within shot of the sea can be destroyed. And Konstantiniyye is
all within shot of the sea.'
' I see what you mean.'
After tea the abbess took Ismail through the monastery
and workshops, down to the docks and shipworks, which were loud.
Late in the day they walked over to the hospital, and Bhakta led
Ismail to the rooms used for teaching monks to become doctors. The
teachers gathered to greet him, and they showed him the shelf on
one wall of books and papers that they had devoted to the letters
and drawings he had sent to Bhakta over the years, all catalogued
according to a system he did not understand. 'Every page has been
copied many times,' one of the men said.
'Your work seems very different to Chinese medicine,' one
of the others said. 'We were hoping you might speak to us about the
differences between their theory and yours.'
Ismail shook his head, fingering through these vestiges
of his former existence. He would not have said he had written so
much. Perhaps there were multiple copies even on this shelf.
'I have no theories,' he said. 'I have only noted what I
have seen.' His face tightened. 'I will be happy to speak with you
about whatever you like, of course.'
The abbess said, 'It would be very good if you would
speak to a gathering about these things, there are many who would
like to hear you, and to ask questions.'
'My pleasure, of course.'
'Thank you. We will convene tomorrow for that, then.'
A clock somewhere struck the bells that marked every hour
and watch.
'What kind of clock do you employ?'
'A version of Bhaskara's mercury wheel,' Bhakta said, and
led Ismail by the tall building that housed it. 'It does very well
for the astronomical calculations, and the Kerala has decreed a new
year using it, more accurate than any before. But to tell the
truth, we are now trying horologues with weight driven
mechanical escapements. We are also trying clocks with spring
drives, which would be useful at sea, where accurate timekeeping is
essential for determining longitude.'
'I know nothing of that.'
'No. You have been attending to medicine.'
'Yes.'
The next day they returned to the hospital, and in a
large room where surgeries were performed, a great number of monks
and nuns in brown and maroon and yellow robes sat on the floor to
hear him. Bhakta had assistants bring several thick wide books to
the table where Ismail was to speak, all of them filled with
anatomical drawings, most Chinese.
They seemed to be waiting for him to speak, so he said,
'I am pleased to tell you what I have observed. Perhaps it will
help you, I don't know. I know little of any formal medical system.
I studied some of the ancient Greek knowledge as it was translated
by Ibn Sina and others, but I never could profit much from it. Very
little from Aristotle, somewhat more from Galen. Ottoman medicine
itself was no very impressive thing. In truth, nowhere have I found
a general explanation that fits what I have seen with my own eyes,
and so long ago I gave up on all hypoth--esis, and decided to try
to draw and to write down only what I saw. So you must tell me
about these Chinese ideas, if you can express them in Persian, and
I will see if I can tell you how my observations match with them.'
He shrugged. 'That's all I can do.'
They stared at him, and he continued nervously: 'So
useful, Persian. The language that bridges Islam and India.' He
waggled a hand. 'Any questions?'
Bhakta herself broke the silence. 'What about the
meridian lines that the Chinese speak of, running through the body
from the skin inward and back again?'
Ismail looked at the drawings of the body she turned to
in one of the books. 'Could they be nerves?' he said. 'Some of
these lines follow the paths of major nerves. But then they
diverge. I have not seen nerves crisscrossing like this, cheek to
neck, down spine to thigh, up into back. Nerves generally branch
like an almond tree's branches, while the blood vessels branch like
a birch tree. Neither tangle like these are shown to.'
'We don't think meridian lines refer to the nerves.'
'To what, then? Do you see anything there when you do
autopsies?'
'We do not do autopsies. When opportunity has allowed us
to inspect torn bodies, their parts look as you have described them
in your letters to us. But the Chinese understanding is of great
antiquity and elaboration, and they get good results by sticking
pins in the right meridian points, among other methods. They very
often get good results.'
'How do you know?'
'Well -- some of us have seen it. Mostly we understand it
from what they have said. We wonder if they are finding systems too
small to be seen. Can we be sure that the nerves are the only
messengers of motion to the musculature?'
'I think so , ' Ismail said. 'Cut the right nerve and the
muscles beyond it will not move. Prick a nerve and the appropriate
muscle will jump.'
His audience stared at him. One of the older men said,
'Perhaps some other kind of energy transference is happening, not
necessarily through the nerves, but through the lines, and this is
needed as much as the nerves.'
'Perhaps. But look here,' pointing at one diagram, 'they
show no pancreas. No adrenal glands either. These both perform
necessary functions.'
Bhakta said, 'For them there are eleven crucial organs --
five yin and six yang. Heart, lungs, spleen, liver and kidneys,
they are yin.'
'A spleen is not essential.'
'Then the six yang organs are gall bladder, stomach,
small intestine, large intestine, bladder and triple burner.'
'Triple burner? What is that?'
She read from the Chinese notations by the drawing: 'They
say, "It has a name but no shape. It combines the effects of the
organs that regulate water, as a fire must control water. The upper
burner is a mist, the middle burner a foam, the lower burner a
swamp. Thus top to bottom,
corresponding to head and upper body, middle from nipples to
navel, lower the abdomen below the navel. -- Ismail
shook his head. 'Do they find it in dissections?'
'Like us, they rarely do dissections. There are similar
religious barriers. Once in their Sung dynasty, about year 390 in
Islam, they dissected forty six rebels.'
'I doubt that would have helped. You have to see a lot of
dissections, and vivisections, with no preconceptions in mind,
before it begins to come clear.'
Now the monks and nuns were staring at him with an odd
expression, but he forged on as he examined the drawings. 'This
flow through the body and all its parts, do they not mean
blood?'
'A harmonious balance of fluids, some material, like
blood, some spiritual, like jing and shen and qi, the
so called three treasures 'What are they, please?'
'ling is the source of change,' one nun said hesitantly,
'supportive and nutritive, like a fluid. Essence is another Persian
word we could use to translate it. In Sanskrit, semen, or the
generative possibility.'
'And shen?'
'Shen is awareness, consciousness. Like our spirit, but a
part of the body, too.'
Ismail was interested in this. 'Have they weighed
it?'
Bhakta led the laughter. 'Their doctors do not weigh
things. With them it is not things, but forces and
relationships.'
'Well, I am just an anatomist. What animates the parts is
beyond me. Three treasures, one, a myriad -- I cannot tell. It does
seem there is some animating vitality, that comes and goes, waxes
and wanes. Dissection cannot find it. Our souls, perhaps. You
believe that the soul returns, do you not?'
'We do.'
'The Chinese also?'
'Yes, for the most part. For their Daoists there is
no'pure spirit, it is always mixed with material things. So their
immortality requires movement from one body to another. And all
Chinese medicine is strongly influenced by Daoism. Their Buddhism
is mostly like ours, although again, more materialist. It is
chiefly what the women do in their older years, to help the
community, and prepare for their next life. The official
Confucian culture does not speak much of the soul, even though they
acknowledge its existence. In most Chinese writing the line drawn
between spirit and matter is vague, sometimes nonexistent.'
'Evidently,' Ismail said, looking at the meridian line
drawing again. He sighed. 'Well. They have studied long, and helped
living people, while I have only drawn dissections.'
They continued. The questions came from more
and more of them, with comments and observations. Ismail answered
every question as best he could. The movement of the blood in the
chambers of the heart; the function of the spleen, if there was
one; location of the ovaries; shock reactions to amputation of the
legs; flooding of punctured lungs; movement of the various limbs
when parts of the exposed brain were prodded with needles: he
described what he had seen in each case, and as the day wore on,
the crowd sitting on the floor looked up at him with expressions
more and more guarded, or odd. A pair of nuns left quietly. As
Ismail was describing the coagulation of the blood after extraction
of teeth, the room went completely silent. Few of them met his eye,
and noticing that, he faltered. 'As I said, I am a mere anatomist
... We will have to see if we can reconcile what I have seen with
your theoretical texts . . .' He looked hot, as if he had a fever,
but only in his face.
Finally the Abbess Bhakta rose to her feet, stepped
stiffly to him, and held his shaking hands in hers. 'No more,' she
said gently. All the monks and nuns rose to their feet, their hands
placed together before them, as in prayer, and bowed towards him.
'You have made good from bad,' Bhakta said. 'Rest now, and let us
take care of you.'
So Ismail settled into a small room in the monastery
provided for him, and studied Chinese texts freshly translated into
the Persian by the monks and nuns, and taught anatomy.
One afternoon he and Bhakta walked from the hospital to
the dining hall, through hot and muggy air, the pre monsoon
air, like a warm wet blanket. The abbess pointed to a little girl
running through the rows of melons in the big garden. 'There is the
new incarnation of the previous lama. She just came to us last
year, but she was born the very hour the old lama died, which is
very unusual. It took a while for us to find her, of course. We did
not start the search until last year, and immediately she turned
up.'
'His soul moved from man to woman?'
'Apparently. The search certainly looked among the little
boys, as is traditional. That was one of the things that made
identifying her so easy. She insisted on being tested, despite her
sex. At four years of age. And she identified all of Peng Roshi's
things, many more than the new incarnation usually can do, and told
me the contents of my final conversation with Peng, almost word for
word.'
'Really!' Ismail stared at Bhakta.
Bhakta met his gaze. 'It was like looking into his eyes
again. So, we say that Peng has come back to us as a Tara
bodhisattva, and we started paying more attention to the girls and
the nuns, something of course that I have always encouraged. We
have emulated the Chinese habit of inviting the old women of
Travancore to come to the monastery and give their lives over to
studying the sutras, but also to studying medicine, and going back
out to care for those in their villages, and to teach their
grandchildren and great grandchildren.'
The little girl disappeared into the palm trees at the
end of the garden. The new moon sickled the sky, pendant under a
bright evening star. The sound of drumming came on a breeze. 'He
has been delayed,' Bhakta said as she listened to the drums. 'He
will be here tomorrow.'
The drumming became audible again at dawn, just after the
clock bells had clonged the coming of day. Distant drums, like
thunder or gunfire, but more rhythmic than either, announced his
arrival. As the sun rose it seemed the ground shook. Monks and nuns
and their families living in the monastery poured out of the
dormitories to witness the arrival, and the great yard inside the
gate was hastily cleared.
The first soldiers danced in a rapid walk, all stepping
together, taking a skip forwards at every fifth step, and shouting
as they reversed their rifles from one shoulder to the other. The
drummers followed, skipping in step as their hands beat their
tablas. A few snapped hand cymbals. They wore uniform shirts,
with red patches sewn to the shoulders, and came circling in a
column around the great yard, until perhaps five hundred men stood
in curved ranks facing the gate. When the Kerala and his officers
rode in on horseback, the soldiers presented their arms and shouted
three times. The Kerala raised a hand, and his detachment commander
shouted orders: the tabla players rolled out the surging beat, and
the soldiers danced into the dining hall.
'They are fast, just as everyone said,' Ismail said to
Bhakta. 'And everything is so together.'
'Yes, they live in unison. In battle they are the same.
The reloading of their rifles has been broken down into ten
movements, and there are ten command drumbeats, and different
groups of them are coordinated to different points of the cycle, so
they fire in rotating mass, to very devastating effect I am told.
No army can stand up to them. Or at least, that was true for many
years. Now it seems the Golden Horde are beginning to train their
armies in similar ways. But even with that, and with modern
weapons, they won't be able to withstand the Kerala.'
Now the man himself dismounted, and Bhakta approached
him, bringing Ismail along. The Kerala waved aside their bows, and
Bhakta said without preamble, 'This is Ismail of Konstantiniyye,
the famous Ottoman doctor.'
The Kerala stared at him intently, and Ismail gulped,
feeling the heat of that impatient eye. The Kerala was short and
compact, black haired, narrow faced, quick of movement.
His torso seemed just a touch too long for his legs. His face was
very handsome, chiselled like a Greek statue.
'I hope you are impressed by the hospital here,' he said
in clear Persian.
'It is the best I have ever seen.'
'What was the state of Ottoman medicine when you left
it?'
Ismail said, 'We were making progress in understanding a
little of the parts of the body. But much remained mysterious.'
Bhakta added, 'Ismail has examined the medical theories
of the ancient Egyptians and Greeks, and brought what was useful in
them to us, as well as making very many new discoveries of his own,
correcting the ancients or adding to their knowledge. His letters
to us have formed one of the main bases of our work in the
hospital.'
'Indeed.' Now the Kerala's gaze was even more piercing.
His eyes were protuberant, their irises a jumble of colours, like
circles of jasper. 'Interesting! We must speak more of these
things. But first I want to discuss recent developments with you
alone, Mother Bodhisattva.'
The abbess nodded, and walked hand in hand with
the Kerala to a pavilion overlooking the dwarf orchard. No
bodyguard accompanied them, but only settled back and watched from
the yard, rifles at the ready, with guards posted on the monastery
wall.
Ismail went with some monks to the streamside, where they were
arranging a ceremony of sand mandalas. Monks and nuns in maroon and
saffron robes flowed everywhere about the bankside, setting out
rugs and flower baskets, happily chattering and in no great hurry,
as the Kerala often conferred with their abbess for half the day,
or longer. They were famous friends.
Today, however, they finished earlier, and the pace
quickened considerably as word came back that the two were leaving
the pavilion. Flower baskets were cast on the stream, and the
soldiers reappeared to the sound of the pulse quickening
tablas. They skipped to the banksides without their rifles and sat,
cleaving an aisle for their leader's approach. He came among them,
stopping to put a hand to one shoulder or another, greeting men by
name, asking after their wounds, and so on. The monks who had led
the mandala effort came out of their studio, chanting to a gong and
the blast of bass trumpets, carrying two mandalas -- wooden discs
as big as millstones, each held level by two men, with the
vibrantly coloured mandalas laid in unfixed sand on their tops. One
was a complex geometrical figure in bold red, green, yellow, blue,
white and black. The other was a map of the world, with Travancore
a red dot like a bindi, and India occupying the centre of the
circle, and the rest of the mandala depicting almost the whole
width of the world, from Firanja to Korea and Japan, with Africa
and the Indies curved around the bottom. All was coloured
naturally, the oceans dark blue, inland seas lighter blue, land
green or brown, as the case might be, with the mountain ranges
marked by dark green and snowy white. Rivers ran in blue threads,
and a vivid red line enclosed what Ismail took to be the border of
the Kerala's conquests, now including the Ottoman empire up through
Anatolia and Konstantiniyye, though not the Balkans or the Crimea.
A most beautiful object, like looking down on the world from the
vantage of the sun.
The Kerala of Travancore walked with the abbess, helping
her with her footing down the path. At the riverside they stopped,
and the Kerala inspected the mandalas closely, slowly, pointing and
asking the abbess and ber monks questions about one feature or
another. Other monks chanted in low voices, and the soldiers helped
to sing a song. Bhakta faced them and sang over their sound in a
high thin voice. The Kerala took the mandala in his hands and
lifted it up carefully; it was almost too large for one man
to hold. He stepped down into the river with it, and bouquets of
hydrangea and azalea floated into his legs. He held the geometrical
mandala over his head, offering it to the sky, and then, at a shift
in the song, and the growling entry of trumpets, he lowered the
disc in front of him, and very slowly tilted it up on its side. The
sand slid off all at once, the colours pouring into the water and
blurring together, staining the Kerala's silken leggings. He dipped
the disc into the water and washed the rest of the sand away in a
multi coloured cloud that dissipated in the flow. He cleared
the surface with his bare hand, then strode out of the water. His
shoes were muddy, his wet leggings stained green and red and blue
and yellow. He took the other mandala from its makers, bowed over
it to them, turned and took it into the river. This time the
soldiers shifted and bowed forehead to ground, chanting a prayer
together. The Kerala lowered the disc slowly, and like a god
offering a world to a higher god, rested it on the water and let it
float, spinning slowly round and round under his fingers, a
floating world that at the height of the song he plunged down into
the stream as far as it would go, releasing all the sand into the
water to float up over his arms and legs. As he walked to shore,
spangled with colour, his soldiers stood and shouted three times,
then three again.
Later, over tea scented with delicate perfumes, the
Kerala sat in repose and spoke with Ismail. He heard all Ismail
could tell him of Sultan Selim the Third, and then he told Ismail
the history of Travancore, his eyes never leaving Ismail's
face.
'Our struggle to throw off the yoke of the Mughals began
long ago with Shivaji, who called himself Lord of the Universe, and
invented modern warfare. Shivaji used every method possible to free
India. Once he called the aid of a giant Deccan lizard to help him
climb the cliffs guarding the Fortress of the Lion. Another time he
was surrounded by the Bijapuri army, commanded by the great Mughal
general Afzal Khan, and after a siege Shivaji offered to surrender
to Afzal Khan in person, and appeared before that man clad only in
a cloth shirt, that nevertheless concealed a scorpion tail dagger;
and the fingers of his hidden left hand were sheathed in
razor edged tiger claws. When he embraced Afzal Khan he
slashed him to death before all, and on that signal his army set on
the Mughals and defeated them.
'After that Alamgir attacked in earnest, and spent the last
quarter century of his life reconquering the Deccan, at a cost of a
hundred thousand lives per year. By the time he subdued the Deccan
his empire was hollowed. Meanwhile there were other revolts against
the Mughals to the northwest, among Sikhs, Afghans and the Safavid
empire's eastern subjects, as well as Rajputs, Bengalis, Tamils and
so forth, all over India. They all had some success, and the
Mughals, who had overtaxed for years, suffered a revolt of their
own zamindars, and a general breakdown of their finances. Once
Marathas and Rajputs and Sikhs were successfully established, they
all instituted tax systems of their own, you see, and the Mughals
got no more money from them, even if they still swore allegiance to
Delhi.
'So things went poorly for the Mughals, especially here
in the south. But even though the Marathas and Rajputs were both
Hindu, they spoke different languages, and hardly knew each other,
so they developed as rivals, and this lengthened the Mughals' hold
on mother India. In these end days the Nazim became premier to a
khan completely lost to his harem and hookah, and this Nazim went
south to form the principality that inspired our development of
Travancore on a similar system.
'Then Nadir Shah crossed the Indus at the same ford used
by Alexander the Great, and sacked Delhi, slaughtering thirty
thousand and taking home a billion rupees of gold and jewels, and
the Peacock Throne. With that the Mughals were finished.
'Marathas have been expanding their territory ever since,
all the way into Bengal. But the Afghans freed themselves from the
Safavids, and surged east all the way to Delhi, which they sacked
also. When they withdrew the Sikhs were given control of the
Punjab, for a tax of onefifth of the harvests. After that the
Pathans sacked Delhi yet once more, rampaging for an entire month
in a city become nightmare. The last emperor with a Mughal title
was blinded by a minor Afghan chieftain.
'After that a Marathan cavalry of thirty thousand marched
on Delhi, picking up two hundred thousand Rajput volunteers as they
moved north, and on the fateful field of Panipat, where India's
fate has so often been decided, they met an army of Afghan and
ex Mughal troops, in full jihad against the Hindus. The
Muslims had the support of the local populace, and the great
general Shah Abdali at their head, and in the battle a hundred
thousand Marathas died, and thirty thousand were captured
for ransom. But afterwards the Afghan soldiers tired of Delhi, and
forced their khan to return to Kabul.
'The Marathas, however, were likewise broken. The Nazim's
succes sors secured the south, and the Sikhs took the Punjab,
and the Bengalese Bengal and Assam. Down here we found the Sikhs to
be our best allies. Their final guru declared their sacred writings
to be the embodiment of the guru from that point on, and after that
they prospered greatly, creating in effect a mighty wall between us
and Islam. And the Sikhs taught us as well. They are a kind of mix
of Hindu and Muslim, unusual in Indian history, and instructive. So
they prospered, and learning from them, coordinating our efforts
with them, we have prospered too.
'Then in my grandfather's time a number of refugees from
the Chinese conquest of Japan arrived in this region, Buddhists
drawn to Lanka, the heart of Buddhism. Samurai, monks and sailors,
very good sailors they had sailed the great eastern ocean
that they call the Dahai, in fact they sailed to us both by heading
cast and by heading west.'
'Around the world?'
'Around. And they taught our shipbuilders much, and the
Buddhist monasteries here were already centres of metalworking and
mechanics, and ceramics. The local mathematicians brought
calculation to full flower for use in navigation, gunnery and
mechanics. All came together here in the great shipyards, and in
our merchant and naval fleets were soon greater even than China's.
Which is a good thing, as the Chinese empire subdues more and more
of the world -- Korea, Japan, Mongolia, Turkestan, Annam and Siam,
the islands in the Malay chain -- the region we used to called
Greater India, in fact. So we need our ships to protect us from
that power. By sea we are safe, and down here, below the gnarled
wildlands of the Deccan, we are not easily conquered by land. And
Islam seems to have had its day in India, if not the whole of the
west.'
'You have conquered its most powerful city,' Ismail
observed.
'Yes. I will always smite Muslims, so that they will
never be able to attack India again. There have been enough rapes
of Delhi. So I had a small navy built on the Black Sea to attack
Konstantiniyye, breaking the Ottomans like the Nazim broke the
Mughals. We will establish small states across Anatolia, taking
their land under our influence, as we have done in Iran and
Afghanistan. Meanwhile we continue to work with the Sikhs, treating
them as chief allies and partners in what is becoming a larger
Indian confederation of principalities and states. The unification
of India on that basis is not something many people resist, because
when it succeeds, it means peace. Peace for the first time since
the Mughals invaded more than four centuries ago. So India has
emerged from its long night. And now 'we will spread the day
everywhere.'
The following day Bhakta took Ismail to a garden party at
the Kerala's palace in Travancore. The big park containing the
little marble building overlooked the northern end of the harbour,
away from the great noise and smoke of the shipworks, visible at
the south side of the shallow bay, but innocuous at that distance.
Outside the park more elaborate white palaces belonged not to the
Kerala, but to the local merchant leaders, who had become rich in
ship building, trade expeditions and most of all, the financing of
other such expeditions. Among the Kerala's guests were many men of
this sort, all richly dressed in silks and jewellery. Especially
prized in this society, it seemed to Ismail, were
semi precious stones -- turquoise, jade, lapis, malachite,
onyx, jasper and the like -- polished into big round buttons and
necklace beads. The wives and daughters of the men wore brilliant
saris, and some walked with tamed cheetahs on leashes.
People circulated in the shade of the garden's arbours
and palm trees, eating at long tables of delicacies, or sipping
from glass goblets. Buddhist monks stood out in their maroon or
saffron, and Bhakta was approached by quite a few of these. The
abbess introduced some of them to Ismail. She pointed out to him
the Sikhs in attendance, men who wore turbans and were bearded; and
Marathas; and Bengalis; also Africans, Malaysians, Burmese,
Sumatrans, Japanese or Hodenosaunee from the New World. The abbess
either knew all these people personally, or could identify them by
some characteristic of dress or figure.
'So very many different peoples here,' Ismail
observed.
'Shipping brings them.'
Many of them seemed to crave a word with Bhakta, and she
introduced Ismail to one of the Nazim's 'most trusted assistants',
in the person of one Pyidaungsu, a short dark man who, he said, had
grown up in Burma and on the eastern side of India's tip.
His Persian was excellent, which was no doubt why the abbess had
introduced Ismail to him, as she dealt with her own press of
conversants.
'The Kerala was most pleased to meet you,' Pyidaungsu
said immediately, drawing Ismail off to one side. 'He is very
desirous of making progre ss in certain medical matters, especially
infectious diseases. We lose more soldiers to disease or infection
than to our enemies in battle, and this grieves him.'
'I know only a little of that,' Ismail said. 'I am an
anatomist, attempting to learn the structures of the body.'
'But all advances in understanding of the body help us in
what the Kerala wants to know.'
'In theory, anyway. Over time.'
'But could you not examine the army's procedures, in
search of some aspects of them that contribute perhaps to diseases
spreading?'
'Perhaps,' Ismail said. 'Although some aspects cannot be
changed, like travelling together, sleeping together.'
'Yes, but the way those things are done .
'Possibly. There seems to be a likelihood that some
diseases are transmitted by creatures smaller than the eye can see
'The creatures in microscopes?'
'Yes, or smaller. Exposure to a very small amount of
these, or to some that are killed beforehand, seems to give people
a resistance to later exposures, as happens with survivors of
pox.'
'Yes, variolation. The troops are already scabbed for
pox.'
Ismail was surprised to hear this, and the officer saw
it.
'We are trying everything,' he said with a laugh. 'The
Kerala believes all habits must be re examined with an eye to
changing them, improving them as much as possible. Eating habits,
bathing, evacuation -- he began as an artillery officer when he was
very young, and he learned the value of regular procedure. He
proposed that the barrels of cannons be bored out rather than cast,
as the casting could never be done with any true smoothness. With
uniform bores cannons become more powerful and lighter at once, and
ever so much more accurate. He tested all these things, and reduced
gunnery to a set of settled motions, like a dance, much the same
for cannon of all sizes, making them capable of deployment as
quickly as infantry, almost as quick as cavalry. And easily carried
on ships. Results have been prodigious, as you see.' Waving around
complacently at the party.
'You have been an artillery officer, I suppose.'
The man laughed. 'Yes, I was.'
'So now you enjoy a celebration here.'
'Yes, and there are other reasons for this gathering. The
bankers, the shippers. But they all ride on the back of the
artillery, if you will.'
'And not the doctors.'
'No. But I wish it were so! Tell me again if you see any
part of military life that might be made more healthy.'
'No contact with prostitutes?'
The man laughed again. 'Well, it is a religious duty for
many of them, you must understand. The temple dancers are important
for many ceremonies.'
'Ah. Well. Cleanliness, then. The animalcules move from
body to body in dirt, by touch, in food or water, and breath.
Boiled surgical instruments reduce infections. Masks on doctors and
nurses and patients, to reduce spread of infection.'
The officer looked pleased. 'Cleanliness is a virtue of
caste purity. The Kerala does not approve of caste, but it should
be possible to make cleanliness more of a priority.'
'Boiling kills the animalcules, it seems. Cooking
implements, pots and pans, drinking water -- all might be boiled to
advantage. Not very practical, I suppose.'
'No, but possible. What other methods could be
applied?'
'Certain herbs, perhaps, and things poisonous to the
animalcules but not to people. But no one knows whether such things
exist.'
'But trials could be made.'
'Possibly.'
'On poisoners, for instance.'
'It's been done.'
'Oh, the Kerala will be pleased. How he loves trials,
records, numbers laid out by his mathematicians to show whether the
impressions of one doctor are true when applied to the army as a
whole body. He will want to speak to you again.'
'I will tell him all I can,' Ismail said.
The officer shook his hand, holding it in both of his. 'I
will bring you back to the Kerala presently. For now, the musicians
are here, I see. I like to listen to them from up on the
terraces.'
Ismail followed him for a while, as if in an eddy, and
then one of the abbess's assistants snagged him and brought him
back to the party gathered by the Kerala to watch the concert.
The singers were dressed in beautiful saris, the
musicians in silk jackets cut from bolts of different colour and
weave, mostly of brilliant sky blue and blood orange red. The
musicians began to play; the drummers set a pattern on tablas, and
others played tall stringed instruments, like long necked
ouds, making Ismail recall Konstantiniyye, the whole city called up
by these twangy things so like an oud.
A singer stepped forward and sang in some foreign tongue,
the notes gliding through tones without a stop anywhere, always
curving through tonalities unfamiliar to Ismail, no tones or
quartertones that did not bend up or down rapidly, like certain
bird calls. The singer's companions danced slowly behind her,
coming as close to still positions as she came close to steady
tones, but always moving, hands extended palm outwards, speaking in
dance languages.
Now the two drummers shifted into a complex but steady
rhythm, woven together in a braid with the singing. Ismail closed
his eyes; he had never heard such music. Melodies overlapped and
went on without end. The audience swayed in time with them, the
soldiers dancing in place, all moving around the still centre of
the Kerala, and even he shimmied in place, moved by sound. When the
drummers went into a final mad flurry to mark the end of the piece,
the soldiers cheered and shouted and leapt in the air. The singers
and musicians bowed deeply, smiling, and came forward to receive
the Kerala's congratulations. He conferred for a time with the lead
singer, talking to her as to an old friend. Ismail found himself in
something like a reception line gathered by the abbess, and he
nodded to the sweaty performers one by one as they passed. They
were young. Many different perfumes filled Ismail's nostrils,
jasmine, orange, sea spray, and his breathing swelled his chest.
The sea smell came in stronger on a breeze, from the sea itself
this time, though there had been a perfume like it. The sea lay
green and blue out there, like the road to everywhere.
The party began to swirl about the garden again, in
patterns determined by the Kerala's slow progress. Ismail was
introduced to a quartet of bankers, two Sikh and two Travancori,
and he listened to them discuss, in Persian to be polite to him,
the complicated situation in India and around the Indian Ocean and
the world more generally. Towns and harbours fought over, new towns
built in hitherto empty river mouths, loyalties of local
populations shifting, Muslim slavers in west Africa, gold in south
Africa, gold in Inka, the island west of Africa all these
things had been going on for years, but somehow it was different
now. Collapse of the old Muslim empires, the mushrooming of new
machines, new states, new religions, new continents, and all
emanating from here, as if the violent struggle within India was
vibrating change outwards in waves all the way around the world,
meeting again coming the other way.
Bhakta introduced another man to Ismail, and the two men
nodded to each other, bowing slightly. The man's name was Wasco,
and he was from the new world, the big island west of Firanja,
which the Chinese called Yingzhou. Wasco identified it as
Hodenosauneega, 'Meaning territories of the peoples of the Long
House,' he said in passable Persian. He represented the
Hodenosaunee League, Bhakta explained. He looked like a Siberian or
Mongolian, or a Manchu who did not shave his forehead. Tall,
hawk nosed, striking to the eye, even there in the intense
sunlight of the Kerala himself; he looked as if those isolated
islands on the other side of the world might have produced a more
healthy and vigorous race. No doubt sent by his people for that
very reason.
Bhakta left them, and Ismail said politely, 'I come from
Konstantiniyye. Do your people have music like what we heard?'
Wasco thought about it. 'We do sing and dance, but they
are done by all together, informally and by chance, if you see what
I am driving at. The drumming here was much more fluid and
complicated. Thick sound. I found it fascinating. I would like to
hear more of it, to see if I heard what I heard.' He waggled a
hand in a way Ismail didn't understand -- amazement, perhaps, at
the drummers' virtuosity.
'They play beautifully,' Ismail said. 'We have drummers
too, but these have taken drumming to a higher level.'
'Truly.'
'What about cities, ships, all that? Does your land have
a harbour like this one?' Ismail asked.
Wasco's expression of surprise looked just like anyone
else's, which, Ismail thought, made perfect sense, as one saw the
same look on the faces of babies just birthed. In fact, with his
fluent Persian, it was impressive to Ismail how immediately
comprehensible he was, despite his exotic home.
'No. Where I come from we do not gather in such numbers.
More people live around this bay than in all my country, I
think.'
Now Ismail was the surprised one. 'So few as that?'
'Yes. Although there are a lot of people here, I think.
But we live in a great forest, extremely thick and dense. The
rivers make the best ways. Until you people arrived, we hunted and
grew some crops, we made only what we needed, with no metal or
ships. The Muslims brought those to our cast coast, and set up
forts in a few harbours, in particular at the mouth of the East
River, and on Long Island. There were not so many of them, at
first, and we learned a lot from them that we put to use for
ourselves. But we have been stricken by sicknesses we never knew
before, and many have died, at the same time that many more Muslims
have come, bringing slaves from Africa to help them. But our land
is very big, and the coast itself, where the Muslims cluster, is
not very good land. So we trade with them, and even better, with
ships from here, when the Travancoris arrived. We were very happy
to see these ships, truly, because we were worried about the
Firanjis. We still are. They have lots of cannons, and they go
where they want, and tell us we do not know Allah, and that we
should pray to him, and so on. So we liked to see the coming of
other people, in good ships. People who were not Muslim.'
'Did the Travancoris attack the Muslims already
there?'
'Not yet. They landed at the mouth of the Mississippi, a
big river. It may be they will come to blows eventually. They both
are very well armed, and we are not, not yet.' He looked Ismail in
the eye and smiled cheerfully. 'I must remember you are Muslim
yourself, no doubt.'
Ismail said, 'I do not insist on it for others. Islam
allows you to choose.'
'Yes, they said that. But here in Travancore you see it
really happening. Sikh, Hindu, Africans, Japanese, you see them all
here. The Kerala does not seem to care. Or he likes it.'
'Hindus absorb all that touch them, they say.'
'That sounds all right to me,' said Wasco. 'Or in any case,
preferable to Allah at gunpoint. We're making our own ships now in
our great lakes, and soon we can come around Africa to you. Or, now
the Kerala is proposing to dig a canal through the desert of Sinai,
connecting the Mediterranean to the Red Sea, and giving us more
direct access to you. He proposes to conquer all Egypt to make this
possible. No, there is much talk to be made, many decisions to be
made. My league is very fond of leagues.'
Then Bhakta came by and took Ismail off again. 'You have
been honoured with an invitation to join the Kerala in one of the
sky chariots.'
'The floating bags?'
Bhakta smiled. 'Yes.'
'Oh joy.'
Following the hobbling abbess Ismail passed through
terraces each with its own perfume scenting it, through nutmeg,
lime, cinnamon, mint, rose, rising level by level in short stone
staircases, feeling as he went something like a step into some
higher realm, where both senses and emotions were keener: a faint
terror of the body, as the odours cast him farther and farther into
a higher state. His head whirled. He did not fear death, but his
body did not like the idea of what would happen to take him to that
final moment. He caught up to the abbess and walked by her, to
stabilize himself by her calm. By the way she went up the stairs he
saw that she was always in pain. And yet she never spoke of it. Now
she looked back down at the ocean, catching her breath, and put one
gnarled hand to Ismail's arm, and told him how glad she was that he
was there among then. How much they might accomplish together
working under the guidance of the Kerala, who was creating the
space for greatness to occur. They were going to change the world.
As she spoke Ismail reeled again on the scents in the air, he
seemed to catch sight of things to come, of the Kerala sending back
people and things from all over the world as he conquered one place
after another, sending back to the monastery books, maps,
instruments, medicines, tools, people with unusual diseases or new
skills, from west of the Urals and east of the Pamirs, from Burma
and Siam and the Malay Peninsula and Sumatra and Java, from the
east coast of Africa, Ismail saw a witch docter from
Madagascar showing him the nearly transparent wings of a kind of
bat, which allowed for a full examination of living veins and
arteries, at which point he would give the Kerala a complete
description of the circulation of the blood, and the Kerala would
be very pleased at this, and then Ismail saw a Chinese Sumatran
doctor showing him what the Chinese meant by qi and shen, which
turned out to be what Ismail had always called lymph, produced by
small glands under the arms, which might be affected by poultices
of steamed herbs and drugs, as the Chinese had always claimed, and
then he saw a group of Buddhist monks arranging charts of different
elements in different families, depending on chemical and physical
properties, all laid out in a very beautiful mandala, the subject
of endless discussions in reading rooms, workshops, foundries and
hospitals, everyone exploring even if they did not sail around the
world, even if they never left Travancore, all of them anxious to
have something interesting to tell the Kerala the next time he came
by -- not so the Kerala would reward them, though he would, but
because he would be so happy at the new information. There was a
look on his face everyone craved to see, and that was the whole
story of Travancore, right there.
They came to a broad terrace where the flying basket was
tethered. Already its huge silken bag was full of heated air, and
straining up in jerks against its anchor ropes. The bamboo wicker
basket was as big as a large carriage or a small pavilion; the
rigging connecting it to the bottom of the silk bag was a network
of lines, each slender, but clearly strong in the aggregate. The
silk of the bag was diaphanous. A coalfired enclosed brazier, with
a hand bellows affixed to its side, was bolted to a bamboo frame
affixed beneath the bag, just over head level when they stepped
through a carriage door up into the basket.
The Kerala, the singer, Bhakta and Ismail crowded in and
stood at the corners. Pyidaungsu looked in and said, 'Alas, it does
not look as if there is room for me, I will crowd you
uncomfortably; I will go up next time, regretful though I am to
have lost the opportunity.'
The ropes were cast off by the pilot and his passengers,
except for a single line, it was a nearly windless day, and this,
Ismail was told, was to be a controlled flight. They were to ascend
like a kite, the pilot explained, and then when they were near the
full extension of the line, they would shut the stove down, and
stabilize in that one spot like any other kite, hanging some
thousand hands over the landscape. The usual slight onshore
afternoon breeze would ensure that they would float inland, if the
line happened to part.
Up they rose. 'It is like Arjuna's chariot,' the Kerala
said to them, and they all nodded, eyes shining with excitement.
The singer was beautiful, the memory of her singing like a song in
the air around them; and the Kerala more beautiful still; and
Bhakta the most beautiful of all. The pilot pumped the bellows once
or twice. The wind whistled in the rigging.
From the air the world proved to be flat looking. It
extended a tremendous distance to the horizon -- green hills to the
northeast and south, and to the west the flat blue plate of the
sea, the sunlight on it gleaming like gold on blue ceramic. Things
down there were small but distinct. The trees were like green tufts
of wool. It looked like the landscapes painted in Persian
miniatures, spread out and laid in space below them, gorgeously
articulated. Fields of rice were banked and bordered by sinuous
lines of palm trees, and beyond them were orchards of small trees,
planted in rows and lines, looking like a tight weave of cloth, all
the way out to the dark green hills in the east. 'What kind of
trees are those?' Ismail asked.
The Kerala answered, for as became clear, he had directed
the establishment of most of the orchards they could see. 'They are
part of the city lands, and used to grow the sources of essential
oils that we trade for the goods that come in. You smelled some of
them on our walk to the basket. Root trees like vetiver, costus,
valerian and angelica, shrubs like keruda, lotes, kadam, parijat
and night queen. Grasses like cintronella, lemon grass and ginger
grass and palmarosa. Flowers, as you see, including tuberose,
champaca, roses, jasmine, frangipani. Herbs including peppermint,
spearmint, patchouli, artemesia. Then there, back in the woods
there, those are orchards of sandalwood and agarwood. All these are
bred, planted, grown, harvested, processed and bottled or bagged
for trade with Africa and Firanja and China and the new world,
where formerly they had no scents and no healing substances
anything like as powerful, and so are much amazed, and desire them
very much. And now I have people out scouring the world to find
more stock of various kind, to see what will grow here. Those that
prosper are cultivated, and their oils sold round the world. Demand
for them is so high it is hard to match it, and gold comes
flowing into Travancore as its wondrous scents perfume the whole
Earth.'
The basket turned as it came to the top of its anchor
rope, and below them the heart of the kingdom was revealed, the
city of Travancore as seen by the birds, or God. The land beside
the bay was covered with roofs, trees, roads, docks, all as small
as the toys of a princess, extending not as far as Konstantiniyye
would have, but big enough, and sprinkled by a veritable arboretum
of green trees, hardly displaced by the buildings and roads. Only
the docks area was more roof than tree.
Just above them floated a tapestry of crosshatched cloud,
moving inland on the wind. Off to sea a great line of tall white
marbled clouds sailed towards them. 'We'll have to get down before
too long,' the Kerala said to the pilot, who nodded and checked his
stove.
A flock of vultures pinioned about them curiously, and
the pilot shouted once at them, pulling a fowling gun out of a bag
on the inside of the basket. He had never seen it happen, he said,
but he had heard of a flock of birds pecking a bag right out of the
sky. Hawks, jealous of their territory, apparently; probably
vultures would not be so bold; but it would be a bad thing by which
to be surprised.
The Kerala laughed, looked at Ismail and gestured at the
colourful and fragrant fields. 'This is the world we want you to
help us make,' he said. 'We will go out into the world and plant
gardens and orchards to the horizons, we will build roads through
the mountains and across the deserts, and terrace the mountains and
irrigate the deserts until there will be garden everywhere, and
plenty for all, and there will be no more empires or kingdoms, no
more caliphs, sultans, emirs, khans or zamin dars, no more
kings or queens or princes, no more qadis or mullas or ulema, no
more slavery and no more usury, no more property and no more taxes,
no more rich and no more poor, no killing or maiming or torture or
execution, no more jailers and no more prisoners, no more generals,
soldiers, armies or navies, no more patriarchy, no more clans, no
more caste, no more hunger, no more suffering than what life brings
us for being born and having to die, and then we will see for the
first time what kind of creatures we really are.'
Chapter Three. Gold Mountain
In the twelfth year of the Xianfeng Emperor, rain
inundated Gold Mountain. It started raining in the third month of
the autumn, the usual start of the rainy season on this part of the
coast of Yingzhou, but then it never stopped raining until the
second month of the following spring. It rained every day for half
a year, and often a pounding, drenching rain, as if it were the
tropics. Before that winter was halfway over the great central
valley of Gold Mountain had flooded up and down its entire length,
forming a shallow lake fifteen hundred li long and three hundred li
wide. The water poured brownly between the green hills flanking the
delta, into the great bay and out of the Gold Gate, staining the
ocean the colour of mud all the way out to the Peng lai
Islands. The outflow ran hard both ebb and flood, but still this
was not enough to empty the great valley. The Chinese towns and
villages and farms on the flat valley floor were drowned to the
rooftops, and the entire population of the valley had to leave for
higher ground, in the coastal range or the foothills of the Gold
Mountains, or, for the most part, down to the city, fabled
Fangzhang. Those who lived on the eastern side of the central
valley tended to move up into the foothills, ascending the rail and
stage roads that ran up through apple orchards and vineyards,
overlooking the deep canyons that cut between the tablelands. Here
they ran into the large foothill population of Japanese.
Many of these Japanese had come in the diaspora, after
the Chinese armies had conquered Japan, in the Yung Cheng dynasty,
a hundred and twenty years before. They were the ones who had first
begun to grow rice in the central valley; but after only a
generation or two, Chinese immigration filled the valley as the
rains were now filling it, and most of the Japanese nisei and
sansei moved up into the foothills, looking for gold, or growing
grapes and apples. There they encountered a fair number of the old
ones, hidden in the foothills and struggling to survive a malaria
epidemic that recently had killed most of them off. The Japanese
got along with the survivors, and the other old ones that came from
the east, and together they resisted Chinese incursions into the
foothills in every way they could, short of insurrection; for over
the Gold Mountains lay high desolate akaline deserts, where nothing
could live. Their backs were to the wall.
So the arrival of so many Chinese refugee farming
families was no very happy event for those already there. The
foothills were composed of plateaux tilted up towards the high
mountains, and cut by very deep, rugged, heavily forested river
canyons. These manzanita choked canyons were impenetrable to
the Chinese authorities, and hidden in them were many Japanese
families, most of them panning for gold or working small diggings.
Chinese road building campaigns stuck to the plateaux for the
most part, and the canyons had remained substantially Japanese,
despite the presence of Chinese prospectors: a
Hokkaido--in exile, tucked between the Chinese valley and the
great desert of the natives. Now this world was filling with soaked
Chinese rice farmers.
Neither side liked it. By now bad relations between
Chinese and Japanese were as natural as between dog and cat. The
foothill Japanese tried to ignore the Chinese setting up refugee
camps by the all the stage and railway stations; the Chinese tried
to ignore the Japanese homesteads they were intruding on. Rice ran
low, tempers got short, and the Chinese authorities sent troops
into the area to keep order. The rain kept falling.
One group of Chinese walked out of the flooding on the
stage road that followed the course of Rainbow Trout River.
Overlooking the river's north bank were apple orchards and cattle
pasturage, mostly owned by Chinese in Fangzhang, but worked by
Japanese. This group of Chinese camped in one of the orchards, and
did what they could to construct shelter from the rain, which
continued to fall, day after day after day. They built a
pole framed barnlike building with a shingle roof, an open
fire at one end and mere sheets for walls; meagre protection, but
better than none. By day the men scrambled down the canyon walls to
fish in the roaring river, and others went into the forest to hunt
deer, shooting great numbers of them and drying their meat.
The matriarch of one of these families, Yao Je by name,
was frantic that her silkworms had been left behind on their farm,
in boxes tucked in the rafters of her filature. Her husband did not
think there was anything that could be done about it, but the
family employed a Japanese servant boy named Kiyoaki, who
volunteered to go back down to the valley and take their rowing
boat out on the first calm day, and recover the silkworms. His
master did not like the proposal, but his mistress approved of it,
as she wanted the silkworms. So one rainy morning Kiyoaki left to
try to return to their flooded farm, if he could.
He found the Yao family's rowing boat still tied to the
valley oak where they had left it. He untied it and rowed out over
what had been the eastern rice paddies of their farm, towards their
compound. A west wind churned up high waves, and both pushed him
back east. His palms were blistered by the time he coasted up to
the Yaos' inundated compound, scraped the flat bottom of the boat
over the outer wall, and tied it to the roof of the filature, the
tallest building on the farm. He climbed through a side window into
the rafters, and found the sheets of damp paper covered with
silkworm eggs, in their boxes filled with rocks and mulberry mulch.
He gathered all the sheets into an oilcloth bag and lowered them
out of the window into the rowing boat, feeling pleased.
Now rain was violently thrashing the surface of the
flood, and Kiyoaki considered spending the night in the attic of
the Yaos' house. But the emptiness of it frightened him, and for no
better reason than that, he decided to row back. The oilcloth would
protect the eggs, and he had been wet for so long that he was used
to it. He was like a frog hopping in and out of its pond, it was
all the same to him. So he got in the boat and began to row.
But now, perversely, the wind was from the east, blowing
up waves of surprising weight and power. His hands hurt, and the
boat occasionally brushed over drowned things: treetops, wiregraph
poles, perhaps other things, he was too jumpy to look. Dead men's
fingers! He could not see far in the growing gloom, and as night
fell he lost his feeling for what direction he was headed. The
rowing boat had a oiled canvas decking bunched in its bow,
and he pulled it back over the gunwales, tied it in place, got
under it and floated over the flood, lying in the bottom of the
boat and occasionally bailing with a can. It was wet, but it would
not founder. He let it bounce over the waves, and eventually fell
asleep.
He woke several times in the night, but after bailing he
always forced himself to sleep again. The rowing boat swirled and
rocked, but the waves never broke over it. If they did the boat
would founder and he would drown, but he avoided thinking about
that.
Dawn made it clear he had drifted west rather than east.
He was far out on the inland sea that the central valley had
become. A knot of valley oaks marked a small island of higher
ground that still stood above the flood, and he rowed towards
it.
As he was facing away from the new little island, he did
not see it well until he had thumped the bow onto it. Immediately
he discovered it was coated with a host of spiders, bugs, snakes,
squirrels, moles, rats, mice, raccoons and foxes, all leaping onto
the rowing boat at once, as representing the new highest ground. He
himself was the highest ground of all, and he was shouting in
dismay and slapping desperate snakes and squirrels and spiders off
him, when a young woman and baby leapt onto the boat like the rest
of the crowd of animals, except the girl pushed off from the tree
Kiyoaki had rowed against, weeping and crying loudly, 'They're
trying to cat her, they're trying to eat my baby!'
Kiyoaki was preoccupied by the scores of creatures still
crawling on him, to the point of nearly losing an oar over the
side. Eventually he had squished or brushed or thrown overboard all
the interlopers, and he replaced the oars in the rowlocks and rowed
swiftly away. The girl and ber baby sat on the boat deck, the girl
still whacking insects and spiders and shouting 'Ugh! Ugh! Ugh!'
She was Chinese.
The lowering grey clouds began to leak rain yet again.
They could see nothing but water in all directions, except for the
trees of the little island they had so hastily vacated.
Kiyoaki rowed east. 'You're going the wrong way,' the
girl complained.
'This is the way I came,' Kiyoaki said. 'The family that
employs me is there.'
The girl did not reply.
'How did you get on that island?'
Again she said nothing.
Having passengers made rowing harder, and the waves came
closer to breaking over the boat. Crickets and spiders continued to
leap around underfoot, and an opossum had wedged itself in the bow
under the decking. Kiyoaki rowed until his hands were bleeding, but
they never caught sight of land; it was raining so hard now that it
formed a kind of thick falling fog.
The girl complained, nursed her baby, killed insects.
'Row west,' she kept saying. 'The current will help you.'
Kiyoaki rowed cast. The boat jounced over the waves, and
from time to time they bailed it out. The whole world seemed to
have become a sea. Once Kiyoaki glimpsed a sight of the coastal
range through a rent in the low clouds to the west, much closer
than he would have expected or hoped. A current in the floodwaters
must have been carrying them west.
Near dark they came on another tiny tree island.
'It's the same one!' the young woman said.
'It just looks that way.'
The wind was rising again, like the evening delta breeze
they enjoyed so much during the hot dry summers. The waves were
getting higher and higher, slapping hard into the bow and splashing
over the canvas and in on their feet. Now they had to land, or they
would sink and drown.
So Kiyoaki landed the boat. Again a tide of animal and
insect life overran them. The Chinese girl cursed with surprising
fluency, beating the larger creatures away from her baby. The
smaller ones you just had to get used to. Up in the vast branches
of the valley oaks sat a miserable troop of snow monkeys, staring
down on them. Kiyoaki tied the boat to a branch and got off,
arranged a wet blanket on the squirming mud between two roots,
pulled the rowing boat's decking off, and draped it over the girl
and her baby, weighing it down as best he could with broken
branches. He crawled underneath the canvas with her, and they and
an entire menagerie of bugs and snakes and rodents settled in for
the long night. It was hard to sleep.
The next morning was as rainy as ever. The young woman
had put her baby between the two of them to protect her from the
rats. Now she nursed her. Under the canvas it was warmer than
outside. Kiyoaki wished he could start a fire to cook some
snakes or squirrels, but nothing was dry. 'We might as well get
going,' he said.
They went out into the chill drizzle and got back in the
boat. As Kiyoaki cast off about ten of the snow monkeys leaped down
through the branches and climbed into the boat with them. The girl
shrieked and pulled her shirt over ber baby, huddling over it and
staring at the monkeys. They sat there like passengers, looking
down or off into the rain, pretending to be thinking about
something else. She threatened one and it shrank back.
'Leave them alone,' Kiyoaki said. The monkeys were
Japanese; the Chinese didn't like them, and complained about their
presence on Yingzhou.
They spun over the great inland sea. The young woman and
her baby were dotted with spiders and fleas, as if they were dead
bodies. The monkeys began to groom them, eating some insects and
throwing others overboard.
'My name is Kiyoaki.'
'I am Peng ti,' the young Chinese woman said,
brushing things off the babe and ignoring the monkeys.
Rowing hurt the blisters on Kiyoaki's hands, but after a
while the pain would subside. He headed west, giving in to the
current that had already taken them so far that way.
Out of the drizzle appeared a small sailing boat. Kiyoaki
shouted, waking the girl and baby, but the men on the sailing boat
had already spotted them, and they sailed over.
There were two sailors on board, two Japanese men.
Peng ti watched them with narrowed eyes.
One told the castaways to climb into their boat. 'But
tell the monkeys to stay there,' he said with a laugh.
Peng ti passed her baby up to them, then hauled
herself over the gunwale.
'You're lucky they're just monkeys,' the other one said.
'Up north valley, Black Fort is high ground for a lot of country
that hadn't been cleared, and the animals that swam onto it were
more than you see here in your rice paddies. They had closed the
gates but walls were nothing much to the bears, brown bears and
gold bears, and they were shooting them when the magistrate ordered
them to stop, because it was just going to use up all their
ammunition and then they'd still have a whole town of bears. And
the giant gold bears opened the gates and in come wolves, elk, the
whole damn Hsu Fu walking the streets of Black Fort, and the people
all locked up in their attics waiting it out.' The men laughed with
pleasure at the thought.
'We're hungry,' Peng ti said.
'You look it,' they said.
'We were going east,' Kiyoaki mentioned.
'We're going west.'
'Good,' Peng ti said.
It continued to rain. They passed another knot of trees
on an embankment just covered by water, and sitting in the branches
like the monkeys were a dozen soaked and miserable Chinese men,
very happy to leap on the sailboat. They had been there six days,
they said. The fact that Japanese had rescued them did not seem to
register with them one way or the other.
Now the sailing boat and rowing boat were carried on a
current of brown water, between misted green hills.
'We're going over to the city,' their tillerman said.
'It's the only place where the docks are still secure. Besides we
want to get dry and have a big dinner in Japantown.'
Across the rain spattered brown water they sailed.
The delta and its diked islands were all under the flood, it was
all a big brown lake with occasional lines of treetops sticking out
of it, giving the sailors a fix on their position, apparently. They
pointed at certain lines and discussed them with great animation,
their fluid Japanese a great contrast to their rough Chinese.
Eventually they came into 'a narrow strait between tall
hillsides, and as the wind was shooting up this strait -- the Inner
Gate, Kiyoaki presumed -- they let down the sail and rode the
current, shifting their rudder to keep in the fast part of it,
which curved with the bend around the tall hills to the south,
beyond which they were through the narrows and thrust out onto the
broad expanse of Golden Bay, now a rocking foam streaked brown bay,
ringed by green hills that disappeared into a ceiling of low grey
cloud. As they tacked across to the city the clouds thinned in a
few bands over the tall ridge of the northern peninsula, and weak
light fell onto the hive of buildings and streets covering the
peninsula, all the way up to the peak of Mount Tamalpi,
turning certain neighbourhoods white or silver or pewter, amidst
the general grey. It was an awesome sight.
The western side of the bay just north of the Gold Gate
is broken by several peninsulas extending into the bay, and these
peninsulas were covered with buildings too, indeed among the city's
busiest districts, as they formed the capes of three little harbour
bays. The middle of these three was the largest, the commercial
harbour, and the peninsula on its south side also served the
Japantown, tucked among the warehouses and a working neighbourhood
behind them. Here, as their sailors had said, the floating docks
and the wharves were intact and functioning normally, as if the
central valley were not completely flooded. Only the
dirt brown water of the bay revealed that anything was
different.
As they approached the docks, the monkeys on the rowing
boat began to look agitated. It was a case of from flood to frying
pan for them, and eventually one slipped overboard and struck out
swimming for an island to the south, and all the others immediately
followed with a splash, picking up their conversation among
themselves where they had left off.
'That's why they call it Monkey Island,' their pilot
said.
He brought them into the middle harbour. The men on the
dock included a Chinese magistrate, who looked down and said,
'Still flooded out there I see.'
'Still flooded and still raining.'
'People must be getting hungry.'
'Yes.'
The Chinese men climbed onto the dock, and thanked the
sailors, who got out with Kiyoaki and Peng ti and the baby.
The tillerman joined them as they followed the magistrate to the
Great Valley Refugee Office, set up in the customs building at the
back of the dock. There they were registered -- their names, place
of residence before the flood, and the whereabouts of their
families and neighbours, if known, all recorded. The clerks gave
them chits that would allow them to claim beds in the immigration
control buildings, located on the steep sided big island out
in the bay.
The tillerman shook his head. These big buildings had
been built to quarantine non Chinese immigrants to Gold
Mountain, about fifty years before. They were surrounded by fences
tipped with barbed wire, and contained big dormitories with men's
and women's sides. Now they housed some of the stream of refugees
flowing down into the bay on the flood, mostly displaced valley
Chinese, but the keepers of the place had retained the prison
attitude they had had with the immigrants, and the valley refugees
there were complaining bitterly and doing their best to get cleared
to move in with local relatives, or to relocate up or down the
coast, or even to return to the flooded valley and wait around the
edges until the water receded. But there had been outbreaks of
cholera reported, and the governor of the province had declared a
state of emergency that allowed him to act directly in the
Emperor's interests: martial law was in effect, enforced by army
and navy.
The tillerman, having explained this, said to Kiyoaki and
Peng ti, 'You can stay with us if you want. We stay at a
boarding house in Japantown, it's clean and cheap. They'll put you
up on credit if we say you're good for it.'
Kiyoaki regarded Peng ti, who looked down. Snake or
spider: refugee housing or Japantown.
'We'll come with you,' she said. 'Many thanks.'
The street leading inland from the docks to the high
central district of the city was lined on both sides by restaurants
and hotels and small shops, the fluid calligraphy of Japanese as
common as the blockier Chinese ideograms. Side streets were tight
alleyways, the peaked rooftops curving up into the rain until the
buildings almost met overhead. People wore oilcloth ponchos or
jackets, and carried black or colourful print umbrellas, many very
tattered by now. Everyone was wet, heads lowered and shoulders
hunched, and the middle of the street was like an open stream,
bouncing brownly to the bay. The green hills rising to the west of
this quarter of the city were bright with tile roofs, red and green
and a vivid blue: a prosperous quarter, despite the Japantown at
its foot. Or, perhaps, because of it. Kiyoaki had been taught to
call the blue of those tiles Kyoto blue.
They walked through alleys to a big merchant house and
chandlery in the warren of Japantown, and the two Japanese men --
the older named Gen, they learned introduced the young
castaways to the proprietress of a boarding house next door. She
was a toothless old Japanese woman, in a simple brown kimono, with
a shrine in her hallway and reception room. They stepped in ber
door and began to shed their wet raingear, and she regarded
them with a critical eye. 'Everyone so wet these days,' she
complained. 'You look as if they pulled you off the bottom of the
bay. Chewed by crabs.'
She gave them dry clothes, and had theirs sent to a
laundry. There were women's and men's wings to her establishment,
and Kiyoaki and Peng ti were assigned mats, then fed a hot
meal of rice and soup, followed by cups of warm sake. Gen was
paying for them, and he waved off their thanks in the usual brusque
Japanese manner. 'Payment on return home,' Gen said. 'Your families
will be happy to repay me.'
Neither of the castaways had much to say to that. Fed,
dry; there was nothing left but to go to their rooms and sleep as
if felled.
Next day Kiyoaki woke to the sound of the chandler next
door, shouting at an assistant. Kiyoaki looked out of the window of
his room into a window of the chandlery, and saw the angry chandler
hit the unfortunate youth on the side of the head with an abacus,
the beads rattling back and forth.
Gen had come in the room, and he regarded the scene in
the next building impassively. 'Come on,' he said to Kiyoaki. 'I've
got some errands to do, it'll be a way to show you some of the
city.'
Off they went, south on the big coastal street fronting
the bay, connecting all of the smaller harbours facing the big bay
and the islands in it. The southernmost harbour was tighter than
the one fronting Japantown, its bay a forest of masts and
smokestacks, the city behind and above it jammed together in a
great mass of three--and four storey buildings, all wooden
with tile roofs, crammed together in what Gen said was the usual
Chinese city style, and running right down to the high tide
line, in places even built out over the water. This compact mass of
buildings covered the whole end of the peninsula, its streets
running straight east and west from the bay to the ocean, and north
and south until they ended in parks and promenades high over the
Gold Gate. The strait was obscured by a fog that floated in over
the yellow spill of floodwater pouring out to sea; the
yellow brown plume was so extensive that there was no blue
ocean to be seen. On the ocean side of the point lay the long
batteries of the city defences, concrete fortresses which Gen said
commanded the strait and the waters outside it for up to fifty li
offshore.
Gen sat on the low wall of one of the promenades overlooking the
strait. He waved a hand to the north, where streets and rooftops
covered everything they could see.
'The greatest harbour on Earth. The greatest city in the
world, some say.'
'It's big, that's for sure. I didn't know it would be so
. .
'A million people here now, they say. And more coming all
the time. They just keep building north, on up the peninsula.'
Across the strait, on the other hand, the southern
peninsula was a waste of marshes and bare steep hills. It looked
very empty compared to the city, and Kiyoaki remarked on it.
Gen shrugged: 'Too marshy, I guess, and too steep for
streets. I suppose they'll get to it eventually, but it's better
over here.'
The islands dotting the bay were occupied by the
compounds of the imperial bureaucrats. Out on the biggest island
the governor's mansion was roofed with gold. The brown
foam streaked surface of the water was dotted with little bay
boats, mostly sail, some smoking two strokes. Little marinas
of square houseboats were tucked against the islands. Kiyoaki
surveyed the scene happily. 'Maybe I'll move here. There must be
jobs.'
'Oh yeah. Down at the docks, unloading the freighters --
get a room at the boarding house -- there's lots of work. In the
chandlery too.'
Kiyoaki recalled his awakening. 'Why was that man so
angry?'
Gen frowned. 'That was unfortunate. Tagomi san is a
good man, he doesn't usually beat his help, I assure you. But he's
frustrated. We can't get the authorities to release supplies of
rice to feed the people stranded in the valley. The chandler is
very high in the Japanese community here, and he's been trying for
months now. He thinks the Chinese bureaucrats, over on the island
there,' gesturing, 'are hoping that most of the people inland will
starve.'
'But that's crazy! Most of them are Chinese.'
'Yeah sure, a lot are Chinese, but it would mean even
more Japanese.'
'How so?'
Gen regarded him. 'There are more of us in the central
valley than there are Chinese. Think about it. It may not be so
obvious, because the Chinese are the only ones allowed to own land,
and so they run the rice paddies, especially where you came from,
over east side. But up valley, down valley -- it's mostly
Japanese at the ends, and in the foothills, the coastal range, even
more so. We were here first, you understand? Now comes this big
flood, people are driven away, flooded out, starving. The
bureaucrats are thinking, when it's over and the land reemerges,
assuming it will some day, if most of the Japanese and natives have
died of hunger, then new immigrants can be sent in to take over the
valley. And they'll all be Chinese.'
Kiyoaki didn't know what to say to this.
Gen stared at him curiously. He seemed to like what he
saw: 'So, you know, Tagomi has been trying to organize private
relief, and we've been taking it inland on the flood. But it isn't
going well, and it's been expensive, and so the old man is getting
testy. His poor workers are paying for it.' Gen laughed.
'But you rescued those Chinese stuck in the trees.'
'Yeah, yeah. Our job. Our duty. Good must result from
good, eh? That's what the old woman boarding you says. Of course
she's always getting taken.'
They regarded a new tongue of fog licking into the
strait. Rain clouds on the horizon looked like a great treasure
fleet arriving. A black broom of rain already swept the desolate
southern peninsula.
Gen clapped him on the shoulder in a friendly way. 'Come
on, I have to get her some stuff at the store.'
He led Kiyoaki up to a tram station, and they got on the
next tram that ran up the western side of the city, overlooking the
ocean. Up streets and down, past shady residential districts, then
another government district, high on the slopes overlooking the
stained ocean, wide esplanades lined with cherry trees; then
another fortress. The hilly neighbourhoods north of these guns held
many of the city's richest mansions, Gen said. They gazed at some
of them from the tram as it squeaked past. From the tops of the
precipitous streets they could see the temples on the summit of
Mount Tamalpi. Then down into a valley, off that tram, and east on
another one, across the peninsula and back to Japantown, with bags
of food from a market for the proprietress of the boarding
house.
Kiyoaki looked in the women's wing to see how
Peng ti and her baby were doing. She was sitting in a window
embrasure holding the child, looking blank and desolate. She had
not gone to find any Chinese relatives, or to seek help from the
Chinese authorities, not that there appeared to be much help from
that direction; but she seemed not at all interested. Staying with
the Japanese, as if in hiding. But she spoke no Japanese, and that
was all they used here, unless they thought to speak to her
directly in Chinese.
'Come out with me,' he said to her in Chinese. 'I have
some money from Gen for the tram, we can see the Gold Gate.'
She hesitated, then agreed. Kiyoaki led her onto the tram
system he had just learned, and they went down to the park
overlooking the strait. The fog had almost burned off, and the next
line of storm clouds were not yet arrived, and the spectacle of the
city and the bay shone in wet blinking sunlight. The brown flood
continued to pour out to sea, the scraps and lines of foam showing
how fast the current was; it must have been ebb tide. That was
every rice paddy in the central valley, scoured away and flushed
out into the big ocean. Inland everything would have to be built
anew. Kiyoaki said something to this effect, and a flash of anger
crossed Peng ti's face, quickly suppressed.
'Good,' she said. 'I never want to see that place
again.'
Kiyoaki regarded ber, shocked. She could not have been
more than about sixteen. What about her parents, her family? She
wasn't saying, and he was too polite to ask.
Instead they sat in the rare sun, watching the bay. The
babe whimpered, and unobtrusively Peng ti nursed it. Kiyoaki
watched her face and the tidal race in the Gold Gate, thinking
about the Chinese, their implacable bureaucracy, their huge cities,
their rule of Japan, Korea, Mindanao, Aozhou, Yingzhou and
Inka.
'What's your baby's name?' Kiyoaki said.
'Hu Die,' the girl said. 'It means '
'Butterfly,' Kiyoaki said, in Japanese. 'I know.' He
fluttered with a hand, and she smiled and nodded.
Clouds obscured the sun again, and it cooled rapidly in
the onshore breeze. They took the tram back to Japantown.
At the boarding house Peng ti went to the women's
wing, and as the men's wing was empty, Kiyoaki entered the
chandlery next door, thinking to inquire about a job. The shop on
the first floor was deserted, and he heard voices on the second
floor, so he went up the stairs.
Here were the accounting rooms and the offices. The
chandler's big office door was closed, but voices came
through it. Kiyoaki approached, heard men speaking Japanese:
' I don't see how we could coordinate our efforts, how we
could be sure it was all going off at once '
The door flew open and Kiyoaki was seized by the neck and
dragged into the room. Eight or nine Japanese men glared at him,
all seated around one elderly bald foreigner, in the chair of the
honoured guest. The chandler roared, 'Who let him in here!'
'There's no one downstairs,' Kiyoaki said. 'I was just
looking for someone to ask for a '
'How long were you listening?' The old man looked as if
he was ready to hit Kiyoaki with his abacus, or worse. 'How dare
you eavesdrop on us, you could get rocks tied to your ankles and
thrown in the bay for that!'
'He's just one of the folks we plucked out of the
valley,' Gen said from a corner. 'I've been getting to know him.
Might as well enlist him, since he's here. I've already vetted him.
He hasn't got anything better to do. In fact he'll be good.'
While the old man spluttered some objection, Gen got up
and grabbed Kiyoaki by the shirt front.
'Get someone to lock the front door,' he told one of the
younger men there, who left quickly. Gen turned to Kiyoaki:
'Listen, youth. We're trying to help the Japanese here, as I told
you down at the Gate.'
'That's good.'
'We're working to free the Japanese, actually. Not only
here, but in Japan itself.'
Kiyoaki gulped, and Gen shook him. 'That's right, Japan
itself! A war of independence for the old country, and here too.
You can work for us, and join one of the greatest things possible
for a Japanese. Are you in or are you out?'
'In!' Kiyoaki said. 'I'm in, of course! just tell me what
I can do!'
'You can sit down and shut up,' Gen said. 'First of all.
Listen and then you'll be told more.'
The elderly foreigner seated in the chair of the honoured
guest asked a question in his language.
Another of the men waved Kiyoaki aside, answered in the
same language. In Japanese he said to Kiyoaki, 'This is Dr Ismail,
visiting us from Travancore, the capital of the Indian League. He's
here to help us organize our resistance to the Chinese. If you are
to stay in this meeting, you must swear never to tell anyone what
you see and hear. It means you are committed to the cause without a
chance of backing out. If we find out you've ever told anyone about
this, you'll be killed, do you understand?'
' I understand,' Kiyoaki said. 'I'm in, I said. You can
proceed with no fear from me. I've worked like a slave for the
Chinese in the valley, all my life.'
The men in the room stared at him; only Gen grinned at
the spectacle of such a youth using the phrase 'all my life'.
Kiyoaki saw that and blushed hotly. But it was true no matter how
old he was. He set his jaw and sat on the floor in the corner by
the door.
The men resumed their conversation. They were asking
questions of the foreigner, who watched them with a birdlike blank
expression, fingering a white moustache, until the man translating
spoke to him, in a fluid language that did not seem to have enough
sounds to create all the words; but the old foreigner understood
him, and replied to the questions carefully and at length, taking
pauses every few sentences to let the young translator speak in
Japanese. He was obviously very used to working with a
translator.
'He says, his country was under the yoke of the Mughals
for many centuries, and finally they freed themselves in a military
campaign run by their Kerala. The methods used have been
systematized, and can be taught. The Kerala himself was
assassinated, about twenty years ago. Dr Ismail says this was a, a
disaster beyond telling, you can see it still upsets him to talk
about it. But the only cure is to go on and do what the Kerala
would have wanted them to do. And he wanted everyone everywhere
free of all empires. So Travancore itself is now part of an Indian
League, which has its disagreements, even violent disagreements,
but mostly they work out their differences as equals. He says this
kind of league was first developed here in Yingzhou, out in the
east, among the Hodenosaunee natives. The Firanjis have taken most
of the cast coast of Yingzhou, as we have the west, and many of the
old ones out there have died of disease, as here, but the
Hodenosaunee still hold the area around the great lakes, and the
Travancoris have helped them to fight the Muslims. He says
that is the key to success; those fighting the great empires have
to help each other. He says they have helped some Africans as well,
down in the south, a King Moshesh of the Basutho tribe. The doctor
here travelled there himself, and arranged for aid to the Basuthos
that allowed them to defend themselves from Muslim slave traders
and the Zulu tribe as well. Without their help the Basuthos
probably wouldn't have survived.'
'Ask him what he means when he says help.'
The foreign doctor nodded when the question was put to
him. He used fingers to enumerate his answer.
'He says, first, they help by teaching the system their
Kerala worked out, for organizing a fighting force, and fighting
armies when those armies are much bigger. Then second, they can in
some instances help with weapons. They will smuggle them in for us,
if they think we are serious. And third, rare but possible, they
can join the fight, if they think it will turn the tide.'
'They fought Muslims, and so do the Chinese. Why should
they help Us?'
' He says, good question. He says, it's a matter of
keeping a balance, and of setting the two great powers against each
other. The Chinese and the Muslims are fighting each other
everywhere, even in China itself, where there are Muslim
rebellions. But right now the Muslims in Firanja and Asia are
splintered and weak, they are always fighting each other, even here
in Yingzhou. Meanwhile China continues to fatten on its colonies
here and around the Dahai. Even though the Qing bureaucracy is
corrupt and inefficient, their manufacturers are always busy, and
gold keeps coming, from here and from Inka. So no matter how
inefficient they are, they keep getting richer. At this point, he
says, the Travancoris are interested in keeping China from becoming
so strong they take over the whole world.'
One of the Japanese men snorted. 'No one can take over
the world,' he said. 'It's too big.'
The foreigner inquired what had been said, and the
translator translated for him. Dr Ismail raised a finger as he
heard it, and replied.
'He says, that may have been true before, but now, with
steamships, and communication by qi, and trade and travel
everywhere by ocean, and machines exerting several thousandcamels
of power, it could be that some dominant country could get an
advantage and keep growing. There is a kind of, what, multiplying
power to power. So that it's best to try to keep any one country
from getting powerful enough to start that process. It was Islam
that looked to be taking over the world for a while, he says,
before their Kerala went at the heart of the old Muslim empires and
broke them. It could be that China needs a similar treatment, and
then there will be no empires, and people can do as they choose,
and form leagues with whoever helps them.'
'But how can we stay in contact with them, on the other
side of the world?'
'He agrees it is not easy. But steamships are fast. It
can be done. They have done it in Africa, and in Inka. Qi wires can
be strung very quickly between groups.'
They went on, the questions becoming more practical and
detailed, losing Kiyoaki, as he didn't know where many of the
places mentioned were: Basutho, Nsara, Seminole and so on.
Eventually Dr Ismail appeared to tire, and they ended the meeting
with tea. Kiyoaki helped Gen pour cups and pass them around, and
then Gen took him downstairs and reopened the chandlery.
'You almost got me in trouble there,' he told Kiyoaki,
'and yourself too. You'll have to work hard for us to make up for
scaring me that bad.'
'Sorry -- I will. Thanks for helping me.'
'Oh that poisonous feeling. No thanks. You do your job, I
do mine.'
'Right.'
'Now, the old man will take you in at the chandlery here,
and you can live next door. He'll hit you with his abacus, as you
saw. But your main job will be running messages for us and the
like. If the Chinese get wind of what we're doing, it will get
ugly, I warn you. It will be war, do you understand? It may be a
secret war, at night, in the alleyways and out on the bay. Do you
understand?'
'I understand.'
Gen regarded him. 'We'll see. First thing, we'll go back
into the valley and get the word into the foothills, to some
friends of mine. Then back to the city, to work here.'
'Whatever you say.'
An assistant gave Kiyoaki a tour of the chandlery, which
he was soon to know so well. After that he went back to the
boarding house next door. Peng ti was helping the old woman
chop vegetables; Hu Die was sunning in a laundry basket. Kiyoaki
sat next to the baby, entertaining it with a finger and thinking
things over. He watched Peng ti, learning the Japanese words
for the vegetables. She didn't want to go back to the valley
either. The old woman spoke pretty good Chinese, and the two women
were talking, but Peng ti wasn't telling her any more about
her past than she had told Kiyoaki. It was warm in the kitchen.
Rain was coming down again outside. The baby smiled at him, as if
to reassure him. As if telling him that it would be all right.
The next time they were down at Gold Gate Park, looking
at the brown flood still pouring, he sat by Peng ti on a
bench. 'Listen,' he said, 'I'm going to stay here in the city. I'll
go back out to the valley on a trip, and get Madam Yao's silkworms
to her, but I'm going to live here.'
She nodded. 'Me too.' She waved at the bay. 'How could
you not?' She picked up Hu Die and held her up in the air, face out
towards the bay, and turned her around to face the four winds.
'This is your new home, Hu Die! This is where you are going to grow
up!' Hu Die goggled at the view.
Kiyoaki laughed. 'Yes. She will like it here. But listen,
Peng ti, I'm going to be . . .' He considered how to say it.
'I'm going to work for Japan. Do you understand?'
'No.'
'I'm going to work for Japan, against China.'
'I see.'
'I'm going to be working against China.'
Her jaw clenched. She said harshly, 'Do you think I
care?' She looked across the bay to the Inner Gate, where brown
water split the green hills. 'I'm so glad to be out of there.' She
looked him in the eye, and he felt his heart jump. 'I'll help
you.'
Chapter Four. Black Clouds
Because China's emerging empire was now chiefly maritime,
its shipping again became the biggest in the world. The emphasis
was on carrying capacity, and so the typical Chinese fleet of the
early modern period was very big, and slow. Speed was not a
consideration. This made difficulties for them later, in naval
disputes with the Indians and with the Muslims of Africa, the
Mediterranean and Firanja. In the Mediterranean, the Islamic Sea,
Muslims developed ships that were smaller but much faster and
nimbler than their Chinese contemporaries, and in several decisive
naval encounters of the tenth and eleventh centuries, Muslim fleets
defeated larger Chinese fleets, preserving the balance of power and
preventing Qing China from achieving world hegemony. Indeed Muslim
privateering in the Dahai became a major source of revenue to
Islamic governments, and a source of friction between Islamic and
Chinese, one of the many factors leading to war. In fact, with the
sea far surpassing land as a means of commercial and military
travel, the superior speed and manoeuvrability of Muslim ships was
one of the advantages they held which allowed them to challenge
Chinese sea power.
The development of steam power and metal hulls in
Travancore was quickly taken up by both of the other major Old
World hegemons, but its lead in this technology and others allowed
the Indian League also to compete with the larger rivals on both
sides of it.
Thus the twelfth and thirteenth Muslim centuries, or the
Qing dynasty in China, was a period of rising competition
between the three major Old World cultures, to dominate and extract
the wealth of the New World, Aozhou, and the hinterlands of the Old
World, now being fully occupied and exploited.
The problem was that the stakes became too high. The two
biggest empires were both the strongest and the weakest at the same
time. The Qing dynasty continued to grow to the south, north, in
the New World, and inside itself. Meanwhile Islam controlled a huge
part of the Old World, and the eastern coasts of the New as well.
Yingzhou had a Muslim east coast, the League of Tribes in the
middle, Chinese settlements in the west, and new Travancori trading
ports. Inka was a battleground between Chinese, Travancori and the
Muslims of west Africa.
So the world was fractured into the two big old hegemons,
China and Islam, and the two new and smaller leagues, the Indian
and the Yingzhou. Chinese ocean trade and conquest slowly extended
their hegemony over the Dahai, settling Aozhou, the west coasts of
Yingzhou and Inka, and making inroads by sea in many other places;
becoming the Middle Kingdom in fact as well as by name, the centre
of the world by sheer numbers alone, as well as by the new power of
its navies. A danger to all the other peoples on Earth, in fact,
despite the various problems in the Qing bureaucracy.
At the same time the Dar al Islam kept spreading,
through all Africa, the east coasts of the New World, across
central Asia, and even into India, where it had never really left,
and into southeast Asia as well, even onto the isolated west coast
of Aozhou.
And in the middle, caught between these two expansions,
so to speak, was India. Travancore took the lead here, but the
Punjab, Bengal, Rajistan, all the other states of the subcontinent
were active and prospering at home and abroad, in turmoil and
conflict, always at odds, and yet free of emperors and caliphs, and
in their ferment the scientific leaders of the world, with trading
posts on every continent, constantly in opposition against the
hegemons, the ally of anyone against Islam, and often against the
Chinese, with whom they kept a most uneasy relationship, both
fearing them and needing them; but as the decades went by, and the
old Muslim empires showed more and more aggression to the cast,
across Transoxiana and into all north Asia,
More and more inclined to court China, as a counterweight,
trusting the Himalaya and the great jungles of Burma to keep them
out from under the big umbrella of Chinese patronage.
Thus it was that the Indian states were often uneasily
allied with China in hope of aid against their ancient foe Islam.
So that when Islam and the Chinese finally fell into active war,
first in central Asia, then all over the world, Travancore and the
Indian League were pulled into it, and Muslim Hindu violence
began yet another deadly round.
It began in the twenty first year of the Kuang Hsu
Emperor, the last of the Qing dynasty, when south China's Muslim
enclaves all revolted at once. The Manchu banners were sent south
and the rebellion put down, more or less, over the course of the
next several years. But the suppression may have worked too well,
for the Muslims of west China had been chafing under Qing military
rule for many generations, and with their fellow believers to the
east being exterminated, it became a matter of jihad or death. So
they revolted, out in the vast empty deserts and mountains of
central Asia, and the brown towns in their green valleys quickly
turned red.
The Qing government, corrupt but massively entrenched,
massively wealthy, made its move against its Muslim rebellions by
initiating another campaign of conquest, west across Asia. This
succeeded for a time, because there was no strong state in the
abandoned centre of the world to oppose them. But eventually it
triggered a defensive jihad from the Muslims of west Asia, whom
nothing would have united at that point except for the threat of
Chinese conquest.
This unintended consolidation of Islam was quite an
accomplishment. Wars between the remnants of the Safavid and
Ottoman empires, between Shiite and Sunni, Sufi and Wahhabi, the
Firanji states and the Maghrib, had been continuous throughout the
period of consolidation of states and boundaries, and even with
sovereign borders more or les fixed, except for ongoing struggles
here and there, they were not initially in a position to respond as
a civilization to the threat from China.
But when threatened by a Chinese expansion across all
Asia, the fractured Islamic states pulled together, and began to
fight back as a united force. A collision that had been building
for centuries now came to a head: for both of the big old
civilizations, global hegemony or complete annihilation were
thinkable possibilities. The stakes could not be higher.
The Indian League tried at first to remain neutral, as
did the Hodenosaunee. But the war drew them in too, when Islamic
invaders crossed into north India, as they had so many times
before, and conquered it south to the Deccan, across Bengal and
down into Burma. Similarly, Muslim armies began to conquer Yingzhou
east to west, attacking both the Hodenosaunee League and the
Chinese in the west. All the world descended into this realm of
conflict together.
And so the long war came.
'China is indestructible, there are too many of us. Fire, flood,
famine, war -- they're like pruning a tree. Branches cut to
stimulate new life. The tree keeps growing.'
Major Kuo was feeling expansive. It was dawn, the Chinese
hour. Early light illuminated the Muslim outposts and put the sun
in their eyes, so that they were wary of snipers, and bad at it
themselves. Sunset was their hour. Call to prayer, sniper fire,
sometimes a rain of artillery shells. Best stay in the trenches at
sunset, or in the caves below them.
But now they had the sun on their side. Sky frost blue,
standing around rubbing gloved hands together, tea and cigarettes,
the low whump of cannon to the north. Rumbling for two weeks now.
Preparation for another big assault, possibly, perhaps even the
breakout spoken of for so many years -- so many that it had become
a catchword for something that would never happen -- 'when the
breakout comes' as 'when pigs fly' or the like. So perhaps not.
Nothing they could see would tell them one way or
another. Out in the middle of the Gansu Corridor, the vast
mountains to the south and the endless deserts to the north were
not visible. It looked like the steppes, or it had, before the war.
Now the whole width of the corridor, from mountains to desert, and
the whole length, from Ningxia to jiayuguan, was torn to mud. The
trenches had moved back and forth, li by li, for over sixty years.
In that time every blade of grass and clod of dirt had been blasted
into the sky more than once. What remained was a kind of disordered
black ocean, ringed and ridged and cratered. As if someone had
tried to replicate in mud the surface of the moon. Every spring
weeds made brave efforts to return, and failed. The town of Ganzhou
had once been near this very spot, paralleling the jo River; now
there was no sign of either. Land pulverized to bedrock. Ganzhou
had been home to a thriving Sino--Muslim culture, so this wasteland
they observed, stark in dawn light, was a perfect ideograph of the
long war.
The sound of the big guns began behind them. The shells
from the latest guns were cast into space, and fell two hundred li
away. The sun rose higher. They retreated into the subterranean
realm of black mud and wet planks which was their home. Trenches,
tunnels, caves. Many caves held Buddhas, usually in his adamant
posture, hand out like a traffic policeman. Water at the bottom of
the lowest trenches, after the night's heavy rain.
Down in the communications cave the wiregraph operator
had received orders. General attack to commence in two days.
Assault all the way across the corridor. An attempt to end the
stalemate, or so Iwa speculated. Cork bunged out of its hole. Onto
the steppes and westward ho! Of course the lead point of the
breakout was the worst place to be, Iwa noted, but with only his
usual academic interest. Once at the front it could not really get
any worse. It would be parsing degrees of the absolute, for they
were already in hell and dead men, as Major Kuo reminded them with
every toast of their rakshi: 'We are dead men! A toast to Lord
Death by--gradations!'
So now Bai and Kuo merely nodded: worst place, yes, that
was where they were always sent, where they had spent the last five
years, or, seen in a larger temporal perspective, their whole
lives. Finishing his tea, Iwa said, 'It is bound to be very
interesting.'
He liked to read the wiregrams and newspapers and try to
work out what was going on. 'Look at this,' he would say, scanning
papers as they lay in their bunks. 'The Muslims have been kicked
off Yingzhou. Twenty year campaign.' Or: 'Big battle at sea,
two hundred ships sunk! Only twenty of them ours, but ours are
bigger, admittedly. North Dahai, water zero degrees, ouch that's
cold, glad I'm not a sailor!' He kept notes and drew maps; he was a
scholar of the war. The appearance of the wireless had pleased him
greatly, he had spent hours in the comm cave talking with other
enthusiasts around the globe, 'Big bounce in the qisphere
tonight, I heard from a guy in South Africa! Bad news though,'
marking up his maps, 'he said the Muslims have retaken all the
Sahel and have conscripted everyone in west Africa as slave
soldiers.' He considered the voices wafting out of the darklight to
be unreliable informants, but no more so than the official
communiques from headquarters, which were mostly propaganda, or
lies designed to deceive enemy spies. 'Look at this,' he would
scoff as he lay reading in his bunk. 'It says they're rounding up
all the Jews and Zotts and Christians and Armenians and killing
them. Subjected to medical experimentation ... blood replaced by
mules' blood to see how long they will live ... who thinks up these
things?'
'Maybe it's true,' Kuo suggested. 'Kill off the
undesirables, the ones that might betray them on the home front . .
.'
Iwa turned the page. 'Unlikely. Why waste all that
labour?'
Now he was on the wireless trying to find out more about
the upcoming assault. But you did not have to be a scholar of the
war to know about breakouts. They had all been part of past
attempts, and this knowledge tended to put a damper on the rest of
their day. The front had moved ten li in three years, and eastwards
at that. Three consecutive Ramadan campaigns, at tremendous cost to
the Muslims, a million men per campaign, Iwa calculated, so that
they now fought with boys and battalions of women: as did the
Chinese. So many had died that those who had survived the past
three years were like the Eight Immortals, walking under a
description, surviving day after day at a great distance from a
world that they only heard about, only saw the wrong way through
the telescope. Tea in cup was all to them now. Another general
assault, masses of men moving west into mud, barbed wire, machine
guns, artillery shells coming down from space: so be it. They drank
their tea. But it had a bitter taste.
Bai was ready to get it over with. He had lost his heart
for this life. Kuo was irritated at the Fourth Assemblage of
Military Talent, for ordering the assault during the brief rainy
season. 'Of course what can you expect of any body named "The
Fourth Assemblage of Military Talent"!' This wasn't entirely fair,
as Kuo's usual analysis of them made plain: the First Assemblage
had been old men trying to fight the previous war; the Second
Assemblage, over ambitious arrivistes ready to use men like
bullets; the Third Assemblage a bad mix of cautious corporals and
desperate fuckwits; and the Fourth had come only after the coup
that had overthrown the Qing dynasty and replaced it with a
military government, so that in principle it was possible that the
Fourth Assemblage was an improvement and the one that might finally
get things right. Results so far, however, had not supported the
notion.
Iwa felt they had discussed this matter too many times
already, and confined his remarks to the quality of the day's rice.
When it was ready and they had eaten it, they went out to tell
their men to get prepared. Bai's squads were mostly conscripts from
Sichuan, including three women's squads who kept trenches four
through six, considered the lucky ones. When Bai was young and the
only women he knew were those from the brothels of Lanzhou, he had
felt uncomfortable in their presence, as if dealing with members of
another species, worn creatures who regarded him as from across a
gaping abyss, looking, as far as he could determine, guardedly
appalled and accusatory, as if thinking to themselves, You idiots
have destroyed the whole world. But now that they were in the
trenches they were just soldiers like any others, different only in
that they gave Bai an occasional sense of how bad things had got:
there was no one in the world left now to reproach them.
That evening the three officers gathered again for a
brief visit from the general of their part of the line, a new
luminary of the Fourth Assemblage, a man they had never seen
before. They stood at loose attention while he spoke briefly,
emphasizing the importance of their attack on the morrow.
'We're a diversion,' Kuo declared when General Shen had
boarded his personal train and headed back towards the interior.
'There are spies among us, and he wanted to fool them. If this was
the real point of attack there would be a million more soldiers
stacking up behind us, and you can hear the trains, they're on
their usual schedule.'
In fact there had been extra trains, Iwa said. Thousands
of conscripts brought in, and no shelter for them. They wouldn't be
able to stay here long.
That night it rained. Fleets of Muslim flyers buzzed
overhead, dropping bombs that damaged the railroad tracks. Repair
began as soon as the raid was over. Arc lamps turned the night
brilliant silver streaked by white, like a ruined photo negative,
and in that chemical glare men scurried about with picks and
shovels and hammers and wheelbarrows, as after any other disaster,
but speeded up, as film sometimes was. No more trains arrived, and
when dawn came there were not very many reinforcements after all.
Extra ammunition for the attack was missing as well.
'They won't care,' Kuo predicted.
The plan was to release poison gas first, to precede them
downslope on the daily morning east wind. At the first watch a
wiregram came from the general: attack.
Today, however, there was no morning breeze. Kuo
wiregraphed this news to the Fourth Assemblage command post thirty
li down the corridor, asking for further orders. Soon he got them:
proceed with the attack. Gas as ordered.
'We'll all be killed,' Kuo promised.
They put on their masks, turned the valves on the steel
tanks that released the gas. It shot out and spread, heavy, almost
viscous, in colour virulent yellow, seeping forwards and down a
slight slope, where it lay in the death zone, obscuring their way.
Fine in that regard, although its effect on those with defective
gas masks would be disastrous. No doubt it was an awful sight for
the Muslims, to see yellow fog flowing heavily towards them, and
then, emerging out of it, wave after wave of insectfaced monsters
firing guns and launchers. Nevertheless they stuck to their machine
guns and mowed them down.
Bai was quickly absorbed in the task of moving from
crater to crater, using mounds of earth or dead bodies as a shield,
and urging groups of soldiers who had taken refuge in holes to keep
going. 'Safer if you get out of holes now, the gas settles. We need
to overrun their lines and stop the machine guns,' and so on, in
the deafening clatter which meant none of them could hear him. A
gust of the usual steady morning breeze moved the gas cloud over
the devastation onto the Muslim lines, and less machine gun fire
struck at them. Their attack picked up speed, cutters busy
everywhere at the barbed wire, men filing through. Then they were
in the Muslim trenches, and they turned the big Iranian machine
guns on the retreating enemy, until their ammunition was
drained.
After that, if there had been any reinforcements
available, it might have become interesting. But with the trains
stuck fifty li behind the lines, and the breeze now pushing the gas
back to the east, and the Muslim big guns now beginning to
pulverize their own front lines, the breakout's position became
untenable. Bai directed his troops down into the Muslim tunnels for
protection. The day passed in a confusion of shouts and mobile
wiregraph and wireless miscommunication. It was Kuo who shouted
down to him that the order had finally come to retreat, and they
rounded up their survivors and made their way back across the
poisoned, shattered, body strewn mud that had been the day's
gain. An hour after nightfall they were back in their own trenches,
less than half as numerous as they had been in the morning.
Well after midnight the officers convened in their little
cave and got the stove burning and started cooking rice, each
trapped in his own ears' roaring; they could barely hear each other
talk. It would be like that for a day or two. Kuo was still fizzing
with irritation, one did not have to be able to hear what he was
saying to see that. He seemed to be trying to decide whether he
should revise the Five Great Errors of the Gansu campaign by
dropping the least of the previous great errors, or by turning it
into the Six Great Errors. Assemblage of talent indeed, he shouted
as he held their rice pot over the burning coals of their little
stove, his bare blackened hands shaking. A bunch of fucking idiots.
Up the hole the sounds of the hospital trains chugged and clanked.
Their cars rang. Too much had happened for them to be able to speak
anyway. They ate in the silence of a great roaring. Unfortunately
Bai began vomiting, and then could not catch his breath. He had to
submit to being carried up and back to one of the hospital trains.
Put on with the host of wounded, gassed and dying men. It took all
the next day to move twenty li to the east, and then another day
waiting to be processed by the overwhelmed medical crews. Bai
almost died of thirst, but was saved by a girl in a mask, given
sips of water while a doctor diagnosed gasburned lungs, and stuck
him with acupuncture needles in the neck and face, after which he
could breathe much easier. This gave him the strength to drink
more, then eat some rice, then talk his way out of the hospital
before he died there of hunger or someone else's infection. He
walked back to the front, hitching a ride at the end on a
mule drawn cart. It was night when he passed one of the
immense batteries of artillery, and the garish sight of the huge
black mortars and cannons pointed at the night sky, the tiny
figures scurrying about under the arc lamps servicing them,
holding hands to their cars (Bai did too) before they went off,
made it clear to him yet again that they must all have been dragged
into the next realm and got caught in a war of asuras, a titanic
conflict in which humans were as ants, crushed under the wheels of
the asuras' superhuman machines.
Back in their cave Kuo laughed at him for returning so
quickly, You're like a pet monkey, can't get rid of you, but Bai in
his relief only said it's safer here than in the hospital, which
made Kuo laugh again. Iwa came back from the comm cave full of
news: apparently their assault had been a diversion after all, just
as Kuo had said. The Gansu plug had been pushed at in order to tie
up Muslim armies, while a Japanese force had finally honoured their
agreement to help the cause, given in exchange for their liberty
which was already accomplished anyway but which could have been
challenged, and the Japanese, being fresh, had made a hard push in
the far north, and broken through the line there and started a big
breakout, rolling west and south like a bunch of crazed ronin out
on a murderous lark. Hopefully they would fold down the back side
of the Muslim line and force a retreat from Gansu, leaving the
shattered Chinese alone and at peace in the field.
Iwa said, 'I guess the Japanese hatred for us was
superseded by a disinclination to have Islam conquer the
world.'
'They'll pick off Korea and Manchuria,' Kuo predicted.
'They'll never give those back. A few port cities too. Now that
we're bled white they can take whatever they please.'
'Fine,' Bai said. 'Give them Beijing if they want it, if
it only ends this war.'
Kuo glanced at him. 'I'm not sure which would be a worse
master, Muslims or Japanese. Those Japanese are tough, and they
don't like us. And after the earthquake demolished Edo they think
they've got the gods on their side. They already killed every
Chinese in Japan.'
'In the end we won't serve either side,' Bai said. 'The
Chinese are indestructible, remember?'
The previous two days had not proved the proverb very
well. 'Except by the Chinese,' Kuo said. 'By Chinese talent.'
'They may have turned the north flank this time,' Iwa
noted. 'That would be something.'
'It could be the end game,' Bai said, and coughed.
Kuo laughed at him. 'Caught between mortar and pestle,' he said.
He went to their locked cabinet, inserted into the mud wall of the
cave, and unlocked it and brought out a jug of rakshi and took a
drink. He drank a jug of these strong spirits every day, when he
could get a supply, starting with his first waking moment and
ending with his last. 'Here's to the Tenth Great Success! Or is it
the Eleventh? And we've survived all of them.' For the moment he
had passed beyond the ordinary precaution of not speaking of these
matters. 'Survived them, and the Six Great Errors, and the Three
Incredible Fuck ups, and the Nine Greatest incidents of Bad
Luck. A miracle! There must be hungry ghosts holding big umbrellas
over us, brothers.'
Bai nodded uneasily; he did not like to talk of such
things. He tried to hear only the roaring. He tried to forget all
he had seen the last three days.
'How can we have possibly survived for so long?' Kuo
asked recklessly. 'Everyone else we began with is dead. In fact the
three of us have outlasted five or six generations of officers. How
long has it been? Five years? How can it be?'
'I am Peng zu,' Iwa said. 'I am the Unfortunate
Immortal, I can never be killed. I could dive right into the gas
and it still wouldn't work.' He looked up from his rice
mournfully.
Even Kuo was spooked by this. 'Well, you'll get more
chances, don't worry. Don't think it's going to end any time soon.
The Japanese could take the north because no one cares about it.
When they try to come off the taiga onto the steppes, that's when
it'll get interesting. I don't think they'll be able to turn the
hinge very far. It would mean a lot more if the breakout was in the
south. We need to connect up with the Indians.'
Iwa shook his head. 'That won't happen.' This kind of
analysis was more like him, and the other two asked him to explain.
For the Chinese the southern front consisted of the great wall of
the Himalaya and Pamirs, and the jungles of Annam and Burma and
Bengal and Assam. There were only a few passes over the mountains
that were even thinkable, and the defences of these were
impregnable. As for the jungles, the rivers offered the only
passage through them, and they were too exposed. The fortifications
of their south front were therefore geographical and immovable, but
the same could be said for the Muslims on the other side of
them. Meanwhile the Indians were trapped below the Deccan. The
steppes were the only way; but the armies of both sides were
concentrated there. Thus the deadlock.
'It has to end some day,' Bai pointed out. 'Otherwise it
will never end.'
Kuo spat out a mouthful of rakshi in a burst of laughter.
'Very deep logic, friend Bai! But this is not a logical war. This
is the end that will never end. We will live our lives in this war,
and so will the next gener ation, and the next, until
everyone is dead and we can start the world all over, or not, as
the case may be.'
'No,' Iwa disagreed mildly. 'It can't go on that long.
The end will come somewhere else, that's all. The war at sea, or in
Africa or Yingzhou. The break will come somewhere else, and then
this region will just be a, a what, a feature of the long war, an
anomaly or whatnot. The front that could not be moved. The frozen
aspect of the long war at its most frozen. They will tell our story
for ever, because there will never be anything like it again.'
'You're such a comfort,' Kuo said. 'To think we're in the
worst fix any soldiers have ever been in!'
'We might as well be something,' Iwa said.
'Exactly! It's a distinction! An honour, if you think
about it.'
Bai preferred not to. An explosion above shook dirt out
of their ceiling onto them. They bustled about covering cups and
plates.
A few days later and they were back in the usual routine.
If there was still a Japanese breakout to the north there was no
way to tell it here, where the daily barrage and sniping from the
Muslims was the same as always, as if the Sixth Great Error, with
its loss of perhaps fifty thousand men and women, had never
happened.
Soon after that the Muslims too started using poison gas,
spreading over the death zone on the wind just as the Chinese had
done, but also sending it over contained in explosive shells that
came down with a loud whistle, scattering the usual shrapnel
(including anything that would cut, as they too were running low on
metal, so that they found sticks, cat bones, hooves, a set of false
teeth) and now with the shrapnel a thick yellow geyser of the gas,
apparently not just mustard gas but a variety of poisons and
caustics, which forced the Chinese to keep both gas mask and hood
and gloves always by them. Dressed or not, when one of these shells
came down it was hard not to get burned around the wrists and
ankles and neck.
The other new inconvenience was a shell so huge, cast so
high by such big cannons, that when it came down out of the sky it
was falling faster than its sound, so there was no warning. These
shells were bigger around than a man, and taller, designed to
penetrate the mud some distance and then go off, in stupendous
explosions that often would bury many more men in trenches and
tunnels and caves than were killed by the blasts themselves. Duds
of these shells were dug out and removed, very cautiously, each one
occupying an entire train car. The explosive used in them was a new
one that looked like fish paste, and smelled like jasmine.
One evening after dusk they were standing around drinking
rakshi and discussing news that Iwa had got from the comm cave. The
southern army was being punished for some failure on that front,
and each squad commander had to send back one per cent of his
command, to be executed as encouragement to those that
remained.
'What a good idea!' Kuo said. 'I know just who I'd
send.'
Iwa shook his head. 'A lottery would create better
solidarity.'
Kuo scoffed: 'Solidarity. Might as well get rid of the
malingerers while you can, before they shoot you in the back some
night.'
'It's a terrible idea,' Bai said. 'They're all Chinese,
how can we kill Chinese when they haven't done anything wrong? It's
crazy. The Fourth Assemblage of Military Talent has gone
insane.'
'They were never sane to begin with,' Kuo said. 'It's
been forty years since anyone on Earth has been sane.'
Suddenly they were all knocked off their feet by a
violent blast of air. Bai struggled to his feet, banged into Iwa
doing the same. He couldn't hear a thing. There was no sight of
Kuo, he was gone and there was a big hole in the ground where he
had been standing, a hole perfectly round and some twelve feet
wide, thirty feet deep, and floored by the back end of one of the
big Muslim supershells. Another dud.
A right hand lay on the ground beside the hole like a
white cane spider. 'Oh damn,' Iwa said through the roar. 'We've
lost Kuo.'
The Muslim shell had landed directly on him. Possibly,
Iwa said later, his presence had kept it from exploding somehow. It
had squished him into the earth like a worm. Only his poor hand
left.
Bai stared at the hand, too stunned to move. Kuo's laugh
seemed still to ring in his cars. Kuo certainly would have laughed
if he had been able to see this turn of events. His hand was
completely recognizable as his, Bai found that he knew it
intimately without ever being aware of the fact until now, so many
hours sitting together in their little cave, Kuo holding the rice
pot or the tea kettle over the stove, or offering a cup of tea or
rakshi, his hand, like all the rest of him, a part of Bai's life,
callused and scarred, clean palmed and dirty backed,
looking still just like itself, even without the rest of him
around. Bai sat back down on the mud.
Iwa gently picked up the severed hand, and they gave it
the same funeral ceremony given to more complete corpses, before
taking it back to one of the death trains for disposal in the
crematoria. Afterwards they drank Kuo's remaining rakshi. Bai could
not speak, and Iwa didn't try to make him. Bai's own hands
displayed the quivering o or inary trenc fatigue. What had
happened to their magic umbrella? What would he do now, without
Kuo's acid laughter to cut through the deathly miasmas?
Then the Muslims took their turn to attack, and the
Chinese were busy for a week with the defence of their trenches,
living in their gas masks, firing belt after belt at the ghostly
fellahem and assassins emerging from the yellow fog. Bai's lungs
gave out again briefly, he had to be evacuated; but at the end of
the week he and Iwa were back in the same trenches they had started
in, with a new squad composed almost entirely of conscripts from
Aozhou, land of the turtle who held up the world, green southerners
thrown into the conflict like so many rounds of machine--gun
ammunition. They had been so busy that already it seemed a long
time since the incident of the dud shell. 'Once I had a brother
named Kuo,' Bai explained to Iwa.
Iwa nodded, patted Bai on the shoulder. 'Go and see if we
have new orders.' His face was black with cordite, except around
mouth and nose where his mask had been, and under his eyes, white
with deltas of tear streaks. He looked like a puppet in a play, his
face the mask of asura suffering. He had been at his machine gun
for over forty straight hours, and in that time had killed perhaps
three thousand men. His eyes looked sightlessly through Bai,
through the world.
Bai staggered away, down the tunnel to the comm cave. He
ducked in and fell into a chair, trying to catch his breath,
feeling himself continuing to fall, through the floor, through the
earth, on the airy drop to oblivion. A creak pulled him up; he
looked to see who was already in the chair at the wireless
table.
It was Kuo, sitting there grinning at him.
Bai straightened up. 'Kuo!' he said. 'We thought you were
dead!'
Kuo nodded. 'I am dead,' he said. 'And so are you.'
His right hand was there at the end of his wrist.
'The shell went off,' he said, 'and killed us all. Since
then you've been in the bardo. All of us have. You've gone at it by
pretending you weren't there yet. Although why you would want to
hang on to that hell world we were living in, I can't imagine. You
are so damned obstinate, Bai. You need to see you're in the bardo
to be able to understand what's happening to you. It's the war in
the bardo that matters, after all. The battle for our souls.'
Bai tried to say yes; then no; then he found himself on
the floor of the cave, having fallen off the chair, apparently,
which had woken him up. Kuo was gone, his chair empty. Bai groaned.
'Kuo! Come back!' But the room stayed empty.
Later Bai told Iwa what had happened, his voice shaking,
and the Tibetan had given him a sharp glance, then shrugged. 'Maybe
he was right,' he said, gesturing around. 'What is there to prove
him wrong?'
Another assault struck and suddenly they were ordered to
retreat, to get to the back lines and then on the trains. At the
depot yard it was chaotic, of course; but men with guns trained on
them boarded them on the cars like cattle, and off the trains
squealed and clanked.
Iwa and Bai sat at one end of a car as they trained
south. From time to time they used their officers' privilege and
went out onto the car's coupling base to smoke cigarettes and
regard the steel sky lowering overhead. Higher and higher they
rose, colder and colder. Thin air hurt Bai's lungs. 'So,' he said,
gesturing at the rock and ice rolling past. 'Maybe it is the
bardo.'
'It's just Tibet,' Iwa said.
But Bai could see very well that it was more desolate
than that. Cirrus clouds hung like sickles just overhead, as on a
stage set, the sky black and flat. It didn't look the slightest bit
real.
In any case, whatever the realm, Tibet or the bardo, in
life or out of it, the war continued. At night winged roaring
flyers, their blimp components dispensed with, buzzed
overhead dropping bombs on them. Arc lamp searchlights lanced the
darkness, pinning flyers to the stars and sometimes blowing them up
in gouts of falling flame. Images from Bai's dreams fell right out
of the thin air. Black snow glittered in the white light of a low
sun.
They stopped before an impossibly huge mountain range,
another stage set from the dream theatre. A pass so deep that from
their distance it dipped under the sere tabletop of the steppe.
That pass was their goal. Their task now was to blast the defences
away and go south through that pass, down to some level below this
floor of the universe. The pass to India, supposedly. Gate to a
lower realm. Very well defended, of course.
The 'Muslims' defending it remained invisible, always
over the great snowy mass of granite peaks, greater than any
mountains on Earth could be, asura mountains, and the big guns
brought to bear on them, asura guns. Never had it been so clear to
Bai that they had got caught up in some bigger war, dying by the
millions for some cause not their own. Ice and black rock fangs
touched the ceiling of stars, snow banners streamed on the monsoon
wind away from the peaks, merging with the Milky Way, at sunset
becoming asura flames blowing horizontally, as if the realm of the
asuras stood perpendicular to their own, another reason perhaps
that their puny imitation battles were always so hopelessly
askew.
The Muslims' big guns were on the south side of the
range; they never even heard them. Their shells whistled over the
stars, leaving white rainbow frost trails on the black sky. The
majority of these shells landed on the massive white mountain to
the cast of the huge pass, blasting it with one stupendous
explosion after another, as if the Muslims had gone crazy and
declared war on the rocks of the Earth. 'Why do they hate that
mountain so much?' Bai asked.
'That's Chomolungma,' Iwa said. 'That was the tallest
mountain in the world, but the Muslims have knocked the summit
pyramid down until it's lower than the second tallest, which is a
peak in Afghanistan. So now the tallest peak in the world is
Muslim.'
His face was its usual blank, but he sounded sad, as
though the mountain mattered to him. This worried Bai: if Iwa had
gone mad, everyone on Earth had gone mad. Iwa would be the last to
go. But maybe it had happened. A soldier in their squad had begun
to weep helplessly at the sight of dead horses and mules. He was
fine at the sight of dead men scattered about, but the bloated
bodies of their poor beasts broke his heart. It made sense in a
strange way, but for mountains Bai could conjure up no sympathy. At
the most it was one god fewer. Part of the struggle in the
bardo.
At night the cold approached pure stasis. Watching
starlight gleaming on the empty plateau, smoking a cigarette by the
latrines, Bai considered what it might mean that there was war in
the bardo. That was the place souls were sorted out, reconciled to
reality, sent back down into the world. judgment rendered, karma
assessed; souls sent back to try again, or released to nirvana. Bai
had been reading Iwa's copy of the Book of the Dead, looking around
him seeing each sentence shape the plateau. Alive or dead, they
walked in a room of the bardo, working on their fate. It was always
so! This room as bleak as any empty stage. They camped on gravel
and sand at the butt end of a grey glacier. Their big guns
squatted, barrels tilted to the sky. Smaller guns on the valley
walls guarded against air attack; these emplacements looked like
the old dzong style monasteries that still lined some
buttresses in these mountains.
Word came they were going to try to break through Nangpa
La, the deep pass interrupting the range. One of the old salt
trading passes, the best pass for many li in both directions.
Sherpas would guide, Tibetans who had moved south of the pass. On
its other side extended a canyon to their capital, tiny Namche
Bazaar, now in ruins like everything else. From Namche trails ran
directly south to the plains of Bengal. A very good passage across
the Himalaya, in fact. Rail could replace trail in a matter of
days, and then they could ship the massed armies of China, what was
left of them, onto the Gangetic Plain. Rumours swirled, replaced
daily by new rumours. Iwa spent all night at the wireless.
It looked to Bai like a change in the bardo itself. Shift
to the next room, a tropical hellworld clogged with ancient
history. The battle for the pass would therefore be particularly
violent, as is any passage between worlds. The artilleries of the
two civilizations massed on both sides. Triggered avalanches in the
granite escarpments were frequent. Meanwhile explosions on the peak
of Chomolungma continued to lower it. The Tibetans fought like
pretas as they saw this. Iwa seemed to have reconciled himself to
it: 'They have a saying about the mountain coming to
Mohammed. But I don't think it matters to the mother goddess.'
Still, it brought home to them yet again how insane their
opponents were. Ignorant fanatical disciples of a cruel desert
cult, promised eternity in a paradise where sexual orgasm with
beautiful houris lasted ten thousand years, no surprise they were
so often suicidally brave, happy to die, reckless in frenzied
opiated ways that were hard to counter. Indeed they were known to
be prodigious benzedrine eaters and opium smokers, pursuing the
entire war in a jerky drugged dream state that could include
bestial rage. Most of the Chinese would have been happy to join
them there, and opium had made its way into the Chinese army, of
course, but supplies were short. Iwa had local contacts, however,
and as they prepared for the assault on Nangpa La he obtained some
from some military policemen. He and Bai smoked it in cigarettes
and drank it as a tincture of alcohol, along with cloves and a pill
of Travancori medicines said to sharpen sight while dulling the
emotions. It worked pretty well.
Eventually there were so many banners and divisions and
big guns collected on this high plane of the bardo that Bai became
convinced that the rumours were right, and a general assault on
Kali or Shiva or Brahma was about to begin. As confirming evidence
he noted that many divisions were composed of experienced soldiers,
rather than raw boys or peasants or women -- divisions with
extensive battle experience in the islands or the New World, where
the fighting had been particularly intense, and where they claimed
to have won. In other words, they were precisely those soldiers
most likely to have been killed already. And they looked dead. They
smoked cigarettes like dead men. A whole army of the dead, gathered
and poised to invade the rich south of the living.
The moon waxed and waned and the bombardment of the
invisible foe across the range continued. Fleets of flyers shaped
like sickles shot through the pass and never came back. On the
eighth day of the fourth month, the date of the conception of the
Buddha, the assault began.
The pass itself had been rigged, and when its immediate
defenders were all killed or had retreated south, the ridges
guarding the pass erupted in massive explosions and poured down
onto the broad saddle. Cho Oyo itself lost some of its mass to this
explosion. That was the end for several banners securing the pass.
Bai watched from below and wondered, when one died in the bardo
where did one go? it was only a matter of chance that Bai's squad
had not been in the first wave.
The defences as well as the Chinese first wave were
buried. After that the pass was theirs, and they could begin the
descent of the giant glaciercut canyon south to the Gangetic Plain.
They were attacked every step of the way, chiefly by distant
bombardment, and with booby traps and enormous mines buried in
the trails at crucial points. They defused or set these off as
often as they could, suffered the occasional missed ones, rebuilt a
road and rail bed as they descended. It was mostly road work at
great speed, as the Muslims gave ground and retreated to the plain,
and only their most distant aerial bombardment remained, shots
fired from around Delhi, erratic and hilarious unless they happened
to make a lucky strike.
In the deep southern canyon they found themselves in a
different world. Indeed Bai had to reconsider the idea that he was
in the bardo at all. If he was, this was certainly a different
level of it: hot, wet, lush, the green trees and bushes and grasses
exploding out of the black soil and overrunning everything. The
granite itself seemed living down here. Perhaps Kuo had lied to
him, and he and Iwa and the rest here had been alive all the while,
in a real world become deathly with death. What an awful thought!
The real world become the bardo, the two the same ... Bai hustled
through his hectic days feeling appalled. After all that suffering
he had only been reborn into his own life, still ongoing, now
regained as if there had been no break, only a moment of cruel
irony, a few days' derangement, and now moved on into a new karmic
existence while trapped in the same miserable biological cycle that
for some reason had turned into a One simulacrum of hell itself, as
if the karmic wheel had broken and the gears between karmic life
and biological life become detached, gone so that one fluctuated
without warning, lived sometimes in the physical world, other times
in the bardo, sometimes in dream sometimes awake, and very often
all at once, without cause or explanation. Already the years in the
Gansu Corridor, the whole of his life he would have said before,
had become a dream mostly forgotten, and even the mystic high
strangeness of the Tibetan plateau was fast becoming an unreal
memory, hard to recall though it was etched on his eyeballs and he
was still looking right through it.
One evening the wiregraph officer came rushing out and
ordered them all to get uphill fast. A glacial lake upstream
had had its ice dam bombed by the Muslims, and now a huge bolus of
water was headed downstream, filling the canyon to a depth of five
hundred feet or more, depending on the narrowness of the gorge.
The scramble began. How they climbed. Here they were,
dead men already, dead for years, and yet they climbed like
monkeys, frantic to move up the slope of a canyon. They had been
camped in a narrow steep defile, the better to avoid bombs from the
air, and as they hauled themselves up through brush they heard ever
more clearly a distant roar like continuous thunder, possibly a
falls in the ordinarily loud Dudh Kosi, but probably not, probably
the approaching flood, until finally they came to a layback in the
slope, and after an hour they were all a good thousand feet above
the Dudh Kosi, looking down at the white thread of it which seemed
so harmless from the broad nose of a promontory where the officers
had regathered them, looking down into the gorge but also around
them at the stupendous icy walls and peaks of the range, hearing a
roar come out of the higher ones to the north, a healthy booming
roar, like a tiger god roaring. Up here they were in a good
position to witness the flood, which arrived just as night was
falling: the roar grew to something almost as loud as a bombardment
on the front, but all below, almost subterranean, coming through
the soles of their feet as much as their ears, and then a dirty
white wall of water appeared, carrying trees and rocks on its
chaotic tumbling front wall, tearing the walls of the canyon right
down to bedrock and causing slides down into it, some of which were
large enough to dam the whole stream for a few minutes, before
water poured over it and ripped it away, causing a smaller surge in
the general flood. After the front of it had passed out of sight
down canyon, it left behind torn walls white in the dusk, and a
brown foaming river that roared and clunked at just above its usual
level.
'We should build the roads higher,' Iwa noted.
Bai could only laugh at Iwa's cool. The opium was making
everything pulse. A sudden realization: 'Why, it just occurred to
me -- I've been drowned in floods before! I've felt the water come
over me. Water and snow and ice. You were there too! I wonder if
that was meant for us, and we've escaped by accident. I don't
really think we're supposed to be here.'
Iwa regarded him, 'In what sense?'
'In the sense that that flood down there was supposed to
kill us!'
'Well,' Iwa said slowly, looking concerned, 'I guess we
got out of its way.'
Bai could only laugh. Iwa: what a mind. 'Yes. To hell
with the flood. That was a different life.'
The routemakers however had learned a good lesson without
much loss of life (equipment was another matter). Now they built
high on the canyon walls where they sloped back, cutting grades and
traverses, going far up tributary canyons and then building bridges
over their streams, also anti aircraft emplacements, even a
small airstrip on one nearly level bench near Lukla. Becoming a
construction battalion was much better than fighting, which was
what others were doing down in the mouth of the canyon, to keep it
open long enough to get the train down there. They could not
believe their luck, or the warm days, or the reality of life behind
the front, so luxurious, the silence, the lessening of muscle
tension, lots of rice, and strange but fresh vegetables ...
Then in a blur of happy days the roadbeds and tracks were
complete and they took some of the first trains down and encamped
on a great dusty green plain, no monsoon yet, division after
division making their way to the front, some fluctuating distance
to the west of them. That was where it was all happening now.
Then one morning they were on their way too, trained all
day to the west and then off and marching over one pontoon bridge
after another, until they were somewhere near Bihar. Here another
army was already encamped, an army on their side. Allies, what a
concept. The Indians themselves, here in their own country, moving
north after four decades of holding out against the Islamic horde,
down in the south of the continent. Now they too were breaking out,
crossing the Indus, and the Muslims therefore in danger of being
cut off by a pincer attack as large. as Asia, some of them already
trapped in Burma, the bulk of them still together in the west and
beginning a slow, stubborn retreat.
So Iwa gathered in an hour's conversation with some
Travancori officers who spoke Nepali, which he had known as a
child. The Indian officers and their soldiers were
dark skinned and small, both men and women, very fast and
nimble, clean, well dressed, well armed -- proud, even
arrogant, assuming that they had taken the brunt of the war against
Islam, that they had saved China from conquest by holding on
as a second front. Iwa came away unsure whether it was a good idea
to discuss the war with them.
But Bai was impressed. Perhaps the world would be saved
from slavery after all. The breakout across north Asia was
apparently stalled, the Urals being a kind of natural Great Wall of
China for the Golden Horde and the Firanjis. Although maps seemed
to indicate that it was nicely to the west. And to have crossed the
Himalaya in force against such resistance, to have met up with the
Indian armies, to be cutting the world of Islam in two . . .
'Well, sea power could make all the whole land war in
Asia irrelevant,' Iwa said as they sat one evening on the ground
eating rice that had been spiced to newly incendiary heights.
Between choking swallows, sweating profusely, he said, 'In the time
of this war we've seen three or four generations of weaponry, of
technology generally, the big guns, sea power, now air power -- I
don't doubt that a time is coming when fleets of airships and
flyers will be all that matter. The fight will go on up there, to
see who can control the skies and drop bombs bigger than anything
you could ever shoot out of a cannon, right onto the capitals of
the enemy. Their factories, their palaces, their government
buildings.'
'Good,' Bai said. 'Less messy that way. Go for the head
and get it over with. That's what Kuo would say.'
Iwa nodded, grinning at the thought of just how Kuo would
say it. The scorching rice here was nothing compared to their
Kuo.
The generals from the Fourth Assemblage of Military
Talent met with the Indian generals, and as they conferred more
railways were built out to the new front west of them. A combined
offensive was clearly in the works, and everyone was full of
speculation about it. That they would be kept behind to defend
their rear from the Muslims still in the Malay Peninsula; that they
would be boarded on ships in the mouth of the sacred Ganges and
deposited on the Arabian coast to attack Mecca itself; that they
were destined for a beachhead attack on the peninsulas of northwest
Firanja; and so on. Never an end to the stories they told
themselves of how their travail would continue.
In the end, though, they marched forwards in the usual
fashion, westwards, holding the right flank against the foothills
of Nepal, hills that shot abrupt and green out of the Gangetic
Plain -- as though, Iwa remarked idly one day, India were a ramming
ship that had slammed into Asia and ploughed under it, pushing all
the way under Tibet, and doubling the height of that land but
dipping down here almost to sea level.
Bai shook his head at this geomorphic fancy, not wanting
to think of the ground as moving like big ships, wanting to
understand the ground as solid, because he was trying to convince
himself now that Kuo had been wrong and that he was still alive and
not in the bardo, where of course lands could slip about like the
stage sets they were. Kuo had probably been disoriented by his own
abrupt death, and confused as to his own whereabouts; not a good
sign concerning his reappearance in his next incarnation. Or
perhaps he had just been playing a joke on Bai, Kuo would mock you
harder than anyone, though he seldom played jokes. Perhaps he had
even been doing Bai a favour, getting him through the worst part of
the war by convincing him that he was already dead and had nothing
to lose indeed, was fighting the war on a level where it
might actually mean something, might have some use, might be a
matter of changing people's souls in their pure existence outside
the world, where they might be capable of change, where they might
learn what was important and return to life next time with new
capacities in their hearts, with new goals in mind.
What might those be? What were they fighting for? It was
clear what they were fighting against -- against fanatical
slaveholding reactionaries, who wanted the world to stand still in
the equivalent of the Tang or Sung dynasties -- absurdly backward
and bloody religious zealots assassins with no scruples, who
fought crazed on opium and ancient blind beliefs. Against all that,
certainly, but for what? What the Chinese were fighting for, Bai
decided, was ... clarity, or whatever else it was that was the
opposite of religion. For humanity. For compassion. For Buddhism,
Daoism and Confucianism, the triple strand that did so well in
describing a relationship to the world: the religion with no God,
with only this world, also several other potential realms of
reality, mental realms, and the void itself, but no God, no
shepherd ruling with the drooling strictures of a demented old
patriarch, but rather innumerable immortal spirits in a vast
panoply of realms and being, including humans and many other
sentient beings besides, everything living, everything holy,
sacred, part of the Godhead -- for yes, there was a God if by that
you meant only a transcendent universal selfaware entity that was
reality itself, the cosmos, including everything, including human
ideas and mathematical forms and relationships. That idea itself
was God, and evoked a kind of worship that was attention to the
real world, a kind of natural study. Chinese Buddhism was the
natural study of reality, and led to feelings of devotion just from
noting the daily leaves, the colours of the sky, the animals seen
from the corner of the eye. The movements of chopping wood and
carrying water. This initial study of devotion led to deeper
understanding as they pursued the mathematical underpinnings of the
ways of things, just out of curiosity and because it seemed to help
them see even more clearly, and so they made instruments to see
farther in and farther out, higher yang, deeper yin.
What followed was a kind of understanding of human
reality that placed the greatest value on compassion, created by
enlightened understanding, created by study of what was there in
the world. This was what Iwa was always saying, while Bai preferred
to think of the emotions created by all that proper attention and
focused effort: the peace, the sharp curiosity and enraptured
interest, the compassion.
But now: all a nightmare. A nightmare speeding up,
however, breaking apart and full of non sequiturs, as if the
dreamer felt the rapid eyed stirrings of the end of sleep and
the waking of a new day. Every day we wake up into a new world,
each sleep causes yet another reincarnation. Some of the local
gurus spoke of it as happening with every breath.
They took off out of the bardo into the real world, into
battle, with their left wing made up of India's crack regiments,
little bearded black men, taller hooknosed white men, bearded
turbanned Sikhs, deepchested women, Gurkhas come out of the
mountains, a banner of Nepali women each of whom was the beauty of
her district, or so it appeared; all of them together like a circus
crew, but so fast, so well armed, in train and truck
divisions, the Chinese could not keep up with them, but got more
train lines established and tried to catch up, running vast numbers
of men forwards with all their supplies. Beyond the forward ends of
the train lines the Indians continued to race forwards on foot, and
in engined cars on rubber wheels, hundreds of them that ran freely
over the villages paths in this dry season, throwing dust
everywhere, and also over a more limited network of asphalted roads, the
only ones that would still be passable when the monsoon hit.
They advanced towards Delhi all at once, more or less,
and they fell on the Muslim army retreating up the Ganges on both
sides of the river, as soon as the Chinese were in position at the
foot of the Nepali hills.
Of course the right flank extended up into the hills,
each army trying to outflank the other. Bai and Iwa's squad was
counted among the mountain troops now because of their experiences
in the Dudh Kosi, and so orders came to seize and hold the hills up
to the first ridge at least, which entailed taking some higher
points on ridges even farther north. They moved by night, learning
to climb in the dark along trails found and marked by Gurkha
scouts. Bai too became a day scout, and as he crawled up
brush choked ravines he worried not that he would be
discovered by any Muslims, for they stuck to their trails and
encampments without fail, but whether or not a mass of hundreds of
men could follow the tortuous monkey routes he was forced to use in
some places. 'That's why they send you, Bai,' Iwa explained. 'If
you can do it, anyone can.' He smiled and added, 'That's what Kuo
would say.'
Each night Bai went up and down the line guiding and
checking to see if routes went as he had expected, learning and
studying, and only going to sleep after observing the sunrise from
some new hideaway.
They were still doing that when the Indians broke through
on the south flank. They heard the distant artillery and then saw
smoke pluming into the white skies of a hazy morning, the haze a
possible mark of the monsoon's arrival. To make a full breakout
assault with the monsoon coming passed all understanding, it seemed
possible it would go right to the head of the list of the recently
augmented Seven Great Errors, and as the afternoon's clouds
bloomed, and built, and dropped black on them, blasting foothills
and plain with volleys of thick lightning which struck the metal in
several gun emplacements on ridges, it was amazing to hear that the
Indians were pressing on unimpeded. They had, among all their other
accomplishments, perfected war in the rain. These were not Chinese
Daoist Buddhist rationalists, Bai and Iwa agreed, not the Fourth
Assemblage of Military Talent, but wild men of all manner of
religion, even more spiritual than the Muslims, as the Muslims'
religion seemed all bluster and wish fulfilment and support of
tyranny with its Father God. The Indians had a myriad of gods, some
elephant headed or six armed, even death was a
god, both female and male life, nobility, there were gods
for each, each human quality deified. Which made for a motley,
godly people, very ferocious in war, among many other things --
great cooks, very sensual people, scents, tastes, music, colour in
their uniforms, detailed art, it was all right there in their camps
to be seen, men and women standing around a drummer singing, the
women tall and big breasted, big eyed and
thick eyebrowed, awesome women really, arms like a woodsman's
and filling all the sharpshooter regiments of the Indians. 'Yes,'
one Indian adjutant had said in Tibetan, 'women are better shots,
women from Travancore especially. They start when they are five,
that may be all there is to it. Start boys at five and they would
do as well.'
Now the rains were full of black ash, falling in a watery
mud. Black rain. The call came for Bai and Iwa's squad to hurry
down to the plain and join the general assault as soon as they
could. They ran down the trails and assembled some twenty li behind
the front line of the battle, and started marching. They were to
hit at the very end of the flank, on the plain itself but right at
the foot of the foothills, ready to scale the first rise of the
hills if there was any resistance to their charge.
That was the plan, but as they came up to the front word
came that the Muslims had broken and were in full retreat, and they
joined the chase.
But the Muslims were in flight, the Indians close on
their heels, and the Chinese could only follow the two faster
armies across the fields and forests, over canals and through the
breaks in bamboo fences and walls, and groups of houses too small
even to be called villages, all still and silent, usually burned,
and yet slowing them down somehow nevertheless. Dead bodies on the
ground in knots, already bloating. The full meaning of embodiment
made manifest here by its opposite, diesel bodiment, death --
departure of the soul, leaving behind so little: a putrefying mass,
stuff like what one found in a sausage. Nothing human about it.
Except for here or there, a face undestroyed, even sometimes
undisturbed; an Indian man lying there on the ground for instance,
staring sideways but utterly still, not moving, not breathing; the
statue of what must have been a very impressive man, well built,
strong shoulders, capable a commanding, high--foreheaded,
moustached face, eyes like fish in the market, round and surprised,
but still impressive. Bai had to say a charm to be able to
walk by him, and then they were in a zone where the land itself was
smoking like the dead zone of Gansu, pools of silvery gassed water
reeking in water holes and the air full of smoke and dust, cordite,
blood haze. The bardo itself would be looking much like this,
crowded now with new arrivals all angry and confused, in agony, the
worst possible way to enter the bardo. Here the empty mirror of it,
blasted and still. The Chinese army marched through in silence.
Bai found Iwa, and they made their way into the burned
ruins of Bodh Gaya, to a park on the west bank of the Phalgu
River. This was where the Bodhi Tree had stood, they were told, the
old assattha tree, pipal tree, under which the Buddha had received
enlightenment so many centuries before. The area had taken as many
hits as the peak of Chomolungma, and no trace of tree or park or
village or stream remained, only black rendered mud for as far as
the eye could see.
A group of Indian officers discussed root fragments
someone had found in the mud near what some thought had been the
location of the tree. Bai didn't recognize the language. He sat
down with a small fragment of bark in his hands. Iwa went over to
see what the officers were saying.
Then Kuo stood before Bai. 'Cut is the branch,' he said,
offering a small twig from the Bodhi Tree.
Bai took it from him. From his left hand; Kuo's right
hand was still missing. 'Kuo,' Bai said, and swallowed. 'I'm
surprised to see you.'
Kuo gave him a look.
'So we are in the bardo after all,' Bai said.
Kuo nodded. 'You didn't always believe me, did you, but
it's true. Here you see it ' waving his hand at the black
smoking plain. 'The floor of the universe. Again.'
'But why?' Bai said. 'I just don't get it.'
'Get what?'
'Get what I'm supposed to be doing. Life after life -- I
remember them now!' He thought about it, seeing back through the
years. 'I remember them now, and I've tried in every one. I keep
trying!' Out across the black plain it seemed they could see
together the faint afterimages of their previous lives, dancing in
the infinite silk of lightly falling rain. 'It doesn't seem to be
making any difference. What I do makes no difference.'
'Yes, Bai. Perhaps so. But after all you are a fool. A
good natured fucking idiot.'
'Don't, Kuo, I'm not in the mood,' though his face was
attempting painfully to smile, pleased to be ribbed again. Iwa and
he had tried to do this for each other, but no one could bring it
off like Kuo. 'I may not be a great leader like you but I've done
some good things, and they haven't made a bit of difference. There
seem to be no rules of dharma that actually pertain.'
Kuo sat down next to him, crossed his legs and made
himself comfortable. 'Well, who knows? I've been thinking these
things over myself, this time out in the bardo. There's been a lot
of time, believe me -- so many have been tossed out here at once
that there's quite a waiting line, it's just like the rest of the
war, a logistical nightmare, and I've been watching you all
struggle on, bashing against things like moths in a bottle, and I
know I did it too, and I've wondered. I've thought sometimes that
maybe it went wrong back when I was Kheim and you were Butterfly, a
little girl we all loved. Do you remember that one?'
Bai shook his head. 'Tell me.'
'As Kheim I was Annamese, I continued the proud tradition
of the great Chinese admirals being foreigners and disreputable, I
had been a pirate king for years on the long coast of Annam, and
the Chinese made a treaty with me as they would with any great
potentate. Struck a deal in which I agreed to lead an invasion of
Nippon, at least the sea aspect of it and perhaps more.
'Anyway we missed all that for lack of a wind, and went
on and discovered the ocean continents, and found you, and then we
took you, and lost you, and saved you from the executioner god of
the southern people; and that's when I felt it, coming back down
the mountain after we had saved you. I aimed my pistol at people
and pulled the trigger, and felt the power of life and death in my
hands. I could kill them, and they deserved it, bloody cannibals
that they were, killers of children. I could do it merely by
pointing at them. And it seemed to me then that my
so much greater power had a meaning to it. That our
superiority in weapons came out of a general superiority of thought
that included a superiority of morals. That we were better than
they were. I strode back down to the ships and sailed west still
feeling that we were superior beings, like gods to those horrid
savages. And that's why Butterfly died.
You died to teach me that I was wrong -- that though we had
saved her we had killed her too, that that feeling we had had,
striding through them as if through worthless dogs, was a poison
that would never stop spreading in men who had guns. Until all the
people like Butterfly, who lived in peace without guns, were dead,
murdered by us. And then only men with guns would be left, and they
would murder each other too, as fast as they could in the hope that
it wouldn't happen to them, until the human world died, and we all
fell into this preta realm and then to bell.
'So our little jati is stuck here with everyone else, no
matter what you do, not that you have been notably effectual, I
must say again, Bai, speaking of your tendency towards credulous
simplicity, gullibility and general soft hearted
namby pamby ineffectiveness '
'Hey,' Bai said. 'Not fair. I've been helping you. I've
just been going along with you.'
'Well, all right. Granted. In any case we're all in the
bardo together now, and headed for the lower realms again, at best
the realm of the human, but possibly spinning down the death spiral
into the hellworlds always underfoot, we may have done it and are
in the spin you can't pull out of, humanity lost to us for a time
even as a possibility, so much harm have we done. Stupid fucking
bastards! Damn it, do you think I haven't been trying too?' Kuo
popped to his feet, agitated. 'Do you think you're the only one who
has tried to make some good in this world?' He shook his solitary
fist at Bai, and then at the lowering grey clouds. 'But we failed!
We killed reality itself, do you understand me! Do you understand
me?'
'Yes,' Bai said, hugging his knees and shivering
miserably. 'I understand.'
'So. Now we are in this lower realm. We must make do. Our
dharma still commands right action, even here. In the hope of small
advances upwards. Until reality itse If be re established, by
many millions of lives of effort. The whole world will have to be
rebuilt. That's where we are now,' and with a farewell tap to Bai's
arm he walked away, sinking into the black mud deeper with every
step, until he had disappeared.
'Hey,' Bai said. 'Kuo! Don't leave!'
After a while Iwa returned and stood before him, looked
down quizzically at him.
'Well?' Bai said, lifting his head from his knees,
collecting himself. 'What is it? Will they save the Bodhi
Tree?'
'Don't worry about the tree,' Iwa said. 'They'll get a
shoot from a daughter tree in Lanka. It's happened before. Best
worry about the people.'
'More shoots there too. On to the next life. To a better
time.' Bai shouted it after Kuo: 'To a better time!'
Iwa sighed. He sat down where Kuo had been sitting. Rain
fell on them. A long time passed in exhausted silence.
'The thing is,' Iwa said, 'what if there is no next life?
That's what I think. This is it. Fan Chen said the soul and body
are just two aspects of the same thing. He speaks of sharpness and
the knife, soul and body. Without knife, no sharpness.'
'Without sharpness, no knife.'
'Yes . . .'
'And sharpness goes on, sharpness never dies.'
'But look at those dead bodies over there. Who they were
won't come back. When death comes, we don't come back.'
Bai thought of the Indian man, lying so still on the
ground. He said, 'You're just distraught. Of course we come back. I
was talking to Kuo this very minute.'
Iwa gazed at him. 'You shouldn't try to hold on, Bai.
This is what the Buddha learned, right here. Don't try to stop
time. No one can do it.'
'Sharpness remains. I tell you, he was cutting me up same
as always!'
'We have to try to accept change. And change leads to
death.'
'And then through death.' Bai said this as cheerfully as
he could, but his voice was desolate. He missed Kuo.
Iwa considered what Bai had said, with a look that seemed
to say he had been hoping that a Buddhist at the Bodhi Tree would
perhaps have had something more helpful to say. But what could you
say? The Buddha himself had said it: suffering is real. You have to
face it, live with it. There is no escape.
After a while longer Bai got up and went over to see what
the offi cers were doing. They were chanting a sutra, in
Sanskrit perhaps, Bai thought, and he joined in softly with the
'Lengyan jing', in Chinese. And as the day wore on many Buddhists
in both armies gathered around the site, hundreds of them, the mud
was covered with people, and they said prayers in all the languages
of Buddhism, standing there on the burnt land that smoked in the
rain for as far as the eye could see, black, grey and silver.
Finally they fell silent. Peace in the heart, compassion, peace.
Sharpness remained in them.
ONE
On sunny mornings the parks on the lakefront were filled
with families out walking. In the early spring, before the plants
had done more than create the tight green buds soon to blossom in
their profusion of colours, the hungry swans would congregate in
the gleaming black water beside the promenade to fight over the
loaves of stale bread thrown at them by children. This had been one
of Budur's favourite activities as a young girl, it had cast her
into gales of laughter to see the swans flop and tussle for the
scraps; now she watched the new kids convulsed by the same
hilarity, with a stab of grief for her lost childhood, and for the
awareness that the swans, though beautiful and comical, were also
desperate and starving. She wished she had the boldness to join the
children and throw more bread to the poor things. But if she did it
now she would look odd, like one of the mentally deficient ones on
their trip out from their school. And in any case there was not a
great deal of bread left in their house anyway.
Sunlight bounced on the water, and the buildings lining
the back of the lakeshore promenade glowed lemon, peach and
apricot, as if lit from within by some light trapped in their
stone. Budur walked back through the old town towards home, through
the grey granite and black wood of the ancient buildings. Turi had
begun as a Roman town, a way station on their main route through
the Alps; Father had once driven them up to an obscure alpine pass
called the Keyhole, where a stretch of the Roman road was still
there, switchbacking through the grass like a petrified dragon's
back, looking lonely for the feet of soldiers and traders.
Now after centuries of obscurity Turi was a way station again,
this time for trains, and the greatest city in all of central
Firanja, the capital of the united Alpine emirates.
The city centre was bustling and squeaky with trams, but
Budur liked to walk. She ignored Ahab, her chaperon; though she
liked him personally, a simple man with few pretensions, she did
not like his job, which included accompanying her on her
excursions. She shunned him on principle as an affront to her
dignity. She knew also that he would report her behaviour to
Father, and when he reported her refusal to acknowledge his
presence, yet another small protest of harem would reach Father, if
only indirectly.
She led Ahab up through the apartments studding the
hillside overlooking the city, to High Street. The wall around
their house was beautiful, a tall patterned weave of green and grey
dressed stones. The wooden gate was topped by a stone arch
seemingly held in a network of wistaria vines; you could pull out
the keystone and it would still stand. Ahmet, their gatekeeper, was
in his seat in the cosy little wooden closet on the inside of the
gateway, where he held forth to all who wanted to pass, his tea
tray ready to serve those who had time to tarry.
Inside the house Aunt Idelba was talking on the
telephone, which was set on a table in the inner courtyard under
the eaves, where anyone could hear you. This was Father's way of
trying to keep anything untoward from ever being said, but the
truth was that Aunt Idelba was usually talking about microscopic
nature and the mathematics of the interiors of atoms, and so no one
could have any idea what she was talking about. Budur liked to
listen to her anyway, because it reminded her of the fairy tales
Aunt Idelba had told in the past when Budur was younger, or her
cooking talk with Mother in the kitchen cooking was one of
her passions, and she would rattle off spells, recipes, procedures
and tools, all mysterious and suggestive just like this talk on the
tele phone, as if she were cooking up a new world. And
sometimes she would get off the phone looking worried, and
absent--mindedly accept Budur's hugs and admit that this was
precisely the case: the ilmi, the scientists, were indeed cooking
up a new world. Or they could be. Once she rang off flushed pink,
and danced a little minuet around the courtyard, singing nonsense
syllables, and their laundry ditty, 'God is great, great is God,
clean our clothes, clean our souls.'
This time she rang off and did not even see Budur, but
stared up at the bit of sky visible from the courtyard.
'What is it, Idelba? Are you feeling hem?' Hem was the
women's term for a kind of mild depression that had no obvious
cause.
Idelba shook her head. 'No, this is a mushkil,' which was
a specific problem.
'What is it?'
'Well ... Simply put, the investigators at the laboratory
are getting some very strange results. That's what it comes down
to. No one can say what they mean.'
This laboratory Idelba talked to over the phone was
currently her main contact with the world outside their home. She
had been a mat ematics teacher and researcher in Nsara, and, with
her husband, an investigator of microscopic nature. But her
husband's untimely death had revealed some irregularities in his
affairs, and Idelba had been left destitute; and the job they had
shared had turned out to be his in the end, so that she had nowhere
to work, and nowhere to live. Or so Yasmina had said; Idelba
herself never spoke about it. She had shown up one day with a
single suitcase, weeping, to confer with Budur's father, her
half brother. He had agreed to put her up for a time. This,
Father explained later, was one of the things harems were for; they
protected women who had nowhere else to go. 'Your mother and you
girls complain about the system, but really, what is the
alternative? The suffering of women left alone would be
enormous.'
Mother and Budur's older cousin, Yasmina, would snort or
snarl at this, cheeks turning red. Rema and Aisha and Fatima would
look at them curiously, trying to understand what they should feel
about what to them was after all the natural order of things. Aunt
Idelba never said anything about it one way or the other, neither
thanks nor complaint. Old acquaintances still called her on the
phone, especially a nephew of hers, who apparently had a problem he
thought she could help him with; he called regularly. Once Idelba
tried to explain why to Budur and her sisters, with the aid of a
blackboard and chalk.
'Atoms have shells around them, like the spheres in the
heavens in the old drawings, all surrounding the heartknot of the
atom, which is small but heavy. Three kinds of particles clump
together in the heartknot, some with yang, some with yin, some
neuter, in different amounts for each substance, and they're held
bound together there by a strong force, which is very strong, but
also very local, in that you don't have to get far away from the
heartknot for the force to reduce a great deal.'
'Like a harem,' Yasmina said.
'Yes, well. That may be more like gravity, I'm afraid.
But anyway, there is a qi repulsion between all particles, that the
strong force counteracts, and the two compete, more or less, along
with other forces. Now, certain very heavy metals have so many
particles that a certain number leak away from them one by one, and
the single particles that leak leave distinctive traces at distinct
rates of speed. And down in Nsara they've been getting strange
results from a particular heavy metal, an elemental that is heavier
than gold, the heaviest elemental found so far, called alactin.
They're bombarding it with neuter particles, and getting very
strange results, all over the plates, in a way hard to explain. The
heavy heart of this elemental appears to be unstable.'
'Like Yasmina!'
'Yes, well, interesting that you say so, in that it is
not true but it suggests the way we keep trying to think of ways to
visualize these things that are always too small for us to see.'
She paused, looking at the blackboard, then at her uncomprehending
students. A spasm of some emotion marred her features, disappeared.
'Well. It is yet another phenomenon that needs explaining, let's
leave it at that. It will take more investigation in a lab.'
After that she scribbled in silence for a while. Numbers,
letters, Chinese ideograms, equations, dots, diagrams -- like
something out of illustrations for the books about the Alchemist of
Samarqand.
After a time she slowed down, shrugged. 'I'll have to
talk to Piali about it.'
'But isn't he in Nsara?' Budur asked.
'Yes.' This too was part of her mishkul, Budur saw. 'We
will talk by the telephone, of course." 'Tell us about
Nsara,' Budur asked for the thousandth time.
Idelba shrugged; she was not in the mood. She never was,
to begin with; it took a while to break through the barrier of
regrets to get her to that time. Her first husband, divorcing her
near the end of her fertility, with no children; her second
husband, dying young; she had a lot of regrets to get through. But
if Budur was patient and merely followed her around the
terrace, and in and out of rooms, she often would make the passage,
helped perhaps by her shifts from room to room, matching the way
each place on Earth we have lived in is like a room in our mind,
with its sky for a roof, hills for walls, and buildings for
furniture, so that our lives have moved from one room to the next
in some larger structure; and the old rooms still exist and yet at
the same time are gone, or emptied, so that in reality one could
only move on to some new room, or stay locked in the one you were
in, as in a jail; and yet, in the mind ...
First Idelba would speak of the weather there, the
storm tossed Atlantic rolling in with water, wind, cloud,
rain, fog, sleet, mist, sometimes snow, all broken by sunny days
with their low shards of light emblazoning the seafront and the
rivermouth, the docks of the giant city filling the valley on both
banks all the way upstream to Anjou, all the states of Asia and
Firanja come west to this westernmost town, to meet the other great
influx by sea, people from all over the world, including the
handsome Hodenosaunee, and the shivering exiles from Inka, with
their serapes and gold jewellery splashing the dark grey afternoons
of the stormthrashed winters with little bits of metallic colour.
These exotics all together made Nsara fascinating, Idelba said, as
did the unwelcome embassies of the Chinese and Tranvancoris,
enforcing the terms of the postwar settlement, standing there like
monuments to the Islamic defeat in the war, long windowless blocks
at the back of the harbour district. Describing all this, Idelba's
eyes would begin to gleam and her voice grow animated, and she
almost always, if she did not cut herself short, ended by
exclaiming Nsara! Nsara! Ohhh, Nssssarrrrra! And then sometimes sit
down wherever she was and hold her head in her hands, overwhelmed.
It was, Budur was sure, the most exciting and wonderful city on
Earth.
The Travancoris had of course founded a Buddhist
monastery school there, as they had in every city and town on
Earth, it seemed, with all the most modern departments and
laboratories, right next to the old madressa and the mosque, still
operating much as they had been since the 900s. The Buddhist monks
and teachers made the clerics of the madressa look very ignorant
and provincial, Idelba said, but they were always courteous to
Muslim practices, very unobtrusive and respectful, and over time a
number of sufi teachers and reformist clerics had eventually built
laboratories of their own, and had taken classes at the monastery
schools to prepare to work on questions of natural law in their own
establishments. 'They gave us time to swallow and digest the bitter
pill of our defeat,' Idelba said of these Buddhists. 'The Chinese
were smart to stay away and let these people be their emissaries.
That way we never really see how ruthless the Chinese are. We think
the Travancoris are the whole story.'
But it seemed to Budur that the Chinese were not so hard
as they could have been. The reparation payments were within the
realm of the possible, Father admitted, or if they were not, the
debts were always being forgiven, or put off. And in Firanja, at
least, the Buddhist monastery schools and hospitals were the only
signs of the victors of the war imposing their will -- almost; that
dark part, the shadow of the conquerors, opium, was becoming more
and more common in Firanji cities, and Father declared angrily
after reading the newspapers that as it all came from Afghanistan
and Burma, its shipment to Firanja was almost certainly sanctioned
by the Chinese. Even in Turi one saw the poor souls in the working
district cafes downriver, stupefied by the oddsmelling smoke, and
in Nsara Idelba said the drug was widespread, like any other world
city in that regard, even though it was Islam's world city, the
only Islamic capital not destroyed by the war; Konstantiniyye,
Cairo , Moscow, Teheran, Zanzibar, Damascus and Baghdad had been
firebombed, and not yet completely rebuilt.
Nsara had survived, however, and now it was the sufis'
city, the scientists' city, Idelba's city; she had gone to it after
a childhood in Turi and at the family farm in the Alps, she had
gone to school there, and mathematical formulations had spoken to
her as if speaking aloud from the page; she understood them, she
spoke that strange alchemical language. Old men explained its rules
of grammar to her, and she followed them and did the work, learned
more, made her mark in theoretical specu lations about the
nature of microscopic matter when she was only twenty years old.
'Young minds are often the strongest in maths,' she said later
already outside the experience itself. Into the labs of Nsara,
then, helping the famous Lisbi and his team to bolt a cyclic
accelerator together, getting married, then getting divorced, then,
apparently very quickly, rather mysteriously, Budur thought,
getting remarried, which was almost unheard of in Turi; working
again with her second husband, very happily,
then his unexpected death; and her again mysterious
return to Turi, her retreat.
Budur asked once, 'Did you wear the veil there?'
'Sometimes,' Idelba said. 'It depended on the situation.
The veil has a kind of power, in certain situations. All such signs
stand for other things; they are sentences spoken in matter. The
hijab can say to strangers, 'I am Islamic and in solidarity with my
men, against you and all the world.' To Islamic men it can say, 'I
will play this foolish game, this fantasy of yours, but only if in
return you do everything I tell you to. For some men this trade,
this capitulation to love, is a kind of release from the craziness
of being a man. So the veil can be like putting on a magician
queen's cape.' But seeing Budur's hopeful expression she added, 'Or
it can be like putting on a slave's collar, certainly.'
'So sometimes you didn't wear one?'
'Usually I did not. In the lab it would have been silly.
I wore a lab jellabah, like the men. We were there to study atoms,
to study nature. That is the greatest godliness! And without
gender. That simply isn't what it's about. So, the people you are
working with, you see them face to face, soul to soul.' Eyes
shining, she quoted from some old poem: Every
moment an epiphany arrives, and cleaves the mountain
asunder. -- This had been the way of it for Idelba in
her youth; and now she sat in her brother's little
middle class harem, 'protected' by him in a way that gave her
frequent attacks of hem, that in truth made her a fairly volatile
person, like a Yasmina with a bent towards secrecy rather than
garrulousness. Alone with Budur, pinning up laundry on the terrace,
she would look at the treetops sticking over the walls and sigh.
'If only I could walk again at dawn through the empty streets of
the city! Blue, then pink -- to deny one that is absurd. To deny
one the world, on one's own terms -- it's archaic! It's
unacceptable.'
But she did not run away. Budur did not fully understand
why. Surely Aunt Idelba was capable of tramming down the hill to
the railway station, and taking a train to Nsara, and finding
lodgings there somewhere -- and getting a job that would
support her somehow? And if not her, then whom? What woman
could do it? None of good repute; not if Idelba couldn't. The only
time Budur dared to ask her about it, she only shook her head
brusquely and said, 'There are other reasons too. I can't talk
about it.'
So there was something quite frightening to Budur about Idelba's
presence in their home, a daily reminder that a woman's life could
crash like an aeroplane out of the sky. The longer it went on the
more disturbing Budur found it, and she noticed that Idelba too
grew more agitated, wandering from room to room reading and
muttering, or working over her papers with a big mathematical
calculator, a net of strings holding beads of different colours.
She wrote for hours on her blackboard, and the chalk squeaked and
clicked and sometimes snapped off in her fingers. She talked on the
phone down in the courtyard, sounding upset sometimes, pleased at
others; doubting, or excited -- and all about numbers, letters, the
value of this and that, strengths and weaknesses, forces of
microscopic things that no one would ever see. She said to Budur
once, staring at her equations, 'You know Budur, there is a very
great deal of energy locked into things. The Travancori Chandaala
was the deepest thinker we ever have had on this Earth; you could
say the Long War was a catastrophe just because of his death alone.
But he left us a lot, and the energy mass equivalence -- look
-- a mass, that's just a measure for a certain weight, say -- you
multiply it by the speed o ig t, and square the result -- multiply
it by half a million li per second, think of that! then take the
square of that, so -- see enormous numbers result, for even
a little pinch of matter. That's the qi energy locked up in it. A
strand of your hair has more energy in it than a locomotive.'
'No wonder it's so hard to get a brush through it,' Budur
said uneasily, and Idelba laughed.
'But there's something wrong?' Budur asked.
At first Idelba did not answer. She was thinking, and
lost to all around her. Then she stared at Budur.
'Something is wrong if we make it wrong. As always.
Nothing in nature is wrong in itself.'
Budur wasn't so sure of that. Nature made men and women,
nature made flesh and blood, hearts, periods, bitter feelings ...
sometimes it all seemed wrong to Budur, as if happiness were a
stale scrap of bread, and all the swans of her heart were fighting
for it, starving for it.
The roof of the house was forbidden to the women; it was
a place where they might be observed from the roof terraces higher
up Turi's Eastern Hill. And yet the men never used it, and it was
the perfect place to get above the street's treetops, and have a
view of the Alps to the south of Lake Turi. So, when the men
were all gone, and Ahmet asleep in his chair by the gate, Aunt
Idelba and cousin Yasmina would use the laundry drying posts as the
legs of a ladder, placing them in olive jars and lashing them
together, so that they could climb the lashings very gingerly, with
the girls below and Idelba above holding the posts. Up they would
go until they were all on the roof, in the dark, under the stars,
in the wind, whispering so that Ahmet would not hear them,
whispering so that they would not shout at the top of their lungs.
The Alps in full moonlight stood there like white cardboard
cut outs at the back of a puppet stage, perfectly vertical,
the very image of what mountains should look like. Yasmina brought
up her candles and powders to say the magic spells that would drive
her male admirers to distraction -- as if they weren't already --
but Yasmina had an insatiable desire for men's regard, sharpened no
doubt by the lack of access to it in the harem. Her Travancori
incense would swirl up into the night, sandalwood, musk, saffron,
nagi, and with their exotic scents filling her head it would seem
to Budur a different world, vaster, more mysteriously meaningful
things suffused with their meanings as if with a liquid,
right to the limits of surface tension, everything become a symbol
of itself, the moon the symbol of moon, the sky the symbol of sky,
the mountains the symbol of mountains, all bathed in a dark blue
sea of longing. Longing the very essence of longing, painful and
beautiful, bigger than the world itself.
Once, however, the full moon came, and Idelba did not
organize an expedition to the roof terrace. She had spent many
hours that month on the telephone, and after each conversation had
been uncharacteristically subdued. She hadn't described to the
girls the contents of these calls, or said who she had been talking
to, though from her manner of talk Budur assumed it was her nephew,
as usual. But no discussion of them at all.
Perhaps it was this that made Budur sensitive and wary of
some change. On the night of the full moon she scarcely slept,
waking every watch to see the moving shadows on the floor, waking
from dreams of anxious flight through the alleys of the old town,
escaping something behind her she never quite saw. Near dawn she
woke to a noise from the terrace, and looked out of her little
window to see Idelba carrying the laundry poles down from the
terrace into the stairwell. Then the olive jars as well.
Budur slipped out into the hall and down to the window at the
carrel overlooking the yard in front. Idelba was constructing their
ladder against the side of the household wall, just around the
corner of the house from Ahmet's locked gate. She would top the
wall next to a big elm tree that stood in the alley running between
the walls of their house and the al Dins' next door, who were
from Neshapur.
Without a moment's hesitation, without any thought at
all, Budur ran back to her room and dressed quickly, then ran
downstairs and back out into the yard, around the corner of the
house, glancing around the corner to be sure Idelba had gone.
She had. The way was clear; Budur could follow without
impediment.
This time she did hesitate; and it would be difficult to
describe her thoughts in that crucial moment of her life. No
particular train of thought occupied her mind, but rather a kind of
balancing of her whole existence: the harem, her mother's moods,
her father's indifference to her, Ahab's simple face always behind
her like an idiot animus, Yasmina's weeping; all of Turi at once,
balanced on its two hills on each side of the River Limat, and in
her head; beyond all that, huge cloudy masses of feeling, like the
clouds one saw boiling up over the Alps. All inside her chest; and
outside her a sensation as if clusters of eyes were trained on her,
the ghost audience to her life, perhaps, out there always whether
she saw them or not, like the stars. Something like that. It is
always thus at the moment of change, when we rise up out of the
everyday and get clear of the blinkers of habit, and stand naked to
existence, to the moment of choice, vast, dark, windy. The world is
huge in these moments, huge. Too big to bear. Visible to all the
ghosts of the world. The centre of the universe.
She lurched forwards. She ran to the ladder, climbed
swiftly; it was no different to when it was set upstairs between
terrace and roof. The branches of the elm were big and solid, it
was easy to climb down far enough in them to make a final jump to
the ground, jarring her fully awake, after which she rolled to her
feet as smoothly as if she had been in on the plan from the
start.
She tiptoed to the street and looked towards the tram
stop. Her heart was thumping hard now, and she was hot in the chill
air. She could take the tram or walk straight down the narrow
streets, so steep that in several places they were staired. She was
sure Idelba was off to the railway station, and if she was
wrong, she could give up the chase.
Even wearing a veil it was too early for a girl from a
good family to be on the tram alone; indeed, it was always too
early for a respectable girl to be out alone. So she hustled over
to the top of the first stair alley, and began hurrying down the
weaving course, through courtyard, park, alley, the stair of the
roses, the tunnel made by Japanese fire maples, down and down the
familiar way to the old town and the bridge crossing the river to
the railway station. Onto the bridge, where she looked upstream to
the patch of sky between old stone buildings, its blue arched over
the pink hem of the little bit of mountains visible, an embroidery
dropped into the far end of the lake.
She was losing her resolve when she saw Idelba in the
station, reading the schedule for track listings. Budur ducked
behind a streetlight post, ran around the building into the doors
on the other side, and likewise read a schedule. The first train
for Nsara was on Track 16, at the far side of the station, leaving
at five sharp, which had to be close. She checked the clock hanging
over the row of trains, under the roof of the big shed; five
minutes to spare. She slipped onto the last car of the train.
The train jerked slightly and was off. Budur moved
forwards up the train, car to car, holding onto the seat backs, her
heart knocking faster and faster. What was she going to say to
Idelba? And what if Idelba was not on the train, and Budur off to
Nsara on her own, with no money?
But there Idelba sat, hunched over, looking forwards out
of the window. Budur steeled herself and burst through the
compartment door and rushed to her weeping, threw herself on her,
'I'm sorry, Aunt Idelba, I didn't know you were going this far, I
only followed to keep you company, I hope you have money to pay for
my ticket too?'
'Oh name of Allah!' Idelba was shocked; then furious;
mostly at herself, Budur judged through her tears, though she took
it out for a little while on Budur, saying, 'This is important
business I'm on, this is no girl's prank! Oh, what will happen?
What will happen? I should send you right back on the next
train!'
Budur only shook her head and wept some more.
The train clicked quickly over the tracks, through
country that was rather bland; hill and farm, hill and farm, flat
woods and pastures, all clicking by at an enormous speed, it almost
made ber sick to look out of the window, though she had ridden in
trains all her life, and had looked out before at the view without
feeling anything.
At the end of a long day the train entered the bleak
outskirts of a city, like Downbrook only bigger, li after li of
apartment blocks and close set houses behind their walls,
bazaars full of people, neighbourhood mosques and bigger buildings
of various kinds; then really big buildings, a whole knot of them
flanking the many bridged river, just before it opened out
into the estuary, now a giant harbour, protected by a jetty that
was broad enough to hold a street on it, with businesses on both
sides.
The train took them right to the heart of this district
of tall buildings, where a station, glass roofed and grimy,
let them out onto a broad treelined street, a two--parted street
divided by huge oaks planted in a line down a centre island. They
were a few blocks from the docks and the jetty. It smelled
fishy.
A broad esplanade ran along the riverbank, backed by a
row of redleaved trees. Idelba walked quickly down this corniche,
like Turi's lakeside corniche only much grander, until she turned
onto a narrow street lined with three storey apartment blocks,
their first floors occupied by restaurants and shops. Up some
stairs into one of these buildings, then into a doorway with three
doors. Idelba rang the bell for the middle one, and the door opened
and they were welcomed into an apartment like an old palace fallen
apart.
TWO
Not an old palace, it turned out, but an old museum. No
room in it was very big or impressive, but there were a lot of
them. False ceilings, open ceilings and abrupt cuts in wall
paintings and wainscoting patterns made it clear that bigger rooms
had been divided and subdivided. Most of the rooms held more than
one bed or cot, and the huge kitchen was crowded with women making
a meal or waiting to eat it. They were thin women, for the most
part. It was noisy with talk and stove fans. 'What is this?'
Budur asked Idelba under the hubbub.
'This is a zawiyya. A kind of boarding house for women.'
Then with a bleak smile: 'An anti harem.' She explained that
these had been traditional in the Maghrib, and now they were
widespread in Firanja. The war had left many more women alive than
men, despite the indiscrim inate devastation of its last two
decades, when more civilians than soldiers had died, and women's
brigades had been common on both sides. Turi and the other Alpine
emirates had kept more men at home than most countries, putting
them to work in the armouries, so Budur had heard of the
depopulation problem, but had never seen it. As for the zawlyyas,
Idelba said they were still technically illegal, as the laws
against female ownership of property had never been changed; but
male nominal owners and other legal dodges were used to legitimize
scores of them, hundreds of them.
'Why did you not live in one of these after your husband
died?' Budur asked.
Idelba frowned. 'I needed to leave for a while.'
They were assigned a room that had three beds, but no
other occupants. The third bed would serve as desk and table. The
room was dusty, and its little window looked out on other grimy
windows, all facing in on an airshaft, as Idelba called it.
Buildings here were so compressed together that they had to
remember to leave shafts for air.
But no complaints. A bed, a kitchen, women around them:
Budur was content. But Idelba was still very worried, about
something having to do with ber nephew Piali and his work. In their
new room she stared at Budur with a dismay she couldn't conceal.
'You know, I should send you back to your father. I've got enough
trouble as it is.'
'No. I won't go.'
Idelba stared at her. 'How old are you again?'
'I'm twenty three.' She would be in two months.
Idelba was surprised. 'I thought you were younger.'
Budur blushed and looked down.
Idelba grimaced. 'Sorry. That's the effect of the harem.
And no men left to marry. But look, you have to do something.'
'I want to stay here.'
'Well, even so, you have to inform your father where you
are, and tell him that I did not kidnap you.'
'He'll come here and get me.'
'No. I don't think so. In any case you must tell him
something. Phone him, or write him a letter.'
Budur was afraid to talk to her father, even over the
phone. The idea of a letter was intriguing. She could explain
herself without giving away her precise location.
She wrote: Dear Father and Mother,
I followed Aunt Idelba when she left, though she did not
know it. I have come to Nsara to live and to pursue a course of
study. The Quran says all of Allah's creatures are equal in His
eyes. I will write you and the rest of the family a weekly report
on my affairs, and will live an orderly life here in Nsara that
will not shame the family. I am living in a good zawiyya with Aunt
Idelba, and she will look after me. Lots of young women here are
doing this, and they will all help me. I will study at the
madressa. Please convey all my love to Yasmina, Rema, Aisha, Nawah
and Fatima.
Your loving daughter, Budur She posted this off,
and after that stopped thinking of Turi. The letter was helpful in
making her feel less guilty. And after a while she realized, as the
weeks went on, and she did clerical work, and cleaning, and
cooking, and other help of that kind in the zawiyya, and made the
arrangements to start studies at the institute connected to the
madressa, that she was not going to get a letter back from her
father. And Mother was illiterate; and her cousins no doubt
forbidden to write, and perhaps angry at her for abandoning them;
and her brother would not be sent after her, nor would he want to
be; nor would she be arrested by the police and sent off in a
sealed train to Turi. That happened to no one. There were literally
thousands of women both escaping from home, and relieving those
left behind from the burden of caring for them. What in Turi had
looked like an eternal system of law and custom that the whole
world abided by, was in reality nothing more than the antiquated
habits of one moribund segment of a single society,
mountain bound and conservative, furiously inventing
pan Islamic 'traditions' even at the moment they were all
disappearing, like morning mist or (more appropriately)
battlefield smoke. She would never go back, it was that simple! And
no one was going to make her. No one even wanted to make her; that
too was a bit of a shock. Sometimes it did not feel so much that
she had escaped as that she had been abandoned.
There was this fundamental fact, however, which struck
her every day when she left the zawiyya: she was no longer living
in a harem. She could go where she chose, when she chose. This
alone was enough to make her feel giddy and strange -- free,
solitary -- almost too happy, to the point of disorientation, or
even a kind of panic: once right in the midst of this euphoria she
saw from behind a man emerging from the railway station and thought
for a second it was her father, and was glad, relieved; but it
wasn't him; and all the rest of that day her hands shook with
anger, shame, fear, longing.
Later it happened again. It happened several times, and
she came to regard the experience as a kind of ghost glimpsed in
the mirror, her past life haunting her: her father, her uncles, her
brother, her male cousins, always in actuality the faces of various
strangers, just alike enough to give her a start, make her heart
jump with fear, though she loved them all. She would have been so
happy to think they were proud of her, that they cared enough to
come after her. But if it meant returning to the harem, she never
wanted to see them again. She would never again submit to rules
from anyone. Even ordinary sane rules now gave her a quick surge of
anger, an instantaneous and complete NO that would fill her like a
shriek in the nerves. Islam in its literal meaning meant
submission: but NO! She had lost that ability. A traffic
policewoman, warning her not to cross the busy harbour road outside
the crosswalks: Budur cursed her. The house rules in her zawiyya:
her teeth would clench. Don't leave dirty plates in the sink, help
wash the sheets every Thursday; NO.
But all that anger was trivial compared to the fact of
her freedom. She woke in the morning, understood where she was,
leapt out of bed full of amazed energy. An hour's vigorous work in
the zawiyya had her groomed and fed, and some of the communal work
done, bathrooms cleaned, dishes, all the chores that had to be done
over and over again, all the chores that at home had been performed
by the servants but how much finer it was to do such work
for an hour than to have other human beings sacrificing their whole
lives to it! How clear it was that this was a model for all human
labour and relations!
Those things done, she was off into the fresh ocean air,
like a cold salty wet drug, sometimes with a shopping list,
sometimes only with her bag of books and writing materials.
Wherever she was going she would go by the harbour, to see the
ocean outside the jetty, and the wind whipping the flags; and one
fine morning she stood at the end of the jetty with nowhere to go,
and nothing to do; and no one in the world knew where she was at
that moment, except for her. My God, the feel of that! The harbour
crowded with ships, the brown water running out to sea on the ebb
tide, the sky a pale wash of clean azure, and all of a sudden she
bloomed, there were oceans of clouds in ber chest, she wept for
joy. Ah, Nsara! Nsssarrrrra!
But first on her list of things to do, on many mornings,
was to visit the White Crescent Disabled Soldiers' Home, a vast
converted army barracks a long way up the river park. This was one
of those duties Idelba had pointed her towards, and Budur found it
both harrowing and uplifting -- like going to the mosque on Friday
was supposed to be and never really had been. The larger part of
this barracks and hospital was taken up by a few thousand blind
soldiers, rendered sightless by gas on the eastern front. In the
mornings they sat in silence, in beds or chairs or wheelchairs as
the case might be, as someone read to them, usually a woman: daily
newspapers on their thin inky sheets, or various texts, or in some
cases the Quran and the hadith, though these were less popular.
Many of the men had been wounded as well as blinded, and could not
walk or move; they sat there with half a face, or without legs,
aware, it seemed, of how they must appear, and staring in the
direction of the readers with a hungry ashamed look, as if they
would kill and eat her if they could, from unrealizable love or
bitter resentment, or both all mixed together. Such naked
expressions Budur had never seen in her life, and she often kept
her own gaze fixed on whatever text she was reading, as though, if
she were to glance up at them they would know it and recoil, or
hiss with disapprobation. Her periph eral vision revealed to
her an audience out of a nightmare, as if one of the rooms of hell
had extruded from the underworld to reveal its inhabitants, waiting
to be processed, as they had waited and been processed in life.
Despite her attempts not to look, every time she read to them Budur
saw more than one of them weeping, no matter what it was she
read, even the weather reports from Firanja or Africa or the New
World. The weather actually was one of their favourite
readings.
Among the other readers there were very plain women who
nevertheless had beautiful voices, low and clear, musical, women
who sang their whole lives without knowing it (and knowing would
have ruined the effect); when they read many in their audience sat
forward in their beds and wheelchairs, rapt, in love with a woman
to whom they never would have given a second glance could they have
seen her. And Budur saw that some of the men leaned forward in the
same way for her, though in her own ears her voice was unpleasantly
high and scratchy. But it had its fans. Sometimes she read them the
stories of Scheherazade, addressing them as if they were angry King
Shahryar and she the wily storyteller, staying alive one more
night; and one day, emerging from that antechamber of hell into the
soaked sunlight of cloudy noon, she almost staggered at the
realization of how completely the old story had been turned on its
head, Scheherazade free to walk away, while the Shahryars were
imprisoned for ever in their own wrecked bodies.
THREE
That duty accomplished, she walked through the bazaar to
the classes she was taking, in subjects suggested by Aunt Idelba.
The madressa institute's classes were folded in to the Buddhist
monastery and hospital, and Budur paid a fee, with money borrowed
from Idelba, to take three classes: beginning statistics (which
began with simple arithmetic, in fact), accounting and the history
of Islam.
This last course was taught by a woman named Kirana
Fawwaz, a short dark Algerine with an intense voice hoarsened by
cigarettes. She looked about forty or forty five. In the first
meeting she informed them she had served in the war hospitals and
then, near the end of the Nakba (or the Catastrophe, as the war was
often referred to) in the Maghribi women's brigades. She was
nothing like the soldiers in the White Crescent home, however; she
had come out of the Nakba with the air of one victorious, and
declared in the first meeting that they would in fact have won the
war, if they had not been betrayed both at home and abroad.
'Betrayed by what?' she asked in her harsh crow's voice,
seeing the question on all their faces. 'I will tell you: by the
clerics. By our men more generally. And by Islam itself.'
Her audience stared at her. Some lowered their heads
uneasily, as if expecting Kirana to be arrested on the spot, if not
struck down by lightning. Surely at the least she would be run down
later that day by an unexpected tram. And there were several men in
the class as well, one right next to Budur, in fact, wearing a
patch over one eye. But none of them said anything, and the class
went on as if one could say such things and get away with it.
'Islam is the last of the old desert monotheisms,' Kirana
told them. 'It is belated in that sense, an anomaly. It followed
and built on the earlier pastoral monotheisms of the Middle West,
which predated Mohammed by several centuries at least:
Christianity, the Essenes, the Jews, the Zoroastrians, the
Mithraists and so on. They were all strongly patriarchal, replacing
earlier matriarchal polytheisms, created by the first agricultural
civilizations, in which gods resided in every domesticated plant,
and women were acknowledged to be crucial to the production of food
and new life.
'Islam was therefore a latecomer, and as such, a
corrective to the earlier monotheisms. It had the chance to be the
best monotheism, and in many ways it was. But because it began in
an Arabia that had been shattered by the wars of the Roman empire
and the Christian states, it had to deal first with a condition of
almost pure anarchy, a tribal war of all against all, in which
women were at the mercy of any warring party. From those depths no
new religion could leap very high.
'Mohammed thus arrived as a prophet who was both trying
to do good, and trying not to be overwhelmed by war, and by his
experiencing of divine voices babbling some of the time, as
the Quran will attest.'
This remark drew gasps, and several women stood and
walked out. All the men in the room, however, remained as if
transfixed.
'Spoken to by God or speaking whatever came into his
head, it did not matter; the end result was good, at first. A
tremendous increase in law, in justice, in women's rights, and in a
general sense of order and human purpose in history. Indeed, it was
precisely this sense of justice and divine purpose which
gave Islam its unique power in the first few centuries AH, when it
swept the world despite the fact that it gave no new material
advantage -- one of the only clear cut demonstrations of the
power of the idea alone, in all of history.
'But then came the caliphs, the sultans, the divisions,
the wars, the clerics and their hadith. The hadith overgrew the
Quran itself, they seized on every scrap of misogyny scattered in
Mohammed's basically feminist work, and stitched them into the
shroud in which they wrapped the Quran, as being too radical to
enact. Generations of patriarchal clerics built up a mass of hadith
that has no Quranic authority whatsoever, thus rebuilding an unjust
tyranny, using frequently falsified authorities of personal
transmission from male master to male student, as if a lie passed
down through three or ten generations of men somehow metamorphoses
into a truth. But it is not so.
'And so Islam, like Christianity and Judaism before it,
stagnated and degenerated. Because its expansion was so great, it
was harder to see this failure and collapse; indeed, it took up
until the Nakba itself to make it clear. But this perversion of
Islam lost us the war. It was women's rights, and nothing else,
that gave China and Travancore and Yingzhou the victory. It was the
absence of women's rights in Islam that turned half the population
into non productive illiterate cattle, and lost us the war.
The tremendous intellectual and mechanical progress that had been
initiated by Islamic scientists was picked up and carried to much
greater heights by the Buddhist monks of Travancore and the
Japanese diaspora, and this revolution in mechanical capacity was
quickly developed by China and the New World free states; by
everyone, in fact, except for Dar al Islam. Even our reliance
on camels did not come to an end until midway through the Long War.
Without any road wider than two camels, with every city built as a
kasbah or a medina, as tightly packed as a bazaar, nothing could be
done in the way of modernization. Only the war's destruction of the
city cores allowed us to rebuild in a modern way, and only our
desperate attempt to defend ourselves brought any industrial
progress to speak of. But by then it was a case of too little and
too late.'
At this point the room was quite a bit emptier than it
had been when Kirana Fawwaz began; and two girls had exclaimed as
they stormed out that they were going to report these blasphemies
to the clerics and the police. But Kirana Fawwaz only paused to
light a cigarette and wave them out of the room, before
continuing.
'Now,' she went on, calmly, inexorably, remorselessly,
'in the aftermath of the Nakba, everything has to be
reconsidered, everything. Islam has to be examined root and branch
and leaf, in the effort to make it well, if that is possible; in
the effort to make our civilization capable of survival. But
despite this obvious necessity, the regressives prattle their
broken old hadith like magic charms to conjure jinns, and in states
like Afghanistan or Sudan, or even in corners of Firanja itself, in
the Alpine Emirates and Skandistan, for instance, the hezbollah
rule, and women are forced into chador and hijab and harem, and the
men in power in these states try to pretend that it is the year 300
in Baghdad or Damascus, and that Haroun al Rashid will come
walking in the door to make everything right. They might as well
pretend to be Christian and hope the cathedrals will spring back to
life and Jesus come flying down from heaven.'
FOUR
As Kirana spoke, Budur saw in her mind the blind men in
the hospital; the walled residential streets of Turi; her father's
face as he was reading to her mother, the sight of the ocean; a
white tomb in the jungle; indeed everything in her life, and many
things she had never thought of before. Her mouth hung open, she
was stunned, frightened but also elated, by every single
shocking word of it: it confirmed everything she had suspected in
her ignorant balked furious girlhood, trapped in her father's
house. She had spent her whole life thinking that something was
seriously wrong With herself, or with the world, or both. Now
reality seemed to have opened up under ber like a trapdoor, as all
her suspicions were confirmed in glorious style. She held onto her
scat, even, and stared at the woman lecturing them, hypnotized as
if by some great hawk circling overhead, hypnotized not just by her
angry analysis of all that had gone wrong, but by the image she
evoked thereby of History itself, the huge long string of events
that had led to this moment, here and now in this rainlashed
western harbour city; hypnotized by the oracle of time itself,
rasping on in her urgent smoky crow's voice. So much had happened
already, nahdas and nakbas, time after time; what could be said
after all that? One had to have courage even to try to talk about
it.
But very clearly this Kirana Fawwaz did not lack for
courage. Now she stopped, and looked around at the
half emptied room. 'Well,' she said cheerfully, acknowledging
with a brief sardonic smile Budur's round eyed look, somewhat
like that of the astonished fish in the boxes at the market. 'It
seems we have driven out everyone who can be driven out. Left are
the brave of heart to venture into this dark country, our
past.'
The brave of heart or the weak of limb, Budur thought,
glancing around. An old one armed soldier looked on
imperturbably. The oneeyed man still sat next to her. Several
women of various ages sat looking around uneasily, shifting in
their seats. A few looked to Budur like women of the street, and
one of these was grinning. Not what Budur had imagined when Idelba
had talked about the Nsarene Madressa and Institutes of Higher
Learning; the flotsam of Dar al Islam, in fact, the sorry
survivors of the Nakba, the swans in winter; women who had lost
their husbands, fiances, fathers, brothers, women who been orphaned
and never since had the chance to meet a single man; and the
warwounded themselves, including a blinded veteran like the ones
Budur read to, led to the class by his sister, and then the
one armed one, and the eyepatch next to her; also a
Hodenosaunee mother and daughter, supremely confident and
dignified, relaxed, interested, but with nothing at stake; also a
longshoreman with a bad back, who seemed to be there mainly to get
out of the rain for six hours a week. These were the ones that
remained, lost souls of the city, looking for something indoors to
occupy them, they were not sure what. But perhaps, for the moment
at least, it would do to stay here and listen to Kirana Fawwaz's
harsh lecture.
'What I want to do,' she said then, 'is to cut through
all the stories, through the million stories we have constructed to
defend ourselves from the reality of the Nakba, to reach
explanation. To the meaning of what has happened, do you
understand? This is an introduction to history, like Khaldun's,
only spoken among us, in conversation. I will be suggesting various
projects for further research as we go along. Now let's go and get
a drink.'
She led them out into the dusk of the long northern
evening, to a cafe behind the docks, where they found acquaintances
from other parts of her life, already there eating late meals or
smoking cigarettes or puffing on communal narghiles, and drinking
little cups of thick coffee. They sat and talked through the long
twilight, then far into the night, the docks out of the windows
empty and calm, the lights from across the harbour squiggling on
black water. The man with the eyepatch was a friend of Kirana's, it
turned out; his name was Hasan, and he introduced himself to Budur
and invited her to sit on the wall bench next to him and his group
of acquaintances, including singers and actors from the institute,
and the city's theatres. 'My fellow student here, I venture to
say,' he said to the others, 'was quite taken by our professor's
opening remarks.'
Budur nodded shyly and they cackled at her. She inquired
about ordering a cup of coffee.
The talk around the dirty marble tabletops ranged widely,
as was true in all such places, even back in Turi. The news in the
newspapers. Interpretations of the war. Gossip about the city
officials. Talk about plays and the cinema. Kirana sometimes rested
and listened, sometimes talked on as if she were still in her
class.
'Iran is the wine of history, they are always getting
crushed.'
'Some vintages are better than others so for them all
great civilizations must finally be crushed.'
'This is merely al Katalan again. It is too
simple.'
'A world history has to simplify,' the old one armed
soldier said. His name was Naser Shah, Budur learned; his accent
when speaking Firanjic marked him as Iranian. 'The trick of it is
to get at causes of things, to generate some sense of the overall
story.'
'But if there isn't one?' Kirana asked.
'There is,' Naser said calmly. 'All people who have ever
lived on Earth have acted together to make a global history. It is
one story. Certain patterns are evident in it. The collisionary
theories of Ibrahim al Lanzhou, for instance. No doubt
they're just yin and yang again, but they make it seem pretty clear
that much of what we call progress comes from the clash of two
cultures.'
'Progress by collision, what kind of progress is this,
did you see those two trams the other day after the one jumped its
tracks?'
Kirana said, 'Al Lanzhou's core civilizations
represent the three logically possible religions, with Islam
believing in one god, India in many gods, and China in no
gods.'
'That's why China won,' said Hasan, his one eye gleaming
with mischief. 'They turned out to be right. Earth congealed out of
cosmic dust, life appeared and evolved, until a certain ape made
more and more sounds, and off we went. Never any God involved,
nothing supernatural, no eternal souls reincarnated time after
time. Only the Chinese really faced that, leading the way with
their science, honouring nothing but their ancestors, working only
for their descendants. And so they dominate us all!'
'It's just that there's more of them,' one of the
questionable women said.
'But they can support more people on less land. This
proves they are right!'
Naser said, 'Each culture's strength can also be its
weakness. We saw this in the war. China's lack of religion made
them horribly cruel.'
The Hodenosaunee women from the class appeared and joined
them; they too were acquaintances of Kirana's. Kirana welcomed
them, saying, 'Here are our conquerors, a culture in which women
have power! I wonder if we could judge civilizations by how well
women have done in them.'
'They have built them all,' proclaimed the oldest woman
there, who up till now had only sat there knitting. She was at
least eighty, and therefore had lived through most of the war,
start to finish, childhood to old age. 'No civilizations exist
without the homes women build from the inside.'
'Well, how much political power women have taken, then.
How comfortable their men are with the idea of women having this
kind of power.'
'That would be China.'
'No, the Hodenosaunee.'
'Not Travancore?'
No one ventured to say.
'This should be investigated!' Kirana said. 'This will be
one of your projects. A history of women in the other cultures of
the world their actions as political creatures -- their
fates. That this is missing from history as we have been given it
so far, is a sign that we still live in the wreckage of patriarchy.
And nowhere more so than in Islam.'
FIVE
Budur of course told Idelba all about Kirana's lecture
and the after class meeting, describing them excitedly while
they washed dishes together, and then sheets. Idelba nodded and
asked questions, interested; but in the end she said, 'I hope you
will keep working hard on your statistics class. Talk about these
kinds of things can go on for ever, but numbers are the only thing
that will get you beyond talk.'
'What do you mean?'
'Well, the world operates by number, by physical laws,
expressed mathematically. If you know these, you will have a better
grasp of things. And some possible job skills. Speaking of which, I
think I can get you a job washing glassware in the lab. That would
be good, it will give you some more money, and teach you that you
want some job skills. Don't get sucked into the whirlpool of cafe
talk.'
'But talk can be good! It's teaching me so many things,
not just about history, but what it all means. It sorts it out, as
we used to do in the harem.'
'Exactly! You can talk all you want in the harem! But
it's only in institutes that you can do science. Since you've
bothered to come here, you might as well take advantage of what's
offered.'
This gave Budur pause. Idelba saw her thinking about it,
and went on: 'Even if you do want to study history, which is
perfectly sensible, there is a way of doing it that goes beyond
cafe talk, that inspects the actual artefacts and sites left from
the past, and establishes what can be asserted with physical
evidence to back it, as in the other sciences. Firanja is full of
old places that are being investigated for the first time in
a scientific manner like this, and it is very interesting. And it
will take decades to investigate them all, even centuries.'
She straightened up, held her lower back and rubbed it as
she regarded Budur. 'Come with me for a picnic on Friday. I'll take
you up the coast to see the menhirs.'
'The menhirs? What are they?'
'You will see on Friday.'
So on Friday they took the tram as far north up the coast
as it ran, then changed to a bus and rode for half a watch, looking
out at the apple orchards and the occasional glimpses of the dark
blue ocean. Finally Idelba led the way off at one stop, and they
walked west out of a tiny village, immediately into a forest of
immense standing stones, set in long lines over a slightly rolling
grassy plain, interrupted here and there by huge mature oak trees.
It was an uncanny sight.
'Who put these here? The Franks?'
'Before the Franks. Before the Kelts, perhaps. No one is
quite sure. Their living settlements have not been found with
certainty, and it's very difficult to date the time when these
stones were dressed and stood on end.'
'It must have taken, I don't know, centuries to put this
many up!'
'It depends on how many of them there were doing it, I
suppose. Maybe there were as many then as now, who can say? Only I
would expect not, as we find no ruined cities, as they do in Egypt
or the Middle West. No, it must have been a smaller population,
taking a lot of time and effort.'
'But how can a historian work with stuff like this?'
Budur asked at one point, as they walked down one of the long lanes
created by the rows of stones, studying the patterns of black and
yellow lichen that grew on their nobbled surfaces. Most were about
twice Budur's height, really massive things.
'You study things instead of stories. It's something
different from history, more a scientific inquiry of material
conditions that early people lived in, things they made.
Archaeology. Again, it is a science that began during the first
Islamic flowering, in Syria and Iraq, then was not pursued again
until the Nahda,' this being the rebirth of Islamic high culture in
certain cities like Teheran and Cairo, in the half century
before the Long War started and wrecked everything. 'Now our
understanding of physics and geology is such that new methods of
inquiry are being suggested all the time. And construction and
reconstruction projects are digging up all kinds of new finds as
well, and people are going out deliberately looking for more, and
it is all coming together in a very exciting way. It is a science
taking off, if you know what I mean. Most interesting. And Firanja
is turning out to be one of the best places to practise it. This is
an ancient place.'
She gestured at the long rows of stones, like a crop
seeded by great stone gods who had never come back to make a
harvest. Clouds scudded by overhead, and the blue sky seemed flat
and low over them. 'Not just these, or the stone rings in Britain,
but stone tombs, monuments, whole villages. I'll have to take you
up to the Orkneys with me some time. I may be wanting to go up
there soon in any case, I'll take you along. Anyway, you think
about studying this kind of thing too, as a grounding for you while
you listen to Madam Fawwaz and all her scheherazading.'
Budur rubbed her hand over a stone dressed by a thin
lichen coat of many colours. Clouds rushed by. 'I will.'
SIX
Classes, a new job cleaning Idelba's lab, walking the
docks and the jetty, dreaming of a new synthesis, an Islam that
included what was important in the Buddhism so prevalent in the
labs: Budur's days passed in a blur of thought, everything she saw
and did fed into it. Most of the women in Idelba's lab were
Buddhist nuns, and many of the men there were monks. Compassion,
right action, a kind of agape, as the ancient Greeks had called it
-- the Greeks, those ghosts of this place, people who had had every
idea already, in a lost paradise that had included even the story
of paradise lost, in the form of Plato's tales of Atlantis, which
were turning out to be true, according to the latest studies of the
scholars on Kreta, digging in the ruins.
Budur looked into classes in this new field, archaeology.
History that was more than talk, that could be a science . . . The
people working on it were an odd mix, geologists,
architects, physicists, Quranic scholars, historians, all studying
not just the stories, but the things left behind.
Meanwhile the talk went on, in Kirana's class and in the
cafes afterwards. One night in a cafe Budur asked Kirana what she
thought of archaeology, and she replied, 'Yes, archaeology is very
important, sure. Although the standing stones are rather mute when
it comes to telling us things. But they're discovering caves in the
south, filled with wall paintings that appear to be very old, older
even than the Greeks. I can give you the names of the people at
Avignon involved with that.'
' Thanks.'
Kirana sipped her coffee and listened to the others for a
while. Then she said to Budur under the hubbub, 'What's
interesting, I think, beyond all the theories we discuss, is what
never gets written down. This is crucial for women especially,
because so much of what we did never got written down. just the
ordinary, you know, daily existence. The work of raising children
and feeding families and keeping a home together, as an oral
culture passed along generation to generation. Uterine culture,
Kang Tongbi called it. You must read her work. Anyway uterine
culture has no obvious dynasties, or wars, or new continents to
discover, and so historians have never tried to account for it --
for what it is, how it is transmitted, how it changes over time,
according to material and social conditions. Changing with them I
mean, in a weave with them.'
'In the harem it's obvious,' Budur said, feeling nervous
at being jammed knee to knee with this woman. Cousin Yasmina had
conducted enough clandestine 'practice sessions' of kissing and the
like among the girls that Budur knew just what the pressure from
Kirana's leg meant. Resolutely she ignored it and went on: 'It's
like Scheherazade, really. Telling stories to get along. Women's
history would be like that, stories told one after another. And
every day the whole process has to be renewed.'
'Yes, Scheherazade is a good tale about dealing with men.
But there must be better models for how women should pass history
along, to younger women, for instance. The Greeks had a very
interesting mythology, full of goddesses modelling various
woman to woman behaviours. Demeter, Persephone ... they
have a wonderful poet for this stuff too, Sappho. You haven't heard
of her? I'll give you the references.'
SEVEN
This was the start of many more personal conversations
over coffee, late at night in the rain lashed cafes. Kirana
lent Budur books on all kinds of topics, but especially Firanji
history: the Golden Horde's survival of the plague that had killed
the Christians; the continuing influence of the Horde's nomad
structures on the descendant cultures of the Skandistani states;
the infill of al Andalus, Nsara and the Keltic Islands by
Maghribis; the zone of contention between the two infilling
cultures in the Rhine Valley. Other volumes described the movement
of Turks and Arabs through the Balkans, adding to the discord of
the Firanji emirates, the little taifa states that fought for
centuries, according to loyalties Sunni or Shiite, sufi or Wahabbi,
Turkic or Maghribi or Tartar; fought for dominance or survival,
often desperately, creating conditions usually repressive for
women, so that only in the farthest west had there been any
cultural advances before the Long War, a progressiveness that
Kirana associated with the ocean, and contact with other cultures
by sea, and with Nsara's origins as a refuge for the heterodox and
marginal, founded indeed by a woman, the fabled refugee Sultana
Katima.
Budur took these books and tried reading from them aloud
to her blind soldiers in the hospital. She read them the story of
the Glorious Ramadan Revolution, when Turkic and Kirghizi women had
led seizures of the power plants of the big reservoirs above
Samarqand, and moved into the ruins of the fabled city, which had
been abandoned for nearly a century because of a series of violent
earthquakes; how they had formed a new republic in which the holy
laws of Ramadan were extended through the year, and the life of the
people made a communal act of divine worship, all humans completely
equal, men and women, adult and child, so that the place had
reclaimed its glorious heritage of the tenth century, and made
amazing advances in culture and law, and all had been happy there,
until the Shah had sent his armies cast from Iran and crushed them
as heretics.
Her soldiers nodded as they listened. That's the way it
happens, their silent faces said. The good is always crushed. Those
who see the farthest have their eyes put out. Budur, seeing the way
they hung on every word, like starving dogs watching people cat in sidewalk cafes,
brought in more of her borrowed books to read to them. Ferdowsi's
'The Book of Kings', the huge epic poem describing Iran before
Islam, was very popular. So was the sufi lyric poet Hafiz, and of
course Rumi and Khayyarn. Budur herself liked to read from her
heavily annotated copy of Ibn Khaldun's 'Muqaddimah'.
'There is so much in Khaldun,' she said to her listeners.
'Everything I learn at the institute I find already here in
Khaldun. One of my instructors is fond of a theory that has the
world being a matter of three or four major civilizations, each a
core state, surrounded by peripheral states. Listen here to
Khaldun, in the section entitled "Each dynasty has a certain amount
of provinces and lands, and no more".'
She read, Whenthe dynastic groups have
spread over the border regions, their numbers are necessarily
exhausted. This, then, is the time when the territory of the
dynasty has reached its farthest extension, where the border
regions form a belt around the centre of the realm. If the dynasty
then undertakes to expand beyond its holdings, its widening
territory remains without military protection, and is laid open to
any chance attack by enemy or neighbour. This has a detrimental
result for the dynasty. -- Budur looked up. 'A very
succinct description of core periphery theory. Khaldun also
addresses the lack of an Islamic core state that the others can
rally around.'
Her audience nodded; they knew about that; the absence of
alliance coordination at the various fronts of the war had been a
famous problem, with sometimes terrible results.
'Khaldun also addresses a systemic problem in Islamic.
economy, in its origins among Bedouin practice. He says of them,
"Places that succumb to the Bedouins are quickly ruined. The reason
for this is that the Bedouins are a savage nation, fully accustomed
to savagery and the things that cause it. Savagery has become their
character and nature. They enjoy it, because it means freedom from
authority and no subservience to leadership. Such a natural
disposition is the negation and antithesis of civilization." He
goes on to say, "It is their nature to plunder whatever other
people possess. Their sustenance lies wherever the shadow of their
lances falls." And after that he gives us the labour theory of
value, saying "Now, labour is the real basis of profit. When labour
is not appreciated and is done for nothing, the hope for profit
vanishes, and no productive work is done. The sedentary population
disperses, and civilization decays." Really quite amazing, how much
Khaldun saw, and this back in a time when the people living here in
Nsara were dying of their plague, and the rest of the world not
even ,close to thinking historically.'
The time for reading ended. Her audience settled back
into their chairs and beds, hunkering down for the long empty
watches of the afternoon.
Budur left with her usual combination of guilt, relief
and joy, and on this day went directly to Kirana's class.
'How can we ever progress out of our origins,' she asked
their teacher plaintively, 'when our faith orders us not to leave
them?'
Kirana replied, 'Our faith said no such thing. This is
just something the fundamentalists say, to keep their hold on
power.'
Budur felt confused. 'But what about the parts of the
Quran that tell us Mohammed is the last prophet, and the rules in
the Quran should stand for ever?'
Kirana shook her head impatiently. 'This is another case
of taking an exception for the general rule, a very common
fundamentalist tactic. In fact there are some truths in the Quran
that Mohammed declared eternal -- such existential realities as the
fundamental equality of every person how could that ever change?
But the more worldly concerns of the Quran, involved with the
building of an Arabic state, changed with circumstances, even
within the Quran itself, as in its variable statements against
alcohol. Thus the principle of naskh, in which later Quranic
instructions supersede earlier ones. And in Mohammed's last
statements, he made it clear that he wanted us to respond to
changing situations, and to make Islam better -- to come up with
moral solutions that conform to the basic framework, but respond to
new facts.'
Naser asked, 'I wonder if one of Mohammed's seven scribes
could have inserted into the Quran ideas of his own?'
Again Kirana shook her head. 'Recall the way the Quran
was assembled. The mushaf, the final physical document, was the
result of Osman bringing together all the surviving witnesses to
Mohammed's dictation, his scribes, wives and companions, who
together agreed upon a single correct version of the holy book. No
individual interpolations could have survived that process.
No, the Quran is a single voice, Mohammed's voice, Allah's voice.
And it is a message of great freedom and justice on this Earth! it
is the hadith that contain the false messages, the reimposition of
hierarchy and patriarchy, the exceptional cases twisted to general
rules. It's the hadith that abandon the major jihad, the fight
against one's own temptations, for the minor jihad, the defence of
Islam against attack. No -- in so many ways, the rulers and clerics
have distorted the Quran to their own purposes. This has been true
in all religions, of course. It is inevitable. Anything divine must
come to us in worldly clothing, and so it comes to us altered. The
divine is like rain striking the Earth, and all our efforts at
godliness are therefore muddy all but those few seconds of
complete inundation, the moments that the mystics describe, when we
are nothing but rain. But those moments are always brief, as the
sufis themselves admit. So we should let the occasional chalice
break, if needs be, to get at the truth of the water inside
it.'
Encouraged, Budur said, 'So how do we be modern
Muslims?'
'We don't,' the oldest woman rasped, never pausing in her
knitting. 'It's an ancient desert cult that has brought ruin to
countless generations, including mine and yours, I'm afraid. It's
time to admit that and move on.'
'On to what, though?'
'To whatever may come!' the old one cried. 'To your
sciences to reality itself! Why worry about any of these
ancient beliefs! They are all a matter of the strong over the weak,
of men over women. But it's women who bear the children and raise
them and plant the crops and harvest them and cook the meals and
make the homes and care for the elderly! It's women who make the
world! Men fight wars, and lord it over the rest with their laws
and religions and guns. Thugs and gangsters, that's history! I
don't see why we should try to accommodate any of it at all!'
There was silence in the class, and the old woman resumed
her knitting as if she were stabbing every king and cleric who ever
lived. They could suddenly hear the rain pouring down outside,
students' voices in a courtyard, the old woman's knitting needles
murderously clicking.
'But if we take that route,' Naser said, 'then the
Chinese have truly won.'
More drumming silence.
The old woman finally said, 'They won for a reason. They
have no God and they worship their ancestors and their descendants.
Their humanism has allowed them science, progress -- everything we
have been denied.'
Even deeper silence, so that they could hear the foghorn
out on the point, bellowing in the rain.
Naser said, 'You speak only of their upper classes. And
their women had their feet bound into little nubbins, to cripple
them, like clipping the wings of birds. That too is Chinese. They
are hard bastards, you take my word for it. I saw in the war. I do
not want to tell you what I saw, but I know, believe me. They have
no sense of godliness, and so no rules of conduct; nothing to tell
them not to be cruel, and so they are cruel. Horribly cruel. They
don't think the people outside China are really human. Only the Han
are human. The rest, we are hui hui, like dogs. Arrogant, cruel
beyond telling it does not seem a good thing to me that we
should imitate their ways, that they should win the war so
completely as that.'
'But we were just as bad,' Kirana said.
'Not when we behaved as true Muslims. What would be a
good project for a history class, I think, would be to focus on
what has been best in Islam, enduring through history, and see if
that can guide us now. Every sura of the Quran reminds us by its
opening words Bismallah, in the name of God, the
compassionate, the merciful. Compassion, mercy how do we express
that? These are ideas that the Chinese do not have. The Buddhists
tried to introduce them there, and they were treated like beggars
and thieves. But they are crucial ideas, and they are central to
Islam. Ours is a vision of all people as one family, in the rule of
compas sion and mercy. This is what drove Mohammed, driven by
Allah or by his own sense of justice, the Allah inside us. This is
Islam to me! That's what I fought for in the war. These are the
qualities we have to offer the world that the Chinese do not have.
Love, to put it simply. Love.'
'But if we don't live by these things '
'No!' Naser said. 'Don't beat us with that stick. I don't
see any people on Earth living by their best beliefs any more. This
must be what Mohammed saw when he looked around him. Savagery
everywhere, men like beasts. So every sura started with a call to
compassion.'
'You sound like a Buddhist,' someone said.
The old soldier was willing to admit this. 'Compassion,
isn't that their guiding principle of action? I like what the
Buddhists do in this world. They are having a good effect on us.
They had a good effect on the Japanese, and the Hodenosaunee. I've
read books that say all our progress in science comes from the
Japanese diaspora, as the latest and strongest of the Buddhist
diasporas. They took up the ideas from the ancient Greeks and the
Samarqandis.'
Kirana said, 'We must find the most Buddhist parts of
Islam, perhaps. Cultivate those.'
'I say abandon all the past!' Click click click!
Naser shook his head. 'Then there could arise a new,
scientific savagery. As during the war. We have to retain the
values that seem good, that foster compassion. We have to use the
best of the old to make a new way, better than before.'
'That seems good policy to me,' Kirana said. 'And it's
what Mohammed told us to do, after all.'
EIGHT
Thus the bitter scepticism of the old woman, the stubborn
hope of the old soldier, the insistent inquiry of Kirana, an
inquiry which never got to the answers she wanted, but forged on
through idea after idea, testing them against her sense of things,
and against thirty years of insatiable reading, and the seedy life
behind the docks of Nsara. Budur, wrapping herself in her oilcloth
raincoat and hunching through the drizzle home to the zawiyya, felt
the invisibilities welling up all around her -- the hot quick
disapproval of maimed young men who passed on the street the clouds
lowering overhead -- the secret worlds enfolded inside everything
that Aunt Idelba was working on at the lab. Her job sweeping up and
restocking the empty place at night was . . . suggestive. Greater
things lay in the final distillation of all this work, in the
formulas scrawled on the blackboards. There were years of
mathematical work behind the experiments of the physicists,
centuries of work now being realized in material explorations that
might bring new worlds. Budur did not feel she could ever learn the
maths involved, but the labs had to run right for anything to
progress, and she began to get involved in ordering supplies,
keeping the kitchen and dining halls running, paying the bills (the
qi bill was huge).
Meanwhile the talk between the scientists went on,
endless as the chatter in the cafes Idelba and her nephew Piali
spent long sessions at the blackboards running over their ideas and
proposing solutions to their mysterious mysteries, absorbed,
pleased, also often worried, an edge in Idelba's voice, as if the
equations were somehow revealing news she did not like or could not
quite believe. Again she spent lots of time on the telephone, this
time the one in its little closet in the zawiyya, and she was often
gone without saying where she had been. Budur couldn't tell if all
these matters were connected or not. There was a lot about Idelba's
life that she didn't know. Men that she talked to outside the
zawiyya, packages, calls . . . it appeared from the vertical lines
etched between her eyebrows that she had her hands full, that it
was a complicated existence somehow.
'Whatever is the problem with this study you are doing
with Piali and the others?' Budur asked her one night as Idelba
very thoroughly cleaned out her desk. They were the last ones
there, and Budur felt a solid satisfaction at that; that here in
Nsara they were trusted with matters; it was this that made her
bold enough to interrogate her aunt.
Idelba stopped her cleaning to look at her. 'We have some
reason for worry, or so it seems. You must not talk to anyone about
this. But well -- as I you told before, the world is made of
atoms, tiny things with heartknots, and around them lightning motes
travelling in concentric shells. All this at so small a scale it's
hard to imagine. Each speck of dust you sweep up is made of
millions of them. There are billions of them in the tips of your
fingers.' She wiggled her grimy hands in the air. 'And yet each
atom stores a lot of energy. Truly it is like trapped lightning,
this qi energy, you have to imagine that kind of blazing power.
Many trillionqi in every little thing.' She gestured at the big
circular chart painted on one wall, their table of the elementals,
Arabic letters and numerals encrusted with many extra dots. 'Inside
the heartknot there is a force holding all that energy together, as
I told you, a force very strong at very close distances, binding
the lightning power to the heart so tightly it can never be
released. Which is good, because the amounts of energy contained
are really very high. We pulse with it.'
'That's how it feels,' Budur said.
'Indeed. But look, it's many times beyond what we can
feel. The formula proposed, as I told you, is energy equals the
mass times the speed of light squared, and light is very fast
indeed. So that with only a little matter, if any of its energy
were released into the world . . .' She shook her head. 'Of course
the strong force means that would never happen. But we continue to
investigate this element alactin, that the Travancori physicists
call Hand of Tara. I suspect its heartknot is unstable, and Piali
is beginning to agree with me. Clearly it is very full of the
jinni, both yin and yang, in such a fashion that to me it is acting
like a droplet of water held together by surface tension, but so
big that the surface tension is just barely holding it, and it
stretches out like a water drop in the air, deforming this way and
that, but held together, just, except for sometimes, when it
stretches too far for surface tension, the strong force in this
case, and then the natural repulsion between the jinni makes a
heartknot split in two, becoming atoms of lead, but releasing some
of its bound power as well, in the form of rays of invisible
energy. That's what we are seeing on the photographic plates you
help with. It's quite a bit of energy, and that's just one
heartknot breaking. What we have been wondering what we have
been forced to consider, given the nature of the phenomenon -- is,
if we gathered enough of these atoms together, and broke even one
heartknot apart, would the released qi break a lot more of them at
the same time, more and more again all at the speed of light, in a
space this big,' holding her hands apart. 'If that might not set
off a short chain reaction,' she said.
'Meaning . . .'
'Meaning a very big explosion!'
For a long time Idelba stared off into the space of pure
mathematics, it seemed.
'Don't tell anyone about this,' she said again.
'I won't.'
'No one.'
'All right.'
Invisible worlds, full of energy and power:
sub atomic harems, each pulsing on the edge of a great
explosion. Budur sighed as this image came to her. There was no
escaping the latent violence at the heart of things. Even the
stones were mortal.
NINE
Budur got up in the mornings at the zawiyya, helped in
the kitchen and office indeed, there was much that was the
same about her work in the zawiyya and at the lab, and though the
work felt quite different in each setting, it still had a basic
tedium to it; leaving her classes and her walks through the great
city as the place to work on her dreams and ideas.
She walked along the harbour and the river, no longer
expecting anyone from Turi to show up and take her back to her
father's house. Much of the vast city remained unknown to her, but
she had her routes through certain districts, and sometimes rode a
tram out to its end just to see what kind of neighbourhoods it went
through. The ocean and river districts were her particular study,
which of course gave her a lot to work on. Wan sunlight splintered
through clouds galloping on the ocean onshore wind; she sat at
cafes behind the docks, or across the sea road from the strands,
reading and writing, and looked up to see whitecaps dashing
themselves at the foot of the great lighthouse at the end of the
jetty, or up the rocky coast to the north. Pale washed blues in the
sky behind the tumbling clouds, the bruised blues of the ocean, the
whites of cloud and broken wave; she loved the looks of these
things, loved them with all her heart. Here she was free to be her
whole self. It was worth all the rain to have the air washed so
clean.
In one rather shabby and stormbeaten beach district at
the end of tram line number six, there was a little Buddhist
temple, and one day outside it Budur saw the Hodenosaunee mother
and daughter from Kirana's class. They saw her and came over.
'Hello,' the mother said. 'You have come to visit us!'
'Actually I was just wandering around town,' Budur said,
surprised. 'I like this neighbourhood.'
'I see.' Said politely, as if she didn't believe ber. 'I
am sorry to have presumed, but we are acquainted with your
aunt Idelba, and so I thought you may have been coming here on her
behalf. But you don't well -- but would you like to come
in?'
'Thank you.' Mystified, Budur followed them into the
compound, which contained a courtyard garden of shrubs and gravel,
arranged around a bell next to a pond. Nuns in dark red dresses
walked through on their way somewhere inside. One sat to talk with
the Hodenosaunee women, whose names were Hanea and Ganagweh, mother
and daughter. They all spoke in Firanjic, with a strong Nsarene
accent mixed with something else. Budur listened to them talk about
repairs to the roof. Then they invited her to come with them into a
room containing a big wireless; Hanea sat before a microphone, and
had a conversation in her language that crossed the ocean.
After that they joined a number of nuns in a
meditation room, and sat chanting for a time. 'So, you are
Buddhists?' Budur asked the Hodenosaunee women when the session was
over, and they had gone back out into the garden.
'Yes,' Hanea said. 'It's common among our people. We find
it very similar to our old religion. And I think it must also have
been true that we liked the way it put us in league with the
Japanese from the west side of our country, who are like us in so
many other ways. We needed their help against the people from your
side.'
'I see.'
They stopped before a group of women and men who were
sitting in a circle chipping away at sandstone blocks, making large
flat bricks, it seemed, perfectly shaped and polished. Hanea
pointed at them and explained: 'These are devotional stones, for
the top of Chomolungma. Have you heard of this project?'
'No.'
'Well, you know, Chomolungma was the highest mountain in
the world, but the top was destroyed by Muslim artillery during the
Long War. So, now there is a project started, very slow of course,
to replace the top of the mountain. Bricks like these are taken
there, and then climbers who ascend Chomolungma carry one brick
along with their lifegas canisters, and leave it on the summit for
stonemasons to work into the new summit pyramid.'
Budur stared at the dressed blocks of stone, smaller than
several of the boulders decorating the courtyard garden. She was
invited to pick one up, and did so; it was about as heavy as three
or four books in her arms.
'It will take a lot of these?'
'Many thousands. It is a very long term project.'
Hanea smiled. 'A hundred years, a thousand years? It depends on how
many climbers there are who want to carry one up the mountain. A
considerable mass of stone was blasted away. But a good idea, yes?
A symbol of a more general restoration of the world.'
They were preparing a meal in the kitchen, and invited
Budur to join them, but she excused herself, saying she needed to
catch the next tram back.
'Of course,' said Hanea. 'Do give our greetings to your
aunt. We look forward to meeting with her soon.'
She didn't explain what she meant, and Budur was left to
think it over as she walked down to the beach stop and waited for
the tram into town, huddling in its little glass shelter against
the stiff blast of the wind. Half asleep, she saw an image of
a line of people, carrying a whole library of stone books to the
top of the world.
TEN
'Come with me to the Orkneys,' Idelba said to her. 'I
could use your help, and want to show you the ruins there.'
'The Orkneys? Where are they again?'
It turned out they were the northernmost of the Keltic
Isles, above Scotland. Most of Britain was occupied by a population
that had originated in al Andalus, the Maghrib and west
Africa; then during the Long War the Hodenosaunee had built a big
naval base in a bay surrounded by the main Orkney island, and they
were still there, overseeing Firanja in effect, but also protecting
by their presence some remnants of the original population, Kelts
who had survived the influx of both Frank and Firanji, and of
course the plague. Budur had read tales of these tall,
pale--skinned, red haired, blue eyed survivors of the
great plague.
And as she and Idelba sat at a window table in the
gondola of their airship, watching England's green hills pass
slowly underneath them, dappled by cloud shadow and cut into large
squares by crops, hedgerows and grey stone walls, she wondered what
it would be like to stand before a true Kelt -- whether she would
be able to bear their mute accusatory gaze, stand without flinching
before the sight of their albinoesque skin and eyes.
But of course it was not like that at all. They landed to
find the Orkney islands were more rolling grassy hills, with
scarcely a tree to be seen, except clustered around whitewashed
farmhouses with chimneys at both ends, a design ubiquitous and
apparently ancient, as it was replicated in grey ruins in fields
near the current versions. And the Orcadians were not the spavined
freckled inbred halfwits Budur had been expecting from the tales of
the white slaves of the Ottoman sultan, but burly shouting
fishermen in oils, red faced and straw haired in some
cases, black--or brown haired in others, shouting at each
other like fisherfolk in any of the villages of the Nsarene coast.
They were unselfconscious in their dealings with Firanjis, as if
they were the normal ones and the Firanjis the exotics; which of
course was true here. Clearly for them the Orkneys were all the
world.
And when Budur and Idelba drove out into the country in
an motorcart to see the island's ruins, they began to see why; the
world had been coming to the Orkneys for three thousand years or
more. They had reason to feel they were at the centre of things,
the crossroads. Every culture that had ever lived there, and there
must have been ten of them through the centuries, had built using
the island's stratified sandstone, which had been split by the
waves into handy plates and beams and broad flat bricks, perfect
for drywall, and even stronger if set in cement. The oldest
inhabitants had also used the stones to build their bedframes and
kitchen shelves, so that here, in a small patch of grass
overlooking the western sea, it was possible to look down into
stone houses that had had the sand filling them removed, and see
the domestic arrangements of people who had lived over five
thousand years before, it was said, their very tools and furniture
just as they had been left. The sunken rooms looked to Budur just
like her own rooms in the zawiyya. Nothing essential had changed in
all that time.
Idelba shook her head at the great ages claimed for the
settlement, and the dating methods used, and wondered aloud about certain
geochronologies she had in mind that might be pursued. But after a
while she fell as silent as the rest, and stood staring down into
the spare and beautiful interiors of the old ones' homes. These
things of ours that endure.
Back in the island's one town, Kirkwall, they walked
through stonepaved streets to another little Buddhist temple
complex, set behind the locals' ancient cathedral, a tiny thing
compared to the big skeletons left behind on the mainland, but
roofed and complete. The temple behind it was very modest, a matter
of four narrow buildings surrounding a rock garden, in a style
Budur thought of as Chinese.
Here Idelba was greeted by Hanea and Ganagweh. Budur was
shocked to see them, and they laughed at the expression on her
face. 'We told you we would be seeing you again soon, didn't
we?'
'Yes,' Budur said. 'But here?'
'This is the biggest Hodenosaunee community in Firanja,'
Hanea said. 'We came down to Nsara from here, actually. And we
return here quite often.'
After they were shown the complex and sat down in a room
off the courtyard for tea, Idelba and Hanea slipped away, leaving a
nonplussed Budur behind with Ganagweh.
'Mother said they would need to talk for an hour or two,'
Ganagweh told her. 'Do you know what they're talking about?'
'No,' said Budur. 'Do you?'
'No. I mean, I assume it has something to do with your
aunt's efforts to create stronger diplomatic relations between our
countries. But that's just stating the obvious.'
'Yes,' Budur said, extemporizing. 'I know she's been
interested in that. But meeting you in Kirana Fawwaz's class as I
did . . .'
'Yes. And then, the way you showed up at the monastery
there. It seems we are fated to cross paths.' She was smiling in a
way Budur couldn't interpret. 'Lets go for a walk; those two will
talk for a long while. There's a lot to discuss, after all.'
This was news to Budur, but she said nothing, and spent
the day wandering Kirkwall with Ganagweh, a very high spirited
girl, tall, quick, confident; the narrow streets and burly men of
the Orkneys held no fears for her. Indeed at the end of the town
tram line they walked far down a deserted strand overlooking the
big bay that had once been such a busy naval base, and
Ganagweh stopped at some boulders and stripped off her clothes and
ran screaming out into the water, bursting back out in a flurry of
whitewater, shrieking, her lustrous dark skin gleaming in the sun
as she dried off with her fingers, flinging the water at Budur and
daring her to take the plunge. 'It's good for you! It's not that
cold, it will wake you up!'
It was just the kind of thing Yasmina had always insisted
they do, but shyly Budur declined, finding it hard to look at the
big wet beauti ful animal standing next to her in the sun;
and when she walked down to touch the water, she was glad she had;
it was freezing. She did feel as if she had woken up, aware of the
brisk salt wind and Ganagweh's wet black hair swinging side to side
like a dogs, spraying her. Ganagweh laughed at her and dressed
while still damp. As they walked back, they passed a group of
pale skinned children who regarded them curiously. 'Let's get
back and see how the old women are doing,' Ganagweh said. 'Funny to
see such grandmothers taking the fate of the world into their own
hands, isn't it?'
'Yes,' Budur said, wondering what in the world was going
on.
ELEVEN
On the flight back to Nsara, Budur asked Idelba about it,
but Idelba shook her head. She didn't want to talk about it, and
was busy writing in her notebook. 'Later,' she said.
Back in Nsara, Budur worked and studied. At Kirana's
suggestion she read about southeast Asia, and learned how
the Hindu, Buddhist and Islamic cultures had mixed there to make a
vibrant new offspring, which had survived the war and was
now using the great botanical and mineral riches of Burma and the
Malay peninsula, and Sumatra and Java and Borneo and Mindanao, to
create a group of peoples united against China's centripetal power,
freeing itself from Chinese influence. They had spread into
Aozhou, the big burnt island continent south of them, and even
across the oceans to Inka, and in the other direction to Madagascar
and south Africa: it was a kind of emerging southern world culture,
with the huge cities of Pyinkayaing, Jakarta and Kwinana on the
west coast of Aozhou leading the way, trading with Travancore, and
building like maniacs, erecting cities that included many steel
skyscrapers more than a hundred floors tall. The war had damaged
but not destroyed these cities, and now the governments of the
world met in Pyinkayaing whenever they tried to work out some more
durable and just postwar dispensation.
There were more meetings all the time, as the situation
became more and more deranged; anything to keep war from returning,
as so very little had been resolved by it. Or so the members of the
defeated alliance felt. It was unclear at this point if the Chinese
and their allies, or the countries of Yingzhou, who had entered the
conflict so much later than the rest, had any interest in
accommodating Islamic concerns. Kirana remarked casually in class
one day that it was very possible Islam was in the rubbish heap of
history without yet knowing it; and the more Budur read of her
books, the less sure she could be that this was necessarily a bad
thing for the world. Old religions died; and if an empire tried to
conquer the world and failed, it generally then disappeared.
Kirana's own writing made that very clear. Budur took out
her books from the monastery library, some published nearly twenty
years before, during the war itself when Kirana had to have been
quite young, and she read them with close interest, hearing
Kirana's voice in her head for every sentence; it was just like a
transcript of her talking, except even more long winded. She
had written on many subjects, both theoretical and practical. Whole
books of her African writings were concerned with various public
health and women's issues. Budur opened one of these randomly, and
found herself reading a lecture that had been given to midwives in
the Sudan:
If the parents of the girl insist, if they cannot be
talked out of it, it is extremely important that only one third of
the clitoris should be cut off, and two thirds left intact. Someone
who practically attacks a girl with a knife, cutting off
everything, this goes against the words of the Prophet. Men and
women are meant to be equal before God. But if a woman's entire
clitoris is cut off it leaves ber a kind of eunuch, she becomes
cold, lazy, without desire, without interest, humourless, like a
mud wall, a piece of cardboard, without spark, without goals,
without desire, like a puddle of standing water, lifeless,
ber children are unhappy, her husband is unhappy, she makes nothing
of her life. Those of you who must perform circumcisions, therefore
remember: cut off one third, leave two thirds! Cut off one third,
leave two thirds!
Budur flipped the pages of the book, disturbed. After a
while she collected herself, and read the new page that presented
itself:
I was privileged to witness the return of Raiza Tarami
from her trip to the New World, where she had attended the
conference at Yingzhou's Long island on women's issues, just after
the end of the war. Conference members who came from throughout the
world were greatly surprised to see this Nsarene woman exhibiting a
full awareness of all the issues that mattered. They had been
expecting a backward woman living behind the walls of the harem,
ignorant and veiled. But Raiza was not like that, she stood on the
same footing as her sisters from China, Burma, Yingzhou and
Travancore, indeed she had been forced by conditions at home to
explore theoretically far in advance of most.
So she represented us well, and when she returned to
Firanja, she had come to believe that the veil was the biggest
obstacle in theway of the progress of the Muslim woman, as
standing for general complicity in the whole system. The veil had
to fall if the reactionary system were to fall. And so, upon her
arrival on the docks of Nsara, she met her companions from the
women's institute, and she stood before them with her face
unveiled. Her immediate companions had removed their veils as well.
Around us the signs of disapproval became apparent in the crowd,
shouting and jostling and the like. Then women in the crowd began
to support the unveiled, by removing the veils from their own faces
and throwing them to the ground. it was a beautiful moment. After
that the veil started to disappear in Nsara with great speed. In
just a few years unveiling had spread throughout the country, and
that brick in the wall of the reactionaries had been removed. Nsara
became known as the leader of Firanja because of this action. This
I was lucky enough to witness with my own eyes.
Budur took a breath, marking the passage as something she
would read to her blind soldiers. And as the weeks passed she read
on, working her way through several volumes of Kirana's essays and lectures,
an exhausting experience, for Kirana never hesitated to attack
head on and at length everything that she disliked. And yet
how she had lived! Budur found herself ashamed of her cloistered
childhood and youth, the fact that she was twenty three, now
almost twenty four, and had not yet done anything; by the time
Kirana Fawwaz was that age she had already spent years in Africa,
fighting in the war and working in hospitals. There was so much
lost time to be made up!
Budur also read in many books Kirana had not assigned,
concen trating for a while on the Sino Muslim cultures
that had existed in central Asia, how they had attempted for a
number of centuries to reconcile the two cultures: the books' bad
old photographs showed these people, Chinese in appearance, Muslim
in belief, Chinese in language, Muslim in law; it was hard to
imagine such a mongrel people had ever existed. The Chinese had
killed the greater part of them in the war, and dispersed the rest
across the Dahai to the deserts and jungles of Yingzhou and Inka,
where they worked in mines and on plantations, in effect slaves,
though the Chinese claimed no longer to practise slavery, calling
it a Muslim atavism. Whatever they called it, the Muslims in their
northwest provinces were gone. And it could happen everywhere.
It began to seem to Budur there was no part of history
she could read that was not depressing, disgusting, frightening,
horrible; unless it be the New World's, where the Hodenosaunee and
the Dinei had organized a civilization capable, just barely, of
resisting the Chinese to their west and the Firanjis to their east.
Except even there, diseases and plagues had wrought such havoc on
them in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries that they had been
reduced to a rather small populace, hiding in the centre of their
island. Nevertheless, small in number though they were, they had
persevered, and adapted. They had remained somewhat open to foreign
influences, tying everything they could into their leagues,
becoming Buddhists, allying themselves with the Travancori League
on the other side of the world, which indeed they had helped to
form by their example; advancing from strength to strength, in
short, even when hidden deep in their wild fastness, far from both
coasts and from the Old World generally. Maybe that had helped.
Taking what they could use, fighting off the rest. A place where
women had always had power. And now that the Long War had shattered
the Old World, they had become a sudden new giant across the
seas, represented here by tall handsome people like Hanea and
Ganagweh, walking the streets of Nsara in long fur or oilskin
coats, butchering Firanjic with friendly dignity. Kirana had not
written much about them, as far as Budur could find; but Idelba was
dealing with them, in some mysterious fashion that began to involve
packages, now, that Budur helped take on the tram up to Hanea and
Ganagweh's temple on the north coast. Four times she did this for
Idelba without asking what it was for, and Idelba did not offer
much explanation. Again, as in Turi, it seemed to Budur that Idelba
knew things the rest of them did not. It was a very complicated
life Idelba was living. Men at the gate, some of them pining for
her romantically, one pounding on the locked door shouting
'Idelbaaaa, I love you, plceeasse!' and drunkenly singing in a
language Budur didn't recognize while punishing a guitar, Idelba
meanwhile disappearing into their room and an hour later pretending
nothing had occurred; then again, gone days at a time, and back,
brow deeply furrowed, sometimes happy, sometimes agitated ... a
very complicated life. And yet more than half in secrecy.
TWELVE
'Yes,' Kirana said once to Budur in response to a
question about the Hodenosaunee, looking at a group of them passing
the cafe they were sitting in that day, 'they may be the hope of
all humanity. But I don't think we understand them well enough to
say for sure. When they have completed their takeover of the world,
then we will learn more.'
'Studying history has made you cynical,' Budur noted.
Kirana's knee was pressed against hers again. Budur let her do it
without ever responding one way or the other. 'Or, to put it more
accurately, what you have seen in your travels and teaching have
made you a pessimist.' To be fair.
'Not at all,' Kirana said, lighting a cigarette. She
gestured at it and said parenthetically, 'You see how they already
have us enslaved to their weed. Anyway, I am not a pessimist. A
realist only. Full of hope, ha ha. But you can see the odds if you dare to look.' She
grimaced and took a long drag on the cigarette. 'Sorry -- cramps.
Ha. History till now has been like women's periods, a little egg of
possibility, hidden in the ordinary material of life, with tiny
barbarian hordes maybe charging in, trying to find it, failing,
fighting each other finally a bloody mess ends that chance,
and everything has to start all over again.'
Budur laughed, shocked and amused. It was not a thought
that had ever occurred to her.
Kirana smiled slyly, seeing this. 'The red egg,' she
said. 'Blood and life.' Her knee pressed hard against Budur's. 'The
question is, will the hordes of sperm ever find the egg? Will one
slip ahead, fructify the seed within, and the world become
pregnant? Will a true civilization ever be born? Or is history
doomed always to be a sterile spinster!'
They laughed together, Budur uncomfortable in several
different ways. 'It has to pick the right partner,' she
ventured.
'Yes,' Kirana said with her sly emphasis, the corners of
her mouth lifted just the tiniest bit. 'The Martians, perhaps.'
Budur recalled cousin Yasmina's 'practice kissing'. Women
loving women; making love to women; it was common in the zawiyya,
and presumably elsewhere; there were, after all, many more women
than men in Nsara, as in the whole world. One saw hardly any men in
their thirties or forties on the streets or in the cafes of Nsara,
and the few one did see often seemed haunted or furtive, lost in an
opium haze, aware they had somehow escaped a fate. No -- that whole
generation had been wiped out. And so one saw everywhere women in
couples, hand in hand, living together in walk ups or
zawiyyas. More than once Budur had heard them in her own zawiyya,
in the baths or bedrooms, or walking down the halls late at night.
It was simply part of life, no matter what anyone said. And she had
once or twice taken part in Yasmina's games in the harem, Yasmina
would read aloud from her romance novels and listen to her wireless
shows, the plaintive songs flying in from Venizia, and afterwards
she would walk around their courtyard singing at the moon, wishing
to have a man spying on her in these moments, or leaping over the
wall and taking her in his arms, but there were no men around to do
it. Let's practise how it would be, she would mutter huskily in
Budur's car, so we will know what to do she always said the same
thing -- and then she would kiss Budur passionately on the
mouth, and press herself against her, and after Budur got over the
surprise of it she felt the passion passed into her mouth by a kind
of qi transference, and she kissed back thinking, Will the real
thing ever make my pulse beat this hard? Could it?
And cousin Rima was even more skilful, though less
passionate, than Yasmina, as like Idelba she had once been married,
and later lived in a zawiyya in Roma, and she would observe them
and say coolly, no, like this, straddle the leg of the man you are
kissing, press your pubic bone hard against his thigh, it will
drive him completely crazy, it makes a full circuit then, the qi
circles around in the two of you as in a dynamo. And when they
tried it they found it was true. After such a moment Yasmina would
be pink cheeked, would cry unconvincingly Oh we're bad, we're
bad, and Rima would snort and say, it's like this in every harem
there has ever been in the world. That's how stupid men are. That's
how the world has got on.
Now, in the dregs of the night in this Nsarene cafe,
Budur pressed back slightly against Kirana's knee, in a knowing
manner, friendly but neutral. For now, she kept arranging always to
leave with some of the other students, not meeting Kirana's eye
when it counted stringing her along, perhaps, because she
was not sure what it would mean to her studies or to her life more
generally, if she were to respond more positively and fall into it,
whatever it might be, beyond the kissing and fondling. Sex she knew
about, that would be the straightforward part, but what about the
rest of it? She was not sure she wanted to get involved with this
intense older woman, her teacher, still in some senses a stranger.
But until you took the plunge, did not everyone remain a stranger
for ever?
THIRTEEN
They stood together, Budur and Kirana, at a garden party
on a crowded patio overlooking the Liwaya River before it opened
into its estuary, their upper arms just barely touching, as if by
accident, as if the crush around the wealthy patron of the arts and
philosopher, Tahar Labid, was so great that they had to do it to catch the beautiful
pearls dropping from his lips; although in truth he was a
terrible and obvious blowhard, a man who said your name over and
over in conversation, almost every time he addressed you, so that
it became very off putting, as if he were trying to take you
over, or simply to remember in his solipsism who he was talking to,
never noticing that it made people want to escape him at all
costs.
After a bit of this Kirana shuddered, at his
self absorption perhaps, too like hers to make her at all
comfortable, and she led Budur away. She lifted Budur's hand, all
bleached and cracked from her constant cleaning, and said, 'You
should wear rubber gloves. I should think they would make you at
the lab.'
'Wearing gloves make it hard to hold onto things.'
'Nevertheless.'
This gruff concern for the health of her hands, from the
great intellectual, the teacher -- suddenly surrounded by an
audience of her own, asking her what she thought of certain Chinese
feminists . . . Budur watched her reply immediately and at length
about their origins among Muslim Chinese, particularly Kang Tongbi,
who, with the encouragement of her husband the Sino Muslim
scholar Ibrahim al Lanzhou, set out the theoretical groundwork for
a feminism later elaborated in the Chinese heartland by generations
of late Qing women -- much of their progress contested by the
imperial bureaucracy, of course -- until the Long War dissolved all
previous codes of conduct in the pure rationality of total war, and
women's brigades and factory crews established a position in the
world that could never be retracted, no matter how hard the Chinese
bureaucrats tried. Kirana could recite by memory the wartime list
of demands made by the Chinese Women's Industrial Workers' Council,
and now she did just that: 'Equal rights for men and women, spread
of women's education and facilities for it, improvement in position
of women in the home, monogamy, freedom of marriage, encouragement
of careers, a ban on concubines and the buying and selling of
women, and on physical mutilation, improved political position,
reform of prostitution.' It was a most strange sounding song,
or chant, or prayer.
'But you see, the Chinese feminists claimed women had it
better in Yingzhou and Travancore, and in Travancore the feminists
claimed to have learned it from the Sikhs, who learned it
from the Quran. And here we focus on the Chinese. So that you see
it has been a matter of pulling ourselves up by our bootstraps,
each imagining that it is better in a different country, and that
we should fight to equal the others . . .' On she talked, weaving
the last three centuries together most brilliantly, and all the
while Budur clenched her cracked white hands, thinking, She wants
you, she wants your hands healthy because if she has her way, they
will be touching her.
Budur wandered away on her own, disturbed, saw Hasan on
another terrace and went up to join the group around him, which
included Naser Shah and the ancient grandmother from Kirana's
class, looking at a loose end without her knitting kit in hand. It
turned out they were brother and sister, and she the hostess of
this party: Zainab Shah, very curt when Budur was finally
introduced; and Hasan a long time family friend of theirs.
They had. all known Kirana for years, and had taken her classes
before, Budur learned from Naser as the conversations swirled
around them.
'What bothers me is to see how repetitive and
small minded he could be, what a lawyer '
'That's why it works in application 'Works for
who? He was the lawyer of the clerics.'
'No writer, anyway.'
'The Quran is meant to be spoken and heard, in Arabic it
is like music, he is such a poet. You must hear it in the
mosque.'
'I will not go there. That's for people who want to be
able to say, I am better than you, simply because
I assert a belief in Allah." I reject that. The world is my
mosque.'
'Religion is like a house of cards. One fingertap of fact
and it all falls over.'
'Clever but not true, like most of your aphorisms.'
Budur left Naser and Hasam, and went to a long table
containing snacks and glasses of red and white wine, eavesdropping
as she walked, eating pickled herrings on crackers.
'I hear the council of ministers had to kotow to the army
to keep them out of the treasury, so it comes to the same thing in
the end '
' the six lokas are names for the parts of the
brain that perform the different kinds of mentation. The level of
beasts is the cerebellum, the level of hungry ghosts the limbic archipelago, the human
realm the speech lobes, the realm of the asuras is the frontal
cortex, and the realm of the gods is the bridge between the two
halves of the brain, which when activated gives us glimpses of a
higher reality. It's impressive, really, sorting things out that
clearly by pure introspection 'But that's only five, what
about hell?'
'Hell is other people.'
' I'm sure it doesn't add up to quite as many
partners as that.'
'They've got control of the oceans, so they can come to
us whenever they want, but we can't go to them without their
permission. So '
'So we should thank our lucky stars. We want the generals
to feel as weak as possible.'
'True, but nothing in excess. We may find it becomes a
case of from the coffee pot to the fire.'
' it's well established that a belief in
reincarnation floats around the world from one culture to the next,
migrating to the cultures most stressed.'
'Maybe it migrates with the few souls who are actually
transmigrating, ever think of that?'
With student after student, it's like a kind of
compulsion. A replacement for friends or something like that. Sad
really, but the students are really the ones who suffer, so it's
hard to feel too sorry 'All history would have been
different, if only .
'Yes, if only? Only what?'
'If only we had conquered Yingzhou when we had the
chance.'
'He's a true artist, it's not so easy working in scents,
everyone has their own associations, but somehow he touches all the
deepest ones everyone has, and as it's the sense most tied to
memory, he really has an effect. That shift from vanilla to cordite
to jasmine, those are just the dominant scents of course, each waft
is a mix of scores of them, I think, but what a progression,
heart rending I assure you . . .'
Near the drinks table a friend of Hasan's, named Tristan,
played an oud with a strange tuning, strumming simple chords over
and over, and singing in one of the old Frankish languages. Budur
sipped a glass of white wine and watched him play, forcing the
voices talking around her from her attention. The man's music was
interesting, the level tones of his voice hanging steadily in the
air. His black moustache curved over his mouth. He caught
Budur's eye, smiled briefly. The song came to an end and there was
a patter of applause, and some of them surrounded him to ask
questions. Budur moved in to hear his answers. Hasan joined them,
and so Budur stood beside him. Tristan explained in clipped short
phrases, as if he were shy. He didn't want to talk about his music.
Budur liked the look of him. The songs were from France and
Navarre, he said, and Provence. Third and fourth centuries. People
asked for more, but he shrugged and put his oud in its case. He
didn't explain, but Budur thought the crowd was simply too loud.
Tahar was approaching the drinks table, and his group came with
him. 'But I tell you, Vika, what happens is this ' ' it
all goes back to Samarqand, when there was still 'It would have to
be beautiful and hard, make people ashamed.' 'That was the day, the
very hour when it all started '
'You, Vika, are perhaps afflicted with intermittent
deafness.' 'But here's the thing '
Budur slipped away from the group, and then, feeling
tired of the party and its guests, she left the party as well. She
read the schedule posted at the tram stop and saw that it would be
almost half a watch before another came, so she took off walking on
the river path. By the time she reached the city centre she was
enjoying walking just for itself, and she continued on out the
jetty, through the fish shops and out into the wind, where the
jetty became an asphalt road cracking over huge boulders that stood
greenly out of the oil slicked water slurping against their
sides. She watched the clouds and the sky, and felt suddenly happy
an emotion like a child inside her, a happiness in which
worry was a vague and distant thing, no more than a cloud's shadow
on the dark blue surface of the sea. To think her life might have
passed without her ever seeing the ocean!
FOURTEEN
Idelba came to her one night in the zawiyya and said,
'Budur, you must remember never to tell anyone what I said to you
about alactin. About what splitting it could mean.'
'Of course not. But why do you mention it?'
'Well ... we are beginning to feel that there is some
kind of surveil lance being placed on us. Apparently from a
part of the government, some security department. It's a bit murky.
But anyway, best to be very careful.'
'Why don't you go to the police?'
'Well.' She refrained from rolling her eyes, Budur could
see it. Voice lowered to a gentleness: 'The police are part of the
army. That's from the war, and it never changed. So ... we prefer
not to draw any attention whatsoever to the issues involved.'
Budur gestured around them. 'Surely we have nothing to
worry about here, though. No woman in a zawiyya would ever betray a
housemate, not to the army.'
Idelba stared at her to see if she was being serious.
'Don't be naive,' she said finally, less gently, and with a pat on
the knee got up to go to the bathroom.
This was not the only cloud to come at this time and drop
its shadow on Budur's happiness. Throughout Dar al Islam,
unrest was filling the newspapers, and inflation was universal.
Military takeovers of the governments in Skandistan and Moldava and
al Alemand and the Tyrol, very close to Turi, alarmed the rest
of the world all out of proportion to their puny size, as seeming
to indicate a resurgence of Muslim aggressivity. The whole of Islam
was accused of breaking the commitments forced on them at the
Shanghai Conference after the war, as if Islam were a monolithic
block, a laughable concept even in the depths of the war itself.
Sanctions and even embargoes were being called for in China and
India and Yingzhou. The effect of the threat alone was felt
immediately in Firanja: the price of rice shot up, then the price
of potatoes and maple syrup, and coffee beans. Hoarding quickly
followed, old wartime habits kicking in, and even as prices rose
staples were cleared off the shelves of the groceries the moment
they appeared. This affected everything else as well, both food and
other matters. Hoarding was a very contagious phenomenon, a bad
mentality, a loss of faith in the system's ability to keep
everything running; and as the system had indeed broken down so
disastrously at the end of the war, a lot of people were prone to
hoard at the first hint of a scare. Making meals in the zawiyya
became an exer cise in ingenuity. They often dined on potato
soup, spiced or garnished in one way or another so that it remained
tasty, but it sometimes had to be watered pretty thin to get
a cup of it into everyone at the table.
Cafe life went on as gaily as ever, at least on the
surface. There was perhaps more of an edge in people's voices; eyes
were brighter, the laughs harder, the binges more drunken. Opium
too became subject to boarding. People came in with wheelbarrows of
paper money, or exhibited fivetrillion drachma bills from
Roma, laughing as they offered them in exchange for cups of coffee
and were refused. It wasn't very funny in all truth; every week
things were markedly more expensive, and there didn't seem to be
anything to be done about it. They laughed at their own
helplessness. Budur went to the cafes less often, which saved
money, and the risk of an awkward moment with Kirana. Sometimes she
went with Idelba's nephew Piali to a different set of cards, with a
seedier clientele; Piali and his associates, who sometimes included
Hasan and his friend Tristan, seemed to like the rougher
establishments frequented by sailors and longshoremen. So through a
winter of thick mists that hung in the streets like rain freed of
gravity, Budur sat and listened to tales of Yingzhou and the stormy
Atlantic, deadliest of all the seas.
'We exist on sufferance,' Zainab Shah said bitterly as
she knitted in their regular cafe. 'We're like the Japanese after
the Chinese conquered them.'
'Let the occasional chalice break,' Kirana murmured. Her
expression in the dim light was serene, indomitable.
'They have all broken,' Naser said. He sat in the corner,
looking out of the window at the rain. He tapped his cigarette on
the ashtray. 'I can't say I'm sorry.'
'In Iran too they don't seem to care.' Kirana appeared to
be trying to cheer him up. 'They are making very great strides
there, leading the way in all kinds of fields. Linguistics,
archaeology, the physical sciences, they have all the leading
people.'
Naser nodded, looking inwards. Budur had gathered that
his fortune had gone to fund many of these efforts, from an exile
of some unexplained sort. Another complicated life.
Another downpour struck. The weather seemed to enunciate
their situation, wind and rain slapping the Cafe Sultana's big
windows and running across the plate glass wildly, pushed this way
and that by gusts of wind. The old soldier watched his smoke rise,
twined threads of brown and grey, ox bowing more and more as they
rose. Piali had once described the dynamics of this lazy ascent, as
he had the rain's deltas down the windowpanes. Storm sunlight cast
a silver sheen on the wet street. Budur felt happy. The world was
beautiful. She was so hungry that the milk in her coffee was like a
meal inside her. The storm's light was a meal. She thought: now is
beautiful. These old Persians are beautiful; their Persian accents
are beautiful. Kirana's rare serenity is beautiful. Throw away the
past and the future. The old Persians' Khayyarn had understood
this, one reason among many that the mullahs had never liked him:
Come fill the cup and in the blaze of spring The winter
garment of repentance fling: The bird of time has but a little way
To fly and hey! The bird is on the wing!
The others left, and Budur sat with Kirana, watching her
write something down in her brown backed notebook. She looked
up, happy to see Budur watching her. She stopped for a cigarette,
and they talked for a while, about Yingzhou and the Hodenosaunee.
As usual, Kirana's thoughts took interesting turns. She thought the
very early stage of civilization that the Hodenosaunee had been in
when discovered by the Old World was what had allowed them to
survive, counter--intuitive though that was. They had been canny
hunter gatherers, more intelligent as individuals than the
people of more developed cultures, and much more flexible than the
Inka, who were shackled by a very rigid theocracy. If it weren't
for their susceptibility to Old World diseases, the Hodenosaunee no
doubt would have conquered the Old World already. Now they were
making up for lost time.
They talked about Nsara, the army and the clerics, the
madressa and the monastery. Budur's girlhood. Kirana's time in
Africa.
When the cafe closed Budur went with her to Kirana's
zawiyya, which had a little study garret with a door that was often
closed, and on a couch in there they lay on each other kissing,
rolling from one embrace to the next, Kirana clasping her so hard
that Budur thought her ribs might break; and they were tested again
when her stomach clamped down on a violent orgasm.
Afterwards Kirana held her with her usual sly smile,
calmer than ever.
'Your turn.'
11 already came, I was rubbing myself on your shin.'
'There are softer ways than that.'
'No really, I'm fine. I'm already done for.' And Budur
realized with a shock she could not keep out of ber eyes that
Kirana was not going to let her touch her.
FIFTEEN
After that Budur went to class feeling strange. In class
and in the cafes afterwards, Kirana acted towards her just as she
always had, a matter of propriety no doubt; but Budur found it
off putting, also sad. In the cafes she sat on the other side
of the table from Kirana, not often meeting her eye. Kirana
accepted this, and joined the flow of conversation on her side of
the table, discoursing in her usual manner, which now struck Budur
as a bit forced, even overbearing, although it was no more verbose
than ever.
Budur turned to Hasan, who was describing a trip to the
Sugar Islands, between Yingzhou and Inka, where he planned to smoke
opium every day and lie on white beaches or in the turquoise water
off their shores, warm as a bath. 'Wouldn't that be grand?' Hasan
asked.
'In my next life,' Budur suggested.
'Your next life.' Hasan snorted, bloodshot eye regarding
her sardonically. 'So pretty to think so.'
'You never know,' Budur said.
'Right. Maybe we should take a trip out to see Madam
Sururi, and you can see who you were in your past lives. Talk to
your loved ones in the bardo. Half the widows of Nsara are doing
it, I'm sure it's quite comforting. If you could believe it.' He
gestured out through the plate glass, where people in black coats
passed in the street, hunched under their umbrellas. 'It's silly
though. Most people don't even live the one life they've got.'
One life. It was an idea Budur had trouble accepting,
even though the sciences and everything else had made it clear that
one life was all you had. As a girl her mother had said, Be good or
you'll come back as a snail. At funerals they said a prayer for the
next existence of the deceased, asking Allah to give him or her a
chance to improve. Now all that was dismissed, with all the rest of
the afterlives, heaven and hell, God himself -- all that claptrap,
all the superstitions of earlier generations in their immense
ignorance, concocting myths to make sense of things. Now they lived
in a material world, evolved to what it was by chance and the laws
of physics; they struggled through one life and died; that was what
the scientists had revealed by their studies, and there was nothing
Budur had ever seen or experienced that seemed to indicate
otherwise. No doubt it was true. That was reality; they had to
adjust to it, or live in a delusion. Adjust each to his or her own
cosmic solitude, to nakba, to hunger and worry, coffee and opium,
the knowledge of an end.
'Did I hear you say we should visit Madam Sururi?' Kirana
asked from across the table. 'A good idea! Let's do it. It would be
like a historical field trip for the class like visiting a
place where people still live as they did for hundreds of
years.'
'From all I've heard she's an entertaining old
charlatan.'
'A friend of mine visited her and said it was great
fun.'
They had spent too many hours sitting there, looking at
the same ashtrays and coffee rings on the tabletops, the same rain
deltas on the windows. So they gathered up their coats and
umbrellas, and took the number four tram upriver to a meagre
neighbourhood of apartments abutting the older shipyards, the
buildings displaying small Maghribi shops at each corner. Between a
seamstress's workshop and a laundry hid a little walk up to
rooms over the shops below. The door opened to their knock, and
they were invited in to an entryway, and then, farther in, to a
dark room filled with couches and small tables, obviously the
converted living room of a fairly large old apartment.
Eight or ten women and three old men were sitting on
chairs, facing a black haired woman who was younger than Budur
had expected but not all that young, a woman who wore Zotti
clothing, heavy kohl and lipstick, and a great deal of cheap glass
jewellery. She had been speaking to her devotees in a low intent
voice, and now she paused, and gestured to empty chairs at the back
of the room without saying anything to the new arrivals.
'Each time the soul descends into a body,' she resumed
when they were seated, 'it is like a divine soldier, entering into
the battlefield of life and fighting ignorance and evil doing.
It tries to reveal its own inner divinity and establish the divine
truth on Earth, according to its capacity. Then at the end of its
journey in that incarnation, it returns to its own region of the
bardo. I can talk to that region when conditions are right.'
'How long will a soul spend there before coming back
again?' one of the women in her audience asked.
'This varies depending on conditions,' Madam Sururi
replied. 'There is no single process for the evolution of higher
souls. Some began from the mineral and some from the animal
kingdom. Sometimes it starts from the other end, and cosmic gods
take on human form directly.' She nodded as if personally familiar
with this phenomenon. 'There are many different ways.'
'So it's true that we may have been animals in a previous
incarnation?'
'Yes, it is possible. In the evolution of our souls we
have been all things, including rocks and plants. It is not
possible to change too much between any two incarnations, of
course. But over many incarnations, great changes can be made. The
Lord Buddha revealed that he had been a goat in a previous life,
for instance. But because he had realized God, this was not
important.'
Kirana stifled a little snort, shifted on her chair to
cover it.
Madam Sururi ignored her: 'It was easy for him to see
what he had been in the past. Some of us are given that kind of
vision. But he knew that the past was not important. Our goal is
not behind us, it is ahead of us. To a spiritual person I always
say, the past is dust. I say this because the past has not given us
what we want. What we want is Godrealization, and contact with our
loved ones, and that depends entirely on our inner cry. We must
say, "I have no past. I am beginning here and now, with God's grace
and my own aspiration. -- There was not much to object
to in that, Budur thought; it cut strangely to the heart, given the
source; but she could feel scepticism emanating from Kirana like
heat, indeed the room seemed to be warming with it, as if a
qi burning heater had been placed on the floor and turned on
high. Perhaps it was a function of Budur's embarrassment. She
reached over and squeezed Kirana's hand. It seemed to her that the
seer was more interesting than Kirana's fidgets were allowing.
An elderly widow, still wearing one of the pins given to them in
the middle decades of the war, said, 'When a soul picks a new body
to enter, does it already know what kind of life it will have?'
'It can only see possibilities. God knows everything, but
He covers up the future. Even God does not use his ultimate vision
all the time. Otherwise, there would be no game.'
Kirana's mouth opened round as a zero, almost as if she
were going to speak, and Budur elbowed her.
'Does the soul lose the details of its previous
experiences, or does it remember?'
'The soul doesn't need to remember those things. It would
be like remembering what you ate today, or what a disciple's
cooking was like. If I know that the disciple was very kind to me,
that she brought me food, then that is enough. I don't need to know
the details of the meals. just the impression of the service. This
is what the soul remembers.'
'Sometimes, my -- my friend and I meditate by looking
into each other's eyes, and when we do, sometimes we see each
other's faces change. Even our hair changes colour. I was wondering
what this means.'
'It means you are seeing past incarnations. But this is
not at all advisable. Suppose you see that three or four
incarnations ago you were a fierce tiger? What good would this do
you? The past is dust, I tell you.'
'Did any of your disciples -- did any of us know each
other in our past incarnations?'
'Yes. We travel in groups, we keep running into each
other. There are two disciples here, for instance, who are close
friends in this incarnation. When I was meditating on them, I saw
that they were physical sisters in their previous incarnation, and
very close to each other. And in the incarnation before that, they
were mother and son. This is how it happens. Nothing can eclipse my
third eye's vision. When you have established a true spiritual
bond, then that feeling can never truly disappear.'
'Can you tell us -- can you tell us who we were before?
Or who among us had this bond?'
'Outwardly I have not personally told these two, but
those who are my real disciples I have told inwardly, and so they
know it inside themselves already. My real disciples -- those who I
have taken as my very own, and who have taken me they are
going to be fulfilled and realized in this incarnation, or
in their next incarnation, or in very few incarnations. Some
disciples may take twenty incarnations or more, because of their
very poor start. Some who have come to me in their first or second
human incarnation may take hundreds of incarnations more to reach
their goal. The first or second incarnation is still a halfanimal
incarnation, most of the time. The animal is still there as a
predominating factor, so how can they achieve God realization?
Even in the Nsara Centre for Spiritual Development, right here
among us, there are many disciples who have had only six or seven
incarnations, and on the streets of the city I see Africans, or
other people from across the sea, who are very clearly more animal
than human. What can a guru do with such souls? With these people a
guru can only do so much.'
'Can you ... can you put us in communication with souls
who have passed over? Now? Is it time yet?'
Madam Sururi returned her questioner's gaze, level and
calm. 'They are speaking to you already, are they not? We cannot
bring them forth in front of everyone tonight. The spirits do not
like to be so exposed. And we have guests that they are not yet
used to. And I am tired. You have seen how draining it is to speak
aloud in this world the things they are saying in our minds. Let's
retire to the dining room now, and enjoy the offerings you have
brought. We will cat knowing that our loved ones speak to us in our
minds.'
The visitors from the cafe decided by glance to leave
while the others were retiring to the next room, before they began
to commit the crime of taking others' food without believing in
their religion. They made small coin offerings to the seer, who
accepted them with dignity, ignoring the tenor of Kirana's look,
staring back at Kirana without guilt or complicity.
The next tram wasn't due for another half watch, and so
the group walked back through the industrial district and down the
riverside, reenacting choice bits of the interview and staggering
with laughter. Kirana for one could not stop laughing, howling it
out over the river: 'My third eye sees all! But I can't tell you
right now! What unbelievable crap!'
'I've already told you what you want to know with my
inner voice, now let's eat!'
'Some of my disciples were sisters in previous lives,
sister goats in actual fact, but you can only ask so much of the
past, ah, ha ha ha ha ha ha ha!'
'Oh be quiet,' Budur said sharply. 'She's only making a living.'
To Kirana: 'She tells people things and they pay her, how is that
so different from what you do? She makes them feel better.'
'Does she?'
'She gives them something in exchange for food. She tells
them what they want to hear. You tell people what they don't want
to hear for your food, is that any better?'
'Why yes,' Kirana said, cackling again. 'It's a pretty
damned good trick, now you put it that way. Here's the deal!' she
shouted over the river at the world. 'I tell you want you don't
want to bear, you give me food!'
Even Budur had to laugh.
They walked across the last bridge arm in arm, laughing
and talking, then into the city centre, trams squealing over
tracks, people hurrying by. Budur looked at the passing faces
curiously, remembering the worn visage of the fake guru,
businesslike and hard. No doubt Kirana was right to laugh. All the
old myths were just stories. The only reincarnation you got was the
next day's waking. No one else was you, not the you that existed a
year before, not the you that might exist ten years from now, or
even the next day. It was a matter of the moment, some unimaginable
minim of time, always already gone. Memory was partial, a dim
tawdry room in a run down neighbourhood, illuminated by
flashes of distant lightning. Once she had been a girl in a good
merchant's harem, but what did that matter now? Now she was a free
woman in Nsara, crossing the city at night with a group of laughing
intellectuals -- that was all there was. It made her laugh too, a
painful wild shout of a laugh, full of a joy akin to ferocity. That
was what Kirana really gave in exchange for her food.
SIXTEEN
Three new women showed up in Budur's zawiyya quiet women
who had arrived with typical stories, and mostly kept to
themselves. They started work in the kitchen, as usual. Budur felt
uncomfortable with the way they glanced at her, and did not
look at each other. She still could not quite believe that young
women like these would betray a young woman like her, and two of
the three were actually very nice. She was stiffer with them than
she would have wanted to be, without actually being hostile, which
Idelba had warned might give away her suspicions. It was a fine
line in a game Budur was completely unused to playing or not
completely -- it reminded ber of the various fronts she had put on
for her father and mother, a very unpleasant memory. She wanted
everything to be new now, she wanted to be herself straight up to
everybody, chest to chest as the Iranians said. But it seemed life
entailed putting on masks for much of the time. She must be casual
in Kirana's classes, and indifferent to Kirana in the cafes, even
when they were leg to leg; and she must be civil to these
spies.
Meanwhile, across the plaza in the lab, Idelba and Piali
were hard at work, staying late into the night almost every night;
and Idelba became more and more serious about it, trying, Budur
thought, to hide her worries behind an unconvincing dismissiveness.
'Just physics,' she would say when asked. 'Trying to work something
out. You know how interesting theories can be, but they're just
theories. Not like real problems.' It seemed everyone put on a mask
to the world, even Idelba, who was not good at it, even though she
seemed to have a frequent need for masks. Budur could see very
plainly now that she thought the stakes were somehow high.
'Is it a bomb?' Budur asked once in a low voice, one
night as they were closing up the emptied building.
Idelba hesitated only a moment. 'Possibly,' she
whispered, looking around them. 'The possibility is there. So,
please -- never speak of it again.'
During these months Idelba worked such long hours, and,
like everyone else in the zawiyya, ate so little that she fell
sick, and had to rest in her bed. This was very frustrating to her,
and along with the misery of illness, she struggled to get up
before she was ready, and even tried to work on papers in her bed,
pencil and logarithmic abacus scritching and clacking all the time
she was awake.
Then one day she got a phone call while Budur was there,
and she dragged herself down the hall to take it, clutching her
night robe to her. When she came off the phone she hurried to the
kitchen and asked Budur to join her in her room.
Budur followed her, surprised to see her moving so quickly. In
ber room Idelba shut the door and began to pile a mass of her
papers and notebooks into a cloth book bag. 'Hide this for me,' she
said urgently. 'I don't think you can leave, though, they'll stop
you and search you. It has to be in the zawiyya somewhere, not in
your room or mine, they'll search them both. They may search
everywhere, I'm not sure where to suggest.' Her voice was low but
the tone was frantic; Budur had never heard her like that.
'Who is it?'
'It doesn't matter, hurry! It's the police. They're on
their way, go.'
The doorbell rang, and rang again.
'Don't worry,' Budur said, and ran down the hall to her
room. She looked around: a room search, perhaps a house search,
and the bag of papers was big. She looked around, thinking over the
zawiyya in her mind, wondering if Idelba would mind if she somehow
managed to destroy the bag entirely -- not that she had any method
in mind, but she wasn't sure how crucial the papers were -- but
possibly they could be shredded and flushed down a toilet.
There were people in the hall, women's voices. Apparently
the police who had entered were women officers, so they were not
breaking the house rule against men. A sign perhaps; but men's
voices came from out in the street, arguing with the zawiyya
elders; women were in the hall; a big knock on her door, they had
come to hers first, no doubt along with Idelba's. She put the bag
around her neck, climbed onto her bed, then the iron headboard, and
pulled herself up the wall and shoved up a panel of the false
ceiling, and with a push off like a dance step, knee in the meeting
of the two walls, got under the panel and onto the wall's dusty
top, which was about two feet wide. She sat on it and put the panel
back down into place, very quietly.
The old museum had had very high ceilings, with some
glass skylights that were now almost perfectly opaque with dust. In
the dimness she could see over the ceilings of several rows of
rooms, and the open tops of the hallways, and the true walls, far
away in every direction. It was not a good hiding place at all, if
they only thought to look up here, from anywhere.
The top of the walls consisted of warped wood beams,
nailed to the top of the framing and over the drywall like coping.
There were two sheets of drywall to each wall, notoriously
transparent to sound, nailed onto each side of the framing; so
there would be gaps between the two sheets of drywall, if she could
get a beam off the top somewhere.
She moved onto her hands and knees and swung the bag onto
her back, and began crawling over the dusty beams, looking for a
hole while staying well away from the hallways, where a glance up
could reveal her. From here the whole arrangement looked
ramshackle, cobbled together in a hurry, and soon enough she found
a cap where three walls met and a beam had been cut short. It
wasn't big enough to fit the whole bag, but she could stuff papers
in there, and she did so quickly, until the bag was empty, and the
bag dropped in last. It wasn't a perfect hiding place if they
wanted to be comprehensive, but it was the best she could think of,
and she was pretty pleased with it, actually; but if they found her
up on the beams, all would be lost. She crawled on as quietly as
she could, hearing voices back in the direction of her room. They
would only have to stand on her bed's headboard and push up a panel
for a look to see her. The far bathroom did not sound as if it had
anyone in it, so she crawled in that direction, ripping the skin
over one knee on a nailhead, and pulled up a panel an inch and
peered in empty she pulled it aside, hung from the beam,
dropped, hit the tiled floor hard. The wall was smeared with dust
and blood; her knees and the tops of her feet were filthy with
dust, and the palms of her hands marked everything like the hand of
Cain. She washed in a sink, tore off her jellabah and put it in the
laundry, pulled clean towels from the cabinet and wetted one to
clean the wall off. The panel above was still pulled aside, and
there were no chairs in the bathroom; she couldn't get up there to
move it back in place. Glance out in the hall -- loud voices
arguing, Idelba's among them, protesting, no one in sight -- she
dashed across the hall to a bedroom and took a chair and ran back
into the bathroom and put the chair against the wall, stepped up
onto it, stepped gently on the chair back, reached up and yanked
the panel back into place, smashing her fingers between two panels.
Yank them free, push the panel into position, down again, the chair
slipping across the tile with her movement. Clatter, bang, catch
herself, another glance out, more arguing, coming closer; she put
the chair back, went back in the bathroom, went to the showers and
got in, soaping her knees and feeling the sting in the cut. She
soaped and soaped, heard voices outside the bathroom. She washed
off the soap as quickly as possible, and was dried and wrapped in a
big towel when women came into the room, including two in army
uniforms, looking like soldiers from the war whom Budur had seen
long ago, in the Turi railway station. She looked as startled as
she could, held the towel to herself.
'Are you Budur Radwan?' one of the policewomen
demanded.
'Yes! What do you want?'
'We want to talk to you! Where have you been?'
'What do you mean, where have I been? You can see very
well where I've been! What is this all about, why do you want me?
What could have brought you in here?'
'We want to talk to you.'
'Well, let me get dressed and I will talk to you. I have
done nothing wrong, I assume? I can get dressed before talking to
my own countrywomen, I assume?'
'This is Nsara,' one of them said. 'You're from Turi,
right?'
'True, but we are all Firanjis here, all good Muslim
women in a zawiyya, unless I am mistaken?'
'Come on, get dressed,' the other one said. 'We have some
questions to ask about affairs here, security threats that may be
centred here. So come. Where are your clothes?'
'In my room, of course!' And Budur swept past them to her
room, considering which jellabah would best hide her knees and any
blood that might be seeping down her leg. Her blood was hot, but
her breathing calm, she felt solid; and there was an anger growing
in her, like a boulder from the jetty, anchoring her from the
inside.
SEVENTEEN
Though they made a fairly thorough search, they did not
find Idelba's papers, nor did they get anything but bewilderment
and indignation from their questionings. The zawiyya filed suit
with the courts against the police, for invasion of privacy without
proper authorization, and only the invocation of wartime secrecy
laws kept it from being a scandal in the newspapers. The
courts backed the search but also the zawiyya's future right to
privacy, and after that it was back to normal, or sort of; Idelba
never talked about her work any more, no longer worked in certain
labs she had before, and she no longer spent any time with
Piali.
Budur continued in her routine, making her rounds from
home, to work, to the Cafe Sultana. There she sat behind the big
plate glass windows and looked out at the docks, and the forests of
masts and steel superstructures, and the top of the lighthouse at
the end of the jetty, while the talk swirled around ber. At their
tables too, very often, were Hasan and Tristan, sitting like
limpets in their pool with the tide gone out, exposing them wetly
to the moon. Hasan's polemics and poetry made him a force to be
reckoned with, a truth that all the city's avantgarde acknowledged,
either enthusiastically or reluctantly. Hasan himself spoke of his
reputation with a smirk meant to be self deprecating, wickedly
smiling as he briefly exposed his power to view. Budur liked him
although she knew perfectly well he was in some senses a
disagreeable person. She was more interested in Tristan and his
music, which included not only the songs like those he had sung at
the garden party, but also vast long works for bands of up to two
hundred musicians, sometimes featuring him on the kundun, an
Anatolian stringed box with metal tabs to the side that slightly
changed the tones of the strings, a fiendishly difficult instrument
to play. He wrote out the parts for each instrument in these
pieces, down to every chord and change, and even every note. As in
his songs, these longer compositions showed his interest in
adapting the primitive tonalities of the lost Christians, for the
most part simple harmonic chords, but containing within them the
possibility of various more sophisticated tonalities, which could
at strategic moments return to the Pythagorean basics favoured in
the chorales and chants of the lost ones. Writing down every note
and demanding that the musicians in the ensemble play only and
exactly the written notes was an act that everyone regarded as
megalomaniacal to the point of impossibility; ensemble music,
though very highly structured in a way that went back ultimately to
Indian classical ragas, nevertheless allowed for individual
improvisation of the details of the variations, spontaneous
creations that indeed provided much of the interest of the music,
as the musician played within and against the raga forms. No one
would have stood for Tristan's insane strictures if it were not
that the results were, one could not deny it, superb and beautiful.
And Tristan insisted that the procedure was not his idea, but
merely the way that the lost civilization had gone about it; that
he was following the lost ways, even doing his best to channel the
hungry ghosts of the old ones in his dreams and in his musical
reveries. The old Frankish pieces he hoped to invoke were all
religious music, devotionals, and had to be understood and utilized
as such, as sacred music. Although it was true that in this
hyper aesthetic circle of the avant garde it was music
itself that was sacred, like all the arts, so that the description
was redundant.
It was also true that treating art as sacred often meant
smoking opium or drinking laudanum to prepare for the experience;
some even used the stronger distillates of opium developed during
the war, smoking or even injecting them. The resulting dream states
made Tristan's music mesmerizing, the practitioners said, even
those who were not fond of the lost civilization's simplistic
tootles; opium induced a deep absorption in the sensuous surface of
musical sound, in the plainsong harmonies, vibrating between a
drugged band and a drugged audience. If the performance was
combined with the fanned aromas of a scent artist, the results
could be truly mystical. Some were sceptical of all this: Kirana
said once, 'As high as they all get, they could simply sing a
single note for the whole hour, and smell their armpits, and all
would be as happy as birds.'
Tristan himself often led the opium ceremonies before
leading the music, so these evenings had a somewhat cultic air to
them, as if Tristan were some kind of mystic sufi master, or one of
the Hosain actors in the plays about Hosain's martyrdom, which the
opium crowd also attended after crossing into dreamland, to watch
Hosain putting on his own shroud before his murder by Shemr, the
audience groaning, not at the murder onstage, but at this choice of
martyrdom. In some of the Shiite countries the person playing Shemr
had to run for his life after the performance, and more than one
unlucky actor had been killed by the crowd. Tristan thoroughly
approved; this was the kind of immersion in the art that he wanted
his musical audiences to achieve.
But only in the secular world; it was all for music, not
for God; Tristan was more Persian than Iranian as he put it
sometimes, much more an Omarian than any kind of mullah, or a
mystic of Zoroastrian bent, concocting rituals in honour of Ahura Mazda, a kind
of sun worship that in foggy Nsara could come straight from the
heart. Channelling Christians, smoking opium, worshipping the sun;
he did all kinds of crazy things for his music, including working
for many hours every day to get every note right on the page; and
though none of it would have mattered if the music had not been
good, it was good, it was more than that; it was the music of their
lives, of Nsara in its time.
He spoke of all the theory behind it, however, in cryptic
little phrases and aphorisms that then made the rounds, as
'Tristan's latest'; and often it was just a shrug and a smile and
an offered opium pipe, and, most of all, his music. He composed
what he composed, and the intellectuals of the city could listen
and then talk about what it all meant, and they often did all
through the night. Tahar Labid would go on endlessly about it, and
then say to Tristan, with almost mock aggressiveness, That's
right, isn't it Tristan Ahura, then go on without pausing for an
answer, as if Tristan were to be laughed at as an idiot savant for
never deigning to reply one way or the other; as if he didn't
really know what his music meant. But Tristan only smiled at Tahar,
sphinxlike and enigmatic under his moustache, relaxed as if poured
into his window seat, looking out at the wet black cobbles or
spearing Tahar with an amused glance.
'Why don't you ever answer me!' Tahar exclaimed once.
Tristan pursed his lips and whistled a response at
him.
'Oh come on,' Tahar said, reddening. 'Say something to
make us think you have a single idea in your head.'
Tristan drew himself up. 'Don't be rude! Of course there
are no ideas in my head, what do you think I am!'
So Budur sat next to him. She joined him when, with a
tilt of the chin and pursing of the lips, he invited her into one
of the back rooms of the cafe where the opium smokers gathered. She
had decided ahead of time to join them if the opportunity was
offered, to see what hearing Tristan's music under the influence
would be like; to see what the drug felt like, using the music as
the ceremony that allowed ber to overcome her Turic fear of the
smoke.
The room was small and dark. The huqqab, bigger than a
narghile, sat on a low table in the middle of floor pillows, and
Tristan cut a chunk from a black plug of opium and put it in the
bowl, lit it with a silver cigarette lighter as one of the others
inhaled. As the single mouthpiece was passed around the smokers
sucked on it, and each in turn began immediately to cough. The
black plug in the bowl bubbled to tar as it burned; the smoke was
thick and white, and smelled like sugar. Budur decided to take in
so little that she wouldn't cough, but when the mouthpiece came to
her and she inhaled gently through it, the first taste of the smoke
caused her to hack like a demon. It seemed impossible she could be
so affected by anything that had been in her so briefly.
Then it struck deeper. She felt her blood filling her
skin, then all of her. Blood filled her like a balloon, it would
spurt out if her hot skin didn't hold it in. She pulsed with her
pulse, and the world pulsed with her. Everything jumped forwards
into itself somehow, in time with her heart. The dim walls pulsed.
More colour revealed itself with every beat of her heart. The
surfaces of things swirled with coiled pressure and tension, they
looked like Idelba said they really were, bundles of bundled
energy. Budur pulled herself to her feet with the others, walked,
balancing carefully, through the streets to the concert hall in the
old palace, into a space long and tall like a deck of cards set on
its side. The musicians filed in and sat, their instruments like
strange weapons. Following Tristan's lead, conveyed by hand and
eye, they began to play. The singers chanted in the ancient
Pythagorean tonality, pure and sugary, a single voice wandering
above in descant. Then Tristan on his oud, and the other string
players, bass to treble, sneaked in underneath, wrecking the simple
harmonies, bringing in a whole other world, an Asia of sound, so
much more complex and dark -- reality seeping in. and, over
the course of a long struggle, overwhelming the old west's
plainchant. This was the story of Firanja that Tristan was singing,
Budur thought suddenly, a musical expression of the history of this
place they lived in, late arrivals that they were. Firanjis,
Franks, Kelts, the oldest ones back in the murk of time ... Each
people overrun in its turn. It was not a scent performance, but
there was incense burning before the musicians, and as their songs
wove together the thick smells of sandalwood and jasmine choked the
room, they came in on Budur's breath and sang inside her, playing a
complex roundelay with her pulse, just as in the music itself,
which was so clearly another speech of the body, a language she
felt she could understand in the moment it happened. without ever
being able to articulate or remember it.
Sex too was a language like that; as she found later that
night, when she went home with Tristan to his grubby apartment, and
to bed with him. His apartment was across the river in the south
wharf district, a cold and damp garret, an artistic clich6, and
uncleaned, it appeared, since his wife had died near the end of the
war some factory accident, Budur had gathered from others, a
chance of bad timing and broken machinery -- but the bed was there,
and the sheets clean, which made Budur suspicious; but after all
she had been showing interest in Tristan, so perhaps it was only a
matter of politeness, or self respect of some heartening kind.
He was a dreamy lover and played her like an oud, languorous and
faintly teasing, so that there was an edge to her passion, of
resistance and struggle, all adding somehow to the sexiness of the
experience, so that it nagged at her afterwards, as if set into her
with hooks nothing like the blazing directness of Kirana --
and Budur afterwards wondered what Tristan intended by it, but
realized also in that very first night that she was not going to
learn from Tristan's words, as he was as reticent with her as he
was with Tahar, almost; so that she would have to know him by what
could be intuited from his music and his looks. Which were indeed
very revealing of his moods and their swings, and so of his
character (perhaps); which she liked. So for a while she went home
with him fairly often, arranging for prophylactics with the zawiyya
clinic, going out at night to the cafes and taking the opportunity
when it came.
After a time, however, it became annoying to try to have
conversation with a man who only sang melodies -- like trying to
live with a bird. it echoed painfully that distance in her father,
and the mute quality of her attempts to study the remote past,
which were equally speechless. And as things in town got tighter,
and each week added another zero to the numbers on the paper money,
it got harder and harder to gather the large ensembles that
Tristan's current compositions required. When the district
panchayat that ran the old palace chose not to lend a concert room,
or the musicians were occupied with their real jobs, in class or on
the docks or in the shops selling hats and raincoats, then Tristan
could only strum his oud, and finger his pencils and take endless
notes, in an Indian musical notation that was said to be older than
Sanskrit, although Tristan confessed to Budur that he had forgotten
the system during the war, and now used one of his own devising
that he had had to teach to his players. His melodies became more
morose, she thought, tunes from a heavy heart, mourning the losses
of the war, and the ones that had happened since, and were still
occurring now, in the moment of listening itself. Budur understood
them, and kept joining Tristan from time to time, watching the
twitches under his moustache for clues as to what amused him when
she or others spoke, watching his yellowed fingers as they felt
their tunes forwards, or noted down one quicksilver lament after
another. She heard a singer she thought he would like, and took him
to hear her, and he did like her, he hummed on the way home,
looking out of the tram window at the dark city streets, where
people hurried from streetlight to streetlight over gleaming
cobblestones, hunched under umbrellas or serapes.
It's like in the forest,' Tristan said with a lift of the
moustache. 'Up in your mountains, you know, you see places where
avalanches have bent all the trees down sideways, and then after
the snow melts, the trees there all stay bent sideways together.'
He gestured at the crowd waiting at a tram stop. 'That's what we're
like now.'
EIGHTEEN
As the days and the weeks passed Budur continued to read
voraciously, in the zawiyya, the institute, the parks, at the
jetty's end, in the hospital for the blind soldiers. Meanwhile
there were ten trillion piastre bills arriving with
immigrants from the Middle West, and they were at ten billion
drachmas themselves; recently a man had stuffed his house from
floor to ceiling with money, and traded the whole establishment for
a pig. At the zawiyya it was harder and harder to put together
meals big enough to feed them all. They grew vegetables in crops on
the roof , cursing the clouds, and lived on their goats' milk,
their chickens' eggs, cucumbers in great vats of vinegar, pumpkins
cooked in every conceivable fashion, and potato soup, watered to a
thinness thinner than milk.
One day Idelba found the three spies going through the
little cabinet above her bed, and she had them kicked out of the
house as common thieves, calling in the neighbourhood police
and bypassing the issue of spying, without however getting into the
tricky issue of what else besides her ideas she had that would be
worth stealing.
'They'll be in trouble,' Budur observed after the three
girls were taken away. 'Even if they're plucked out of jail by
their employers.'
'Yes,' Idelba agreed. 'I was going to leave them here, as
you saw. But once caught, we had to act as if we didn't know who
they were. And the truth is we can't afford to feed them. So they
can go back to who sent them. Hopefully.' A grim expression; she
didn't want to think about it -- about what she might have
condemned them to. That was their problem. She had hardened in just
the two years since she had brought Budur to Nsara, or so it seemed
to Budur. 'It's not just my work,' she explained, seeing Budur's
expression. 'That remains latent. It's the problems we have right
now. Things won't need blowing up if we all starve first. The war
ended badly, that's all there is to it. I mean not just for us, as
the defeated, but for everyone. Things are so out of balance, it
could bring everything down. So everyone needs to pull together.
And if some people don't, then I don't know . . .'
'All that time you spend working in the music of the
Franks,' Budur said to Tristan, one evening in the cafe, 'do you
ever think about what they were like?'
'Why yes,' he said, pleased at the question. 'All the
time. I think they were just like us. They fought a lot. They had
monasteries and madressas, and water powered machinery. Their
ships were small, but they could sail into the wind. They might
have taken control of the seas before anyone else.'
'Not a chance,' said Tahar. 'Compared to Chinese ships
they were no more than dhows. Come now, Tristan, you know
that.'
Tristan shrugged.
'They had ten or fifteen languages, thirty or forty
principalities, isn't that right?' said Naser. 'They were too
fractured to conquer anyone else.'
'They fought together to capture Jerusalem,' Tristan
pointed out. 'The infighting gave them practice. They thought they
were God's chosen people.'
' Primitives often think that.'
'Indeed.' Tristan smiled, leaning sideways to peer
through the window towards the neighbourhood mosque. 'As I say,
they were just like us. If they had lived, there would be more
people like us.'
'There's no one like us,' Naser said sadly. 'I think they
must have been very different.'
Tristan shrugged again. 'You can say anything you like
about them, it doesn't matter. You can say they would have been
enslaved like the Africans, or made slaves of the rest of us, or
brought a golden age, or waged wars worse than the Long War . .
.'
People shook their heads at all these
impossibilities.
'. . . but it doesn't matter. We'll never know, so you
can say whatever you like. They are our jinns.'
'It's funny how we look down on them,' Kirana observed,
'just because they died. At an unconscious level it seems like it
must have been their fault. A physical weakness, or a moral
failing, or a bad habit.'
'They affronted God with their pride.'
'They were pale because they were weak, or vice versa.
Muzaffar has shown it, how the darker the skin, the stronger the
persons. The blackest Africans are strongest of all, the palest of
the Golden Horde are weakest. He did tests. The Franks were
hereditarily incompetent, that was his conclusion. Losers in the
evolutionary game of survival of the fittest.'
Kirana shook her head. 'It was probably just a mutation
of the plague, so strong it killed off all its hosts, and therefore
died itself. It could have happened to any of us. The Chinese, or
us.'
'But there's a kind of anemia common around the
Mediterranean, that might have made them more susceptible .
'No. It could have been us.'
'That might have been good,' Tristan said. 'They believed
in a god of mercy, their Christ was all love and mercy.'
'Hard to tell that by what they did in Syria.'
'Or al Andalus '
'It was latent in them, ready to spring forth. While for
us what is latent is jihad.'
'They were the same as us, you said.'
Tristan smiled under his moustache. 'Maybe. They're the
blank on the map, the ruins underfoot, the empty mirror. The clouds
in the sky that look like tigers.'
I, it's such a useless exercise,' Kirana reflected. 'What if
this had happened, what if that had happened, what if the Golden
Horde had forced the Gansu Corridor at the start of the Long War,
what if the Japanese had attacked China after retaking Japan, what
if the Ming had kept their treasure fleet, what if we had
discovered and conquered Yingzhou, what if Alexander the Great had
not died young, on and on, and they all would have made enormous
differences and yet it's always entirely useless. These historians
who talk about employing counterfactuals to bolster their theories,
they're ridiculous. Because no one knows why things happen, you
see? Anything could follow from anything. Even real history tells
us nothing at all. Because we don't know if history is sensitive,
and for want of a nail a civilization was lost, or if our mightiest
acts are as petals on a flood, or something in between, or both at
once. We just don't know, and the what ifs don't help us work it
out.'
'Why do people like them so much then?'
Kirana shrugged, took a drag on her cigarette. 'More
stories.'
And indeed more of them were immediately proposed, for
despite their uselessness in Kirana's eyes, people enjoyed
contemplating the what might have been: what if the lost Moroccan
fleet of 924 had been blown to the Sugar Islands and then made it
back, what if the Kerala of Travancore had not conquered much of
Asia and set out his railways and legal system, what if there had
been no New World islands there at all, what if Burma had lost its
war with Siam ...
Kirana only shook her head. 'Perhaps it would be better
just to focus on the future.'
'You, a historian, say this? But the future can't be
known at all!'
'Well, but it exists for us now as a project to be
enacted. Ever since the Travancori enlightenment we have had a
sense of the future as something we make. This new awareness of
time to come is very important. It makes us a thread in a tapestry
that has unrolled for centuries before us, and will unroll for
centuries after us. We're midway through the loom, that's the
present, and what we do casts the thread in a panic ular
direction, and the picture in the tapestry changes accordingly.
When we begin to try to make a picture pleasing to us and to those
who come after, then perhaps you can say that we have seized
history.'
NINETEEN
But one could sit with people like that, have
conversations like that, and still walk outside into watery
sunlight with nothing to cat and no money worth anything. Budur
worked hard at the zawiyya, and set up classes in Persian and
Firanjic for the hungry girls moving in who only spoke Berber or
Arabic or Andalusi or Skandistani or Turkish. At night she
continued as a habituaee of the cafes and coffee houses, and
sometimes the opium dens. She got work with one of the government
agencies as a translator of documents, and continued to study
archaeology. She was worried when Idelba fell ill again, and spent
a lot of time caring for her. The doctors said that Idelba was
suffering from 'nervous exhaustion', something like the battle
fatigue of the war; but to Budur she seemed very obviously
physically weaker, harmed by something the doctors could not
identify. Illness without cause; Budur found this too frightening
to think about. Probably it was a hidden cause, but that too was
frightening.
She got more involved with the running of the zawiyya,
taking over some of what Idelba had done before. There was less
time to read. Besides, she wanted to do more than read, or even
write reports: she felt too anxious to read, and merely perusing a
number of texts and then boiling them down into a new text struck
her as an odd activity; it was like being a still, distilling
ideas. History as a brandy; but she wanted something more
substantial.
Meanwhile, many a night she still went out and enjoyed
the midnight scene at the coffee and opium cafes listening to
Tristan's oud (they were friends only now), sometimes in an opiated
dream that allowed her to wander the fogged halls of her thoughts
without actually entering any rooms. She was deep in. a reverie
concerning the Ibrahamic collisional nature of progress in history,
something like the continents themselves, if the geologists were
right, creating new fusions, as in Samarqand, or Mughal India, or
the Hodenosaunee dealing with China to the west and Islam to the
east, or Burma, yes all this was coming clear, like random
bits of coloured rock on the ground swirling into one of Hagia
Sophia's elaborate self--replicating arabesques, a common opium
effect to be sure, but then that was what history always was, a hallucinated
pattern onto random events, so there was no cause to disbelieve the
illumination just because of that. History as an opium dream Halah
from the zawiyya burst into the cafe's back room looking around;
spotting her Budur knew immediately that something was wrong with
Idelba. Halali came over, her face holding a serious expression.
'She's taken a turn for the worse.'
Budur followed her out, stumbling under the weight of the
opium, trying to banish all its effects immediately with her panic,
but that only cast her farther out into visual distortions of all
kinds, and never had Nsara looked uglier than on that night, rain
bouncing hard on the streets, squiggles of light cobbling
underfoot, shapes of people like rats swimming . . .
Idelba was gone from the zawiyya, she had been taken to
the nearest hospital, a huge rambling wartime structure on the hill
north of the harbour. Slogging up there, inside the rain cloud
itself; then the sound of rain pounding on the cheap tin roof. The
light was an intense throbbing yellow white in which everyone
looked blank and dead, like walking meat as they had said during
the war of men sent to the front.
Idelba was no worse looking than the rest, but Budur
rushed to her side. 'She's having trouble breathing,' a nurse said,
looking up from her chair. Budur thought: these people work in
hell. She was very frightened.
'Listen,' Idelba said calmly. She said to the nurse,
'Please leave us alone for ten minutes.' When the nurse was gone,
she said in a low voice to Budur, 'Listen, if I die, then you need
to help Piali.'
'But Aunt Idelba! You aren't going to die.'
'Be quiet. I can't risk writing this down, and I can't
risk telling only one person, in case something happens to them
too. You need to get Piali to go to Isfahan, to describe our
results to Abdol Zoroush. Also to Ananda, in Travancore. And Chen,
in China. They all have tremendous influence within their
respective governments. Hanea will handle her end of things. Remind
Piali of what we decided was best. Soon, you see, all atomic
physicists will understand the theoretical possibilities of the way
alactin splits. The possible application. If they all know the
possibility exists, then there will be reason for them to press to
make peace permanent. The scientists can pressure their respective
governments, by making clear the situation, and taking control of
the direction of the relevant fields of science. They must keep the
peace, or there will be a rush to destruction. Given the choice,
they must choose peace.'
'Yes,' Budur said, wondering if it would be so. Her mind
was reeling at the prospect of such a burden being placed on her to
carry. She did not like Piali very much. 'Please, Aunt Idelba,
please. Don't distress yourself. It will be all right.'
Idelba nodded. 'Very possibly.'
She rallied late that night, just before dawn, just as
Budur was beginning to come down from her opium delirium, unable to
remember much of the night that had taken so many eons to pass. But
she still knew what Idelba wanted her to try to do. Dawn came as
dark as if an eclipse had come and stayed.
It was the following year before Idelba died.
The funeral was attended by many people, hundreds of
them, from zawiyya and madressa and institute, and the Buddhist
monastery, and the Hodenosaunee embassy, and the district panchayat
and the state council, and many other places all over Nsara. But
not a single person from Turi. Budur stood numbly in a reception
line with a few of the senior women from the zawiyya, and shook
hand after hand. Afterwards, during the unhappy wake, Hanea came up
to her again. 'We loved her too,' she said with a flinty smile. 'We
will make sure to keep the promises we made to her.'
A couple of days later Budur kept her usual appointment
to read to her blind soldiers. She went in their ward and sat there
staring at them in their chairs and beds, and thought, This is
probably a mistake. I may feel blank but I'm probably not. She told
them of her aunt's death, then, and tried to read to them from
Idelba's work, but it was not like Kirana's; even the abstracts
were incomprehensible, and the texts themselves, scientific papers
on the behaviour of invisible things, were composed largely of
tables of numbers. She stopped trying with those, and picked up
another book. 'This is one of my aunt's favourite books, a
collection of the autobiographical writings found in the works of
Abu Ali Ibn Sina, the early scientist and philosopher who was a
great hero to her. From what I have read of him, Ibn Sina and my
aunt were alike in many ways. They both had a great curiosity about
the world. Ibn Sina first mastered Euclid's geometry, then set out to understand
everything else. Idelba did that very same thing. When Ibn Sina was
still young he fell into a sort of fever of inquiry, that gripped
him for almost two years. Here, I will read to you what he himself
says about that period:
During this time I did not sleep completely through a
single night, or devote myself to anything else but study by day. I
compiled a set of files for myself, and for each proof that I
examined, I entered into the files its syllogistic premises, their
classification, and what might follow from them. I pondered over
the conditions that might apply to their premises, until I had
verified this question for myself in each case. Whenever sleep
overcame me or I became conscious of weakening, I would turn aside
to drink a cup of wine, so that my strength would return to me. And
whenever sleep seized me I would see those very problems in my
dreams; and many questions became clear to me in my sleep. I
continued in this until all of the sciences were deeply rooted
within me and I understood them as far as is humanly possible.
Everything which I knew at that time is just as I know it now; I
have not added anything much to it to this day.
'That's the kind of person my aunt was,' Budur said. She
put down that book and picked up another one, thinking that it
would be better to stop reading things inspired by Idelba. It
wasn't making her feel any better. The book she chose out of her
bag was called 'Nsarene Sailors, Tales', true stories about the
local seamen and fisherfolk, rousing adventures full of fish and
danger and death but also of the sea air, the waves and the wind.
The soldiers had enjoyed chapters of the book she had read to them
before.
But this time she read one called 'The Windy Ramadan',
and it turned out to be about a time long before, in the age of
sail, when contrary winds had held the grain fleet out of the
harbour, so that they had had to anchor offshore in the roads as
darkness fell, and then in the night the wind shifted around and a
great storm came roaring in from the Atlantic, and there was no way
for those out on the ships to get safely to shore, and nothing
those on shore could do but walk the shore through the night. The
author of the account had a wife who was taking care of three
motherless children whose father was one of the sea captains
out in the fleet, and, unable to watch the children at their
nervous play, the author had gone out to walk the strand with the
rest, braving the howling winds of the tempest. At dawn they had
all seen the fringe of soaked grain lining the high water
mark, and knew the worst had come. 'Not a single ship survived the
gale, and all up and down the beach the bodies washed ashore. And
as it had dawned a Friday, at the appointed hour the muezzin went
to the minaret to ascend and make the call for prayer, and the town
idiot in a rage detained him, crying 'Who in such an hour can
praise the Lord?"'
Budur stopped reading. A deep silence filled the room.
Some of the men nodded their heads, as if to say, Yes, that's the
way it happens; I've had that very thought for years; still others
reached out as if to snatch the book from her hands, or gestured as
if waving her away, telling her to leave. If they had had their
sight they would have walked her to the door, or done something;
but as it was no one knew what to do.
She said something and got up and left, and walked
downriver through the city, out onto the docks, then out on the big
jetty, out to its end. The beautiful blue sea sloshed against the
boulders, hissing its clean salt mist into the air. Budur sat on
the last sun warmed rock and watched the clouds fly in over
Nsara. She was as full of grief as the ocean was of water, but
still, something in the sight of the noisy city was heartening to
her; she thought, Nsara, now you are my only living relative. Now
you will be my Aunt Nsara.
TWENTY
And now she had to get to know Piali.
He was a small, self absorbed man, dreamy and
uncommunicative, seemingly full of himself. Budur had thought that
his abilities in physics were compensated for by an exceptional
lack of gracefulness.
But now she was impressed by the depth of his grief at
Idelba's death. In life he had treated her, Budur often thought, as
an embarrassing appurtenance, a needed but unwanted collaborator in
his work. Now that she was gone, he sat on a jetty
fishermen's bench where they had occasionally sat with Idelba when
the weather was good, and sighed, saying, 'She was such a joy to
talk things over with, wasn't she? Our Idelba was a truly brilliant
physicist, let me tell you. If she had been born a man, there would
have been no end to it she would have changed the world. Of
course there were things she wasn't so good at, but she had such
insight into the way things might work. And when we got stuck,
Idelba would keep hammering away for ever at the problem, forehead
pounding the brick wall, you know, and I would stop, but she was
persistent, and so clever at finding new ways to come at the thing,
turning the flank if the wall wouldn't give. Lovely. She was a most
lovely person,' deadly serious now, and emphasizing 'person' rather
than I woman', as if Idelba had taught him some things about what
women might be that he was not so stupid as to have missed. Nor
would he fall into the error of exceptionalism, no physicist tended
to think of exceptions as a valid category; and so now he spoke to
Budur almost as he would have to Idelba or his male colleagues,
only more intently, concentrating to achieve some semblance of
normal humanity, perhaps -- and yet achieving it. Almost. He was
still a very distracted and graceless man. But Budur began to like
him better.
This was a good thing, as Piali took an interest in her
too, and over the next several months, courted her in his peculiar
way; he came to the zawiyya, and got to know her house family
there, and listened to her describe her problems with her studies
in history, while also going on at nearly intolerable length about
his problems in physics and at the institute. He shared with her a
propensity for the cafe life as well, and did not seem to care
about the assorted indiscretions she had committed since her
arrival in Nsara; he ignored all that, and concentrated on things
of the mind, even when sitting in a cafe sipping a brandy, and
writing all over his napkins, one of his peculiar habits. They
talked about the nature of history for hours, and it was under the
impact of his deep scepticism, or materialism, that she finally
completed the shift in the emphasis of her study from history to
archaeology, from texts to things convinced, in part, by his
argument that texts were always just people's impressions, while
objects had a certain unchangeable reality to them. Of course the
objects led directly to more impressions, and meshed with them in
the web of proofs that any student of the past had to present in
order to make a case; but to start with the tools and buildings
rather than the words of the past were indeed a comfort to Budur.
She was tired of distilling brandy. She began consciously to take
on some of the inquisitiveness about the real world that Idelba had
always exhibited, as a way of honouring her memory. She missed
Idelba so much that she could not think of it directly, but had to
parry it by homages such as these, invoking Idelba's presence by
her habits, as if becoming a kind of Madam Sururi. It occurred to
her more than once that there were ways in which we know the dead
better than the living, because the actual person is no longer
there to distract our thinking about them.
Following these various trains of thought, there also
began to occur to Budur a great number of questions that connected
her work with Idelba's as she understood it, as she considered
physical changes in the materials used in the past: chemical or
physical or qi or qileak changes, that might be used as clocks,
buried in the texture of the materials used. She asked Piali about
this, and he quickly mentioned the shift over time in the types of
particulates in the heartknots and shells, so that, for instance,
lifering fourteens within a body would, after the death of an
organism, begin slowly to fall back to lifering twelves, beginning
about fifty years after the death of an organism and continuing for
about a hundred thousand years, until all the lifering in the
material was back to twelves, and the clock would stop
functioning.
This would be long enough to date most human activities,
Budur thought. She and Piali began to work on the method together,
enlisting the help of other scientists at the institute. The idea
was taken up and extended by a team of Nsarene scientists that grew
by the month, and the effort quickly became global as well, in the
usual way of science. Budur had never studied harder.
Thus it was that over time she became an archaeologist,
working among other things on dating methods, with the help of
Piali. In effect she had replaced Idelba as Piali's partner, and he
had therefore moved part of his work to a different field, to
accommodate what she was doing. His method of relating to someone
was to work with them; so even though she was younger, and in a
different field, he simply adjusted and continued in his habitual
way. He also continued to pursue his studies in atomic physics, of
course, collaborating with many colleagues at the
laboratories of the institute, and some of the scientists at the
wireless factory on the outskirts of the city, whose lab was now
beginning to match the madressa and the institute as a centre of
research in pure physics.
The military of Nsara were getting involved as well.
Piali's physics research continued along the lines set by Idelba,
and though there was nothing more published about the possibility
of creating a chain reaction splitting of alactin, there was
certainly a small crowd of Muslim physicists, in Skandistan and
Tuscany and Iran, who had discussed the possibility among
themselves; and they suspected that similar discussions were taking
place in Chinese and Travancori and New World labs. Internationally
published papers on this aspect of physics were now analysed in
Nsara to see what they might have left out, to see if new
developments one might expect to see were appearing or if sudden
silences might mark government classification of these matters. So
far no unequivocal signs of censorship or self silencing had
appeared, but Piali seemed to feel it was only a matter of time,
and was probably happening in other countries as it was among them,
semi consciously and without a plan. As soon as there was
another global political crisis, he said, before hostilities came
to a head, one could expect the field to disappear entirely into
classified military labs, and along with it a significant number of
that generation of physicists, all cut off from contact with
colleagues anywhere else in the world.
And of course trouble could come at any time. China,
though victo rious in the war, had been wrecked almost as
thoroughly as the defeated coalition, and it appeared to be falling
into anarchy and civil war. Apparently it was near the end for the
wartime leadership that had replaced the Qing dynasty.
'That's good,' Piali told Budur, 'because only a military
bureaucracy would have tried to build a bomb so dangerous. But it's
bad because military governments don't like to go down without a
fight.'
'No government does,' said Budur. 'Remember what Idelba
said. The best defence against government seizure of these ideas
would be to spread the knowledge among all the physicists of the
world, as quickly as possible. If all know that all could construct
such a weapon, then no one would try.'
'Maybe not at first,' Piali said, 'but in years to come
it might happen.'
'Nevertheless,' Budur said. And she continued to pester Piali to
pursue Idelba's suggested course of action. He did not renounce it,
nor did he make any move to enact it. Indeed, Budur had to agree
with him that it was difficult to see exactly what to do about it.
They sat on the secret like pigeons on a cuckoo egg.
Meanwhile the situation in Nsara continued to
deteriorate. A good summer had followed several bad ones, taking
the sharpest edge off the possibility of famine, but nevertheless
the newspapers were full of bread riots, and strikes in the
factories on the Rhine and the Ruhr and the Rhone, and even a
'revolt against reparations' in the Little Atlas Mountains, a
revolt that could not easily be put down. The army appeared to have
within it elements who were encouraging rather than suppressing
these signs of unrest, perhaps out of sympathy, perhaps to
destabilize things further and justify a complete military
takeover. Rumours of a coup were widespread.
All this was depressingly similar to the endgame of the
Long War, and boarding increased. Budur found it hard to
concentrate on her reading, and was often oppressed by grief for
Idelba. She was surprised therefore, and pleased, when Piali
brought news of a conference in Isfahan, an international gathering
of atomic physicists to discuss all the latest results in their
field, 'including', he said, 'the alactin problem'. Not only that,
but the conference was linked to the fourth convocation of a large
biannual meeting of scientists, the first of which had occurred
outside Ganono, the great harbour city of the Hodenosaunee, so that
they were now called the Long Island Conferences. The second one
had taken place in Pyinkayaing, and the third in Beijing. The
Isfahan conference was therefore the first one to take place in the
Dar, and it was going to include a track of meetings on
archaeology; and Piali had already arranged funding for Budur from
the institute to attend with him, as co author of papers they
had written with Idelba on lifering dating methods. 'It looks to me
like a good place to talk privately about your aunt's ideas.
There'll be a session devoted to her work, organized by Zoroush,
and Chen and quite a few others of her correspondents will be
there. You'll come?'
'Of course.'
TWENTY ONE
The direct trains to Iran all ran through Turi, and
whether it was for this reason or another, Piali arranged for them
to fly from Nsara to Isfahan. The airship was similar to the one
Budur had taken with Idelba to the Orkneys, and she sat in the
window seats of the gondola looking down at Firanja: the Alps,
Roma, Greece and the brown islands of the Aegean; then Anatolia and
the Middle Western states. It was, Budur thought to herself as the
long floating hours passed, a big world.
Then they were flying over the snowy Zagros Mountains to
Isfahan, situated in the upper reaches of the Zayandeh Rud, a high
valley with a swift river, overlooking salt flats to the east. As
they approached the city's airport they saw a vast expanse of ruins
around the new town. Isfahan had lain on the Silk Road, and
successive cities had been demolished in their turn by Chinggis
Khan, Temur the Lame, the Afghans in the eleventh century, and
lastly by the Travancoris, in the late war.
Nevertheless the latest incarnation of the city was a
bustling place, with new construction going on everywhere, so that
as they trammed into the downtown it looked as if they were passing
through a forest of construction cranes, each canted at a different
angle over some new hive of steel and concrete. At a big madressa
in the new centre of the city, Abdol Zoroush and the other Iranian
scientists greeted the contingent from Nsara, and took them to
rooms in their Institute for Scientific Research's big guest
quarters, and then into the city surrounding it for a meal.
The Zagros Mountains overlooked the city, and the river
ran through it just south of the downtown, which was being built
over the ruins of the oldest city centre. The institute's
archaeological collection, the locals informed them, was filling
with newly recovered antiquities and artefacts from previous eras
of the city. The new town had been designed with broad
tree lined streets, raying north away from the river. Set at a
high altitude, under even higher mountains, it would be a very
beautiful city when the new trees grew to their full heights. Even
now it was very impressive.
The Isfaharis were obviously very proud of both the city
and their institute, and of Iran more generally. Crushed repeatedly
in the war, the whole country was now being rebuilt, and in a new
spirit, they said, a kind of Persian worldliness, with their own
Shiite ultra conservatives awash in a more tolerant influx of
polyglot refugees and immigrants, and local intellectuals who
called themselves Cyruses, after the supposed first king of Iran.
This new kind of Iranian patriotism was very interesting to the
Nsarenes, as it seemed to be a way of asserting some independence
from Islam without renouncing it. The Cyruses at the table informed
them cheerfully that they now spoke of the year as being not 1423
AH, but 2561 of 'the era of the king of kings', and one of them
stood to offer a toast by reciting an anonymous poem that had been
discovered painted on the walls of the new madressa:
'Ancient Iran, Eternal Persia, Caught in the press of time and the
world, Giving up to it beautiful Persian, Language of Hafiz,
Ferdowski and Khayyarn, Speech of my heart, home of my soul, It's
you I love if I love anything. Once more great Iran sing us that
love.'
And the locals among them cheered and drank, although
many of them were clearly students from Africa or the New World or
Aozhou.
'This is how all the world will look, as people become
more mobile,' Abdol Zoroush said to Budur and Piali afterwards, as
he showed them around the institute's grounds, very extensive, and
then the riverside district just south of it. There was a promenade
overlooking the river being built, with cafes backing it and a view
of the mountains upstream, which Zoroush said had been designed
with the estuary corniche of Nsara in mind. 'We wanted to have
something like your great city, landlocked though we are.. We want
a little of that sense of openness.'
The conference began the next day, and for the next week
Budur did little else but attend sessions on various topics related
to what many there were calling the new archaeology, a science
rather than just a hobby of antiquarians, or the misty starting
point of the historians. Piali meanwhile disappeared into the
physical sciences buildings for meetings on physics. The two
of them then met again for supper in big groups of scientists,
seldom getting the chance to talk in private.
For Budur the archaeological presentations, coming from
all over the world, were a very exciting education all by
themselves, making clear to her and everyone else that in the
postwar reconstruction, with the new discoveries and the
development of new methodologies, and a provisional framework of
early world history, a new science and a new understanding of their
deep past was coming into being right before their eyes. The
sessions were overbooked, and went long into the evenings. Many
presentations were made in the hallways, with the presenters
standing by posters or chalkboards, talking and gesturing and
answering questions. There was more that Budur wanted to attend
than was possible, and she quickly developed the habit of
positioning herself at the back of the rooms or the crowds in the
halls, taking in the crux of a presentation while perusing the
schedule, and planning her next hour's wandering.
In one room she stopped to listen to an old man from
western Yingzhou, Japanese or Chinese in ancestry, it appeared,
speaking in an awkward Persian about the cultures that existed in
the New World when it had been discovered by the Old. It was her
acquaintance with Hanea and Ganagweh that made her interested.
'Although in terms of machinery, architecture and so
forth, the inhabitants of the New World still existed in the oldest
days, without domesticated animals in Yingzhou, and none but guinea
pigs and llamas in Inka, the culture of the Inkas and Aztecs
somewhat resembled what we are learning of ancient Egypt. Thus the
Yingzhou tribes lived as people in the Old World did before the
first cities, say around eight thousand years ago, while the
southern empires of Inka resembled the Old World of about four
thousand years ago: a distinct difference, which it would be
interesting to explain, if you could. Perhaps Inka had some
topographical or resource advantages, such as the llama, a beast of
burden which, though slight by Old World standards, was more than
Yingzhou had. This put more power at their disposal, and as our
host Master Zoroush has made clear, in the energy equations used to
judge a culture, the power they can bring to bear against the
natural world is a crucial factor in their development.
'In any case, the great degree of primitivity in Yingzhou
actually gives us a view into social structures that might be like
the Old World's pre agricultural societies. They are curiously
modern in certain respects. Because they had the basics of
agriculture -- squash, corn, beans and so on -- and had a small
population to support in a forest that provided enormous numbers of
game animals and nut bearing trees, they lived in a
pre scarcity economy, just as we now glimpse a
technologicallycreated post scarcity state in its theoretical
possibility. In both, the indi vidual receives more
recognition as a value bearer him or herself, than does the
individual in a scarcity economy. And there is less domination of
one caste by another. In these conditions of material ease and
plenty, we find the great egalitarianism of the Hodenosaunee, the
power wielded by women in their culture, and the absence of slavery
-- rather the rapid incorporation of defeated tribes into the full
texture of the state.
'By the time of the First Great Empires, four thousand
years later, all this was gone, replaced by an extreme vertical
scale, with god kings, a priest caste with ultimate power,
permanent military control, and slavery of defeated nations. These
early developments, or one should say pathologies, of civilization
(for the gathering into cities greatly speeded this process) are
only now being dealt with, some four thousand years later still, in
the most progressive societies of the world.
'In the meantime, of course, both these archaic cultures
have almost entirely disappeared from this world, mostly due to the
impact of Old World diseases on populations that apparently had
never been exposed to them. Interestingly, it was the southern
empires that collapsed most quickly and completely, conquered
almost incidentally by the Chinese gold armies, and then quickly
devastated by disease and famine, as if the body without its head
must die instantly. Whereas in the north it was completely
different, first because the Hodenosaunee were able to defend
themselves in the depths of the great eastern forest, never fully
succumbing to either the Chinese or to the Islamic incursion from
across the Atlantic, and second because they were much less
susceptible to Old World diseases, possibly because of early
exposure to them from wandering Japanese monks, traders, trappers
and prospectors, who ended up infecting the local populace in small
numbers, thus serving in effect as human inoculants, immunizing or
at least preparing the population of Yingzhou for a fuller
incursion of Asians, who did not have quite as devastating an
effect, although of course many people and tribes did die.'
Bodur moved on, thinking about the notion of a
post scarcity society, which in hungry Nsara she had never
heard of at all. But it was time for another session, a plenary
affair that Budur did not want to miss, and which turned out to be
one of the most heavily attended. It concerned the question of the
lost Franks, and why the plague had hit them so hard.
Much work had been done in this area by the Zott scholar
Istvan Romani, who had done his research around the periphery of
the plague zone, in Magyaristan and Moldava; and the plague itself
had been studied intensively during the Long War, when it seemed
possible that one side or another would unleash it as a weapon. It
was understood now that it had been conveyed in the first centuries
by fleas living on grey rats, travelling on ships and in caravans.
A town called Issyk Kul, south of Lake Balkhash in Turkestan, had
been studied by Romani and a Chinese scholar named jiang, and they
had found evidence in the cemetery of the town's Nestorians of a
heavy die off from the plague around the year 700. This had
apparently been the start of the epidemic that had moved west on
the silk roads to Sarai, capital at that time of the Golden Horde
khanate. One of their khans, Yanibeg, had besieged the Genoese port
of Kaffa in the Crimea by catapulting the bodies of plague victims
over the town walls. The Genoese had thrown the bodies in the sea,
but this had not stopped the plague from infecting the entire
Genoese network of trading ports, including, eventually, the whole
of the Mediterranean. Movement from port to port, respite during
the winters, then a renewal in the hinterlands the following
spring; this pattern continued for over twenty years. All the
westernmost peninsulas of the Old World were devastated, moving
north from the Mediterranean and back to the east as far as Moscow,
Novgorod, Kopenhagen and the Baltic ports. At the end of this time
the population in Firanja was perhaps thirty per cent what it had
been before the onset of the epidemic. Then in the years around
777, a date considered significant at the time by some mullahs and
sufi mystics, a second wave of the plague -- if it was the plague
-- had killed off almost all the survivors of the first wave, so
that sailors at the start of the eighth century reported
witnessing, usually from offshore, a completely emptied land.
Now there were scholars giving presentations who believed
that the second plague had actually been anthrax, following on the
bubonic plague; there were others who held the reverse position, arguing
that contemporary accounts of the first sickness matched the
freckling of anthrax more often than the buboes of bubonic plague,
while the final blow had been the plague. It was explained in this
session that the plague itself had bubonic, septic and pneumonic
forms, and that the pneumonia caused by the pneumonic form was
contagious, and very fast and lethal; the septic form even more
lethal. Indeed, much had been clarified about all these diseases by
the unfortunate experiences of the Long War.
But why had the disease, whichever one it had been, or in
whatever combinations, been so lethal in Firanja and not elsewhere?
The meeting offered presentation after presentation by scholars
advancing one theory after another. From her notes Budur described
them all for Piali at the end of the day, over supper, and he
quickly jotted them down on a napkin:
' Plague animalcules mutated in the 770s to take on
forms and virulence similar to tuberculosis or typhoid; -- Cities
of Tuscany had reached enormous numbers by the eighth century, say
two million people, and hygienic systems broke down and plague
vectors ran wild; -- Depopulation of the first plague followed by a
series of disastrous floods that wrecked agriculture leading to
starvation; -- Super--contagious form of the animalcule mutated in
northern France at the end of the first epidemic; Pale skin
of the Franks and Kelts lacked pigments that helped resist the
disease, accounting for the freckling; -- Sunspot cycle disrupted
weather and caused epidemics every eleven years, effect worse every
time '
'Sunspots?' Piali interjected.
'That's what he said.' Budur shrugged.
'So,' Piali said, looking over the napkin, 'it was either
the plague animalcules, or some other animalcules, or some quality
of the people, or their habits, or their land, or the weather, or
sunspots.' He grinned. 'That pretty much covers it, I should think.
Perhaps cosmic rays ought to be included. Wasn't there a big
supernova spotted about that time?'
Budur could only laugh. 'I think it was earlier. Anyway,
you must admit, it does want explaining.'
'Many things do, but it looks as if we have a way to go
on this one.'
The presentations continued, ranging from the recording
of the world that had existed just before the Long War, all the way
back through time to the earliest human remains. This work on the
first humans forced everyone to the contemplation of one of the
larger arguments shaping up in the field, concerning human
beginnings.
Archaeology as a discipline had its origins for the most
part in the Chinese bureaucracy, but it had been picked up quickly
by the Dinei people, who studied with the Chinese and went back to
Yingzhou intending to learn what they could about the people they
called the Anasazi, who had preceded them in the dry west of
Yingzhou. The Dinei scholar Anan and his colleagues had offered the
first explanations of human migration and history, asserting that
tribes on Yingzhou had mined the tin on Yellow Island in the
biggest of the Great Lakes, Manitoba, and shipped this tin across
the oceans to all the bronze era cultures in Africa and Asia.
Anan's group contended that civilization had begun in the New World
with the Inka and Aztecs and the Yingzhou tribes, in particular the
old ones who preceded their Anasazi in the western deserts. Their
great and ancient empires had sent out reed and balsam rafts,
trading tin for spices and various plant stocks with Asian
ancestry, and these Yingzhou traders had established the
Mediterranean civilizations predating Greece, especially the
ancient Egyptians and Middle Western empires, the Assyrians and
Sumerians.
So the Dinei archaeologists had claimed, anyway, in a
very fully articulated case, with all sorts of objects from all
over the world to support it. But now a great deal of evidence was
appearing in Asia and Firanja and Africa that indicated this story
was all wrong. The oldest lifering dates for human settlement in
the New World were about twenty thousand years before the present,
and everyone had agreed at first that this was extremely old, and
predated by a good deal the earliest civilizations known to Old
World history, the Chinese and the Middle Western and Egyptian; so
at that point it had all seemed plausible. But now that the war was
over, scientists were beginning to investigate the Old World in a
way that hadn't been possible since a time predating modern
archaeology itself. And what they were finding was a great
quantity of signs of a human past far older than any yet known.
Caves in the Nsaran south containing superb drawings of animals
were now reliably dated at forty thousand years. Skeletons in the
Middle West appeared to be a hundred thousand years old. And there
were scholars from Ingali in south Africa saying they had found
remains of humans, or evolutionarily ancestral prehumans, that
appeared to be several hundred thousand years old. They could not
use lifering dating for these finds, but had different dating
methods they thought were just as good as the lifering method.
Nowhere else on Earth were people making a claim like
this one from the Africans, and there was a great deal of
scepticism about it; some queried the dating methods, others simply
dismissed the claim out of hand, as a manifestation of some kind of
continental or racial patriotism. Naturally the African scholars
were upset by this response, and the meeting that afternoon took on
a volatile aspect that could not help but remind people of the late
war. It was important to keep the discourse on a scientific basis,
as an investigation into facts uncontaminated by religion or
politics or race.
'I suppose there can be patriotism in anything,' Budur
said to Piali that night. 'Archaeological patriotism is absurd, but
it's beginning to look as if that's how it started in Yingzhou. An
unconscious bias, no doubt, towards one's own region. And until we
sort out the dating of things, it's an open question as to which
model will replace theirs.'
'Certainly the dating methods will improve,' Piali
said.
'True. But meanwhile all is confusion.'
'That's true of everything.'
The days shot by in a blur of meetings. Every day Budur
got up at dawn, went to the madressa's dining commons to have a
small breakfast, and then attended talks and sessions and poster
explanations from then until supper, and after that far into the
evenings. One morning she was startled to hear a young woman
describing her discovery of what appeared to be a lost feminist
branch of early Islam, a branch which had fuelled the renaissance
of Samarqand, and was then destroyed and the memory of it erased.
Apparently a group of women in Qum had taken against a ruling by
the mullahs, and led their families east and north to the walled
town of Derbent, in Bactria, a place that had been conquered
by Alexander the Great and was still living a Greek life in
Transoxianic bliss a thousand years later, when the Muslim women
rebels and their families arrived. Together they created a way of
life in which all living beings were equal before Allah and among
themselves, something like what Alexander would have made, for he
was a disciple of the queens of Kreta. Then all the people of
Derbent lived happily for many years, and though they kept to
themselves and did not try to impose themselves on all the world,
they did tell some of what they had learned to the people they
traded with in nearby Samarqand; and in Samarqand they took that
knowledge, and made of it the start of the rebirth of the world.
You can read all this in the ruins, the young researcher
insisted.
Budur wrote down the references, realizing as she did
that archaeology too could be a kind of wish, or even a statement
about the future. She went back into the halls, shaking her head.
She would have to ask Kirana about it. She would have to look into
it herself. Who knew, really, what people had done in the past?
Many things had happened and never been written about and after a
time had been utterly forgotten. Almost anything might have
happened, anything. And there was that phenomenon Kirana had
mentioned once in passing, of people imagining that things were
better in another land, which then gave them the courage to try to
enact some progress in their own country. Thus women had everywhere
imagined that women elsewhere had it better than they did, and thus
they had had the courage to press for changes. And no doubt there
were other examples of the tendency, people imagining the good in
advance of its reality, as in the stories of the good place
discovered and then lost, what the Chinese called 'Source of the
Peach Blossom Stream' stories. History, fable, prophecy; no way to
distinguish, until perhaps centuries had passed, and they had made
the stories one thing or the other.
She dropped in on many more sessions, and this impression
of people's endless struggle and effort, endless experimentation,
of humans thrashing about trying to find a way to live together,
only deepened in her. An imitation Potala built outside Beijing at
two thirds full size; an ancient temple complex, perhaps Greek
in origin, lost in the jungles of Amazonia; another in the jungles
of Siam; an Inka capital set high in the mountains; skeletons of
people in Firanja who were not quite like modern humans in their
skull shape; roundhouses made of mammoth bones; the calendrical
purposes of the stone rings of Britain; the intact tomb of an
Egyptian pharaoh; the nearly untouched remains of a French medieval
village; a shipwreck on the peninsula of Ta Shu, the ice continent
surrounding the south pole; early Inkan pottery painted with
patterns from the south of Japan; Mayan legends of a 'great
arrival' from the west by a god Itzamna, which was the name of the
Shinto mother goddess of the same era; megalithic monuments in
Inka's great river basin that resembled megaliths in the Maghrib;
old Greek ruins in Anatolia that seemed to be the Troy of Homer's
epic poem 'The Iliad', huge lined figures on the Inkan plains that
could be seen properly only from the sky; the beach village in the
Orkneys that Budur had visited with Idelba; a very complete Greek
and Roman city at Ephesus, on the Anatolian coast; these and many,
many more such finds were described. Each day was a rush of talk,
Budur all the while scribbling notes in her notebook, and asking
for reprints of articles, if they were in Arabic or Persian. She
took a particular interest in the sessions on dating methods, and
the scientists working on this matter often told her how much they
owed to her aunt's pioneering work. They were now investigating
other methods of dating, such as the matching up of successive
tree rings to create a 'dendrochronology', proceeding fairly
well, and also the measurement of a particular kind of qileak
luminescence that was fixed into pottery that had been fired at
high enough temperatures. But there was much work to be done on
these methods, and no one was happy with the current state of their
abilities to date what they found of the past in the earth.
One day a group of the archaeologists who had used
Idelba's work on dating joined Budur, and they crossed the campus
of the madressa to attend a memorial session for Idelba put on by
the physicists who had known her. This session was to consist of a
number of eulogies, a presentation on the various aspects of her
work, some presentations of recent work that referred back to hers,
and then a short party or wake in celebration of ber life.
Budur wandered the rooms of this memorial session
accepting praise for her aunt, and condolences on ber passing. The
men in the room (for they were mostly men) were very solicitous of
her and, for the most par', quite cheerful. Even the memory
of Idelba brought smiles to their faces. Budur was filled with
amazement and pride by this outpouring of affection, though often
it made her ache as well; they had lost a valued colleague, but she
had lost the only family that mattered to her, and could not always
keep her focus on her aunt's work alone.
At one point she was asked to speak to the assemblage and
so she struggled to pull herself together as she went up to the
lectern, thinking as she walked of her blind soldiers, who existed
in her mind as a kind of bulwark or anchor, a benchmark of what was
truly sad. In contrast to that this was indeed a celebration, and
she smiled to see all these people congregated to honour her aunt.
It only remained to work out what to say, and as she went up the
stairs it occurred to her that she needed only to try to imagine
what Idelba herself would say, and then paraphrase that. That was
reincarnation in a sense she could believe in.
So she looked down at the crowd of physicists, feeling
calm and anchored inside, and thanked them for coming, and added,
'You all know how concerned Idelba was for the work that you are
doing in atomic physics at this time. That it should be used for
the good of humanity and not for anything else. I think the best
memorial you could make to her would be some kind of organization
of scientists devoted to the proper dissemination and use of your
knowledge. Perhaps we can talk about that later. It would be very
appropriate if such an organization came to be as a result of
thinking about her wishes, because of a belief that she held, as
you know, that scientists, among all people, could be counted on to
do what was right, because it would be the scientific thing to
do.'
She felt a stilling in the audience. The looks on their
faces were all of a sudden very much like those on the faces of her
blind soldiers: pain, longing, desperate hope; regret and resolve.
Many of the people in this room had no doubt been involved in the
war effort of their respective countries -- at the end, too, when
the race in military technologies had speeded up, and things had
become particularly ferocious and dire. The inventors of the gas
shells that had blinded her soldiers could very well be in this
room.
'Now,' Budur continued cautiously, 'obviously this has
not always been the case, so far. Scientists have not always done
the right thing.
But Idelba's vision of science had it as being progressively
improvable, just as a matter of making it more scientific. That
aspect is one of the ways you define science, as against many other
human activities or institutions. So to me this makes it a kind of
prayer, or worship of the world. It is a devotional labour. This
aspect should be kept in mind, whenever we remember Idelba, and
whenever we consider the uses of our work. Thank you.'
After that more people than ever came up to her to speak
their thanks and appreciation, displaced though it was from its
absent object. And then, as the memorial hour wound down, some of
them moved on to a meal in a nearby restaurant, and when it was
over, an even smaller group of them lingered afterwards over coffee
and baklava. It was as if they were in one of the rain lashed
cafes of Nsara.
And finally, very late in the night, when no more than a
dozen of them remained, and the waiters of the restaurant looked as
if they wanted to close down, Piali looked around the room, and got
a nod from Abdol Zoroush, and said to Budur, 'Dr Chen here,'
indicating a white haired Chinese man at the far end of the
table, who nodded, 'has brought work from his team on the matter of
alactin. This was one of the things Idelba was working on, as you
know. He wanted to share this work with all of us here. They
have made the same determinations we have, concerning the splitting
of the alactin atoms, and how this might be exploited to make an
explosive. But they have done further calculations, which the rest
of us have checked during the conference, including Master Ananda
here,' and another old man seated next to Chen nodded, 'that make
it clear that the particular form of alactin that would be
necessary for any explosive chain reaction, is so rare in nature
that it could not be gath ered in sufficient quantities. A
natural form would have to be gathered first, and then processed in
factories, in a process that right now is hypothetical only; and
even if made practicable, it would be so difficult that it would
take the entire industrial capacity of a state to produce enough
material to make even a single bomb.'
'Really?' Budur said.
They all nodded, looking quietly relieved, even happy. Dr
Chen's translator spoke to him in Chinese and he nodded and said
something back.
The translator said in Persian, 'Dr Chen would like to
add, that from his observations it seems very unlikely any country
will be able to create these materials for many years, even if they
should want to. So we are safe. Safe from that, anyway.'
'I see,' Budur said, and nodded at the elderly Chinese.
'As you know, Idelba would be very pleased to have heard these
results! She was quite worried, as no doubt you know. But she would
also press again for some kind of international scientific
organization, of atomic physicists perhaps. Or a more general
scientific group, that would take steps to make sure humanity is
never threatened by these possibilities. After what the world has
just been through in the war, I don't think it could take the
introduction of some super bomb. It would lead to
madness.'
'Indeed,' Piali said, and when her words were translated,
Dr Chen spoke again.
His translator said, 'The esteemed professor says that he
thinks scientific committees to augment, or advise '
Dr Chen intervened with a comment.
'To guide the world's governments, he says, by telling
them what is possible, what is advisable . . . He says he thinks
this could be done unobtrusively, in the postwar ... exhaustion. He
says he thinks governments will agree to the existence of such
committees, because at first they will not be aware of what it
means ... and by the time they learn what it means, they will be
unable to ... to dismantle them. And so scientists could take a ...
a larger role in political affairs. This is what he said.'
The others around the table were nodding thoughtfully,
some cautious, others worried; no doubt most of the men there were
funded by their governments.
Piali said, 'We can at least try. It would be a very good
way to remember Idelba. And it may work. It seems it would help, at
the very least.'
Everyone nodded again, and after translation, Dr Chen
nodded too.
Budur ventured to say, 'It might be introduced simply as
a matter of scientists doing science, coordinating their efforts,
you know, as part of doing better science. At first simple things
that look completely innocuous, like uniform weights and measures,
rationalized mathematically. Or a solar calendar that is accurate
to the Earth's actual movement around the sun. Right now we don't
even agree on the date. We all come here in different years, as you
know, and now our hosts have resuscitated yet another system. Right
now there must be constant multiple listings of dates. We don't
even agree on the length of the year. In effect we are still living
in different histories, even though it is just one world, as the
war taught us. You scientists should perhaps gather your
mathematicians and astronomers, and establish a scientifically
accurate calendar, and start using it for all scientific work. That
might lead to some larger sense of world community.'
'How would we start it?' someone asked.
Budur shrugged; she hadn't thought about that part of it.
What would Idelba say? 'What about just starting now? Call this
meeting the zero date. It's spring, after all. Start the year on
the spring equinox, perhaps, as most years already do, and then
simply number the days of every year, avoiding the various ways of
calculating months and the like, the seven day weeks, the
ten day weeks, all that. Or something else simple, something
beyond culture, unarguable because it is physical in origin. Day
two fifty seven of Year One. Forwards and backwards from that
zero date, three hundred and sixty five days, leap days added,
whatever it takes to be accurate to nature. Then as these kinds of
matters are all universalized, or made standard all over the world,
when the time comes that governments come to put pressure on their
scientists to work for just one part of humanity, they can say, I'm
sorry, science doesn't work that way. We are a system for all
peoples. We only work to make things so that they will be all
right.'
The translator was saying all this in Chinese to Dr Chen,
who watched Budur closely as she spoke. When she had finished, he
nodded and said something.
The translator said, 'He says, those are good ideas. He
says, let's try them and see.'
After that evening, Budur continued to attend the
sessions, and take her notes, but she was distracted by thoughts of
the private discussions she knew were taking place among the
physicists on the other side of the madressa: the plans being made.
Piali told ber all about them. Her notes tended to become lists of
things to do. In sunny Isfahan, a city that was old but entirely
new, like a garden just planted in a vast set of ruins, it
was easy to forget how hungry they were in Firanja, in China and
Africa and indeed over most of the world. On paper it seemed as if
they could save everything.
One morning, however, she passed a poster presentation
that caught her attention, called 'A Tibetan Village Found Intact'.
It looked just the same as a hundred other hallway exhibits, but
something about it caught her. Like most of them, it had its
principal text in Persian, with smaller translated texts in
Chinese, Tamil, Arabic and Algonquin, the 'big five' languages of
the conference. The presenter and author of the poster was a big
flat faced young woman, nervously answering questions from a
small group, no more than half a dozen people, who had gathered to
hear her formal presentation. She was Tibetan herself, apparently,
and was using one of the Iranian translators to answer any
questions she got. Budur wasn't sure if she was speaking in Tibetan
or Chinese.
In any case, as she was explaining to someone else, an
avalanche and landslide had covered a high mountain village in
Tibet, and preserved everything within as if in a giant rocky
refrigerator, so that bodies had stayed frozen, and everything been
preserved -- furniture, clothing, food, even the last messages that
two or three literate villagers had written down, before the lack
of air had killed them.
The tiny photos of the excavated village made Budur feel
very odd. Ticklish just behind her nose, or above the roof of her
mouth, until she thought she might sneeze, or retch, or cry. There
was something awful about the corpses, almost unchanged through all
the centuries; surprised by death, but forced to wait for it. Some
of them had even written down goodbye messages. She looked at the
photos of the messages, crammed into a margin of a religious book;
handwriting clear, looking like Sanskrit. The Arabic translation
underneath one had a homely sound: 'We have been buried by a
big avalanche, and can not get out. Kenpo is still trying, but it
is not going to work. The air is getting bad. We do not have much
time. In this house we are Kenpo, Iwang, Sidpa, Zasep, Dagyab,
Tenga and Baram. Puntsok left just before the avalanche hit, we
don't know what happened to him. "All existence is like a
reflection in the mirror, without substance, a phantom of the mind.
We will take form again in another place." All praise to Buddha the
Compassionate.'
The photos looked somewhat like those Budur had seen of
certain wartime disasters, death impinging without much of a mark
on daily life, except that everything was changed for ever. Looking
at them Budur felt dizzy all of a sudden, and in the hall of the
conference chamber she could almost feel the shock of snow and rock
falling on her roof, trapping her. And all her family and friends.
But this was how it had happened. This was how it happened.
She was still under the spell of this poster, when Piali
came hurrying up. 'I'm afraid we should get back home as fast as
possible. The army command has suspended the government, and is
trying to take over Nsara.'
TWENTY TWO
They flew back the next day, Piali fretting at the
slowness of the airship, wishing that the military aeroplanes had
been adapted more generally for civilian passenger use, also
wondering if they would be arrested on their arrival, as
intellectuals visiting a foreign power during a time of national
emergency, or some such thing.
But when their airship landed at the airfield outside
Nsara, not only were they not arrested, but in fact, looking out of
the windows of the tram as it rolled into the city, it was
impossible to tell that anything at all had changed.
It was only when they got out of the tram and walked over
to the madressa district that a difference became apparent. The
docks were quieter. The longshoremen had closed down the docks to
protest about the coup. Now soldiers stood guard over the cranes
and gantries, and groups of men and women stood on the street
corners watching them.
Piali and Budur went into the offices of the physics
building, and heard all the latest from Piah's colleagues. The army
command had dissolved the Nsarene state council and the district
panchayats, and declared martial law over all. They were calling it
sharia, and they had a few mullahs going along with it to provide
some religious legitimacy, though it was very slight; the mullahs
involved were hardline reactionaries out of step with everything
that had happened in Nsara since the war, part of the 'we
won' crowd, or, as Hasan had always called them, the 'we would have
won if it weren't for the Armenians, Sikhs, Jews, Zott, and whoever
else we dislike' crowd, the 'we would have won if the rest of the
world hadn't beaten the shit out of us' crowd. To be among
like minded people they should have moved to the Alpine
emirates or Afghanistan long before.
So no one was fooled by the facade of the coup. And as
things had recently been getting a bit better, the timing of the
coup was not particularly good. It made no sense; apparently it had
only happened because the officers had been living on fixed incomes
during the period of hyperinflation, and thought everyone else was
as desperate as they were. But many, many people were still sick of
the army, and supportive of their district panchayats if not of the
state council. So it seemed to Budur that the chances for
successful resistance were good.
Kirana was much more pessimistic. She was in the hospital
now, as it turned out; Budur went running over to it the moment she
found out, feeling raw and frightened. For tests only, Kirana
informed her brusquely, though she did not identify them; something
to do with her blood or her lungs, Budur gathered. Nevertheless,
from her hospital bed she was calling every zawiyya in the city,
organizing things. 'They've got the guns so they may win, but we're
not going to make it easy.'
Many of the madressa and institute's students were
already out in crowds on the central plaza, and the corniche and
docks, and the grand mosque's courtyards, shouting, chanting,
singing, and sometimes throwing stones. Kirana was not satisfied
with these efforts, but spent all her time on the phone trying to
schedule a rally: 'They'll have you back behind the veil, they'll
try to turn back the clock until you are all domestic animals
again, you have to get out in the streets in great numbers, this is
the only thing that scares coup leaders' -- always 'you' and not
'we', Budur noticed, excluding herself as if speaking posthumously,
although she was clearly pleased to be involved in all the
activities. And pleased also that Budur was visiting her in the
hospital.
'They mistimed it,' she said to Budur with a kind of
mordant glee. Not only were the food shortages getting better, but
it was spring, and as sometimes happened in Nsara, the endlessly
cloudy skies had abruptly cleared and the sun was shining day after
day, illuminating new greens that welled up everywhere in the
gardens and the cracks in the pavement. The sky was washed clear
and gleaming like lapis overhead, and when twenty thousand people
gathered on the commercial docks and marched down Sultana Katima
Boulevard to the Mosque of the Fishermen, many thousands more came
to watch, and joined the crowd marching, until when the army
ringing the district shot pepper gas canisters into the crowd,
people poured in every direction out of the big transverse streets,
cutting through the medinas flanking the Liwayya River, causing it
to appear that the whole city had rioted. After those hurt by the
gas were cared for, the crowd returned bigger than it had been
before the attack.
This happened two or three times in a single day, until
the huge square before the city's great mosque and the old palace
was completely filled with people, facing the barbed wire fronting
the old palace and singing songs, listening to speeches, and
chanting slogans and various suras of the Quran that supported the
rights of the people against the ruler. The square never emptied,
nor even grew uncrowded; people went home for meals and other
necessities, leaving the young to carouse through the nights, but
they refilled the square during the beautiful lengthening days to
bear witness. The whole city was in effect shut down for all of the
first month of spring, like an extreme Ramadan.
One day Kirana was pushed to the palace square in a
wheelchair by her students, and she grinned at the sight. 'Now this
is what works,' she said. 'Sheer numbers!'
They brought her through the crowd to the rough podium
they were constructing daily, made of dock pallets, and got her up
there to make a speech, which she did with gusto, in her usual
style, despite her physical weakness. She grabbed the microphone of
the amplifier and said to them: 'What Mohammed began was the
idea that all humans had rights that could not be taken away from
them without insulting their creator. Allah made all humans equally
His creatures, and none are to serve others. This message came into
a time very far from these practices, and the course of progress in
history has been the story of the clarifi cation of these
principles of Islam, and the establishment of true justice. Now we
are here to continue that work!
'In particular women have had to struggle against
misinterpretation of the Quran, jailed in their homes and their
veils and their illiteracy, until Islam itself foundered under the general ignorance
of all for how can men be wise and prosper when they spend
their first years taught by people who don't know anything?
'Thus we fought the Long War and lost it, for us it was
the Nakba. Not the Armenians or the Burmese or the Jews or the
Hodenosaunee or the Africans were responsible for our defeat, nor
any problem with Islam itself fundamentally, as it is the voice of
the love of God and the wholeness of humanity, but only the
historical miscarriage of Islam, distorted as it has been.
'Now, we have been facing that reality in Nsara ever
since the war ended, and we have made great strides. We have all
witnessed and taken part in the burst of good work done here,
despite physical privations of every sort and underneath the
constant rain.
'Now the generals think they can stop all this and turn
the clock back, as if they did not lose the war and cast us into
this necessity of creation that we have used so well. As if time
could ever run backwards! Nothing like that can ever happen! We
have made a new world here on old ground, and Allah protects it,
through the actions of all the people who truly love Islam and its
chances to survive in the world to come.
'So we have gathered here to join the long struggle
against oppression, to join all the revolts, rebellions and
revolutions, all the efforts to take power away from the armies,
the police, the mullahs, and give it back to the people. Every
victory has been incremental, a matter of two steps forwards one
step back, a struggle for ever. But each time we progress a little
further, and no one is going to push us backwards! If they expect
to succeed in such a project, the government will have to dismiss
the people and appoint another one! But I don't think that's how it
happens.'
This was well received, and the crowd kept growing, and
Budur was pleased to see how many were women, working women from
the kitchens and the canning factories, women for whom the veil or
the harem had never been an issue, but who had suffered as they all
had with the war and the crash; indeed they formed the raggedest,
hungriest looking mob possible, with a tendency merely to
stand there as if asleep on their feet, and yet there they were,
filling the squares, refusing to work; and on Friday they faced
Mecca only when one of the revolutionary clerics stood among them,
not a policeman in a pulpit, but a man among neighbours, as
Mohammed had been in his life. As it was Friday, this particular
cleric said the first chapter of the Quran, the Fatiha, known to
everyone, even the large group of Buddhists and Hodenosaunee always
standing there among them, so that the whole crowd could recite it
together, over and over many times: 'Praise be to God, Lord
of the Worlds! The compassionate, the merciful! King on the day of
reckoning! Thee only do we worship, and to Thee do we cry for help.
Guide us on the straight path, The path of those to whom Thou hast
been gracious; With whom thou art not angry, and who go not
astray!'
The next morning this same cleric got up on the dais and
started the day by reciting into the microphone a poem by Ghaleb,
waking people up and calling them out to the square again:
'Soon I will be only a story But the same is true of you. I hope
the bardo will not be empty But people do not yet know where they
live. Past and future all mixed together, Let those trapped birds
out the window! What then remains? The stories you no longer
Believe. You had better believe them. While you live they carry the
meaning When you die they carry the meaning To those who come after
they carry the meaning You had better believe in them. In Rumi's
story he saw all the worlds As one, and that one, Love, he called
to and knew, Not Muslim or Jew or Hindu or Buddhist, Only a Friend,
a breath breathing human, Telling his boddhisatva story. The bardo
Waits for us to make it real.'
Budur on that morning was awakened in the zawiyya by
someone bringing news to her of a phone message: it was from one of
her blind soldiers. They wanted to talk to her.
She took the tram and then walked into the hospital,
feeling apprehensive. Were they angry at her for not coming
recently? Were they worried about the way she had left after her
last visit?
No. The oldest ones spoke for them, or for some part of
them, anyway; they wanted to march in the demonstration against the
army takeover, and they wanted her to lead them. About
two thirds of the ward said they wanted to do it.
It wasn't the kind of request one could refuse. Budur
agreed, and feeling shaky and uncertain, led them out of the gate
of the hospital. There were too many of them for the trams, so they
walked down the riverfront road, and then the corniche, hands on
the shoulders before them, like a parade of elephants. Back in the
ward Budur had got used to the look of them, but out here in the
brilliant sunshine and the open air they were a shocking sight once
again, maimed and awful. Three hundred and twenty seven of
them, walking down the corniche; they had taken a head count when
leaving the ward.
Naturally they drew a crowd, and some people began
following them down the corniche, and in the big plaza there was
already a crowd, a crowd that quickly made room for the veterans at
the front of the protest, facing the old palace. They arranged
themselves into ranks and files by feel, and counting off in
undertones, with a little aid from Budur. Then they stood silently,
right hands on the shoulders to their left, listening to the
speakers at the microphone. The crowd behind them grew bigger and
bigger.
Army airships floated low over the city, and amplified
voices from them ordered everyone to leave the streets and plazas.
A full curfew had been declared, the mechanical voices informed
them.
This decision had no doubt been made in ignorance of the
blind soldiers' presence in the palace square. They stood there
without moving, and the crowd stood with them. One of the blind
soldiers shouted, 'What are they going to do, gas us?'
In fact this was all too possible, as pepper gas had been
deployed already, at the State Council Chambers and the police
barracks, and down on the docks. And later it was said by many that
the blind soldiers were in fact tear gassed during that tense
week, and that they just stood there and took it, for they had no
tears left to shed; that they stood in their square with their
hands on each other's shoulders and chanted the Fatiha, and the
bismallah which starts every sura: 'In the name of Allah,
the compassionate, the merciful! In the name of Allah, the
compassionate, the merciful!'
Budur herself never saw any pepper gas dropped in the
palace square, although she heard her soldiers chanting the
bismallah for hours at a time. But she was not there in the square
every hour of that week, and hers was not the only group of blind
soldiers to have left their hospitals and joined the protests,
either. So possibly something of the sort occurred. Certainly in
the time afterwards everyone believed it had.
In any case, during that long week people passed the time
by reciting long passages from Rumi Balkhi, and Ferdowski, and the
joker mullah Nusreddin, and the epic poet of Firanja, Ali, and from
their own sufi poet of Nsara, young Ghaleb, who had been killed on
the very last day of the war. Budur made frequent visits to the
women's hospital where Kirana was staying, to tell her what was
happening on the plaza and elsewhere in the great city, now pulsing
everywhere with its people. They had taken to the streets and were
not leaving them. Even when the rain returned they stayed out
there. Kirana ate up every word of news, hungry to be out herself,
supremely irritated that she was confined at this time. Obviously
she was seriously ill or she wouldn't have suffered it, but she was
emaciated, with sallow, dark rings under her eyes like a raccoon
from Yingzhou, 'stuck', as she put it, 'just when things are
getting interesting', just when her long winded acid--tongued
facility for speech could have been put to use, could have made
history as well as commented on it. But it was not to be; she could
only lie there fighting ber illness. The one time Budur ventured to
ask how she was feeling, she grimaced and said only, 'The termites
have got me.'
But even so she stayed close to the centre of the action.
A delegation of opposition leaders, including a contingent of women
from the zawlyyas of the city, were meeting with adjutants of the
generals to make their protests and negotiate if they could, and
these people visited Kirana often to talk over strategy. On the
streets the rumour was that a deal was being hammered out,
but Kirana lay there, eyes burning, and shook her head at Budur's
hopefulness. 'Don't be naive.' Her sardonic grin wrinkled her
wasted features. 'They're just playing for time. They think that if
they hold on long enough the protests will die down, and they can
get on with their business. They're probably right. They've got the
guns after all.'
But then a Hodenosaunee fleet steamed into the harbour
roads and anchored. Hanea! Budur thought when she saw them: forty
giant steel battleships, bristling with guns that could fire a
hundred li inland. They called in on a wireless frequency used by a
popular music station, and though the government had seized the
station, they could do nothing to stop this message from reaching
all the wireless receptors in the city, and many heard the message
and passed it along: the Hodenosaunee wanted to speak to the
legitimate government, the one they had been dealing with before.
They refused to speak to the generals, who were breaking the
Shanghai Convention by usurping the constitutionally required
government, a very serious breach; they declared they would not
move from Nsara's harbour until the council established by the
postwar settlement was reconvened; and they would not trade with
any government led by the generals. As the grain that had saved
Nsara from starvation in the previous winter had mostly come from
Hodenosaunee ships, this was a serious challenge indeed.
The matter hung for three days, during which rumours flew
like bats at dusk: that negotiations were going on between the
fleet and the junta, that mines were being laid, that amphibious
troops were being readied, that negotiations were breaking down
...
On the fourth day the leaders of the coup were suddenly
nowhere to be found. The Yingzhou fleet was a few ships smaller in
size. The generals had been spirited off, everyone said, to asylums
in the Sugar Islands or the Maldives, in exchange for stopping
without a fight. The ranking officers left behind led the deployed
units of the army back to their barracks and stood down, waiting
for further instructions from the legitimate State Council. The
coup was cancelled.
The people in the streets cheered, shouted, sang,
embraced total strangers, went crazy for joy. Budur did all these
things, and led her soldiers back to their ward, and then rushed to
Kirana's hospital to tell Kirana everything she had seen, feeling a
pang to see her so sick in the midst of this triumph. Kirana nodded
at the news, saying, 'We got lucky to get help like that. The whole
world saw that, it will have a good effect, you'll see. Although
now we're in for it! We'll see what it's like to be part of a
league, we'll see what kind of people they really are.'
Other friends wanted to wheel her out to give another
speech, but she wouldn't do it, she said, 'Just go and tell people
to get back to work, tell them we need to get the bakeries baking
again.'
Darkness. Silence. Then a voice in the void: Kirana? Are
you there? Kuo? Kyu? Kenpo? What. Are you there? I'm here. We're
back in the bardo. There is no such thing. Yes there is. Here we
are. You can't deny it. We keep coming back. (Blackness, silence. A
refusal of speech.) Come on, you can't deny it. We keep coming
back. We keep going out again. Everybody does. That's dharma. We
keep trying. We keep making progress. A noise like a tiger's growl.
But we do! Here's Idelba, and Piali, and even Madam Sururi. So she
was right. Yes. Ridiculous. Nevertheless. Here we are. Here to be
sent back again, sent back together, our little jati. I don't know
what I would do without all of you. I think the solitude would kill
me. You're killed anyway. Yes, but it's less lonely this way. And
we're making a difference. No, we are! Look at what has happened!
You can't deny it! Things were done. It's not very much.
Of course. You said it yourself, we have thousands of lifetimes
of work to do. But it's working.
Don't generalize. It could all slip away.
Of course. But back we go, to try again. Each generation
makes its fight. A few more turns of the wheel. Come on -- back
with a will. Back into the fray!
As if one could refuse.
Oh come on. You wouldn't even if you could. You're always
the one leading the way down there, you're always up for a
fight.
... I'm tired. I don't know how you persist the way you
do. You tire me too. All that hope in the face or calamity.
Sometimes I think you should be more marked by it. Sometimes I
think I have to take it all on myself.
Come on. You'll be your old self once things get going
again. Idelba, Piali, Madam Sururi, are you ready?
We're ready.
Kirana?
... All right then. One more turn.
I. Always China
Bao Xinhua was fourteen years old when he first met Kung
Jianguo, in his work unit near the southern edge of Beijing, just
outside the Dahongmen, the Big Red Gate. Kung was only a few years
older, but he was already head of the revolutionary cell in his
work unit next door, quite an accomplishment given that he had been
one of the sanwu, the I three withouts' -- without family, without
work unit, without identity card -- when he turned up as a boy at
the gate of the police station of the Zhejiang district, just
outside the Dahongmen. The police had placed him in his current
work unit, but he always remained an outsider there, often called
'an individualist', which is a very deep criticism in China even
now, when so much has changed. 'He persisted in his own ways, no
matter what others said.' 'He clung obstinately to his own course.'
'He was so lonely he didn't even have a shadow.' This is what they
said about him in his work unit, and so naturally he looked outside
the unit to the neighbourhood and the city at large, and was a
street boy for no one knew how long, not even him. And he was good
at it. Then at a young age he became a firebrand in Beijing
underground politics, and it was in this capacity that he visited
Bao Xinhua's work unit.
'The work unit is the modern equivalent of the Chinese
clan compound,' he said to those of them who gathered to listen.
'It is a spiritual and social unit as much as an economic one,
trying its best to continue the old ways in the new world. No one
really wants to change it, because everyone wants to have a place
to come to when they die. Everyone needs a place. But these big
walled factories are not like the old family compounds that they
imitate. They are prisons, first built to organize our labour for
the Long War. Now the Long War has been over for forty years and
yet we slave all our lives for it still, as if we worked for China,
when really it is only for corrupt military governors. Not even for
the Emperor, who disappeared long ago, but for the generals and
warlords, who hope we will work and work and never notice how the
world has changed.
'We say, "we are of one work unit" as if we were saying,
"we are of the same family", or 'Ve are brother and sister", and
this is good. But we never see over the wall of our unit, to the
world at large.'
Many in his audience nodded. Their work unit was a poor
one, made up mostly of immigrants from the south, and they often
went hungry. The postwar years in Beijing had seen a lot of
changes, and now in the Year 29, as the revolutionaries liked to
call it, in conformity with the practice of scientific
organizations, things were beginning to fall apart. The Qing
dynasty had been overthrown in the middle years of the war, when
things had gone so badly; the Emperor himself, aged six or seven at
the time, had disappeared, and now most assumed he was dead. The
Fifth Assemblage of Military Talent was still in control of the
Confucian ureaucracy, its hand still on the wheel of their
destiny; but it was a senile old hand, the dead hand of the past,
and all over China revolts were breaking out. They were of all
sorts: some in the service of foreign ideologies, but most internal
insurgencies, organized by Han Chinese hoping to rid themselves
once and for all of the Qing and the generals and warlords. Thus
the White Lotus, the Monkey Insurgents, the Shanghai Revolutionary
Movement and so on. joining these were regional revolts by the
various nationalities and ethnic groups in the west and south --
the Tibetans, Mongolians, Xinzing and so on, all intent on freeing
themselves from the heavy hand of Beijing. There was no question
that despite the big army that Beijing could in theory bring to
bear, an army still much admired and honoured by the populace for
its sacrifices in the Long War, the military command itself was in
trouble, and soon to fall. The Great Enterprise had returned again
to China: dynastic succession; and the question was, who was going
to succeed? And could anyone succeed in bringing China back
together again?
Kung spoke to Bao's work unit in favour of the League of
All Peoples' School of Revolutionary Change, which had been founded
during the last years of the Long War by Zhu
Tuanjie kexue ('Unite for Science'), a half--Japanese whose
birth name had been Isao. Zhu Isao, as he was usually called,
had been a Chinese governor of one of the Japanese provinces before
their revolution, and when that revolution came he had negotiated a
settlement with the Japanese independence forces. He had ordered
the Chinese army occupying Kyushu back to China without loss of
life on either side, landing with them in Manchuria and declaring
the port city of Tangshan to be an international city of peace,
right there in the homeland of the Qing rulers, and in the midst of
the Long War. The official Beijing position was that Zhu was a
Japanese and a traitor, and that when the appropriate time came his
insurgency would be crushed by the Chinese armies he had betrayed.
As it turned out, when the war ended and the postwar years marched
by in their dreary hungry round, the city of Tangshan was never
conquered; on the contrary, similar revolts occurred in many other
Chinese cities, particularly the big ports on the coast, all the
way down to Canton, and Zhu Isao published an unending stream of
theoretical materials defending his movement's actions, and
explaining the novel organization of the city of Tangshan, which
was run as a communal enterprise belonging equally to all the
people who lived within its embattled borders.
Kung talked about these matters with Bao's work unit,
describing Zhu's theory of communal creation of value, and what it
meant for ordinary Chinese, who had for so long had the fruits of
their labour stolen from them. 'Zhu looked at what really happens,
and described our economy, politics, and methods of power and
accumulation in scientific detail. After that he proposed a new
organization of society, which took this knowledge of how things
work and applied it to serve all the people in a community and in
all China, or any other country.'
During a break for a meal, Kung paused to speak to Bao,
and asked his name. Bao's given name was Xinhua, 'New China';
Kung's was Jianguo, 'Construct the Nation' -- they knew therefore
that they were children of the Fifth Assemblage, who had encouraged
patriotic naming to counteract their own moral bankruptcy and the
superhuman sacrifices of the people during the postwar famines.
Everyone born around twenty years before had names like 'Oppose
Islam' (Huidi) or 'Do Battle' (Zhandou) even though at that point
the war had been over for twenty years. Girls' names had suffered
especially during this fad, as parents attempted to keep some
traditional elements of female names incorporated into the
whipped up patriotric fervour, so that there were girls their
age named 'Fragrant Soldier' or 'Graceful Army' or 'Public
Fragrance' or 'Nation loving Orchid' and the like.
Kung and Bao laughed together over some of these
examples, and spoke of Bao's parents, and Kung's lack of parents,
and Kung fixed Bao with his gaze, and said, 'Yet Bao itself is a
very important word or concept, you know. Repayment, retribution,
honouring parents and ancestors -- holding, and holding on. It's a
good name.'
Bao nodded, captured already by the attention of this
dark eyed person, so intense and cheerful, so interested in
things. There was something about him that drew Bao, drew him so
strongly that it seemed to Bao that this meeting was a matter of
yuanfen, a 'predestined relation', a thing always meant to be, part
of his yuan or fate. Saving him perhaps from a nieyuan, a 'bad
fate', for his work unit struck him as smallminded, oppressive,
stultifying, a kind of death to the soul, a prison from which he
could not escape, in which he was already entombed. Whereas he
already felt as if he had known Kung for ever.
So he followed Kung around Beijing like a younger brother, and
because of him became a sort of truant from his work unit, or in
other words, a revolutionary. Kung took him to meetings of the
revolutionary cells he was part of, and gave him books and
pamphlets of Zhu Isao's to read; took charge of his education, in
effect, as he had for so many others; and there was nothing Bao's
parents or his work unit could do about it. He had a new work unit
now, spread out across Beijing and China and all the world -- the
work unit of those who were going to make things
right.
Beijing at the time was a place of most severe
deprivations. There were millions who had moved there during the
war, who still lived in improvised shantytowns outside the gates.
The wartime work units had expanded far to the west, and these
still stood like a succession of grey fortresses, looking down on
the wide new streets. Every tree in the city had been cut down
during the Twelve Hard Years, and even now the city was bare of
almost all vegetation; the new trees had been planted with spiked
fences protecting them, and watchmen to guard them at night, which
did not always work; the poor old guards would wake in the mornings
to find the fence there but the tree gone, cut at the ground
for firewood or pulled out by the roots for sale somewhere else,
and for these lost saplings they would weep inconsolably, or even
commit suicide. The bitter winters would sweep down on the city in
the autumn, rains full of yellow mud from the dust torn out of the
loess to the west, and drizzle down onto a concrete city without a
single leaf to fall to the ground. Rooms were kept warm by space
heaters, but the qi system often shut down, in blackouts that
lasted for weeks, and then everyone suffered, except for the
government bureaucrats, whose compounds had their own generating
systems. Most people stayed warm then by stuffing their coats with
newspaper, so that it was a bulky populace that moved around in
their thick brown coats, doing what work they could find, looking
as if they were all fat with prosperity; but it wasn't so.
Thus many people were ripe for change. Kung was as lean
and hungry as any of them, but full of energy, he didn't seem to
need much food or sleep: all he ever did was read and talk, talk
and read, and ride his bike from meeting to meeting and exhort
groups to unify to join the revolutionary movement spearheaded by
Zhu Isao, and change China.
'Listen,' he would say to his audiences urgently, 'it's
China we can change, because we are Chinese, and if we change
China, then we change the world. Because it always comes back to
China, do you understand? There are more of us than all the rest of
the people of the Earth combined. And because of the
colonialist imperialist years of the Qing, all the wealth of
the world has come to us over the years, in particular all the gold
and silver. For many dynasties we brought in gold by trade, and
then when we conquered the New World we took their gold and silver
from them, and all that came back to China too. And none of it has
ever left! We are poor not for any material reason, but because of
the way we are organized, do you see? We suffered in the Long War
the way every nation suffered in the Long War, but the rest of the
world is recovering and we are not, even though we won, because of
the way we are organized! The gold and silver is hidden in the
treasure chests of the corrupt bureaucrats, and people freeze and
starve while the bureaucrats hide in their holes, warm and full.
And that will never change unless we change it!'
He would go on to explain Zhu's theories of society, how
for many long dynasties a system of extortion had ruled China and
most of the world, and because the land was fecund and the farmers'
taxes supportable, the system had endured. Eventually, however, a
crisis had come to this system, wherein the rulers had grown so
numerous, and the land so depleted, that the taxes they required
could not be grown by the farmers; and when it was a choice of
starvation or revolt, the farmers had revolted, as they had often
before the Long War. 'They did it for their children's sake. We
were taught to honour our ancestors, but the tapestry of the
generations runs in both directions, and it was the genius of the
people to begin to fight for the generations to come -- to give up
their lives for their children and their children's children. This
is the true way to honour your family! And so we had the revolts of
the Ming and the early Qing, and similar uprisings were happening
all over the world, and eventually things fell apart, and all
fought all. And even China, the richest nation on Earth, was
devastated. But the necessary work went on. We have to continue
that work, and end the tyranny of the rulers, and establish a new
world based on the sharing of the world's wealth among all equally.
The gold and silver come from the Earth, and the Earth belongs to
all of us, just like the air and the water belong to all of us.
There can no longer be hierarchies like those that have oppressed
us for so long. The fight has to be carried on, and each defeat is
simply a necessary defeat in the long march towards our goal.'
Naturally anyone who spent every hour of every day making
such speeches, as Kung did, was quickly going to get in serious
trouble with the authorities. Beijing, as the capital and biggest
manufacturing city, undamaged in the Long War compared to many
other cities, was assigned many divisions of the army police, and
the walls of the city made it possible for them to close the gates
and conduct quarter by quarter searches. It was, after
all, the heart of the empire. They could order an entire quarter
razed if they wanted to, and more than once they did; shantytowns
and even legally allowed districts were bulldozed flat and rebuilt
to the standard work unit compound plan, in the effort to rid the
city of malcontents. A firebrand like Kung was marked for trouble.
And so in the Year 3 I, when he was around seventeen, and Bao
fifteen, he left Beijing for the southern provinces, to take the
message to the masses, as Zhu Isao had urged him and all the cadres
like him to do.
Bao followed along with him. At the time of his departure
he took with him a bag containing a pair of silk socks, a pair of
blue wool shoes with leather bottoms, a wadded jacket, an
old lined jacket, a pair of lined trousers, a pair of unlined
trousers, a hand towel, a pair of bamboo chopsticks, an enamel
bowl, a toothbrush, and a copy of Zhu's 'Analysis of Chinese
Colonialism'.
The next years flew by, and Bao learned a great deal
about life and people, and about his friend Kung Jianguo. The riots
of Year 33 evolved into a full revolt against the Fifth Military
Assemblage, which became a general civil war. The army attempted to
keep control of the cities, the revolutionaries scattered into the
villages and fields. There they lived by a series of protocols that
made them the favourite of the farmers, taking great pains to
protect them and their crops and animals, never expropriating their
possessions or their food, preferring starvation to theft from the
very people they had pledged themselves to liberate.
Every battle in this strange diffuse war had a macabre
quality; it seemed like a huge gathering of murders of civilians in
their own clothes, no uniforms or big formal battles about it; men,
women and children, farmers in the fields, shopkeepers in their
doorways, animals; the army was merciless. And yet it went on.
Kung became a prominent leader at the revolutionary
military college in Annan, a college headquartered deep in the
gorge of the Brahmaputra, but also spread through every unit of the
revolutionary forces, the professors or advisers doing their best
to make every encounter with the enemy a kind of education in the
field. Soon Kung headed this effort, particularly when it came to
the struggle for the urban and coastal work units; he was an
endless source of ideas and energy.
The Fifth Military Assemblage eventually abandoned the
central government, and fell away into a scattering of warlords.
This was a victory, but now each warlord and his little army had to
be defeated in turn. The struggle moved unevenly from province to
province, an ambush here, a bridge blown up there. Often Kung was
the target of assassi nation attempts, and naturally Bao, as
his comrade and assistant, was also endangered by these attacks.
Bao tended to want vengeance against the attempted assassins, but
Kung was imperturbable. 'It doesn't matter,' he would say. 'We all
die anyway.' He was much more cheerful about this fact than anyone
else Bao ever met.
Only once did Bao see Kung seriously angry, and even that
was in a strangely cheerful way, considering the situation. It
happened when one of their own officers, one Shi Fandi ('Oppose
Imperialism'), was convicted by eyewitnesses of raping and killing
a female prisoner in his keeping.
Shi emerged from the jail they had kept him in shouting
'Don't kill me! I've done nothing wrong! My men know I tried to
protect them, the bandit that died was one of the most brutal in
Sechuan! This judgment is wrong!'
Kung appeared from the storeroom where he had slept that
night.
Shi said, 'Commander, have mercy. Don't kill me!'
Kung said, 'Shi Fandi, don't say anything more. When a
man does something as wrong as you have, and it's time for him to
die, he should shut up and put a good face on it. That's all he can
do to prepare himself for his next time around. You raped and
killed a prisoner, three eyewitnesses testified to it, and that's
one of the worst crimes there is. And there are reports it wasn't
the first time. To let you live and do more such things will only
make people hate you and our cause, so it would be wrong. Let's
have no more talk. I'll make sure your family is taken care of. You
be a man of more courage.'
Shi said bitterly, 'More than once I've been offered ten
thousand taels to kill you, and I always turned them down.'
Kung waved this away. 'That was only your duty, but you
think it makes you special. As if you had to resist your character
to do the right thing. But your character is no excuse! I'm sick of
your character! I too have an angry soul, but this is China we're
fighting for! For humanity! You have to ignore your character, and
do what is right!'
And he turned away as Shi Fandi was led off.
Afterwards Kung was in a dark mood, not remorseful about
the condemnation of Shi, but depressed. 'It had to be done but it
did nothing. Such men as he often come out on top. Presumably they
will never die out. And so perhaps China will never escape her
fate.' He quoted from Zhu: Vastterritories,
abundant resources, a great population -- from such an excellent
base, will we only ever go in circles, trapped on the wheel of
birth and death?"'
Bao did not know how to reply; he had never heard his
friend speak so pessimistically. Although now it seemed familiar
enough. Kung had many moods. But in the end, one mood dominated; he
sighed, leapt to his feet: 'On with it, anyway! Go on, go
on! We can only try. We have to occupy the time of this life
somehow, we might as well fight for the good.'
It was the farmers' associations that made the difference
in the end. Kung and Bao attended nightly meetings in hundreds of
villages and towns, and thousands of revolutionary soldiers like
them were conveying Zhu's analysis and plan to the people, who in
the country were still for the most part illiterate, so that the
information had to be conveyed by word of mouth. But there is no
form of communication faster and more certain, once it reaches a
certain critical point of accumulation.
Bao learned every detail of farming existence during that
time. He learned that the Long War had stripped away most of the
men who had been alive, and many of the younger women. There were
only a few old men around no matter where you went, and the total
population was still less than it had been before the war. Some
villages were abandoned, others were occupied by skeleton crews.
This made planting and harvesting crops difficult, and the young
people alive were always at work ensuring that the season's food
and tax crops would be grown. The old women worked as hard as
anyone, doing what they could at their age to help, maintaining at
all times the imperial demeanour of the ordinary Chinese farmwife.
Usually the ones in the village who could read and do accounts were
the grandmothers, who as girls had lived in more prosperous
families; now they taught the younger folk how to run the looms,
and to deal with the government in Beijing, and to read. Because of
this they were often the first ones cut down when a warlord army
invaded their region, along with the young men who might join the
fight.
In the Confucian system the farmers were the second most
highly regarded class, just below the scholar bureaucrats who
invented the system, but above the artisans and merchants. Now
Zhu's intellectuals were organizing the farmers in the back
country, and the artisans and merchants in the cities largely
waited to see what would happen. So it seemed Confucius himself had
identified the revolutionary classes. Certainly there were many
more farmers than city dwellers. So when the farmer armies
began to organize and march, there was little the old Long War
remnants could do about it; they had been decimated themselves, and
had neither the means nor the will to kill millions of their
countrymen. For the most part they retreated to the biggest cities,
and prepared to defend them as if against Muslims.
In this uneasy stand off, Kung argued against any
all out assaults, advocating more subtle methods for defeating
the city based warlords that remained. Certain cities had
their supply lines cut off, their airports destroyed, their ports
blockaded; siege tactics of the oldest kind, updated to the new
weapons of the Long War. Indeed another long war, this time a civil
war, seemed to be brewing, though there was no one in China who
wanted such a thing. Even the youngest child lived in the wreckage
and shadow of the Long War, and knew another one would be
catastrophe.
Kung met with White Lotus and other revolutionary groups
in the cities controlled by the warlords. Almost every work unit
had within it workers sympathetic to the revolution, and many of
them were joining Zhu's movement. In reality there was almost no
one who actively and enthusiastically supported the old regime; how
could there be? Too much bad had happened. So it was a matter of
getting all the disaffected to back the same resistance, and the
same strategy for change. Kung proved to be the most influential
leader in this effort. 'In times like these,' he would say,
'everyone becomes a sort of intellectual, as matters so dire demand
to be thought through. That's the glory of these times. They have
woken us up.'
Some of these talks and organizational meetings were
dangerous visits to enemy ground. Kung had risen too far in
the New China movement to be safe making such missions; he was too
famous now, and had a price on his
head.
I But once, in the thirty second week of Year 35, he
and Bao made a clandestine visit to their old neighbourhood in
Beijing, hiding in a delivery truck full of cabbage heads, and
emerging near the Big Red Gate.
At first it seemed everything had changed. Certainly the
immediate vicinity outside the Gate had been razed, and new streets
laid out, so that there was no way they could find their old haunts
by the Gate, as they were gone. In their place stood a police
station and a number of work unit compounds, lined up parallel to
the old stretch of city wall that still existed for a short
distance on each side of the Gate. Fairly big trees had been
transplanted to the new street corners, protected by thick
wrought iron fences with spikes on top: the greenery looked
very fine. The work unit compounds had dorm windows looking
outwards, another welcome new feature; in the old days they were
always built with blank walls facing the outside world, and only in
their inner courtyards were there any signs of life. Now the
streets themselves were crowded with vendor carts and rolling
bookstalls.
'It looks good,' Bao had to admit.
Kung grinned. 'I liked the old place better. Let's get
going and see what we can find.'
Their appointment was in an old work unit, occupying
several smaller buildings just to the south of the new quarter.
Down there the alleys were as tight as ever, all brick and dust and
muddy lanes, not a tree to be seen. They wandered freely here,
wearing sunglasses and aviator's caps like half the other young
men. No one paid them the slightest attention, and they were able
to buy paper bowls of noodles and eat standing on a street corner
among the crowds and traffic, observing the familiar scene, which
did not seem to have changed a bit since their departure a few
packed years before.
Bao said, 'I miss this place.'
Kung agreed. 'It won't be long before we can move back
here if we want. Enjoy Beijing again, centre of the world.'
But first, a revolution to finish. They slipped into one
of the shops of the work unit and met with a group of unit
supervisors, most of them old women. They were not inclined to be
impressed by any boy advocating enormous change, but by this time
Kung was famous, and they listened carefully to him, and asked a
lot of detailed questions, and when he had finished they nodded and
patted him on the shoulder and sent him back out onto the street,
telling him he was a good boy and that he should get out of the
city before he got himself arrested, and that they would back him
when the time came. That was the way it was with Kung: everyone
felt the fire in him, and responded in the human way. If he could
win over the old women of the Long War in a single meeting, then
nothing was impossible. Many a village and work unit was staffed
entirely by these women, as were the Buddhist hospitals and
colleges. Kung knew all about them by now, 'the gangs of widows and
grandmothers', he called them; 'very frightening minds, they are
beyond the world but know every tael of it, so they can be very
hard, very unsenti mental. Good scientists frequent among
them. Politicians of great cunning. It's best not to cross them.'
And he never did, but learned from them, and honoured them; Kung
knew where the power lay in any given situation. 'If the old women
and the young men ever get together, it will be all over!'
Kung also travelled to Yingkou to meet with Zhu Isao
himself, and discuss with the old philosopher the campaign for
China. Under Zhu's aegis he flew to Yingzhou, and spoke with the
Japanese and Chinese representatives of the Yingzhou League,
meeting also Travancoris and others in Fangzhang, and when he
returned, he came with promises of support from all the progressive
governments of the New World.
Soon after that, one of the great Hodenosaunee fleets
arrived in Yingkou, and unloaded huge quantities of food and
weapons, and similar fleets appeared off all the port cities not
under revolutionary control already, blockading them in effect if
not in word, and the New China forces were able over the next
couple of years to win victories in Shanghai, Canton, Hangzhou,
Nanjing, and inland all over China. The final assault on Beijing
became more of a triumphal entry than anything else; the soldiers
of the old army disappeared into the vast city, or out to their
last stronghold in Gansu, and Kung was with Zhu in the first trucks
of a giant motorcade that entered the capital uncontested, indeed
hugely celebrated, on the spring equinox marking the Year 36,
through the Big Red Gate.
It was later in that week that they opened up the
Forbidden City to the people, who had been in there only a few
times before, after the disappearance of the last emperor, when for
a few years of the war it had been a public park and army barracks.
For the past forty years it had been closed again to the people,
and now they streamed in to hear Zhu and his inner circle speak to
China and the world. Bao was in the crowd accompanying them, and as
they passed under the Gate of Great Harmony he saw Kung look
around, as if surprised. Kung shook his head, an odd expression on
his face; and it was still there when he went up to the podium to
stand by Zhu and speak to the ecstatic masses filling the
square.
Zhu was still speaking when the shots rang out. Zhu fell,
Kung fell; all was chaos. Bao fought his way through the
screaming crowd and got to the ring of people around the wounded on
the temporary wooden stage, and most of those people were men and
women he knew, trying to establish order and get medical assistance
and a route out of the palace grounds to a hospital. One who
recognized him let Bao through, and he rushed and stumbled to
Kung's side. The assassin had used the big soft tipped bullets
that had been developed during the war, and there was blood all
over the wood of the stage, shocking in its copious gleaming
redness. Zhu had been struck in the arm and leg; Kung in the chest.
There was a big hole in his back and his face was grey. He was
dying. Bao knelt beside him and took up his splayed right hand,
calling out his name. Kung looked through him; Bao couldn't be sure
he was seeing anything; 'Kung Jianguo!' Bao cried, the words torn
out of him like no others had ever been.
'Bao Xinhua,' Kung mouthed. 'Go on.'
Those were his last words. He died before they even got
him off the stage.
2. This Square Fathom
All that happened when Bao was young.
After Kung's assassination he wasn't much good for a
time. He attended the funeral and never shed a tear; he thought he
was beyond such things, that he was a realist, that the cause was
what mattered and that the cause would go on. He was numb to his
grief, he felt he didn't really care. That seemed odd to him, but
there it was. It wasn't all that real, it couldn't be. He had got
over it.
He kept his nose in books, and read all the time. He
attended the college in Beijing and read history and political
science, and accepted diplomatic posts for the new government,
first in Japan, then Yingzhou, then Nsara, then Burma. The New
China programme progressed, but slowly, so slowly. Things were
better but not in any rapid marked way. Different but in some ways
the same. People still fought, corruption infected the new
institutions, it was always a struggle. Everything took much longer
than anyone had anticipated, and yet every few years everything was
also somehow entirely different. The pulse of history's long
duration was much slower than an individual's time.
One day, after some years had passed, he met a woman
named Pan Xichun, a diplomat from Yingzhou, in Beijing on
assignment to the embassy there. They were assigned together to
work on the Dahai League, the association of states encircling the
Great Ocean, and as part of that work they were both sent by their
governments to a conference in Hawaii, in the middle of the
Dahai. There on the beaches of the big island they spent a
great deal of time together, and when they returned to Beijing they
were a couple. Her ancestry was both Chinese and Japanese, and all
her great grandparents had lived in Yingzhou, in Fangzhang and
the valley behind it. When Pan Xichun's assignment in Beijing ended
and she went back home, Bao made arrangements to join the Chinese
embassy in Fangzhang, and flew across the Dahai to the dramatic
green coastline and golden hills of Yingzhou.
There he and Pan Xichun married and lived for twenty
years, raising two children, a son, Zhao, and a daughter, Anzi. Pan
Xichun took on one of the ministries of the Yingzhou government,
which meant she travelled fairly often to Long Island, to Qito, and
around the Dahai Rim countries. Bao stayed at home and worked for
the Chinese embassy, looked after the children, and wrote and
taught history at the city college. It was a good life in
Fangzhang, that most beautiful and dramatic of all cities, and
sometimes it would seem to him that his youth in revolutionary
China was a kind of vivid intense dream he had once had. Scholars
came over to talk to him sometimes, and he would reminisce about
those years, and once or twice he even wrote about parts of it
himself, but it was all at a great distance.
Then one day he felt a bump on the side of Pan Xichun's
right breast; cancer, and a year later, after much suffering, she
died. In her usual way she had gone on before.
Bao, desolate, was left to raise their children. His son
Zhao was already almost grown, and soon took a job in Aozhou,
across the sea, so that Bao rarely saw him in person. His daughter
Anzi was younger, and he did what he could, hiring women to live in
and help him, but somehow he tried too hard, he cared too much;
Anzi got angry with him often, moved out when she could, got
married, and seldom came to see him after that. Somehow he had
botched that and he didn't even know how.
He was offered a post in Beijing, and he returned, but it
was too strange; he felt like a preta, wandering the scenes of some
past life. He stayed in the western quarters of the city, new
neighbourhoods that bore no particular resemblance to the ones he
had known. The Forbidden City he forbade to himself. He tried
reading and writing, thinking that if only he could write
everything down, then it would never come back again.
After not too many years of that he took a post in Pyinkayaing,
the capital of Burma, joining the League of All Peoples' Agency for
Harmony with Nature, as a Chinese representative and diplomat at
large.
3. Writing Burmese History
Pyinkayaing was located on the westernmost channel of the
Mouths of the Irrawaddy, that great river road of Burmese life,
which was by now urbanized all across the mouths in one enormous
seafront city, or congeries of cities, all the way up each branch
of the delta to Henzada, and indeed from there up the river all the
way to Mandalay. But it was Pyinkayaing where the super city
could be seen at its most huge, the river channels running out into
the sea like grand avenues, between stupendous skyscrapers that
made of the rivers deep gorges, bridged by innumerable streets and
alleyways, alternating with the many more numerous canals, all
criss crossing each other in hundreds of overlapping grids,
and all dominated by the deep canyons formed by the myriad tall
buildings.
Bao was given an apartment on the hundred and sixtieth
floor of one of the skyscrapers set on the main channel of the
Irrawaddy, near the seafront. Walking out onto his balcony for the
first time he was amazed at the view, and spent most of an
afternoon looking around: south to sea, west to Pagoda Rock, cast
along the other mouths of the Irrawaddy, and upstream, looking down
onto the rooftops of the supercity, into the million windows of the
other skyscrapers lining the riverbanks and crowding the rest of
the delta. All the buildings had been sunk deep through the
alluvial soil of the delta to bedrock, and a famous system of dams
and locks and offshore breakwaters had secured the city against
floods from upstream, high tides from the Indian Ocean, typhoons --
even the rise in sea level that was now beginning did not
fundamentally threaten the city, which was in truth a kind of
collec tion of ships anchored permanently in the bedrock, so
that if eventually they had to abandon the 'ground floors' and move
up it would be, just one more engineering challenge, something to
keep the local construction industry occupied in years to come. The
Burmese were not afraid of anything.
Looking down at the little junks and water taxis brushing
their deli cate white calligraphy over the blue brown
water, Bao seemed to read a kind of message in them, just outside
the edge of his conscious comprehension. He understood now why the
Burmese wrote 'Burmese history', because maybe it was true -- maybe
all that had ever happened, had happened so that it could collide
here, and make something greater than any of its elements. As when
the wakes from several different water taxis struck all together,
shooting a bolt of white water higher than any individual wave ever
would have got.
This monumental city, Pyinkayaing, was then Bao's home
for the next several years. He took a cable car high across the
river to the League offices on the other bank, and worked on the
balance with nature problems beginning to plague the
world, wreaking such damage that even, Burma itself might some day
suffer from it, unless they were to remove Pyinkayaing to the moon,
which did not seem completely impossible given their enormous
energy and confidence.
But they had not been a power long enough to have seen
the way the wheel turns. Over the years Bao visited a hundred lands
as part of his job, and many reminded him that in the long run of
time, civilizations rise, then fall; and most, upon falling, never
really rose again. The locus of power wandered the face of the
earth like some poor restless immortal, following the sun.
Presumably Burma would not be immune to that fate.
Bao now flew in the latest spaceplanes, popping out of
the atmosphere like the artillery shells of the Long War, and
landing on the other side of the globe three hours later; he also
flew in the giant airships that still conveyed the bulk of traffic
and cargo around the world, their slowness more than compensated
for by their capacity, humming around like great ships in the sea
of air, for the most part unsinkable. He conferred with officials
in most of the countries of the Earth, and came to
understand that their balance with nature problems were
partly a matter of pure numbers, the human population of the planet
rebounding so strongly from the Long War that it was now
approaching ten billion people; and this could be more people than
the planet could sustain, or so many scientists speculated,
especially the more conservative ones, those of a kind of Daoist
temperament, found in great numbers in China and Yingzhou
especially.
But also, beyond the sheer number of people, there was
the accumulation of things, and the uneven distribution of wealth,
so that people in Pyinkayaing thought nothing of throwing a party
in Ingoli or Fangzhang, spending ten years of a Maghribi's life
earnings on a weekend of pleasure; while people in Firanja and
Inka. still frequently suffered from malnutrition. This discrepancy
existed despite the efforts of the League of All Peoples and the
egalitarian movements in China, Firanja, Travancore and Yingzhou.
In China the egalitarian movement came not just from Zhu's vision,
but also from the Daoist ideas of balance, as Zhu would always
point out. In Travancore it rose out of the Buddhist idea of
compassion, in Yingzhou from the Hodenosaunee idea of the equality
of all, in Firanja from the idea of justice before God. Everywhere
the idea existed, but the world still belonged to a tiny minority
of rich; wealth had been accumulating for centuries in a few hands,
and the people lucky enough to be born into this old aristocracy
lived in the old manner, with the rights of kings now spread among
the wealthy of the Earth. Money had replaced land as the basis of
power, and money flowed according to its own gravity, its laws of
accumulation, which though divorced from nature, were nevertheless
the laws ruling most countries on Earth, no matter their religious
or philosophical ideas of love, compassion, charity, equality,
goodness and the like. Old Zhu had been right: humanity's behaviour
was still based on old laws, which determined how food and land and
water and surplus wealth were owned, how the labour of the ten
billions was owned. If these laws did not change, the living shell
of the Earth might well be wrecked, and inherited by seagulls and
ants and cockroaches.
So Bao travelled, and talked, and wrote, and travelled
again. For most of his career he worked for the League's Agency for
Harmony with Nature, trying for several years to coordinate efforts
in the Old World and the New to keep some of the greater mammals
alive; many of them were going extinct, and without action they
would lose most of them, in an anthropogenic extinction event to
rival even the global crashes now being found in the fossil
record.
He came back from these diplomatic missions to
Pyinkayaing, after travelling in the big new airships that were a
combination of blimp and flyer, hovercraft and catamaran, skating
over the water or in the air depending on weather conditions and
freight loads. He looked down on the world from his apartment, and
saw the human relationship to nature drawn in the calligraphy of
the water taxis' wakes, the airships' contrails, the great canyons
formed by the city's skyscrapers. This was his world, changing
every year; and when he visited Beijing and tried to remember his
youth, or went to Kwinana in Aozhou, to see his son Zhao and family
there, or when he tried to remember Pan Xichun -- even when he
visited Fangzhang once, the actual site of those years -- he could
scarcely call them to mind. Or, to be more precise -- for he could
remember a great many things that had happened -- it was the
feeling for these things that was gone away, leached out by the
years. They if they had happened to someone else. As if they had
been were as if previous incarnations.
It was someone else in the League offices who thought to
invite Zhu Isao himself to Pyinkayaing, and teach a set of classes
to the League workers and anyone else who cared to attend. Bao was
surprised when he saw this notice; he had assumed that somewhere
along the way Zhu must have died, it had been so long since they
had all changed China together; and Zhu had been ancient then. But
that turned out to have been a youthful mistake on Bao's part; Zhu
was about ninety now, he was informed, meaning he had been only
about seventy years old at that time. Bao had to laugh at his
youthful miscalculation, so characteristic of the young. He signed
up for the course with great anticipation.
Zhu Isao turned out to be a sprightly white haired
old man, small but no smaller than he had been all those years
before, with a lively curious look in his eye. He shook Bao's hand
when Bao went up before the introductory lecture, and smiled a
slight but friendly smile: 'I remember you,' he said. 'One of Kung
Jianguo's officers, isn't that right?' And Bao gripped his hand
hard, ducking his head in assent. He sat down feeling warm.
The old man still walked with the ghost of a limp from that
terrible day. But he had been happy to see Bao.
In his first lecture he outlined his plan for the course,
which he hoped would be a series of conversations on history,
discussing how it was constructed, and what it meant, and how they
might use it to help them plot their course forwards through the
next difficult decades, 'when we have to learn at last how to
inhabit the Earth'.
Bao kept notes as he listened to the old man, tapping at
his little hand lectern, as did many others in the class. Zhu
explained that he hoped first to describe and discuss the various
theories of history that had been proposed through the centuries,
and then to analyse those theories, not only by testing them in the
description of actual events, 'difficult since events as such are
remembered for how well they prop up the various theories', but
also for how the theories themselves were structured, and what sort
of futures they implied, 'this being their chief use to us. I take
it that what matters in a history is what there is in it we can put
to use.'
So, over the next few months a pattern was set, and every
third day the group would meet in a room high in one of the League
buildings overlooking the Irrawaddy: a few score diplomats, local
students, and younger historians from everywhere, many of whom had
come to Pyinkayaing specifically for this class. All sat and
listened to Zhu talk, and though Zhu kept encouraging them to enter
the discussion and make of it a large conversation, they were
mostly content to listen to him think aloud, only egging him on
with their questions. 'Well, but I am here to listen too,' he would
object, and then, when pressed to continue, would relent. 'I must
be like Pao Ssu, I suppose, who used to say "I am a good listener,
I listen by talking".'
So they made their way through discussions of the four
civilizations theory, made famous by al Katalan; and
al Lanzhou's collision of cultures theory, of progress by
conflict ('clearly accurate in some sense, as there has been much
conflict and much progress'); the somewhat similar conjunction
theories, by which unnoticed conjunctions of developments, often in
unrelated fields of endeavour, had great consequences. Zhu's many
examples of this included one he presented with a small smile: the
introduction of coffee and printing presses at around the same time
in caliphate Iran, causing a great outpouring of literature. They
discussed the theory of the eternal return, which combined Hindu
cosmologies with the latest in physics to suggest that the universe
was so vast and ancient that everything possible had not only
happened, but had happened an infinite number of times ('limited
usefulness to that one, except to explain the feeling you get that
things have happened before'); and the other cyclical theories,
often based on the cycle of the seasons, or the life of the
body.
Then he mentioned 'dharma history' or 'Burmese history',
meaning any history that believed there was progress towards some
goal making itself manifest in the world, or in plans for the
future; also 'Bodhisattva history', which suggested that there were
enlightened cultures that had sprung ahead somehow, and then gone
back to the rest and worked to bring them forwards -- early China,
Travancore, the Hodenosaunee, the Japanese diaspora, Iran -- all
these cultures had been proposed as possible examples of this
pattern, 'though it seems to be a matter of individual or cultural
judgment, which is less than useful to historians seeking a global
pattern. Although it is a weak criticism to call them tautological,
for the truth is every theory is tautological. Our reality itself
is a tautology.'
Someone brought up the old question of whether the 'great
man' or mass movements' were the principal force for change, but
Zhu immediately dismissed this as a false problem. 'We are all
great men, yes?'
'Maybe you are,' muttered the person sitting next to
Bao.
What has mattered are the moments of exposure in every
life, when habit is no longer enough, and choices have to be made.
That's when everyone becomes the great man, for a moment; and the
choices made in these moments, which come all too frequently, then
combine to make history. In that sense I suppose I come down on the
side of the masses, in that it has been a collective process,
whatever else it is.
'Also, this formulation "the great man" of course should
bring up the question of women; are they included in this
description? Or should we describe history as being the story of
women wresting back the political power that they lost with the
introduction of agriculture and the creation of surplus wealth?
Would the gradual and unfinished defeat of patriarchy be the larger
story of history? Along with, perhaps, the gradual and uncertain
defeat of infectious disease? So that we have been battling
micro parasites and macro parasites, eh? The bugs and the
patriarchs?'
He smiled at this, and went on to discuss the struggle
against the Four Great Inequalities, and other concepts grown out
of the work of Kang and al Lanzhou.
After that, Zhu took a few sessions to describe various
'phase change moments' in global history that he thought
significant -- the Japanese diaspora, the independence of the
Hodenosaunee, the shift of trade from land to sea, the Samarqand
Flowering, and so forth. He also spent quite a few sessions
discussing the latest movement among historians and social
scientists, which he called 'animal history', the study of humanity
in biological terms, so that it became not a matter of religions
and philosophies, but more a study of primates struggling for food
and territory.
It was many weeks into the course when he said, 'Now we
are ready to come to what interests me extremely these days, which
is not history's content, but its form.
'For we see immediately that what we call history has at
least two meanings to it, first, simply what happened in the past,
which no one can know, as it disappears in time -- and then second,
all the stories we tell about what happened.
'These stories are of different kinds, of course, and
people like Rabindra and Scholar White have categorized them. First
come eyewitness accounts, and chronicles of events made soon after
things happened, also documents and records -- these are history as
wheat still in the field, as yet unharvested or baked, thus given
beginnings or ends, or causes. Only later come these baked
histories, that attempt to coordinate and reconcile source
materials, that not only describe but explain.
'Later still come the works that eat and digest these
baked accounts, and attempt to reveal what they are doing, what
their relationship to reality is, how we use them, that kind of
thing -- philosophies of history, epistemologies, what have you.
Many digestions use methods pioneered by Ibrahim al Lanzhou,
even when they denounce his results. Certainly there is great
sustenance in going back to al Lanzhou's texts and seeing what he
had to say. In one useful passage, for instance, he points out that
we can differentiate between explicit arguments, and more deeply
hidden unconscious ideological biases. These latter can be teased
out by identifying the mode of emplotment chosen to tell the tale.
The emplotment scheme al Lanzhou used comes from Rabindra's
typology of story types, a rather simplistic scheme, but
fortunately, as al Lanzhou pointed out, historians are often
fairly naive storytellers, and use one or another of Rabindra's
basic types of emplotment rather schematically, compared to the
great novelists like Cao Xueqin or Murasaki, who constantly mix
them. Thus a history like Than Oo's is what some call "Burmese
history", rather literally in this case, but that I would prefer to
call "dharma history", being a romance in which humanity struggles
to work out its dharma, to better itself, and so generation by
generation to make progress, fighting for justice, and an end to
want, with the strong implication that we will eventually work our
way up to the source of the peach blossom stream, and the age of
great peace will come into being. It is a secular version of the
Hindu and Buddhist tale of nirvana successfully achieved. Thus
Burmese history, or Shambala tales, or any teleological history
that asserts we are all progressing in some way, are dharma
histories.
'The opposite of this mode is the ironic or satiric mode,
which I call entropic history, from the physical sciences, or
nihilism, or, in the usage of certain old legends, the story of the
fall. In this mode, everything that humanity tries to do fails, or
rebounds against it, and the combination of biological reality and
moral weakness, of death and evil, means that nothing in human
affairs can succeed. Taken to its extreme this leads to the Five
Great Pessimisms, or the nihilism of Shu Shen, or the antidharma of
Buddha's rival Purana Kassapa, people who say it is all a chaos
without causes, and that taken all in all, it would have been
better never to have been born.
'These two modes of emplotment represent end point
extremes, in that one says we are masters of the world and can
defeat death, while the other says that we are captives of the
world, and can never win against death. It might be thought these
then represent the only two possible modes, but inside these
extremes Rabindra identified two other modes of emplotment, which
he called tragedy and comedy. These two are mixed and partial modes
compared to their absolutist outliers, and Rabindra suggested they
both have to do with reconciliation. In comedy the reconciliation
is of people with other people, and with society at large. The
weave of family with family, tribe with clan -- this is how
comedies end, this is what makes them comedy: the marriage with
someone from a different clan, and the return of spring.
'Tragedies make a darker reconciliation. Scholar White
said of them, they tell the story of humanity face to face with
reality itself, therefore facing death and dissolution and defeat.
Tragic heroes are destroyed, but for those who survive to tell
their tale, there is a rise in consciousness, in awareness of
reality, and this is valuable in and of itself, dark though that
knowledge may be.'
At this point in his lecture Zhu Isao paused, and looked
around the room until he had located Bao, and nodded at him; and
though it seemed they had only been speaking of abstract things, of
the shapes stories took, Bao felt his heart clench within him.
Zhu proceeded: 'Now, I suggest that as historians, it is
best not to get trapped in one mode or another, as so many do; it
is too simple a solution, and does not match well with events as
experienced. instead we should weave a story that holds in its
pattern as much as possible. It should be like the Daoists'
yin yang symbol, with eyes of tragedy and comedy dotting the
larger fields of dharma and nihilism. That old figure is the
perfect image of all our stories put together, with a dark dot of
our comedies marring the brilliance of dharma, and the blaze of
tragic knowledge emerging from black nothingness.
'The ironic history by itself, we can reject out of hand.
Of course we are bad; of course things go wrong. But why dwell on
it? Why pretend this is the whole story? Irony is merely death
walking among us. It doesn't take up the challenge, it isn't life
speaking.
'But I suppose we also have to reject the purest version
of dharma history, the transcending of this world and this life,
the perfection of our way of being. It may happen in the bardo, if
there is a bardo, but in this world, all is mixed. We are animals,
death is our fate. So at best we could say the history of the
species has to be made as much like dharma as possible, by a
collective act of the will.
'This leaves the middle modes, comedy and tragedy.' Zhu
stopped, held up his hands, perplexed. 'Surely we have a great deal
of both of these. Perhaps the way to construct a proper history is
to inscribe the whole figure, and say that for the individual,
ultimately, it is a tragedy; for the society, comedy. If we can
make it so.'
Zhu Isao's own predilection was clearly for comedy. He
was a social creature. He was always inviting Bao and some others
from the class, including the League's Minister for Health of the Natural World,
to the rooms provided for him during his stay, and these small
gatherings were sparked by his laughter and curiosity about things.
Even his research amused him. He had had a great many books shipped
down from Beijing, so that every room of his apartment was filled
like a warehouse. Because of his growing conviction that history
should be the story of everyone who had ever lived, he was now
studying anthologies of biography as a genre, and he had many
examples of the form in his apartment. This explained the
tremendous number of volumes standing everywhere, in tall unsteady
stacks. Zhu picked up one huge tome, almost too heavy for him to
lift: 'This is a first volume,' he said with a grin, 'but I've
never found the rest of the series. A book like this is only the
antechamber to an entire unwritten library.'
The collection of lives genre seemed to have
begun, he said as he tapped the piles affectionately, in religious
literatures: collections of the lives of Christian saints and
Islamic martyrs, also Buddhist texts that described lives through
long sequences of reincarnations, a speculative exercise that Zhu
clearly enjoyed very much: 'Dharma history at its purest, a kind of
proto politics. Plus they can be so funny. You see a
literalist like Dhu Hsien trying to match up his subjects' death
and birth dates exactly, so that he creates strings of prominent
historical actors through several reincarnations, asserting that he
can tell they have always been one soul by what they do, but the
difficulties of getting the dates to match up cause him in the end
to select some odd additions to his sequences to make them all
match life to life. Finally he has to theorize a "work hard then
relax" pattern in these immortals, to justify those who alternate
lives as geniuses and generals with careers as minor portrait
artists or cobblers. But the dates always match up!' Zhu grinned
delightedly.
He tapped other tall piles that were examples of the
genre he was studying: Ganghadara's. 'Forty six
Transmigrations', the Tibetan text 'Twelve Manifestations of
Padmasambhava', the guru who established Buddhism in Tibet; also
the 'Biography of the Gyatso Rimpoche, Lives One Through Nineteen',
which brought the Dalai Lama up to the present; Bao had once met
this man, and had not realized then that his full biography would
take up so many volumes.
Zhu Isao also had in his apartment copies of Plutarch's
'Lives', and Liu Xiang's 'Biographies of Exemplary Women',
from about the same time as the Plutarch; but he admitted that he
was finding these texts not as interesting as the reincarnation
chronicles, which in certain cases spent as much time on their
subjects' time in the bardo and the other five lokas as they did on
their time as humans. He also liked the 'Autobiography of the
Wandering Jew', and the 'Testaments of the Trivicurn jati', and a
beautiful volume, 'Two Hundred and Fifty--three Travellers', as
well as a scurrilous looking collection, possibly
pornographic, called 'Tantric Thief Across Five Centuries'. All of
these Zhu described to his visitors with great enthusiasm. They
seemed to him to hold some kind of key to the human story, assuming
there could be any such thing: history as a simple accumulation of
lives. 'After all, in the end all the great moments of history have
taken place inside people's heads. The moments of change, or the
clinamen as the Greeks called it.'
This moment, Zhu said, had become the organizing
principle and perhaps the obsession of the Samarqandi anthologist
Old Red Ink, who had collected the lives in his reincarnation
compendium using something like the clinamen moment to choose his
exemplars, as each entry in his collection contained a moment when
the subjects, always reincarnated with names that began with the
same letters, came to crossroads in their lives and made a swerve
away from what they might have been expected to do.
'I like the naming device,' Bao remarked, leafing through
one volume of this collection.
'Well, Old Red Ink explains in one marginalia that it is
merely a mnemonic for the ease of the reader, and that of course in
reality every soul comes back with every physical particular
changed. No telltale rings, no birthmarks, no same names -- he
would not have you think his method was anything like the old folk
tales, oh no.'
The Minister for Natural Health asked about a stack of
extremely slender volumes, and Zhu smiled happily. As a reaction
against these endless compendiums, he explained, he had got into
the habit of buying any books he came across that seemed required
by their subject matter to be short, often so short that their
titles would scarcely fit on their spines. Thus 'Secrets to
Successful Marriage', or 'Good Reasons to Have Hope for the
Future', or 'Stories About Not Being Afraid of Ghosts'.
'But I have not read them, I must admit. They exist only for
their titles, which say it all. They could be blank inside.'
Later, outside on his balcony, Bao sat next to Zhu
watching the city flow beneath them. They drank cup after cup of
green tea, talking about many different things, and as the night
grew late, and Zhu feeling pensive, it seemed, Bao said to him, 'Do
you ever think of Kung Jianguo? Do you ever think of those times
any more?'
'No, not very often,' Zhu admitted, looking at him
directly. 'Do you?'
Bao shook his head. 'I don't know why. It's not as if
it's so very painful to recall. But it seems so long ago.'
'Yes. Very long.'
'I see you still have a bit of a limp from that day.'
'Yes, I do. I don't like it. I walk slower and it's not
so bad. But it is still there. I set off metal detectors in the
high security zones.' He laughed. 'But it is a long time ago.
So many lives ago I get them all confused, don't you?' And
he smiled.
One of Zhu Isao's last sessions was a discussion of what
purpose the study of history might have, and how it might help them
now in their current predicament.
Zhu was tentative in this matter. 'It may be no help at
all,' he said. 'Even if we gained a complete understanding of what
happened in the past, it might not help us. We are still
constrained in our actions in the present. In a way we can say that
the past has mortgaged the future, or bought it, or tied it up, in
laws and institutions and habits. But perhaps it helps to know as
much as we can, just to suggest ways forward. You know, this matter
of residual and emergent that we discussed -- that each period in
history is composed of residual elements of past cultures, and
emergent elements that later on will come more fully into being
this is a powerful lens. And only the study of history allows
one to make this distinction, if it is possible at all. Thus we can
look at the world we live in, and say, these things are residual
laws from the age of the Four Great Inequalities, still binding us.
They must go. On the other hand we can look at more unfamiliar
elements of our time, like China's communal ownership of land, and
say, perhaps these are emergent qualities that will be more
prominent in the future; they look helpful; I will support these.
Then again, there may be residual elements
that have always helped us, and need to be retained. So
it is not as simple a matter as "new is good, old is bad".
Distinctions need to be made. But the more we understand, the finer
we can make the distinctions.
'I begin to think that this matter of "late emergent
properties" that the physicists talk about when they discuss
complexity and cascading sensitivities, is an important concept for
historians. justice may be a late emergent property. And maybe we
can glimpse the beginnings of it emerging; or maybe it emerged long
ago, among the primates and proto humans, and is only now
gaining leverage in the world, aided by the material possibility of
post scarcity. It is hard to say.'
He smiled again his little smile. 'Good words to end this
session.'
His final meeting was called 'What Remains to be
Explained', and consisted of questions that he was still mulling
over after all his years of study and contemplation. He made
comments on his list of questions, but not many, and Bao had to
write as fast as he could to get the questions themselves
recorded:
What Remains to be Explained Why has there been
inequality in accumulation of goods since the earliest recorded
history? What causes the ice ages to come and go? Could Japan have
won its war of independence without the fortuitous combination of
the Long War and the earthquake and fire striking Edo? Where did
all the Roman gold end up? Why does power corrupt? Was there any
way that the native peoples of the New World could have been saved
from the devastation of Old World diseases? When did people first
arrive in the New World? Why were the civilizations on Yingzhou and
Inka at such different stages of development? Why can't gravity be
reconciled mathematically with pulse microprobability? Would
Travancore have initiated the modern period and dominated the Old
World, if the Kerala had never lived? Is there life after death, or
transmigration of souls? Did the polar expedition of the
fifty second year of the Long War reach the south pole? What
causes well fed and secure people to work for the subjugation
and immiseration of starving insecure people? If al Alemand
had conquered Skandistan, would the Sami people have survived? If
the Shanghai Conference had not arranged such punitive reparations,
would the postwar world have been more peaceful? How many people
can the Earth support? Why is there evil? How did the Hodenosaunee
invent their form of government? Which disease or combination of
diseases killed the Christians of Firanja? Does technology drive
history? Would things have turned out differently if the birth of
science in Samarqand had not been delayed in its dispersal by the
plague? Did the Phoenicians cross the Atlantic to the New World?
Will any mammals larger than a fox survive the next century? Is the
Sphinx thousands of years older than the Pyramids? Do gods exist?
How can we return the animals to the earth? How can we make a
decent existence? How can we give to our children and the
generations following a world restored to health?
Soon after that final session , and a big party, Zhu Isao
returned to Beijing, and Bao never saw him again.
They worked hard in the years after Zhu's visit to enact
programmes that helped to frame some answers to his final
questions. Just as the geologists had been greatly helped in their
labours by the construction of a framework of understanding based
on the movement of the broken eggshell plates of the crust, so the
bureaucrats and technocrats and scientists and diplomats at the
League of All Peoples were helped in their endeavours by Zhu's
theoretical considerations. It helps to have a plan! as Zhu had
often remarked.
And so Bao criss crossed the world, meeting and
talking to people, helping to put certain strands into place,
thickening the warp and weft of treaties and agreements by which
all the peoples on the planet were tied together. He worked
variously on land tenure reform, forest management, animal
protection, water resources, panchayat support and divestiture of
accumulated wealth, chipping away at the obdurate blocks of
privilege left in the wake of the Long War and all that had
happened in the centuries before it. Everything went very slowly,
and progress was always in small increments, but what Bao noticed
from time to time was that improvements in one part of the world
situation often helped elsewhere, so that, for instance, the
institution of panchayat governments at the local level in China
and the Islamic states led to increased power for more and more
people, especially where they adopted the Travancori law of
requiring at least two of every five panchayat members to be women;
and this in turn mitigated many land problems. Indeed, as many of
the world's problems stemmed from too many people competing for too
few resources, using too crude technologies, another happy result
of the panchayat empowerment of localities and of women was that
birthrates dropped rapidly and dramatically. The replacement rate
for a population was 2.I births per woman, and before the Long War
the world rate had been more like five; in the poorest countries,
more like seven or eight. Now, in every country where women exerted
the full range of rights advocated by the League of All Peoples,
the replacement rate had fallen to less than three, and often less
than two; this, combined with improvements in agriculture and other
technologies, boded well for the future. it was the ultimately
hopeful expression of the warp and the weft, of the principle of
late emergent properties. It seemed, though everything went very
slowly, that they might be able to concoct some kind of dharmic
history after all. Perhaps; it was not yet clear; but some work got
done.
So when Bao read of Zhu Isao's death, some years later,
he groaned and threw the paper to the floor. He spent the day out
on his balcony, feeling unaccountably bereft. Really there was
nothing to mourn, everything to celebrate: the great one had lived
over a hundred years, had helped to change China and then all the
world; late in life he had appeared to be thoroughly enjoying
himself, going around and listening by talking. He had given the
impression of someone who knew his place in the world.
But Bao did not know his place. Contemplating the immense
city below him, looking up the great watery canyons, he realized
that he had been living in this place for over ten years, and he
still didn't know a thing about it. He was always leaving or coming
back, always looking down on things from a balcony, eating in the
same little hole in the wall, talking to colleagues
from the League offices, spending most of his mornings and evenings
reading. He was almost sixty now, and he didn't know what he was
doing or how he was supposed to live. The huge city was like a
machine, or a ship half sunk in the shallows. It was no help to
him. He had worked every day trying to extend Kung and Zhu's work,
to understand history and work on it in the moment of change, also
to explain it to others, reading and writing, reading and writing,
thinking that if he could only explain it then it wouldn't oppress
him quite so much. It did not seem to have worked. He had the
persistent feeling that everyone who ever meant anything to him had
already died.
When he went back inside his apartment, he found a
message on the screen of his lectern from his daughter Anzi, the
first he had received from her in a long time. She had given birth
to a daughter of her own, and wondered if Bao wanted to visit and
meet his new grandchild. He typed an affirmative reply and packed
his bag.
Anzi and her husband Deng lived above Shark Point, in one
of the crowded hilly neighbourhoods on the bay side of Fangzhang.
Their baby girl was named Fengyun, and Bao enjoyed very much taking
her out on the tram and walking her in a stroller around the park
at the south end of town, overlooking the Gold Gate. There was
something about her look that reminded him very strongly of Pan
Xichun -- a curve of the cheek, a stubborn look in her eye. These
traits we pass on. He watched ber sleep, and the fog roll in
through the Gate, under and over the sweep of the new bridge,
listening to a feng shui guru lecture a small class sitting at his
feet, 'you can see that this is the most physically beautiful
setting of any city on Earth', which seemed true enough to Bao;
even Pyinkayaing had no prospect compared to this, the glories of
the Burmese capital were all artefactual, and without those it was
just like any other delta mouth; unlike this sublime place he had
loved so in a previous existence, 'oh no, I don't think so, only
geomantic imbeciles would have located the city on the other side
of the strait, apart from practical considerations of street
plaiting, there is the intrinsic qi of place, its dragon arteries
are too exposed to the wind and fog, it is best to leave it as a
park'. Certainly the opposing peninsula made a beautiful park,
green and hilly across the water, sunlight streaming down on it
through cloud, the whole scene so vibrant and gorgeous that Bao
lifted the babe up out of her stroller to show it all to her; he
pointed her in the four directions; and the scene blurred before
his eyes as if he too were a babe. Everything became a flow of
shapes, cloudy masses of brilliant colour swimming about, vivid and
glowing, stripped of their meanings as known things, blue and white
above, yellow below ... He shivered, feeling very strange. It was
as if he had been looking through the babe's eyes; and the
child seemed fretful. So he took her back home, and Anzi reproached
him for letting her get cold. 'And her nappy needs changing!'
'I know that! I'll do it.'
'No I'll do it, you don't know how.'
'I most certainly do too, I changed your nappies often
enough in my time.'
She sniffed disapprovingly, as if he had been rude to do
so, invading her privacy perhaps. He grabbed up the book he was
reading and went out for a walk, upset. Somehow things were still
awkward between them.
The great city hummed, the islands in the bay with their
skyscrapers looking like the vertical mountains of south China, the
slopes of Mount Tamalpi equally crowded with huge buildings; but
the bulk of the city hugged its hills tightly, most of it still
human scale, buildings two and three storeys tall, with upturned
corners on all the roofs in the oldfashioned way, like a city of
pagodas. This was the city he had loved, the city he had lived in
during the years of his marriage.
And so he was a preta here. Like any other hungry ghost,
he walked over the hill to the ocean side, and soon he found
himself in the neighbourhood where they had lived when Pan was
alive. He walked through the streets without even thinking about
navigating his way, and there he was: the old home.
He stood before the building, an ordinary apartment
block, now painted a pale yellow. They had lived in an apartment
upstairs, always in the wind, just as it was now. He stared at the
building. He felt nothing. He tested it, he tried to feel
something: no. The main thing he felt was wonder that he could feel
so little; a rather pale and unsatisfactory feeling to have at such
a momentous confrontation with his past, but there it was. The
children each had had a bedroom to themselves up there, and Bao and
Pan had slept on an unrolled futon in the living room, the stove of
the kitchenette right at their feet; it had been a cricket box of a
place, really, but there they had lived, and for a time it had
seemed it would always be just like that, husband, wife, son,
daughter, clothed in a tiny apartment in Fangzhang, and every day
the same, every week the same, in a round that would last for ever.
Thus the power of thoughtlessness, the power people had to forget
what time was always doing.
He took off walking again, south towards the Gate, on the busy
promenade high over the ocean, the trams squealing by. When he
reached the park overlooking the strait he returned to the spot
where he had been just hours before with his granddaughter, and
looked around again. Everything remained the same this time,
retaining its shape and its meaning; no flow into colours, no
yellow ocean. That had been an odd experience, and he shuddered
again remembering it.
He sat on the low wall overlooking the water, and took
his book from his jacket pocket, a book of poems translated from
the ancient Sanskrit. He opened it at random, and read, 'This verse
from Kalidasa's "Sakuntala" is considered by many scholars of
Sanskrit to be the most beautiful in the language.'
Ramyani viksya madhurans ca nisamya sabdan paryutsuki
bhavati yat sukhito pi jantuh tac cetasa smarati nunarn
abodhapurvarn bhavasthirani jananantarasauhrdani. Even the
man who is happy glimpses something Or a thread of sound touches
him And his heart overflows with a longing he does not
recognize Then it must be that he is remembering a place out
of reach people he loved In a life before this their pattern
Still there in him waiting He looked up, looked around. An
awesome place, this great gate to the sea. He thought, maybe I
should stay here. Maybe this day is telling me something. Maybe
this is my home, hungry ghost or not. Maybe we cannot avoid
becoming hungry ghosts, no matter where we live; so might as well
be home.
He walked back to his daughter's. A letter had arrived on
his lectern from an acquaintance of his, living at the farm
station of Fangzhang's college, inland from the city a hundred li,
in the big central valley. This acquaintance from his Beijing years
had heard he was visiting the area, and wondered if he would like
to come out and teach a class or two a history of the Chinese
revolution, perhaps foreign relations, League work, whatever
he liked. Because of his association with Kung, among other things,
he would be viewed by the students as a living piece of world
history. 'A living fossil, you mean,' he snorted. Like that fish
whose species was four hundred million years old, dragged up
recently in a net off Madagascar. Old Dragonfish. He wrote back to
his acquaintance and accepted the invitation, then wrote to
Pyinkayaing and put in for a more extended leave of absence.
4. The Red Egg
The farm extension of the college, now a little college
itself, was clustered at the west end of a town called Putatoi,
west of the North Lung River, on the banks of Puta Creek, a lively
brook pouring out of the coastal range and creating a riverine
gallery of oaks and brush on an alluvial berm just a few hands
higher than the rest of the valley. The valley otherwise was given
over entirely to rice cultivation; the big rivers flowing into it
out of the mountains on both sides had been diverted into an
elaborate irrigation system, and the already flat valley floor had
been shaved even flatter, into a stepwise system of broad flooded
terraces, each terrace just a few fingers higher than the one below
it. All the dikes in this system curved, as part of some kind of
erosion resistance strategy, and so the landscape looked somewhat
like Annam or Kampuchea, or anywhere in tropical Asia really,
except that wherever the land was not flooded, it was shockingly
dry. Straw coloured hills rose to the west, in the first of
the coastal ranges between the valley and the bay; then to the east
the grand snow topped peaks of the Gold Mountains stood like a
distant Himalaya.
Putatoi was tucked into a nest of trees in this broad
expanse of green and gold. It was a village in the Japanese style,
with shops and apartments clustered by the stream, and small
groupings of cottages ringing the town centre north of the stream.
After Pyinkayaing it seemed tiny, dowdy, sleepy, green, dull. Bao
liked it.
The students at the college mainly came from farms in the
valley, and they were mostly studying to be rice farmers or orchard
managers.
Their questions in the Chinese history class that Bao
taught were amazingly ignorant, but they were fresh faced and
cheerful youths; they didn't care in the slightest who Bao was, or
what he had done in the postwar period so long ago. He liked that
too.
His little seminar of older students, who were studying
history specif ically, were more intrigued by his presence
among them. They asked him about Zhu Isao, of course, and even
about Kung Jianguo, and about the Chinese revolution. Bao answered
as if it were a period of history that he had studied extensively,
and perhaps written a book or two about. He did not offer them
personal reminiscences, and most of the time felt that he had none
to offer. They watched him very closely as he spoke.
'What you have to understand,' he told them, 'is that no
one won the Long War. Everyone lost, and we have not recovered from
it even yet.
'Remember what you have been taught about it. It lasted
sixty seven years, two--thirds of a century, and it's
estimated now that almost a billion people died in it. Think of it
this way; I've been talking to a biologist here who works on
population issues, and he has tried to estimate how many humans
have lived in all of history, from the start of the species until
now.'
Some in the class laughed at such an idea.
'You haven't beard of this? He estimates that there have
been about forty billion humans to have lived since the species
came into being although of course that was no determinate moment,
so this is just a game we play. But it means that if there have
been forty billion humans in all history, then one in forty of all
the people ever to have lived, were killed in the Long War. That's
a big percentage!
'So. The whole world fell into disarray, and now we've
lived in the war's shadow for so long we don't know what full
sunlight would look like. Science keeps making advances, but many
of them rebound on us. The natural world is being poisoned by our
great numbers and our crude industries. And if we quarrel again,
all could be lost. You are probably aware, certainly most
governments are, that science could provide us very quickly with
extremely powerful bombs, they say one bomb per city, and so that
threat hangs over us too. If any country tries for such a bomb, all
may follow.
'So, all these dangers inspired the creation of the League of
All Peoples, in the hope of making a global system that could cope
with our global problems. That came on the heels of the Year One
effort, standardized measurements, and all the rest, to form what
has been called the scientizing of the world, or the modernization,
or the Hodenosaunee programme, among other names for it. Our time,
in effect.'
'In Islam they don't like all that,' one student pointed
out.
'Yes, this has been a problem for them, how to reconcile
their beliefs with the scientizing movement. But we have seen
changes in Nsara spread through most of Firanja, and what a united
Firanja implies is that they have agreed there is more than one way
to be a good Muslim. If your Islam is a form of sufism that is
Buddhist in all but name, and you say it is all right, then it is
hard to condemn the Buddhists in the next valley. And this is
happening in many places. All the strands are beginning to weave
together, you see. We have had to do it to survive.'
At the end of that first set of classes, the history
teachers invited Bao to stay on and do it on a regular basis; and
after some thought, he accepted their invitation. He liked these
people, and the work that came from them. The bulk of the college's
efforts had to do with growing more food, with fitting people into
the natural systems of the earth less clum sily. History was
part of this, and the history teachers were friendly. Also a single
woman his age, a lecturer in linguistics, had been particularly
friendly through the time of his stay. They had eaten quite a few
meals together, and got into the habit of meeting for lunch. Her
name was Gao Qirignian.
Bao moved into the small group of cottages where Gao
lived, renting one next to hers that had come open at just the
right time. The cottages were Japanese in style, with thin walls
and big windows, all clustered around a common garden. It was a
nice little neighbourhood.
In the mornings Bao started to hoe and plant vegetables
in one corner of that central garden. Through a gap between the
cottages he could see the great valley oaks in their streamside
gallery; beyond them the green rice paddies, and the isolated peak
of Mount Miwok, over a hundred li away, south of the great delta.
To the cast and north, more rice paddies, curving green on green.
The coastal range lay to the west,
the Cold Mountains to the east. He rode an old bicycle to
the college for classes, and taught his smaller seminars at a set
of picnic tables by the side of the stream, under a stand of
enormous valley oaks. Every once in a while he would rent a little
airboat from the airport just west of town, and pilot it down the
delta to Fangzhang, to visit Anzi and her family. Though Bao and
Anzi remained stiff and fractious with each other, the repetition
of these visits eventually made them seem normal, a pleasant ritual
in most respects. They did not seem connected to his memories of
the past, but an event of their own. Well, Bao would say to Gao,
I'm going to go down to Fangzhang and bicker with my daughter.
Have fun, Gao would say.
Mainly he stayed in Putatoi, and taught classes. He liked
the young people and their fresh faces. He liked the people who
lived in the cluster of cottages around the garden. They worked in
agriculture, mostly, either in the college's agronomy labs and
experimental fields, or out in the paddies and orchards themselves.
That was what people did in this valley. The neighbours all gave
him advice on how best to cultivate his little garden, and very
often it was conflicting advice, which was no very reassuring thing
given that they were among the world's experts on the topic, and
that there might be more people than there was food in the world to
feed them. But that too was a lesson, and though it worried him, it
also made him laugh. And he liked the labour, the sitting in the
earth, weeding and looking at vegetables grow. Staring across rice
terraces at Mount Miwok. He babysat for some of the younger couples
in the cottages, and talked with them about the events of the town,
and spent the evenings out lawn bowling with a group who liked to
do that.
Before long the routines of this life became as if they
were the only ones he had ever known. One morning, babysitting for
a little girl who had caught the chicken pox, sitting by her as she
lay thoughtlessly in a lukewarm oatmeal bath, stoically flicking
the water with her finger and occasionally moaning like a small
animal, he felt a sudden gust of happiness sweep through him,
simply because he was the old widower of the neighbourhood, and
people used him as a babysitter. Old Dragonfish. There had been
just such a man back in Beijing, living in a hole in the wall by
the Big Red Gate, repairing shoes and watching the children in the
street.
The deep sense of solitude that had afflicted Bao since Pan's
death began to slip away. Although the people he lived among now
were not Kung, nor Pan, nor Zhu Isao -- not the companions of his
fate just people he had fallen in with by accident --
nevertheless, they were now his community. Maybe this was the way
it had always happened, with no fate ever involved; you simply fell
in with the people around you, and no matter what else happened in
history or the great world, for the individual it was always a
matter of local acquaintances -- the village, the platoon, the work
unit, the monastery or madressa, the zawiyya or farm or apartment
block, or ship, or neighbourhood -- these formed the true
circumference of one's world, some twenty or so speaking parts, as
if they were in a play together. And no doubt each cast included
the same character types, as in Noh drama or a puppet play. And so
now he was the old widower, the babysitter, the broken down
old bureaucrat poet, drinking wine by the stream and singing
nostalgically at the moon, scratching with a hoe in his
unproductive garden. It made him smile; it gave him pleasure. He
liked having neighbours, and he liked his role among them.
Time passed. He continued to teach a few classes,
arranging for his seminars to meet out under the valley oaks.
'History!' he would say to them. 'It's a hard thing to
get at. There is no easy way to imagine it. The Earth rolls around
the sun, three hundred and sixty five and a quarter days a
year, for year after year. Thousands of these years have passed.
Meanwhile a kind of monkey kept on doing more things, increasing in
number, taking over the planet by means of meanings. Eventually
much of the matter and life on the planet was entrained to their
use, and then they had to work out what they wanted to do, beyond
merely staying alive. Then they told each other stories of how they
had got where they were, what had happened, and what it meant.'
Bao sighed. His students watched him.
'The way Zhu told the story, it is a matter of tragedy
for the individual, comedy for the society. Over the long pulses of
historical time, reconciliations can be achieved, that's the
comedy; but every individual meets a tragic end. We have to admit
here that no matter what else we say, for the individual death is
always an end and a catastrophe.'
His students regarded him steadily, perfectly willing to
admit this, for they were all about twenty five years
old, while he was near seventy, and so they felt immortal. This was
perhaps the evolutionary usefulness of the elderly, Bao had
concluded: to give the young some kind of psychic shield from
reality, putting them under a description which allowed them to
ignore the fact that age and death would come to them too, and
could come early and out of sequence. A very useful function! And
it gave the old some amusement as well, as well as an extra pinch
from their own mortality to remind them to appreciate life.
So he smiled at their unfounded equanimity, and said,
'But all right, we admit that catastrophe, and the people who live
go on. Go on! They knit things together as best they can. So, what
Zhu Isao used to say, what my old comrade Kung Jianguo used to say,
was that each time a generation pulls itself together, and revolts
against the established order of things in an attempt to make them
more just, it is doomed to fail in some respects; but it succeeds
in others; and in any case it gives something to posterity, even if
it be only knowledge of how hard things are. Which makes it
retroactively a kind of success. And so people go on.'
A young Aozhani woman, come here like so many others did
from all around the world, to study agriculture with the old adepts
at the college, said, 'But since we are all reincarnated anyway, is
death really such a catastrophe?'
Bao felt himself take a long breath. Like most
scientifically educated people, he did not believe in
reincarnation. It was clearly just a story, something out of the
old religions. But still how to account for his feeling of
cosmic solitude, the feeling that he had lost his eternal
companions? How to account for that experience at the Gold Gate,
holding his granddaughter aloft?
He thought about it for so long that the students began
to look at each other. Then he said carefully to the young woman,
'Well, let us try something. Think that there might be no bardo. No
heavens or hells, no afterlife at all. No continuation of your
consciousness, or even your soul. Imagine all you are is an
expression of your body, and when it finally succumbs to some
disorder and dies, you are gone for good. Gone utterly.'
The girl and the others stared at him.
He nodded. 'Then indeed you have to think again what
reincarnation might mean. For we need it. We all need it. And there
might be some, way to reconceptualize it so it still has meaning,
even if you admit that the death of the self is real.'
'But how?' the young woman said.
'Well, first, of course, there are the children. We are
literally reincarnated in new beings, though they are the mix of
two previous beings -- two beings who will live on in the
twistingladders that detach and recombine, passed on to subsequent
generations.'
'But that's not our consciousness.'
'No. But consciousness gets reincarnated another way,
when the people of the future remember us, and use our language,
and unconsciously model their lives on ours, living out some
recombination of our values and habits. We live on in the way
future people think and talk. Even if things change so much that
only the biological habits are the same, they are real for all that
-- perhaps more real than consciousness, more rooted in reality.
Remember, reincarnation means return to a new body.'
'Some of our atoms may do that literally,' one young man
offered.
'Indeed. In the endlessness of eternity, the atoms that
were part of our bodies for a time will move on, and be
incorporated in other life on this earth, and perhaps on other
planets in subsequent galaxies. SO we are diffusely reincarnate
through the universe.'
'But that's not our consciousness,' the young woman said
stubbornly.
'Not consciousness, nor the self. The ego, the string of
thoughts, the flow of consciousness, which no text or image has
ever managed to convey -- no.'
'But I don't want that to end,' she said.
'No. And yet it does. This is the reality we were born
into. We can't change it by desire.'
The young man said, 'The Buddha says we should give up
our desires.'
'But that too is a desire!' the young woman
exclaimed.
'So we never really give it up,' Bao agreed. 'What the
Buddha was suggesting is impossible. Desire is life trying to
continue to be life. All living things desire, bacteria feel
desire. Life is wanting.'
The young students thought it over. There is an age, Bao
thought, remembering, there is that time in your life, when you are
young and everything seems possible, and you want it all; you are
simply bursting with desire. You make love all night because
you want things so much.
He said, 'Another way of rescuing the concept of
reincarnation is simply to think of the species as the organism.
The organism survives, and has a collective consciousness of itself
-- that's history, or language, or the twistingladder structuring
our brains and it doesn't really matter what happens to any
one cell of this body. In fact their deaths are neces sary
for the body to stay healthy and go on, it's a matter of making
room for new cells. And if we think of it that way, then it might
increase feelings of solidarity and obligation to others. It makes
it clearer that if there is part of the body that is suffering, and
if at the same time another part commandeers the mouth and laughs
and proclaims that everything is really fine, dancing a jig like
the lost Christians as their flesh fell off -- then we understand
more clearly that this creature species or speciescreature is
insane, and cannot face its own sickness unto death. Seen
in that sense, more people might understand that the organism must
try to keep itself healthy throughout its whole body.'
The young woman was shaking her head. 'But that's not
reincarnation either. That's not what it means.'
Bao shrugged, gave up. 'I know. I know what you mean, I
think; it seems there should be something that endures of us. And I
myself have sometimes felt things. Once, down at Gold Gate . . .'
He shook his head. 'But there is no way to know. Reincarnation is a
story we tell; then in the end it's the story itself that is the
reincarnation.'
Over time Bao came to understand that teaching too was a
kind of reincarnation, in that years passed, and students came and
went, new young people all the time, but always the same age,
taking the same class; the class under the oak trees, reincarnated.
He began to enjoy that aspect of it. He would start the first class
by saying, 'Look, here we are again.' They never knew what to make
of it; same response, every time.
He learned, among other things, that teaching was the
most rigorous form of learning. He learned to learn more from his
students than they did from him; like so many other things, it was
the reverse of what it seemed to be, and colleges existed to bring
together groups of young people to teach some chosen few of their
elders the things that they knew about life, that the old teachers
had been in danger of forgetting. So Bao loved his students, and
studied them assiduously. Most of them,
he found, believed in reincarnation; it was what they had been
taught at home, even when they hadn't been given explicit religious
instruction. It was part of the culture, an idea that kept coming
back. So they brought it up, and he talked about it with them, in a
conversation reincarnated many times. Over time the students added
to his growing internal list of ways reincarnation was true: that
you might really come back as another life; that the various
periods of one's life were karmic reincarnations; that every
morning you reawakened to consciousness newly, and thus are
reincarnated every day to a new life.
Bao liked all of these. The last one he tried to live in
his daily existence, paying attention to his morning garden as if
he had never seen it before, marvelling at the strangeness and
beauty of it. In his classes he tried to talk about history newly,
thinking things through yet again, not allowing himself to say
anything that he had ever said before; this was hard, but
interesting. One day in one of the ordinary classrooms (it was
winter, and raining), he said, 'What's hardest to catch is daily
life. This is what I think rarely gets written down, or even
remembered by those who did it -- what you did on the days when you
did the ordinary things, how it felt doing it, the small variations
time and again, until years have passed. A matter of repetitions,
or almost repetitions. Nothing, in other words, that could be
easily encoded into the usual forms of emplotment, not dharma or
chaos, or even tragedy or comedy. just ... habit.'
One intense young man with thick black eyebrows replied,
as if contradicting him, 'Everything happens only once!'
And that too he had to remember. There was no doubt at
all that it was true. Everything happens only once!
And so, eventually, one particular day came: first day of
spring, Day One of Year 87, a festival day, first morning of this
life, first year of this world; and Bao got up early with Gao and
went out with some others, to hide coloured eggs and wrapped sweets
in the grass of the lawn and meadow, and on the streambank. This
was the ritual in their ring of cottages; every New Year's Day the
adults would go out and hide eggs that had been coloured the day
before, and sweets wrapped in vibrantly coloured metallic wrapping,
and at the appointed hour of the morning all the children of the
neighbourhood would be unleashed on their hum baskets in
hand, the older ones racing forwards pouncing on finds to pile in
their baskets, the youngest ones staggering dreamily from one great
discovery to the next. Bao had learned to love this morning,
especially that last walk downstream to the meeting point, after
all the eggs and sweets had been hidden: he strolled through the
high wet grass with his spectacles taken off, sometimes, so that
the real flowers and their pure colours were mixed in with the
artificial colours of the eggs and the sweet wrappers, and the
meadow and streambank became like a painting or a dream, a
hallucinated meadow and streambank, with more colours, and stranger
colours, than any nature had ever made on her own, all dotting the
omnipresent and surging vivid green.
So he made this walk again, as he had for so many years
now, the sky a perfect blue above, like another coloured egg over
them. The air was cool, the dew heavy on the grass. His feet were
wet. The glimpsed sweet wrappers broke in his peripheral vision,
cyanic and fuchsia and lime and copper, sparkier even than in
previous years, he thought. Putah Creek was running high, purling
over the salmon weirs. A doe and fawn stood in one brake like
statues of themselves, watching him pass.
He came to the gathering place and sat to watch the
children race about in their egghunt, shouting and squealing. He
thought, if you can see that all the kids are happy, then maybe
things are going to be all right after all.
In any case, this hour of pleasure. The adults stood
around drinking green tea and coffee, eating cakes and
hard boiled eggs, shaking hands or embracing. 'Happy new year!
Happy new year!' Bao sat down in a low chair to watch their
faces.
One of the three year olds he sometimes babysat
came wandering by, distracted by the contents of her wicker basket.
'Look!' she said when she saw him. 'Egg!'
She plucked a red egg from her basket and shoved it in
his face. He pulled back his head warily; like many of the children
in the neighbourhood, this one had come into the world in the
avatar of a complete maniac, and it would not be unlike her to
whack him on the forehead with the egg just to see what would
happen.
But this morning she was serene; she merely held the egg
out between them for their mutual inspection, both rapt in
contemplation of it. It had been steeped in the vinegar and dye
solution for a long time, and was as vividly red as the sky was
blue. Red curve in a blue curve, red' and blue together 'Very
nice!' Bao said, pulling his head back to see it better. 'A red
egg, that means happiness.'
'Egg!'
'Yes, that too. Red egg!'
'You can have it,' she said to him, and put the egg in
his hand.
'Thank you!'
She wandered on. Bao looked at the egg; it was redder
than he could remember the dye being, mottled in the way eggshells
got when dyed, but everywhere deeply red.
The breakfast party was coming to a close, the kids
sitting around busily chewing some of their treasure, the adults
taking the paper plates inside. All at peace. Bao wished for a
second that Kung had lived to see this scene. He had fought for
something like this little age of peace, fought so full of anger
and hilarity; it seemed only fair that he should have got to see
it. But -- fair. No. No, there would be another Kung in the village
someday, perhaps that little girl, suddenly so intent and serious.
Certainly they were all repeated again and again, the whole cast:
in every group a Ka and a Ba, as in Old Red Ink's anthology, Ka
always complaining with the caw of the crow, the cough of the cat,
the cry of coyote, caw, caw, that fundamental protest; and then Ba
always Ba, the banal baa of the water buffalo, the sound of the
plough bound to the earth, the bleat of hope and fear, the bone
inside. The one who missed the missing Ka, and felt the loss
keenly, if intermittently, distracted by life; but also the one who
had to do whatever possible to keep things going in that absence.
Go on! The world was changed by the Kungs, but then the Baos had to
try to hold it together, baaing their way along. All of them
together playing their parts, performing their tasks in some dharma
they never quite understood.
Right now his task was to teach. Third meeting of this
particular class, when they began to get into things. He was
looking forward to it.
He took the red egg back with him to his cottage, put it
on his desk. He put his papers in his shoulder bag, said goodbye to
Gao, got on his old bike and pedalled down the path to the college.
The bike path followed Puta Creek, and the new leaves on the trees
shaded the path, so that its asphalt was still wet with dew. The
flowers in the grass looked like coloured eggs and sweets
wrappers, everything stuffed with its own colour, the sky overhead
unusually clear and dark for the valley, almost cobalt. The opaque
water in the stream was the colour of apple jade. Valley oaks as
big as villages overhung its banks.
He parked his bike, and seeing a gang of snow monkeys in
the tree overhead, locked it to a stand. These monkeys enjoyed
rolling bikes down the bank into the stream, two or three
cooperating to launch them upright on their course. It had happened
to Bao's bike more than once, before he purchased a lock and
chain.
He walked on, downstream to the round picnic table where
he always instructed his spring classes to meet him. Never had the
greens of grass and leaf been so green before, they made him a bit
unsteady on his feet. He recalled the little girl and her egg, the
peace of the little celebration, everyone doing what they always
did on this first day. His class would be the same as well. It
always came down to this. There they were under the giant oak tree,
gathering around the round table, and he would sit down with them
and tell them as much as he could of what he had learned, trying to
get it across to them, giving them what little portion of his
experience he could. He would say to them, 'Come here, sit down, I
have some stories to tell, about how people go on.'
But he was there to learn too. And this time, under the
jade and emerald leaves, he saw that there was a beautiful young
woman who had joined them, a Travancori student he had not seen
before, darkskinned, black haired, thick eyebrowed, eyes
flashing as she glanced briefly up at him from across the picnic
table. A sharp glance, suffused with a profound scepticism; by that
look alone he could tell that she did not believe in teachers, that
she did not trust them, that she was not prepared to believe a
single thing he said. He would have a lot to learn from her.
He smiled and sat down, waited for them to grow still. 'I
see we have someone new joining us,' he said, indicating the young
woman with a polite nod. The other students looked at her
curiously. 'Why don't you introduce yourself?'
'Hello,' the young woman said. 'My name is Kali.'
Robinson, Kim Stanley - The Years of Rice and Salt
Tripitaka: Monkey, how far is it to the Western Heaven,
the abode of Buddha?
Wu kong: You can walk from the time of your youth
till the time you grow old, and after that, till you become young
again; and even after going through such a cycle a thousand times,
you may still find it difficult to reach the place where you want
to go. But when you perceive, by the resoluteness of your will, the
Buddha nature in all things, and when every one of your
thoughts goes back to that fountain in your memory, that will be
the time you arrive at Spirit Mountain.
--
The Journey to the West
ONE
Another journey west, Bold and Psin find an empty
land;
Temur is displeased, and the chapter has a stormy
end.
Monkey never dies. He keeps coming back to help us in times of
trouble, just as he helped Tripitaka through the dangers of the
first journey to the west, to bring Buddhism back from India to
China.
Now he had taken on the form of a small Mongol named Bold
Bardash, horseman in the army of Temur the Lame. Son of a Tibetan
salt trader and a Mongol innkeeper and spirit woman, and thus a
traveller from before the day of his birth, up and down and back
and forth, over mountains and rivers, across deserts and steppes,
crisscrossing always the heartland of the world. At the time of our
story he was already old: square face, bent nose, grey plaited
hair, four chin whiskers for a beard. He knew this would be Temur's
last campaign, and wondered if it would be his too.
One day, scouting ahead of the army, a small group of them rode
out of dark hills at dusk. Bold was getting skittish at the quiet.
Of course it was not truly quiet, forests were always noisy
compared to the steppe; there was a big river ahead, spilling its
sounds through the wind in the trees; but something was missing.
Birdsong perhaps, or some other sound Bold could not quite
identify. The horses snickered as the men kneed them on. It did not
help that the weather was changing, long mares' tails wisping
orange in the highest part of the sky, wind gusting up, air damp --
a storm rolling in from the west. Under the big sky of the steppe
it would have been obvious. Here in the forested hills there was
less sky to be seen, and the winds were fluky, but the signs were
still there.
They ride by fields that lay rank with unharvested crops. Barley
fallen over itself, Apple trees with apples dry in the branches, Or
black on the ground. No cart tracks or hoof prints or footprints In
the dust of the road. Sun sets, The gibbous moon misshapen
overhead. Owl dips over field. A sudden gust: How big the world
seems in a wind. Horses are tense, Monkey too.
They came to an empty bridge and crossed it, hooves thwocking
the planks. Now they came upon some wooden buildings with thatched
roofs. But no fires, no lantern light. They moved on. More
buildings appeared through the trees, but still no people. The dark
land was empty.
Psin urged them on, and more buildings stood on each side of the
widening road. They followed a turn out of the hills onto a plain,
and before them lay a black silent city. No lights, no voices; only
the wind, rubbing branches together over sheeting surfaces of the
big black flowing river. The city was empty.
Of course we are reborn many times. We fill our bodies like air
in bubbles, and when the bubbles pop we puff away into the bardo,
wandering until we are blown into some new life, somewhere back in
the world. This knowledge had often been a comfort to Bold as he
stumbled exhausted over battlefields in the aftermath, the ground
littered with broken bodies like empty coats.
But it was different to come on a town where there had been no
battle, and find everyone there already dead. Long dead; bodies
dried; in the dusk and moonlight they could see the gleam of
exposed bones, scattered by wolves and crows. Bold repeated the
Heart Sutra to himself. 'Form is emptiness, emptiness form. Gone,
gone, gone beyond, gone altogether beyond. 0, what an Awakening!
All hail!'
The horses stalled on the outskirts of the town. Aside from the
cluck and hiss of the river, all was still. The squinted eye of the
moon gleamed on dressed stone, there in the middle of all the
wooden buildings. A very big stone building, among smaller stone
buildings.
Psin ordered them to put cloths over their faces, to avoid
touching anything, to stay on their horses, and to keep the horses
from touching anything but the ground with their hooves. Slowly
they rode through narrow streets, walled by wooden buildings two or
three storeys high, leaning together as in Chinese cities. The
horses were unhappy but did not refuse outright.
They came into a paved central square near the river, and
stopped before the great stone building. It was huge. Many of the
local people had come to it to die. Their lamasery, no doubt, but
roofless, open to the sky -- unfinished business. As if these
people had only come to religion in their last days; but too late;
the place was a boneyard. Gone, gone, gone beyond, gone altogether
beyond. Nothing moved, and it occurred to Bold that the pass in the
mountains they had ridden through had perhaps been the wrong one,
the one to that other west which is the land of the dead. For an
instant he remembered something, a brief glimpse of another life --
a town much smaller than this one, a village wiped out by some
great rush over their heads, sending them all to the bardo
together. Hours in a room, waiting for death; this was why he so
often felt he recognized the people he met. Their existences were a
shared fate.
'Plague,' Psin said. 'Let's get out of here.'
His eyes glinted as he looked at Bold, his face was hard; he
looked like one of the stone officers in the imperial tombs.
Bold shuddered. 'I wonder why they didn't leave,' he said.
'Maybe there was nowhere to go.'
Plague had struck in India a few years before. Mongols rarely
caught it, only a baby now and then. Turks and Indians were more
susceptible, and of course Temur had all kinds in his army,
Persians, Turks, Mongols, Tibetans, Indians, Tajiks, Arabs,
Georgians. Plague could kill them, any of them, or all of them. If
that was truly what had felled these people. There was no way to be
sure.
'Let's get back and tell them,' Psin said.
The others nodded, pleased that it was Psin's decision. Temur
had told them to scout the Magyar Plain and what lay beyond, west
for four days' ride. He didn't like it when scouting detachments
returned without fulfilling orders, even if they were composed of
his oldest qa'uchin. But Psin could face him.
Back through moonlight they rode, camping briefly when the
horses got tired. On again at dawn, back through the broad gap in
the mountains the earlier scouts had called the Moravian Gate. No
smoke from any village or hut they passed. They kicked the horses
to their fastest long trot, rode hard all that day.
As they came down the long eastern slope of the range back onto
the steppe, an enormous wall of cloud reared up in the western half
of the sky,
Like Kali's black blanket pulling over them,
The Goddess of Death chasing them out of her land. Solid black
underside fluted and rippled,
Black pigs' tails and fishhooks swirling into the air below. A
portent so bleak the horses bow their heads,
The men can no longer look at each other.
They approached Temur's great encampment, and the black
stormcloud covered the rest of the day, causing a darkness like
night. Hair rose on the back of Bold's neck. A few big raindrops
splashed down, and thunder rolled out of the west like giant iron
cartwheels overhead. They hunkered down in their saddles and kicked
the horses on, reluctant to return in such a storm, with such news.
Temur would take it as a portent, just as they did. Temur often
said that he owed all his success to an asura that visited him and
gave him guidance. Bold had witnessed one of these visitations, had
seen Temur engage in conversation with an invisible being, and
afterwards tell people what they were thinking and what would
happen to them. A cloud this black could only be a sign. Evil in
the west. Something bad had happened back there, something worse
even than plague, maybe, and Temur's plan to conquer the Magyars
and the Franks would have to be abandoned; he had been beaten to it
by the goddess of skulls herself. It was hard to imagine him
accepting any such preemption, but there they were, under a
storm like none of them had ever seen, and all the Magyars were
dead.
Smoke rose from the vast camp's cooking fires, looking like a
great sacrifice, the smell familiar and yet distant, as if from a
home they had already left for ever. Psin looked at the men around
him. 'Camp here,' he ordered. He thought things over. 'Bold.'
Bold felt the fear shoot through him.
'Come on.'
Bold swallowed and nodded. He was not courageous, but he had the
stoic manner of the qa'uchin, Temur's oldest warriors. Psin also
would know that Bold was aware they had entered a different realm,
that everything that happened from this point onwards was freakish,
something preordained and being lived through inexorably, a karma
they could not escape.
Psin also was no doubt remembering a certain incident from their
youths, when the two of them had been captured by a tribe of taiga
hunters north of the Kama River. Together they had staged a very
successful escape, knifing the hunters' headman and running through
a bonfire into the night.
The two men rode by the outer sentries and through the camp to
the Khan's tent. To the west and north lightning bolts crazed the
black air. Neither men had ever seen such a storm in all their
lives. The few little hairs on Bold's forearms stood up like pig
bristles, and he felt the air crackling with hungry ghosts, pretas
crowding in to witness Temur emerge from his tent. He had killed so
many.
The two men dismounted and stood there. Guards came out of the
tent, drawing aside the flaps of the doorway and standing at
attention, ready with drawn bows. Bold's throat was too dry to
swallow, and it seemed to him a blue light glowed from within the
great yurt of the Khan.
Temur appeared high in the air, seated on a litter his carriers
had already hefted on their shoulders. He was pale faced and
sweating, the whites of his eyes visible all the way around. He
stared down at Psin.
'Why are you back?'
'Khan, a plague has struck the Magyars. They're all dead.'
Temur regarded his unloved general. 'Why are you back?'
'To tell you, Khan.'
Psin's voice was steady, and he met Temur's fierce gaze without
fear. But Temur was not pleased. Bold swallowed; nothing here was
the same as that time he and Psin had escaped the hunters, there
wasn't a single feature of that effort that could be repeated. Only
the idea that they could do it remained.
Something inside Temur snapped, Bold saw it -- his asura was
speaking through him now, and it looked as if it was wreaking great
harm as it did so. Not an asura, perhaps, but his nafs, the spirit
animal that lived inside him. He rasped, 'They cannot get away as
easily as that! They will suffer for this, no matter how they try
to escape.' He waved an arm weakly. 'Go back to your
detachment.'
Then to his guards he said in a calmer voice, 'Take these two
back and kill them and their men, and their horses. Make a bonfire
and burn everything. Then move our camp two days' ride east.'
He raised up his hand.
The world burst asunder.
A bolt of lightning had exploded among them. Bold sat deaf on
the ground. Looking around stunned, he saw that all the others
there had been flattened as well, that the Khan's tent was burning,
Temur's litter tipped over, his carriers scrambling, the Khan
himself on one knee, clutching his chest. Some of his men rushed to
him. Again lightning blasted down among them.
Blindly Bold picked himself up and fled. He looked over his
shoulder through pulsing green afterimages, and saw Temur's black
nafs fly out of his mouth into the night. Temur i Lang,
Iron the Lame, abandoned by both asura and nafs. The emptied body
collapsed to the ground, and rain bucketed onto it. Bold ran into
the dark to the west. We do not know which way Psin went, or what
happened to him; but as for Bold, you can find out in the next
chapter.
TWO
Through the realm of hungry ghosts
A monkey wanders, lonely as a cloud.
Bold ran or walked west all that night, scrambling through the
growing forest in the pouring rain, climbing into the steepest
hills he could find, to evade any horsemen who might follow. No one
would be too zealous in pursuit of a potential plague carrier, but
he could be shot down from a good distance away, and he wanted to
disappear from their world as if he had never existed. If it had
not been for the uncanny storm he would certainly be dead, already
embarked on another existence: now he was anyway. Gone, gone, gone
beyond, gone altogether beyond ...
He walked the next day and all the second night. Dawn of the
second day found him hurrying back through the Moravian Gate,
feeling that no one would dare follow him there. Once onto the
Magyar Plain he headed south, into trees. In the morning's wet
light he found a fallen tree and slipped deep under its exposed
roots, to sleep for the rest of the day in hidden dryness.
That night the rain stopped, and on the third morning he emerged
ravenous. In short order he found, pulled and ate meadow onions,
then hunted for more substantial food. It was possible that dried
meat still hung in the empty villages' storehouses, or grain in
their granaries. He might also be able to find a bow and some
arrows. He didn't want to go near the dead settlements, but it
seemed the best way to find food, and that took precedence over
everything else.
That night he slept poorly, his stomach full and gassy with
onions. At dawn he made his way south, following the big river. All
the villages and settlements were empty. Any people he saw were
dead on the ground. It was disturbing, but there was nothing to be
done. He too was in some kind of posthumous existence, a very
hungry ghost indeed. Living on from one found bite to the next,
with no name or fellows, he began to close in on himself, as during
the hardest campaigns on the steppes, becoming more and more an
animal, his mind shrinking in like the horns of a touched snail.
For many watches at a time he thought little but the Heart Sutra.
Form is emptiness, emptiness form. Not for nothing had he been
named Sun Wu kong, Awake to Emptiness, in an earlier
incarnation. Monkey in the void.
He came to a village that looked untouched, skirted its edge. In
an empty stable he found an unstrung bow and a quiver of arrows,
all very primitive and poorly made. Something moved in the
pasturage outside, and he went out and whistled up a small black
mare. He caught her with onions, and quickly taught her to take
him.
He rode her across a stone bridge over the big river, and slowly
crossed the grain of the land southwards, up and down, up and down.
All the villages continued empty, their food rotted or scavenged by
animals, but now he had the mare's milk and blood to sustain him,
so the matter was not so urgent.
It was autumn here, and he began to live like the bears, eating
berries and honey, and rabbits shot with the ridiculous bow.
Possibly it had been concocted by a child; he couldn't believe
anyone older would make such a thing. It was a single bend of wood,
probably ash, partly carved but still misshapen; no arrowrest, no
nocking point, its pull like that of a prayer flag line. His old
bow had been a laminate of horn, maplewood and tendon glue covered
by blue leather, with a sweet pull and release, and enough power to
pierce body armour from over a li away. Gone now, gone altogether
beyond, lost with all the rest of his few possessions, and when he
shot these twig arrows with this branch bow and missed, he would
shake his head and wonder if it was even worth tracking the arrow
down. It was no wonder these people had died.
In one small village, five buildings clustered above a stream
ford, the headman's house proved to have a locked larder, still
stocked with dried fishcakes that were spiced with something Bold
did not recognize, which made his stomach queasy. But with the
strange food in him he felt his spirits rise. In a stable he found
sidebags for the mare, and stuffed them with more dried food. He
rode on, paying more attention than he had been to the land he was
passing through.
White barked trees hold up black branches, Pine and cypress
still verdant on the ridge. A red bird and a blue bird sit near
each other In the same tree. Now anything is possible.
Anything but return to his previous life. Not that he harboured
any resentment of Temur; Bold would have done the same in his
place. Plague was plague, and could not be treated lightly. And
this plague was obviously worse than most, having killed everyone
in the region. Among the Mongols plague usually killed a few
babies, maybe made some adults sick. You killed rats or mice on
sight, and if babies got feverish and developed the bumps, their
mothers took them out to live or die by the rivers. Indian cities
were said to have a worse time with it, people dying in great
crowds. But never anything like this. It was possible something
else had killed them.
Travelling through empty land.
Clouds hazy, moon waning and chill. Sky, frost coloured,
cold to look at.
Wind piercing. Sudden terror.
A thousand trees roar in the sparse woodland: A lonely monkey
cries on a barren hill.
But the terror washed through him and then away, like freshets
of rain, leaving a mind as empty as the land itself. It was very
still. Gone, gone, altogether gone.
For a time he thought he would ride through and out of the
region of plague, and find people again. But then he came over a
jagged range of black hills, and saw a big town spread below,
bigger than any he had ever seen, its rooftops covering a whole
valley bottom. But deserted. No smoke, no noise, no movement. In
the centre of the city another giant stone temple stood open to the
sky. Seeing it, the terror poured into him again, and he rode into
the forest to escape the sight of so many people gone like the
autumn leaves.
He knew roughly where he was, of course. South of here, he would
eventually come into the Ottoman Turks' holdings in the Balkans. He
would be able to speak with them, he would be back in the world,
but out of Temur's empire. Something then would start up for him,
some way to live.
So he rode south. But still only skeletons occupied the
villages. He grew hungrier and hungrier. He drove the mare harder,
while drinking more of her blood.
Then one night in the dark of the moon, all of a sudden there
were howls and wolves were on them in a snarling rush. Bold just
had time to cut the mare's tether and scramble into a tree. Most of
the wolves chased the mare, but some sat panting under the tree.
Bold got as comfortable as he could and prepared to wait them out.
When rain came they slunk away. At dawn he woke for the tenth time,
climbed down. He took off downstream and came on the body of the
mare, all skin and gristle and scattered bones. The sidebags were
nowhere to be found.
He continued on foot.
One day, too weak to walk, he lay in wait by a stream, and shot
a deer with one of the sorry little arrows, and made a fire and ate
well, bolting down chunks of cooked haunch. He slept away from the
carcass, hoping to return to it. Wolves couldn't climb trees, but
bears could. He saw a fox, and as the vixen had been his wife's
nafs, long ago, he felt better. In the morning the sun warmed him.
The deer had been removed by a bear, it appeared, but he felt
stronger with all that fresh meat in him, and pressed on.
He walked south for several days, keeping on ridges when he
could, over hills both depopulated and deforested, the ground
underfoot sluiced to stone and baked white by the glare of the sun.
He watched for the vixen in the valleys at dawn, and drank from
springs, and raided dead villages for scraps of food. These grew
harder and harder to find, and for a while he was reduced to
chewing the leather strap from a harness, an old Mongol trick from
the hard campaigns on the steppes. But it seemed to him it had
worked better back there, on the endless grass, which was so much
easier to cross than these baked tortured white hills.
At the end of one day, after he had long got used to living
alone in the world, scavenging it like Monkey himself, he came into
a little copse of trees to make a fire, and was shocked to see one
already there, tended by a living man.
The man was short, like Bold. His hair was as red as maple
leaves, his bushy beard the same colour, his skin pale and brindled
like a dog. At first Bold was sure the man was sick, and he kept
his distance. But the man's eyes, blue in colour, were clear; and
he too was afraid, absolutely on point and ready for anything.
Silently they stared at each other, across a small clearing in the
middle of the copse.
The man gestured at his fire. Bold nodded and came warily into
the glade.
The man was cooking two fish. Bold took a rabbit that he had
killed that morning out of his coat, and skinned and cleaned it
with his knife. The man watched him hungrily, nodding at each
familiar move. He turned his fish on the fire, and made room in the
coals for the rabbit. Bold spitted it on a stick and put it in.
After the meat had cooked they ate in silence, sitting on logs
on opposite sides of the fire. They both stared into the flames,
glancing only occasionally at each other, shy after all their time
alone. After all that it was not obvious what one could say to
another human.
Finally the man spoke, first brokenly, then at length. Sometimes
he used a word that sounded familiar to Bold, but not so familiar
as his movements around the fire, and no matter how hard he tried,
Bold could make nothing of what the man said.
Bold tried out some simple phrases himself, feeling the
strangeness of words in his mouth, like pebbles. The other man
listened closely, his blue eyes gleaming in firelight, out of the
dirty pale skin of his lean face, but he showed no sign of
comprehension, not of Mongolian, Tibetan, Chinese, Turkic, Arabic,
Chagatay, or any other of the polyglot greetings Bold had learned
through his years of crossing the steppe.
At the end of Bold's recitation the man's face spasmed, and he
wept. Then, wiping his eyes clear, leaving big streaks on his dirty
face, he stood before Bold and said something, gesturing widely. He
pointed his finger at Bold, as if angry, then stepped back and sat
on his log, and began to imitate rowing a boat, or so Bold
surmised. He rowed facing backwards, like the fishermen on the
Caspian Sea. He made the motions for fishing, then for catching
fish, cleaning them, cooking them, and feeding them to little
children. By his gestures he evoked all the people he had fed, his
children, his wife, the people he lived with.
Then he turned his face up at the firelit branches over the two
men, and cried again. He pulled up the rough shift covering his body,
and pointed at his arms -- at his underarms, where he made a fist.
Bold nodded, felt his stomach shrink as the man mimed the sickness
and cleat o all the children, by lying down on the ground and
mewling like a dog. Then the wife, then all the rest. All had died
but this man, who walked around the fire pointing at the leaf
litter on the ground intoning words, names perhaps. It was all so
clear to Bold.
Then the man burned his dead village, all in gestures so clear,
and mimed rowing away. He rowed on his log for a long time, so long
Bold thought he had forgotten the story; but then he ground to a
halt and fell back in his boat. He got out, looking around in
feigned surprise. Then he began to walk. He walked around the fire
a dozen times, pretend eating grass and sticks, howling like a
wolf, cowering under his log, walking some more, even rowing again.
Over and over he said the same things, 'Dea, dea, dea, dea,'
shouting it at the branch crossed stars quaking over them.
Bold nodded. He knew the story. The man was moaning, with a low
growl like an animal, cutting at the ground with a stick. His eyes
were as red as any wolf's in the light. Bold ate more of the
rabbit, then offered the stick to the man, who snatched it and ate
hungrily. They sat there and looked at the fire. Bold felt both
companionable and alone. He eyed the other man, who had eaten both
his fish, and was now nodding off. The man jerked up, muttered
something, lay down, curled around the fire, fell asleep. Uneasily
Bold stoked the fire, took the other side of it, and tried to do
the same. When he woke the fire had died and the man was gone. It
was a cold dawn, dew drenched, and the trail of the man led
down the meadow to a big bend in a stream, where it disappeared.
There was no sign of where the man had gone from there.
Days passed, and Bold continued south. Many watches went by in
which he didn't think a thing, only scanning the land for food and
the sky for weather, humming a word or two over and over. Awake to
emptiness. One day he came on a village surrounding a spring,
Old temples scattered throughout,
Broken round columns pointing at the sky. All in the midst of a
vast silence. What made these gods so angry With their people? What
might they make Of a solitary soul wandering by After the world has
ended? White marble drums fallen this way and that: One bird cheeps
in the empty air.
He did not care to test anything by trespassing, and so circled
the temples, chanting 'Orn mane padme hum, om mane padme hummmm',
aware suddenly that he often spoke aloud to himself now, or hummed,
without ever noticing it, as if ignoring an old companion who
always said the same things.
He continued south and east, though he had forgotten why. He
scrounged roadside buildings for dried food. He walked on the empty
roads. It was an old land. Gnarled olive trees, black and heavy
with their inedible fruit, mocked him. No person ate entirely by
his own efforts, no one. He got hungrier, and food became his only
focus, every day. He passed more marble ruins, foraged in the
farmhouses he passed. Once he came on a big clay jar of olive oil,
and stayed there four days to drink it all down. Then game became
more abundant. He saw the vixen more than once. Good shots with his
ridiculous bow kept him away from hunger. He made his fires larger
every night, and once or twice wondered what had become of the man
he had met. Had meeting Bold made him realize he would be alone no
matter what happened or whom he found, so that he had killed
himself to rejoin his jati? Or perhaps just slipped while drinking?
Or walked in the stream to keep Bold from tracking him? There was
no way of telling, but the encounter kept coming back to Bold,
especially the clarity with which he had been able to understand
the man.
The valleys ran south and east. He felt the shape of his travels
in his mind, and found he could not remember enough of the last few
weeks to be sure of his location, relative to the Moravian Gate, or
the khanate of the Golden Horde. From the Black Sea they had ridden
west about ten days' ride, hadn't they? It was like trying to
remember things from a previous life.
It seemed possible, however, that he was nearing the Byzantine
empire, coming towards Constantinople from the north and west.
Sitting slumped before his nightly bonfire, he wondered if
Constantinople would be dead too. He wondered if Mongolia was dead,
if perhaps everyone in the world was dead. The wind soughed through
the shrubs like ghosts' voices, and he fell into an uneasy sleep,
waking through the watches of the night to check the stars and
throw more branches on his fire. He was cold.
He woke again, and there was Temur's ghost standing across the
fire, the light of the flames dancing over his awesome face. His
eyes were black as obsidian, and Bold could see stars gleaming in
them.
'So,' Temur said heavily, 'You ran away.'
'Yes,' Bold whispered.
'What's wrong? Don't want to go out on the hunt again?'
This was a thing he had said to Bold before. At the end he had
been so weak he had had to be carried on a litter, but he never
thought of stopping. In his last winter he had considered whether
to move east in the spring, against China, or west, against the
Franks. During a huge feast he weighed the advantages of each, and
at one point he looked at Bold, and something on Bold's face caused
the Khan to jump him with his powerful voice, still strong despite
his illness: 'What's wrong, Bold? Don't want to go out on the hunt
again?'
That earlier time Bold had said, 'Always, Great Khan. I was
there when we conquered Ferghana, Khorasan, Sistan, Kbrezm and
Mughalistan. One more is fine by me.'
Temur had laughed his angry laugh. 'But which way this time,
Bold? Which way?'
Bold knew enough to shrug. 'All the same to me, Great Khan. Why
don't you flip a coin?'
Which got him another laugh, and a warm place in the stable that
winter, and a good horse in the campaign. They had moved west in
the spring of the year 784.
Now Temur's ghost, as solid as any man, glared reproachfully at
Bold from across the fire. 'I flipped the coin just like you said,
Bold. But it must have come up wrong.'
'Maybe China would have been worse,' Bold said.
Temur laughed angrily. 'How could it have been? Killed by
lightning? How could it have been? You did that, Bold, you and
Psin. You brought the curse of the west back with you. You never
should have come back. And I should have gone to China.'
'Maybe so.' Bold didn't know how to deal with him. Angry ghosts
needed to be defied as often as they needed to be placated. But
those jet black eyes, sparkling with starlight Suddenly Temur
coughed. He put a hand to his mouth, and gagged out something red.
He looked at it, then held it out for Bold to see: a red egg. 'This
is yours,' he said, and tossed it over the flames at Bold.
Bold twisted to catch it, and woke up. He moaned. The ghost of
Temur clearly was not happy. Wandering between worlds, visiting his
old soldiers like any other preta... In a way it was pathetic, but
Bold could not shake the fear in him. Temur's spirit was a big
power, no matter what realm it was in. His hand could reach into
this world and grab Bold's foot at any time.
All that day Bold wandered south in a haze of memories, scarcely
seeing the land before him. The last time Temur visited him in the
stables had been difficult, as the Khan could no longer ride. He
had looked at one thick black mare as if at a woman, and smoothed
its flank and said to Bold, 'The first horse I ever stole looked
just like this one. I started poor and life was hard. God put a
sign on me. But you would think He would have let me ride to the
end.' And he had stared at Bold with that vivid gaze of his, one
eye slightly higher and larger than the other, just like in the
dream. Although in life his eyes had been brown.
Hunger kept Bold hunting. Temur, though a hungry ghost, no
longer had to worry about food; but Bold did. All the game ran
south, down the valleys. One day, high on a ridge, he saw water,
bronze in the distance. A large lake, or sea. Old roads led him
over another pass, down into another city.
Again, no one there was alive. All was motionless and silent.
Bold wandered down empty streets, between empty buildings, feeling
the cold hands of pretas running down his back.
On the central hill of the city stood a copse of white temples,
like bones bleaching in the sun. Seeing them, Bold decided that he
had found the capital of this dead land. He had walked from
peripheral towns of rude stone to capital temples of smooth white
marble, and still no one had survived. A white haze filled his
vision, and through it he stumbled up the dusty streets, up onto
the temple hill, to lay his case before the local gods.
On the sacred plateau three smaller temples flanked a large one,
a rectangular beauty with double rows of smooth columns on all four
sides, supporting a gleaming roof of marble tiles. Under the eaves
carved, figures fought, marched, flew and gestured in a great stone
tableau depicting the absent people, or their gods. Bold sat on a
marble drum from a long toppled column and stared up at the
carving in stone, seeing the world that had been lost.
Finally he approached the temple, entered it praying aloud.
Unlike the big stone temples in the north, it had been no place of
congregation in the end; there were no skeletons inside. Indeed it
looked as if it had been abandoned for many years. Bats hung in the
rafters, and the darkness was lanced by sunbeams breaking through
broken rooftiles. At the far end of the temple it looked as if an
altar had been hastily erected. On it a single candlewick burned in
a pot of oil. Their last prayer, flickering even after they had
died.
Bold had nothing to offer by way of sacrifice, and the great
white temple stood silent above him. 'Gone, gone, gone beyond, gone
altogether beyond! 0 what an awakening! All hail!' His words echoed
hollowly.
He stumbled back outside into the afternoon glare, and saw to
the south the blink of the sea. He would go there. There was
nothing here to keep him; the people and their gods too had
died.
A long bay cut in between hills. A harbour at the head of the
bay was empty, except for a few small rowing boats slapping against
the waves, or upturned on the shingle beach stretching away from
the docks. He did not risk the boats, he knew nothing about them.
He had seen Issyk Kul and Lake Qinghai, and the Aral, Caspian and
Black Seas, but he had never been in a boat in his life, except for
ferries crossing rivers. He did not want to start now.
No traveller seen on this long road,
No boats from afar return for the night. Nothing moves in this
dead harbour.
On the beach he scooped a handful of water to drink -- spat it
out it was salty, like the Black Sea, or the springs in the Tarim
Basin. It was strange to see so much waste water. He had beard
there was an ocean surrounding the world. Perhaps he was at the
edge of the world, the western edge, or the southern. Possibly the
Arabs lived south of this sea. He didn't know, and for the first
time in all his wandering, he had the feeling that he had no idea
where he was.
He was asleep on the warm sand of a beach, dreaming of the
steppes, trying to keep Temur out of the dream by force of will
alone, when he was rousted by strong hands, rolling him over and
tying his legs together and his arms behind his back. He was hauled
to his feet.
A man said 'What have we here?' or something to that effect. He
spoke something like Turkic, Bold didn't know many of the words,
but it was some kind of Turkic, and he could usually catch the
drift of what they were saying. They looked like soldiers or
perhaps brigands, big hard handed ruffians, wearing gold
earrings and dirty cotton clothes. He wept while grinning foolishly
at the sight of them; he felt his face stretch and his eyes burn.
They regarded him warily.
'A madman,' one ventured.
Bold shook his head at this. 'I -- I haven't seen anyone,' he
said in Ulu Turkic. His tongue was big in his mouth, for despite
all his babbling to himself and the gods, he had forgotten how to
talk to people. 'I thought everyone was dead.'
He gestured to the north and west.
They did not seem to understand him.
'Kill him,' one said, as dismissive as Temur.
'The Christians all died,' another said.
'Kill him, let's go. Boats are full.'
'Bring him,' the other said. 'The slavers will pay for him. He
won't bring down the boat, thin as he is.'
Something like that. They hauled behind him down the beach. He
had to hurry so the rope wouldn't pull him around backwards, and
the effort made him dizzy. He didn't have much strength. The men
smelled of garlic and that made him ravenous, though it was a foul
smell. But if they meant to sell him to slavers, they would have to
feed him. His mouth was watering so heavily that he slobbered like
a dog, and he was weeping as well, nose running, and with his hands
tied behind his back he couldn't wipe his face.
'He's foaming at the mouth like a horse.'
'He's sick.'
'He's not sick. Bring him. Come on,' this to Bold, 'don't be
scared.
Where we take you even the slaves live a better life than you
barbaria dogs.'
Then he was shoved over the side of a beached boat, and with
great jerks it was pulled off into the water, where it rocked
violently. Immediately he fell sideways into the wooden wall of the
thing.
' UP here, slave. On that pile of rope. Sit!'
He sat and watched them work. Whatever happened, it was better
than the empty land. Just to see men move, to hear them talk,
filled him. It was like watching horses run on the steppe. Hungrily
he watched them haul a sail into the air on a mast, and the boat
heeled to the side such that he threw himself the other way. They
roared with laughter at this. He grinned sheepishly, gesturing at
the big lateen.
'It takes more wind than this breath to tip us.'
'Allah protect us from it.'
'Allah protect us.'
Muslims. 'Allah protect us,' Bold said politely. Then, in
Arabic, 'In the name of God, the merciful, the compassionate.' In
his years in Temur's army he had learned to be as much a Muslim as
anyone. The Buddha did not mind what you said to be polite. Now it
would not keep him from slavery, but it would perhaps earn him a
little more food. The men regarded him curiously. He watched the
land slide by. They untied his arms and gave him some dried mutton
and bread. He tried to chew each bite a hundred times. The familiar
tastes called back to him his whole life. He ate what they gave
him, drank fresh water from a cup they gave him.
'Praise be to Allah. Thank you in the name of God the
compassionate, the merciful.'
They sailed down a long bay, into a larger sea. At night they
pulled behind headlands and anchored the boat and slept. Bold
curled under a coil of rope. Every time he woke in the night he had
to remind himself where he was.
In the mornings they sailed south and south again, and one day
they passed through a long narrows into an open sea, with big
waves. The rocking of the boat was like riding a camel. Bold
gestured west. The men named it, but Bold didn't catch the name.
'They're all dead,' the men said.
The sunset came and they were still on the open sea. For the
first time they sailed all night long, always awake when Bold woke,
watching the stars without talking to each other. For three days
they sailed out of the sight of any land, and Bold wondered how
long it would go on. But on the fourth morning the sky to the south
grew white, then brown, A haze like the one that blew out of the
Gobi. Sand in the air, sand and fine dust. Land ho! Very low land.
The sea and sky Both turn the same brown Before catching sight of a
stone tower, Then a great stone breakwater, fronting a harbour.
One of the sailors happily names it: 'Alexandria!' Bold had
heard the name, though he knew nothing about it. Neither do we; but
to find out more, you can read the next chapter.
THREE
In Egypt our pilgrim is sold into slavery; In Zanj
he encounters again the inescapable Chinese.
His captors sailed to a beach, anchored with a stone tied to a
rock, tied Bold up securely, and left him in the boat under a
blanket while they went ashore.
It was a beach for small boats, near an immense long wooden
dockfront behind the seawall, which served much bigger ships. When
the men came back they were drunk and arguing. Without untying
anything but his legs, and with no more words to him, they pulled
Bold out of the boat and marched him down the great seafront of the
city, which appeared to Bold dusty and salty and worn down,
stinking in the sun like a dead fish, of which there were indeed
many scattered about. On the docks before a long building were
bales, boxes, great clay jars, netted bolts of cloth; then a fish
market, which made his mouth water at the same time that his
stomach flopped.
They came to a slave market. A small square with a raised dais
in its middle, somewhat like a lama's teaching platform. Three
slaves were quickly sold. The women being sold garnered the most
attention and comment from the crowd. They were stripped of all but
the ropes or chains holding them, if such were necessary, and stood
there listlessly, or cowered. Most were black, some brown. They
seemed to be at the end of auction day, people selling off
leftovers. Before Bold an emaciated girl of about ten years was
sold to a fat black man in dirty silk robes. The transaction was
completed in a kind of Arabic; she sold for some unit of currency
Bold had never heard of before, the payment in little gold coins.
He helped his captors get his crusted old clothes off.
'I don't need tying,' he tried to tell them in Arabic, but they
ignored him and chained his ankles. He walked onto the platform
feeling the baked air settle on him. Even to himself he emitted a
powerful smell, and looking down he saw that his time in the empty
land had left him about as fleshless as the little girl before him.
But what was left was muscle, and he stood up straight, looking
into the sun as the bidding went on, thinking the part of the Lapis
Lazuli Sutra that went, 'The ruffian demons of unkindness roam the
earth, begone! begone! The Buddha renounces slavery!'
'Does he speak Arabic?' someone asked.
One of his captors prodded him, and in Arabic he said, 'In the
name of God the merciful, the compassionate, I speak Arabic, also
Turkic, Mongolian, Ulu, Tibetan and Chinese,' and he began to chant
the first chapter of the Quran as far as he remembered it, until
they pulled his chain and he took this as a sign to stop. He was
very thirsty.
A short, slight Arab bought him for twenty somethings. His
captors seemed pleased. They handed him his clothes as he stepped
down, slapped him on the back and were off. He began to put on his
greasy coat, but his new owner stopped him, handing him a length of
clean cotton cloth.
'Wrap that around you. Leave the other filth here.'
Surprised, Bold looked down at the last vestiges of his previous
life. Dirty rags only, but they had accompanied him this far. He
pulled his amulet out of them, leaving his knife hidden in a
sleeve, but his owner intervened and threw it back onto the
clothes.
'Come on. I know a market in Zanj where I can sell a barbarian
like you for three times what I just paid. Meanwhile you can help
me get ready for the voyage there. Do you understand? Help, and it
will go easier for you. I'll feed you more.'
'I understand.'
'Be sure that you do. Don't think of trying to escape.
Alexandria is a very fine city. The Mamlukes keep things stricter
than sharia here. They are not forgiving of slaves that try to
escape. They're orphans brought here from north of the Black Sea,
men whose parents were killed by barbarians like you.'
In fact Bold himself had killed quite a few of the Golden Horde,
so he nodded without comment.
His owner said, 'They have been trained by Arabs in the way of
Allah, and now they are more than Muslim.' He whistled at the
thought. 'Trained to rule Egypt apart from all lesser influences,
to be true only to the sharia. You don't want to cross them.'
Bold nodded again. 'I understand.'
Crossing the Sinai was like travelling with a caravan crossing
one of the deserts of the heartland, except this time Bold was
walking with the slaves, in the cloud of dust at the back of the
camel train. They were part of the year's haj. Enormous numbers of
camels and people had tramped over this road through the desert,
and now it was a broad dusty smooth swathe through rockier hills.
Smaller parties going north passed by to their left. Bold had never
seen so many camels.
The caravanserai were beaten and ashy. The ropes tying him to
his new master's other slaves were never untied, and they slept in
circles on the ground at night. The nights were warmer than Bold
was used to, and this almost made up for the heat of the days.
Their master, whose name was Zeyk, kept them well watered and
fed them adequately at night and at dawn, treating them about as
well as his camels, Bold observed: a tradesman, taking care of the
goods in his possession. Bold approved of the attitude, and did
what he could to keep the bedraggled string of slaves in good form.
If they all kept the pace it made the walking that much easier. One
night he looked up and saw the Archer looking down on him, and he
remembered his nights alone in the empty land.
The ghost of Temur,
The last survivor of the fisherfolk,
The empty stone temples open to the sky, The days of hunger, the
little mare,
That ridiculous bow and arrow,
A red bird and blue bird, sitting side by side.
They came to the Red Sea, and boarded a ship three or four times
as long as the one that had brought him to Alexandria, a dhow or
zambuco, people called it both. The wind always blew from the west,
sometimes hard, and they hugged the western shore with their big
lateen sail bellied out to the cast. They made good time. Zeyk fed
his string of slaves more and more, fattening them for the market.
Bold happily downed the extra rice and cucumbers, and saw the sores
around his ankles begin to heal. For the first time in a long time
he was not perpetually hungry, and he felt as if he was coming out
of a fog or a dream, waking up more each day. Of course now he was
a slave, but he wouldn't always be one. Something would happen.
After a stop at a dry brown port called Massawa, one of the
hajjira depots, they sailed east across the Red Sea and rounded the
low red cape marking the end of Arabia, to Aden, a big seaside
oasis, indeed the biggest port Bold had ever seen, a very rich town
of green palms waving over ceramic roofs, citrus trees, and
numberless minarets. Zeyk did not disembark his goods or slaves
here, however; after a day on shore he came back shaking his
head.
'Mombasa,' he said to the ship's captain, and paid him more, and
they sailed south across the strait again, around the horn and Ras
Hafun, then down the coast of Zanj, sailing much farther south than
Bold had ever been. The sun at noon was nearly directly overhead,
and beat down on them most cruelly all day, day after day, with
never a cloud in the sky. The air baked as if the world were an
oven. The coast appeared either dead brown or else vibrant green,
nothing in between. They stopped at Mogadishu, Lamu and Malinda,
each a prosperous Arab trading port, but Zeyk got off only briefly
at them.
As they sailed into Mombasa, the grandest harbour yet, they came
on a fleet of giant ships, ships bigger than Bold had imagined
possible. Each one was as big as a small town, with a long line of
masts down its centre. There were about ten of these gigantic
outlandish ships, with another twenty smaller ones anchored among
them. 'Ah good,' said Zeyk to the zambuco's captain and owner. 'The
Chinese are here.'
The Chinese! Bold had had no idea they owned such a great fleet
as this one. It made sense, though. Their pagodas, their great
wall; they liked to build big.
The fleet was like an archipelago. All on board the zambuco
looked at the great ships, abashed and apprehensive, as if faced
with sea going gods. The large Chinese ships were as long as a
dozen of the biggest dhows, and Bold counted nine masts on one of
them. Zeyk saw him and nodded. 'Look well. Those will soon be your
home, God willing.'
The zambuco's master brought them inshore on a breath of a
breeze. The town's little waterfront was entirely occupied by the
landing boats of the visitors, and after some discussion with Zeyk,
the zambuco's owner beached his craft just south of the waterfront.
Zeyk and his man rolled up their robes and stepped over the
freeboard into the water, and helped the whole string of slaves
over the side onto land. The green water was as warm as blood, or
even hotter.
Bold spotted some Chinese, wearing their characteristic red felt
coats even here, where they were certainly much too warm. They
wandered the market, fingering the goods on display and chattering
among themselves, trading with the aid of a translator Zeyk knew.
Zeyk approached and greeted him effusively, asked about direct
trade with the Chinese visitors. The translator introduced him to
some of the Chinese, who seemed polite, even affable, in their
usual way. Bold found himself trembling slightly, perhaps from heat
and hunger, perhaps from the sight of the Chinese, after all these
years, on the other side of the world. Still pursuing their
business.
Zeyk and his assistant led the slaves through the market. It was
a riot of smell, colour and sound. People as black as pitch, their
eyeballs and teeth flashing white or yellow against their skin,
offered goods and bartered happily. Bold followed the others past
Great mounds of green and yellow fruit, Rice, coffee, dried fish
and squid,
Lengths and bolts of coloured cotton cloth,
Some spotted, others striped white and blue; Bales of
Chinese silk, piles of Mecca carpets; Huge brown nuts, copper pans
Filled with coloured beads or gemstones, Or round balls of
sweet smelling opium; Pearls, raw copper, carnelian,
quicksilver; Daggers and swords, turbans, shawls; Elephant tusks,
rhinoceros horns,
Yellow sandalwood, ambergris,
Ingots and coin strings of gold and silver, White cloth,
red cloth, porcelains,
All the things of this world, solid in the sun.
And then the slave market, again in a square of its own, next to
the main market, with a central auction block, so much like a
lama's dais when empty.
The locals were gathered around a sale to one side, not a full
auction.
They were mostly Arabs here, and often dressed in blue cloth
robes and red leather shoes. Behind the market a mosque and minaret
stood before rows of four--and even five storey buildings. The
clamour was great, but surveying the scene, Zeyk shook his head.
'We'll wait for a private audience,' he said.
He fed the slaves barley cakes and led them to one of the big
buildings next to the mosque. There some Chinese arrived with their
translator, and they all went inside to an inner courtyard of the
building, shaded and full of green broad leaved plants and a
burbling fountain. A room opening onto this courtyard had shelves
on all its walls, with bowls and figures placed on them in an
elaborate, beautiful display: Bold recognized pottery from
Samarqand, and painted figurines from Persia, among Chinese white
porcelain bowls painted in blue, gold leaf and copper.
'Very elegant,' Zeyk said.
Then they were to business. The Chinese officers inspected
Zeyk's string of slaves. They spoke to the translator, and Zeyk
conferred in private with the man, nodding frequently. Bold found
he was sweating, though he felt cold. They were being sold to the
Chinese as a single lot.
One of the Chinese strolled down the line of slaves. He looked
Bold over.
'How did you get here?' he asked Bold in Chinese.
Bold gulped, waved north. 'I was a trader.' His Chinese was
really rusty. 'The Golden Horde took me and brought me to Anatolia.
Then to Alexandria, then here.'
The Chinese nodded, then moved on. Soon after they were led off
by Chinese sailors in trousers and short shirts, back to the
waterfront. There several other strings and groups of slaves were
gathered. They were stripped, washed down with fresh water, an
astringent, more fresh water. They were given new robes of plain
cotton, led to boats, and rowed out to the huge side of one of the
great ships. Bold climbed a ladder forty one steps up the
wooden wall of the ship's side, following a skinny black slave boy.
They were taken together below the main deck, to a room near the
rear of the ship. What happened in there we don't want to tell you,
but the story won't make sense unless we do, so on to the next
chapter. These things happened.
FOUR
After dismal events, a piece of the Buddha
appears;
Then the treasure fleet asks Tianfei to calm their
fears.
The ship was so big it did not rock on the waves. It was like
being on an island. The room they were kept in was low and broad,
extending across the width of the ship. Gratings on both sides let
in air and some light, though it was dim. A hole under one grating
overhung the ship's side and served as the place of relief.
The skinny black boy looked down it as if judging whether he
could escape through the hole. He spoke Arabic better than Bold,
though it was not his native tongue either; he had a guttural
accent that Bold had never heard before. 'They trot you like derg.'
He came from the hills behind the sahil he said, staring down the
hole. He stuck one foot through, then another. He wasn't going to
get through.
Then the doorlock rattled and he pulled his feet out and sprang
away like an animal. Three men came in and had them all stand
before them. Ship's petty officers, Bold judged. Checking the
cargo. One of them inspected the black boy closely. He nodded to
the others, and they put wooden bowls of rice on the floor, and a
big bamboo tube bucket of water , and left.
That was the routine for two days. The black boy, whose name was
Kyu, spent much of his time looking down the shithole, at the water
it seemed, or at nothing. On the third day they were led up and out
to help load the ship's cargo. It was hauled inboard on ropes
running through pulleys on the masts, then guided down hatches into
holds below. The loaders followed instructions from the officer of
the watch, usually a big moon faced Han. Bold learned that the
hold was broken by interior walls into nine individual
compartments, each several times bigger than the biggest Red Sea
dhows. The slaves who had been on ships before said that would make
the great ship impossible to sink; if one compartment leaked it
could be emptied and repaired, or even left to flood, but the
others would keep the ship afloat. It was like being on nine ships
tied together.
One morning the deck overhead reverberated with the drumming of
sailors' feet, and they could feel the two giant stone anchors
being raised. Big sails were hauled up on crossbeams, one for each
mast. The ship began a slow stately rocking over the water, heeling
slightly.
It was indeed a floating town. Hundreds lived on it; moving bags
and boxes from hold to hold, Bold counted five hundred different
people, and there were no doubt many more. It was astonishing how
many people were aboard. Very Chinese, the slaves all agreed. The
Chinese didn't notice it was crowded, to them it was normal, no
different from any other Chinese town.
The admiral of the great fleet was on their ship: Zheng He, a
giant of a man, a flat--faced western Chinese, a hui as some slaves
called him under their breath. Because of his presence the upper
deck was crowded with officers, dignitaries, priests and
supernumeraries of every sort. Belowdecks there were a lot of black
men, Zanjis and Malays, doing the hardest work.
That night four men came into the slaves' room. One was Hua Man,
Zheng's first officer. They stopped before Kyu and grabbed him up.
Hua struck him on the head with a short club. The other three
pulled off the boy's robe and separated his legs. They tied
bandages tightly around his thighs and around his waist. They held
the semi conscious boy up, and Hua took a small curved knife
from his sleeve. He grasped the boy's penis and pulled it out, and
with a single deft slice cut off penis and balls, right next to the
body. The boy groaned as Hua squeezed the bleeding wound and
slipped a leather thong around it. He leaned down and inserted a
slender metal plug into the wound, then pulled the thong tight and
tied it off. He went to the shithole and dropped the boy's genitals
through it into the sea. Then from one of his assistants he took a
wet wad of paper and held it against the wound he had made, while
the others bandaged it in place. When it was secured two of them
put the boy's arms over their shoulders, and walked him out the
door.
They returned with him a watch or so later, and let him lie
down. Apparently they had been walking him the whole time. 'Don't
let him drink,' Hua said to the cowed slaves. 'If he drinks or eats
in the next three days, he'll die.'
The boy moaned through the night. The other slaves moved
instinctively to the other side of the room, too scared to talk
about it yet. Bold, who had gelded quite a few horses in his time,
went and sat by him. The boy was perhaps ten or twelve years old.
His grey face had some quality that drew Bold, and he stayed by
him. For three days the boy moaned for water, but Bold didn't give
him any.
On the night of the third day the eunuchs returned. 'Now we see
whether he will live or die,' Hua said. They held up the boy, took
off the bandages, and with a swift jerk Hua pulled the plug from
the boy's wound. Kyu yelped and groaned as a hard stream of urine
sprayed out of him into a porcelain chamberpot held in place by the
second eunuch.
'Good,' Hua said to the silent slaves. 'Keep him clean. Remind
him to take out the plug to relieve himself, and to get it back in
quick, until he heals.'
They left and locked the door.
Now the Abyssinian slaves would talk to the boy. 'If you keep it
clean it will heal right up. Urine cleans it too, so that's all
right, I mean, if you wet yourself when you go.'
'Lucky they didn't do it to all of us.'
'Who says they won't?'
'They don't do it to men. Too many die of it. Only boys can
sustain the loss.'
The next morning Bold led the boy to the shithole and helped him
to get the bandage off, so he could pull the plug and pee again.
Then Bold put it back for him, showing him where it went, trying to
be delicate as the boy whimpered. 'You have to have the plug, or
the tube will close up and you'll die.'
The boy lay on his cotton shift, feverish. The others tried not
to look at the horrible wound, but it was hard not to see it once
in a while.
'How could they do it?' one said in Arabic, when the boy was
sleeping.
'They're eunuchs themselves,' one of the Abyssinians said. 'Hua
is a eunuch. The admiral himself is a eunuch.'
'You'd think they'd be the ones to know.'
'They know and that's why they do it. They hate us all. They
rule the Chinese Emperor, and they hate everyone else. You can see
how it will be,' waving around at the immense ship. 'They'll
castrate all of us. It's the end coming.'
'You Christians like to say that, but so far it's only been true
for you.'
'God took us first to shorten our suffering. Your turn will
come.'
'It's not God I fear, but Admiral Zheng He, the Three Jewel
Eunuch. He and the Yongle Emperor were friends when they were boys,
and the Emperor ordered him castrated when they were both thirteen.
Can you believe it? Now the eunuchs do it to all the boys they take
prisoner.'
In the days that followed Kyu got hotter and hotter, and was
seldom conscious. Bold sat by his side and put wet rags in his
mouth, reciting sutras in his mind. The last time he had seen his
own son, almost thirty years before, the boy had been about this
age. This one's lips were grey and parched, his dark skin dull, and
very dry and hot. Bold had never felt anyone that hot who had not
died, so it was probably a waste of time for all concerned; best to
let the poor sexless creature slip away, no doubt. But he kept
giving him water anyway. He recalled the boy looking around the
ship as they had loaded it, his gaze intense and searching. Now the
body lay there looking like some sad little African girl, sick to
death from an infection in her loins.
But the fever passed. Kyu ate more and more. Even when he was
active again, however, he spoke little compared to before. His eyes
were not the same either; they stared at people like a bird's eyes
do, as if they did not quite believe anything they saw. Bold
realized that the boy had travelled out of his body, gone into the
bardo and come back someone else. All different. That black boy was
dead; this one started anew.
'What is your name now?' he asked him.
'Kyu,' the boy said, but unsurprised, as if he didn't remember
telling Bold before.
'Welcome to this life, Kyu.'
Sailing on the open ocean was a strange way to travel. The skies
flew by overhead, but it never looked as if they had moved
anywhere. Bold tried to reckon what a day's ride was for the fleet,
wondering if it was faster in the long run than horses, but he
couldn't do it. He could only watch the weather and wait.
...............
Twenty three days later the fleet sailed into Calicut, a
city much bigger than any of the ports of Zanj, as big as
Alexandria, or bigger.
Sandstone towers bulbed, walls crenellated,
All overgrown by a riot of greens.
This close to the sun life fountains into the sky. Around the
stone of the central districts,
Light wooden buildings fill the green bush Up the coast in both
directions,
Into the hills behind; the city extends As far as the eye can
see, up the sides Of a mountain ringing the town.
Despite its great size, all activity in the city stopped at the
arrival of the Chinese fleet. Bold and Kyu and the Ethiopians
looked through their grating at the shouting crowds, all those
people in their colours waving their arms overhead in awe.
'These Chinese will conquer the whole world.'
'Then the Mongols will conquer China,' Bold said.
He saw Kyu watching the throng on shore. The boy's expression
was that of a preta, unburied at death. Certain demon masks had
that look, the old Bon look, like Bold's father when enraged,
staring into a person's soul and saying I'm taking this along with
me, you can't stop me and you'd better not try. Bold shuddered to
see such a face on a mere boy.
They were put to work unloading cargo into boats, and taking
other loads out of boats onto the ship, but none of the slaves was
sold, and only once were they taken ashore, to help break up a mass
of cloth bolts and carry them to the long low dug outs being
used to transfer goods from the beaches to the treasure fleet.
During this work Zheng He came ashore in his personal barge,
which was painted, gilded and encrusted with jewellery and
porcelain mosaics, and had a gold statue facing forwards from the
bow. Zheng stepped down a walkway from the barge, wearing golden
robes embroidered in red and blue. His men had laid a carpet strip
on the beach for him to walk on, but he left it to come over and
observe the loading of the new cargo. He was truly an immense man,
tall, broad, and with a deep draught fore and aft. He had
a broad face, not Han; and he was a eunuch; he was all the
Abyssinians had claimed. Bold watched him out of the corner of his
eye, and then noticed that Kyu was standing bolt upright staring at
him too, work forgotten, eyes fixed like a hawk's on a mouse. Bold
grabbed the boy and hauled him back to work. 'Come on, Kyu, we're
chained together here, move or I'll knock you down and drag you
across the ground. I don't want to get in trouble here, Tara knows
what happens to a slave in trouble with such people as these.'
From Calicut they sailed south to Lanka. Here the slaves were
left aboard the ship, while the soldiers went ashore and
disappeared for several days. The behaviour of the officers left
behind made Bold think the detachment was out on a campaign, and he
watched them as closely as he could as the days passed and they
grew more nervous. Bold could not guess what they might do if Zheng
He did not return, but he did not think they would sail away.
Indeed the fire officers were hard at work laying out their array
of incendiaries, when the admiral's barge and the other boats came
flying back out of Lanka's inner harbour, and their men came aboard
shouting triumphantly. Not only had they fought their way out of an
inland trap, they said, but they had captured the treacherous local
usurper who had laid the trap, and taken the rightful king as well
though there seemed to be some confusion in the story as to
which was which, and why they should abduct the rightful king as
well as the usurper. Most amazing of all, they said that the
rightful king had had in his possession the island's holiest relic,
a tooth of the Buddha, called the Dalada. Zheng held up the little
gold reliquary to show all aboard this prize. An eyetooth,
apparently. Crew, passengers, slaves, all spontaneously roared
their acclaim, in throattearing shouts that went on and on.
'This is a great bit of fortune,' Bold told Kyu when the awful
noise died down, pressing his hands together and reciting the
Descent into Lanka Sutra. In fact it was so much good fortune it
frightened him. And there was no doubt that fright had been a big
part of the roar of the crew. The Buddha had blessed Lanka, it was
one of his special lands, with a branch of his Bodhi tree growing
in its soil, and his mineralized tears still falling off the sides
of the sacred mountain in the island's centre, the one that was
topped by Adam's footprint. Surely it was not right to take the
Dalada away from its rightful place in such a holy land. There was
an affront in the act that could not be denied.
As they sailed cast, the story circulated through the ship that
the Dalada was only proof of the deposed king's right to rule; it
would be returned to Lanka when the Yongle Emperor determined the
rights of the case. The slaves were reassured by this news.
'So the Emperor of China will decide who rules that island,' Kyu
said. Bold nodded. The Yongle Emperor had himself come to the
throne in a violent coup, so it was not clear to Bold which of the
two Lankan contenders he would favour. Meanwhile, they had the
Dalada on board. 'It's good,' he said to Kyu after thinking it over
some more. 'Nothing bad can happen to us on this voyage,
anyway.'
And so it proved. Black squalls, bearing directly down on them,
unaccountably evaporated just as they struck. Giant seas rocked
all the horizons, great dragon tails visibly whipping up the waves,
while they sailed serenely over a moving flat calm at their centre.
They even sailed through the Malacca Strait without hindrance from
Palembanque, or, north of that, from the myriad pirates of Cham, or
the Japanese wakou -- though, as Kyu pointed out, no pirate in his
right mind would chal lenge a fleet so huge and powerful,
tooth of the Buddha or no.
Then as they sailed into the south China Sea, someone saw the
Dalada floating about the ship at night, as if, he said, it were a
little candle flame. 'How does he know it wasn't a candle flame?'
Kyu asked. But the next morning the sky dawned red. Black clouds
rolled over the horizon in a line from the south, in a way that
reminded Bold strongly of the storm that had killed Temur.
Driving rain struck, then a violent wind that turned the sea
white. Shooting up and down in their dim little room, Bold realized
that such a storm was even more frightening at sea than on land.
The ship's astrologer cried out that a great dragon under the sea
was angry, and thrashing the water under them. Bold joined the
other slaves in holding to the gratings and looking out of their
little holes to see if they could catch sight of spine or claw or
snout of this dragon, but the spume flying over the whitewater
obscured the surface. Bold thought he might have seen part of a
dark green tail in the foam.
Wind shrieks through the nine masts,
All bare of sail. The great ship tilts in the wind, Rolls side
to side, and the little ships Accompanying them bob like corks,
In and out of view through the grating.
In storms like this, nothing to be done but hold on! Bold and
Kyu cling fast to the wall, Listening through the howl for the
officers' shouts And the thumping feet of the sailors Doing what
they can to secure the sails And then to tie the tiller securely in
place. They hear the fear in the officers, And sense it in the
sailors' feet. Even belowdecks they are wet with spray.
Up on the great poop deck the officers and astrologers performed
some sort of ceremony of appeasement, and Zheng He himself could be
heard calling out to Tianfei, the Chinese goddess of safety at
sea.
'Let the dark water dragons go down into the sea, and leave us
free from calamity! Humbly, respectfully, piously, we offer up this
flagon of wine, offer it once and offer it again, pouring out this
fine, fragrant wine! That our sails may meet favourable winds, that
the sea lanes be peaceful, that the all seeing and
all hearing spirit soldiers of winds and seasons, the
wave quellers and swell drinkers, the airborne immortals,
the god of the year, and the protectress of our ship, the Celestial
Consort, brilliant, divine, marvellous, responsive, mysterious
Tianfei might save us!'
Looking up through the dripping cracks in the deck Bold could
see a composite vision of sailors watching this ceremony, mouths
all open wide shouting against the wind's roar. Their guard yelled
at them, 'Pray to Tianfei, pray to the Celestial Consort, the
sailor's only friend! Pray for her intercession! All of you! Much
more of this wind and the ship will be torn apart!'
'Tianfei preserve us,' Bold chanted, squeezing Kyu to indicate
he should do the same. The black boy said nothing. He pointed up at
the forward masts, however, which they could see through the
hatchway grating, and Bold looked up and saw red filaments of light
dancing between the masts: balls of light, like Chinese lanterns
without the paper or the fire, glowing at the top of the mast and
over it, illuminating the flying rain and even the black bottoms of
the clouds that were peeling by overhead. The otherworldly beauty
of the sight tempered the terror of it; Bold and everyone else
moved outside the realm of terror, it was too strange and awesome a
sight to worry any longer about life or death. All the men were
crying out, praying at the top of their lungs. Tianfei coalesced
out of the dancing red light, her figure gleaming brightly over
them, and the wind diminished all at once. The seas calmed around
them. Tianfei dissipated, ran redly out of the rigging and back
into the air. Now their grateful voices could be heard above the
wind. Whitecaps still toppled and rolled, but all at a distance
from them, halfway to the horizon.
Tianfei!' Bold shouted with the rest. 'Tianfei!'
Zheng He stood at the poop rail and raised both hands in a light
rain. He shouted 'Tianfei! Tianfei has saved us!' and they all
bellowed it with him, filled with joy in the same way the air had
been filled with the red light of the goddess. Later the wind blew
hard again, but they had no fear.
How the rest of the voyage home went is not really material;
nothing of note happened, they made it back safely, and what
happened after that you can find out by reading the next
chapter.
FIVE
In a Hangzhou restaurant, Bold and Kyu rejoin their
jati; In a single moment, end of many months' harmony.
Storm tossed, Tianfei protected, the treasure fleet
sailed into a big estuary. Ashore, behind a great seawall, stood
the rooftops of a vast city. Even the part visible from the ship
was bigger than all the cities Bold had ever seen put together --
all the bazaars of central Asia, the Indian cities Temur had razed,
the ghost towns of Frengistan, the white seaside towns of Zanj,
Calicut all combined would have occupied only a quarter or a
third of the land covered by this forest of rooftops, this steppe
of rooftops, extending all the way to distant hills visible to the
west.
The slaves stood in the waist of the big ship, silent in the
midst of the cheering Chinese, who cried out 'Tianfei, Celestial
Consort, thank you!' and 'Hangzhou, my home, never thought to be
seen again!' 'Home, wife, new year festival!' 'We happy, happy men,
to have travelled all the way to the other side of the world and
then make it back home!' and so on.
The ships' huge anchor stones were dropped over the side. Where
the Chientang River entered the estuary there was a powerful tidal
bore, and any ship not securely anchored could be swept far up into
the shal lows, or flushed out to sea. When the ships were
anchored the work of unloading began. This was a massive operation,
and once as he ate rice between watches at the hoist, Bold noted
that there were no horses, camels, water buffalo, mules or asses to
help with the job, or with any other job in the city: just
thousands of labourers, endless lines of them, moving the food and
goods in, or taking out the refuse and manure,
Mostly by canal -- in and out, in and out, as if the city were a
monstrous imperial body lying on the land, being fed and relieved
by all its subjects together.
Many days passed in the labour of unloading, and Bold and Kyu
saw a bit of the harbour Kanpu, and Hangzhou itself, when manning
barges on trips to state warehouses under the southern bill
compound that had once been the imperial palace, hundreds of years
before. Now lesser aristocrats and even high ranking
bureaucrats and eunuchs lived in the old palace grounds. North of
these extended the walled enclosure of the old city, impossibly
crowded with warrens of wooden buildings that were five, six and
even seven storeys tall -- old buildings that overhung the canals,
people's bedding spread out from balconies to dry in the sun, grass
growing out of the roofs.
Bold and Kyu gawked up from the canals while unloading the
barges. Kyu looked with his bird's gaze, seeming unsurprised,
unimpressed, unafraid. 'There are a lot of them,' he conceded.
Constantly he was asking Bold the Chinese words for things, and in
the attempt to answer Bold learned many more words himself.
When the unloading was done, the slaves from their ship were
gathered together and taken to Phoenix Hill, 'the hill of the
foreigners', and sold to a local merchant named Shen. No slave
market here, no auction, no fuss. They never learned what they had
been sold for, or who in particular had owned them during their sea
passage. Possibly it had been Zheng He himself.
Chained together at the ankles, Bold and Kyu were led through
the narrow crowded streets to a building near the shores of a lake
flanking the west edge of the old city. The first floor of the
building was a restaurant. It was the fourteenth day of the first
moon of the year, Shen told them, the start of the Feast of
Lanterns, so they would have to learn fast, because the place was
hopping.
Tables spill out of the restaurant Into the broad street
bordering the lakefront, Every chair filled all day long.
The lake itself dotted with boats,
Each boat sporting lanterns of all kinds Coloured glass painted
with figures,
Carved white and apple jade, Roundabouts turning on their
candles' hot air, Paper lanterns burning up in brief blazes. A dyke
crowded with lantern bearers Extends into the lake, the opposite
shore is crowded As well, so at the day's end The lake and all the
city around it Spark in the dusk of the festival twilight. Certain
moments give us such unexpected beauty.
Shen's eldest wife, I Ii, ran the kitchen very strictly,
and Bold and Kyu soon found themselves unloading hundredweight bags
of rice from the canal barges tied up behind the restaurant;
carrying them in; returning bags of refuse to the compost barges;
cleaning the tables; and mopping and sweeping the floor. They ran
in and out, also upstairs to the family compound above the
restaurant. The pace was relentless, but all the while they were
surrounded by the restaurant women, in white robes with paper
butterflies in their hair, and by thousands of other women as well,
promenading under the globes of coloured light, so that even Kyu
raced about drunk on the sights and smells, and on drinks salvaged
from near empty cups. They drank lychee, honey and ginger
punch, paw paw and pear juice, and teas green and black. Shen also
served fifteen kinds of rice wine; they tried the dregs of them
all. They drank everything but plain water, which they were warned
against as dangerous to the health.
As for the food, which again came to them mostly in the form of
table scraps -- well, it beggared description. They were given a
plateful of rice every morning, with some kidneys or other offal
thrown in, and after that they were expected to fend for themselves
with what customers left behind. Bold ate everything he got his
hands on, astonished at the variety. The Feast of Lanterns was a
time for Shen and I Ii to offer their fullest menu, and so
Bold had the chance to taste roebuck, red deer, rabbit, partridge,
quail, clams cooked in rice wine, goose with apricots, lotus seed
soup, pimento soup with mussels, fish cooked with plums, fritters
and souffles, ravioli, pies and cornflour fruitcakes. Every kind of
food, in fact, except for any beef or dairy; strangely, the Chinese
had no cattle. But they had eighteen kinds of soy, Shen said, nine
of rice, eleven of apricots, eight of pears. It was a feast every
day.
After the rush of the Feast of Lanterns was over, I Ii
liked to take short breaks from her work in the kitchen, and visit
some of the other,, , restaurants of the city, to see what
they were offering. She would return" to inform Shen and the cooks
that they needed to make a sweet soy soup, for instance, like that
she had found at the Mixed Wares Market; or pig cooked in ashes,
like that at the Longevity and Compassion Palace.
She started taking Bold with her on her morning trips to the
abattoir, located right in the heart of the old city. There she
chose her pork ribs, and the liver and kidneys for the slaves. Here
Bold learned why they were never to drink the city's water; the
offal and blood from the slaughter were washed off right into the
big canal running down to the river, but often the tides pushed
water back up this canal and through the rest of the city's water
network.
Returning behind I li with his wheelbarrow of pork one day,
pausing to let a party of nine intoxicated women in white pass by,
Bold felt all of a sudden that he was in a different world. Back at
the restaurant he said to Kyu, 'We've been reborn without our
noticing it.'
'Maybe you have. You're like a baby here.'
'Both of us! Look about you! It's . . .' He could not express
it.
'They are rich,' Kyu said, looking about. Then they were back to
work.
The lakefront never was an ordinary place. Festival or not --
and there were festivals almost every month -- the lakefront was
one of the main places the people of Hangzhou congregated. Every
week there were private parties between the more general festivals,
so the promenade was a daily celebration of greater or lesser
magnitude, and although there was a great deal of work to be done
supplying and maintaining the restaurant, there was also a great
deal of food and drink to be scavenged, or poached in the kitchen,
and both Bold and Kyu were insatiable. They soon filled out, and
Kyu was also still sprouting up, looking tall among the
Chinese.
Soon it was as if they had never lived any other life. Well
before dawn, resonant wooden fish were struck with mallets, and the
weathermen shouted their announcements from the firewatch towers:
'It is raining! It is cloudy today!' Bold and Kyu and about twenty
other slaves got up and were let out of their room, and most went
down to the service canal that ran in from the suburbs, to meet the
rice barges. The barge crews had got up even earlier -- theirs was
night work, starting at midnight many li away. All together they
heaved the bulging sacks onto wheelbarrows, then the slaves wheeled
them back through the alleys to Shen's. They sweep up the
restaurant,
Light the stove fires, set the tables,
Wash bowls and chopsticks, chop vegetables, Cook, carry supplies
and food Out to Shen's two pleasure boats, And then as dawn breaks
And people begin slowly to appear On the lakefront for
breakfast,
They help the cooks, wait on tables,
Wait and clean tables -- anything needed, Lost in the meditation
of labour though usually the hardest work in the place
was theirs, as they were the newest slaves. But even the hardest
work wasn't very hard, and with the constant availability of food,
Bold considered their placement a windfall; a chance to put some
meat on their bones, and learn better the local dialect and the
ways of the Chinese. Kyu pretended never to notice any of these
things, indeed pretended not to understand most of the Chinese
spoken to him, but Bold saw that he was actually soaking in
everything like a dishwasher's sponge, watching sideways so that it
seemed he never watched, when he always watched. That was Kyu's
way. He already knew more Chinese than Bold.
The eighth day of the fourth moon was another big festival,
celebrating a deity who was patron to many of the guilds of the
town. The guilds organized a procession, down the broad imperial
way that divided the old city north to south, then over to West
Lake for dragon boat jousts, among all the other more usual
pleasures of the lakefront. Each guild wore its particular costume
and mask, and brandished identical umbrellas, flags or bouquets as
they marched in squares together, shouting 'Ten thousand years! Ten
thousand years!' as they had done ever since the emperors had
actually lived in Hangzhou, and heard these shouted hopes for their
longevity. Spread out along the lakefront at the end of the parade,
they watched a dance of a hundred little eunuchs in a circle, a
particular celebration of that festival. Kyu almost looked directly
at these children.
Later that day he and Bold were assigned to one of Shen's
pleasure boats, which were floating extensions of his restaurant.
'We have a wonderful feast for our passengers today,' Shen cried as
they arrived and filed aboard. 'We'll be serving the Eight Dainties
today dragon livers, phoenix marrow, bear paws, lips of
apes, rabbit embryo, carp tail, broiled osprey, and kumiss.'
Bold smiled to think of kumiss, which was simply fermented
mares' milk, included among the Eight Dainties; he had practically
grown up on it. 'Some of those are easier to obtain than others,'
he said, and Shen laughed and kicked him into the boat.
Onto the lake they paddled. 'How come your lips are still on
your face?' Kyu called back at Shen, who was out of hearing.
Bold laughed. 'The Eight Dainties,' he said. 'What these people
think of!'
'They do love their numbers,' Kyu agreed. 'The Three Pure Ones,
the Four Emperors, the Nine Luminaries 'The Twenty eight
Constellations '
'The Twelve Horary Branches, the Five Elders of the Five Regions
. .
'The Fifty Star Spirits.'
'The Ten Unforgivable Sins.'
'The Six Bad Recipes.'
Kyu cackled briefly. 'It's not numbers they like, it's lists.
Lists of all the things they have.'
Out on the lake Bold and Kyu saw up close the magnificent
decoration of the day's dragon boats, bedecked with flowers,
feathers, coloured flags and spinners. Musicians on each boat
played madly, trying with drum and horn to drown out the sound of
all the others, while pikemen in the bows reached out with padded
staves to knock people on other boats into the water.
In the midst of this happy tumult, screams of a different tone
caught the attention of those on the water, and they looked ashore
and saw that there was a fire. Instantly the games ended and all
the boats made a beeline for land, piling up five deep against the
docks. People ran right over the boats in their haste, some towards
the fire, some towards their own neighbourhoods. As they hurried
over to the restaurant Bold and Kyu saw for the first time a fire
brigade. Each neighbourhood had one, with its own equipment, and
they would all follow the signal flags from the watchtowers around
the city, soaking roofs in districts threatened by the blaze, or
putting out flying embers. Hangzhou's buildings were all wood or
bamboo, and most districts had gone up in flames at one time or
another, so the routine was well practised. Bold and Kyu ran
behind Shen up to the burning neighbourhood, which was to the north
of theirs and upwind, so that they too were in danger.
At the fire's edge thousands of men and women were at work, many
in bucket lines that extended to the nearest canals. The buckets
were run upstairs into smoky buildings, and tossed down onto the
flames. There were also quite a number of men carrying staves,
pikes, and even crossbows, and questioning men hauled out of the
fiery alleyways bordering the conflagration. Suddenly these men
beat one of those that emerged to a bloody mass, right there amid
the firefighting. Looter, someone said. Army detachments would soon
arrive to help capture more and kill them on the spot, after public
torture, if there was time.
Despite this threat, Bold saw now that there were figures
without buckets, darting in and out of the burning buildings. The
fight against looters was as intense as that against the fire! Kyu
too saw this as he passed wooden or bamboo buckets down the line,
openly watching everything.
Days flew by, each busier than the last. Kyu was still nearly
mute, head always lowered, a mere beast of burden or kitchen swab
incapable of learning Chinese, or so everyone in the
restaurant believed. Only semihuman in fact, which was the usual
attitude of the Chinese towards black slaves in the city.
Bold spent more and more time working for I li. She
appeared to prefer to take him on her trips out, and he hustled to
keep up with her, manoeuvring the wheelbarrow through the crowd.
She was always in a tearing hurry, mostly in her quest for new
foods; she seemed anxious to try everything. Bold saw that the
restaurant's success had resulted from her efforts. Shen himself
was more an impediment than a help, as he was bad with his abacus
and couldn't remember much, especially about his debts, and he
kicked his slaves and his girls for hire.
So Bold was pleased to follow I Ii They visited Mother
Sung's outside the Cash--reserve Gate, to try her white soy soup.
They watched Wei Big Knife at the Cat Bridge boil pork, and Chou
Number Five in front of the Five span Pavilion, making his
honey fritters. Back in the kitchen I Ii would try to
reproduce these foods exactly, shaking her head ominously as she
did. Sometimes she would retire to her room to think, and a few
times she called Bold up the stairs, to order him out in search of
some spice or ingredient she had thought of that might help with a
dish.
Her room had a table by the bed, covered with cosmetic bottles,
jewellery, perfume sachets, mirrors and little boxes of lacquered
wood, jade, gold and silver. Gifts from Shen, apparently. Bold
glanced at them while she sat there thinking.
A tub of white foundation powder, Still flat and shiny on
top.
A deep rose shade of grease blush,
For cheeks already chapped dark red. A box of pink balsam leaves
Crushed in alum, for tinted nails,
Which many women in the restaurant displayed. I Ii's nails
were bitten to the quick.
Cosmetics never used, jewellery never worn,
Mirrors never looked into. The outward gaze.
Once she stained her palms with the pink balsam dye; another
time, all the dogs and cats in the kitchen. Just to see what would
happen, as far as Bold could tell.
But she was interested in the things of the city. Half her trips
out were occupied by talk, by asking questions. Once she came home
troubled: 'Bold, they say that northerners here go to restaurants
that serve human flesh. "Two legged mutton", have you heard
that? Different names for old men, women, young girls, children?
Are they really such monsters up there?'
'I don't think so,' Bold said. 'I never met any.'
She was not entirely reassured. She often saw hungry ghosts in
her sleep, and they had to come from somewhere. And they sometimes
complained to her of having had their bodies eaten. It made sense
to her that they might cluster around restaurants in search of some
kind of retribution. Bold nodded; it made sense to him too, though
it was hard to believe the teeming city harboured practising
cannibals when there was so much other food to be had.
As the restaurant prospered, I Ii made Shen improve the
place, cutting holes in the side walls and putting in windows,
filling them with square trellis works supporting oiled paper,
which blazed or glowed with sunlight, depending on the hour and
weather. She opened the front of the building entirely to the
lakefront promenade, and paved the downstairs with glazed bricks.
She burned pots of mosquito smoke during the summer, when they were
at their worst. She built in a number of small wall shrines devoted
to various gods deities of place, animal spirits, demons and
hungry ghosts, even, at Bold's humble request, one to Tianfei the
Celestial Consort, despite her suspicion that this was only another
name for Tara, already much honoured in the nooks and crannies of
the house. If it annoyed Tara, she said, it would be on Bold's
head.
Once she came home retailing a story of a number of people who
had died and come back to life shortly thereafter, apparently
because of the mistakes of careless celestial scribes, who had
written down the wrong names. Bold smiled; the Chinese imagined a
complicated bureaucracy for the dead, just like the ones they had
established for everything else. 'They came back with information
for their living relatives, things that turned out to be correct
even though the briefly deceased person couldn't have known about
it!'
'Marvels,' Bold said.
'Marvels happen every day,' I li replied. It was, as far as
she was concerned, a universe peopled by spirits, genies, demons,
ghosts as many kinds of beings as tastes. She had never had
the bardo explained to her, and so she didn't understand the six
levels of reality that organized cosmic existence; and Bold did not
feel that he was in a position to teach her. So it remained at the
level of ghosts and demons. Malignant ones could be held off by
various practices that annoyed them; firecrackers, drums and gongs,
these things chased them away. It was also possible to strike them
with a stick, or burn artemisia, a Sechuan custom that I Li
practised. She also bought magic writing on miniature papers or
cylinders of silver, and put up white jade square tiles in every
doorway; dark demons disliked the light of these. And the
restaurant and its household prospered, so she felt she had done
the right things.
Following her out several times a week, Bold learned a lot about
Hangzhou. He learned the best rhinoceros skins were found at
Chien's,
As you went down from the service canal to little Chinghu Lake;
the finest turbans were at Kang Number Eight's, in the Street of
the Worn Cash Coin, or at Yang Number Three's, going down the canal
after the Three Bridges. The largest display of books was at the
bookstalls under the big trees near the summer house of the Orange
Tree Garden. Wicker cages for birds and crickets could be found in
Ironwire Lane, ivory combs at Fei's, painted fans at the Coal
Bridge. I Ii liked to know of these places, even though she
only bought what they sold as gifts for her friends or her
mother in law. A very curious person indeed. Bold could
hardly keep up with her. One day in the street, rattling off some
story or other, she stopped and looked up at him, surprised, and
said, 'I want to know everything!'
But all the while, Kyu had been watching without watching. And
one night, during the tidal bore of the eighth moon, when the
Chientang River roared with high waves and there were many visitors
in the city, in the hour before the woodblocks and the weathermen's
cries, Bold was awakened by a gentle tug on the ear, then the firm
pressure of a hand over his mouth.
It was Kyu. He held a key to their room in his hand. 'I stole
the key.' Bold pulled Kyu's hand away from his mouth. 'What are you
doing?' he whispered.
'Come on,' Kyu said in Arabic, in the phrase used for a balking
camel. 'We're escaping.'
'What? What do you mean?'
'We're escaping, I said.'
'But where will we go?'
'Away from this city. North to Nanjing.'
'But we have it good here!'
'Come on, none of that. We're finished here. I've already killed
Shen.' 'You what!'
'Shhhh. We need to set the fires and get out of here before the
wake up.'
Stunned, Bold scrambled to his feet, whispering 'Why, why, why,
why? We had a good thing here, you should have asked me first if I
wanted any part of this!'
'I want to escape,' Kyu said, land I need you to do it. I need a
master to get around.'
'Get around where?'
But now Bold was following Kyu through the silent household,
stepping blindly with complete assurance, so well had he come to
know this building, the first one he had ever lived in. He liked
it. Kyu led him into the kitchen, took a branch sticking out of the
smouldering stove fire; he must have put it in before rousing Bold,
for the pitchy knot at the end was now blazing. 'We're going north
to the capital,' Kyu said over his shoulder as he led Bold
outdoors. 'I'm going to kill the Emperor.'
'What!'
'More about that later,' Kyu said, and applied the flaming torch
to a bundle of rush and kindling and balls of wax he had put
against the walls, in a corner. When it had caught fire he ran
outside, and Bold followed him appalled. Kyu lit another bundle of
kindling against the house next door, and placed the brand against
a third house, and all the while Bold stayed right behind him, too
shocked to think properly. He would have stopped the boy if it
weren't for the fact that Shen was already murdered. Kyu and Bold's
lives were forfeit; setting the district on fire was probably their
only chance, as it might burn the body so that the killing would
not show. It also might be assumed that some slaves had been burned
up entire, locked in their room as they were. 'Hopefully they'll
all burn,' Kyu said, echoing this thought.
We are as shocked as you are by this development, and don't know
what happened next, but no doubt the next chapter will tell us.
SIX
By way of the Grand Canal our pilgrims escape
justice;
In Nanjing they beg the aid of the Three jewel
Eunuch.
They ran north up the dark alleys paralleling the service canal.
Behind them the alarm was being raised already, people screaming,
fire bells ringing, a fresh dawn wind blowing in off West Lake.
'Did you take some cash?' Bold thought to ask.
'Many strings,' Kyu said. He had a full bag under his arm.
They would need to get as far away as they could, as quickly as
possible. With a black like Kyu it would be hard to be
inconspicuous. Necessarily he would have to remain a young black
eunuch slave, Bold therefore his master. Bold would have to do all
the talking; this was why Kyu had brought him along. This was why
he had not murdered Bold along with the rest of the household.
'What about I Ii Did you kill her too?'
'No. Her bedroom has a window. She'll do fine.'
Bold wasn't so sure; widows had a hard time of it; she'd end up
like Wei Big Knife, on the street cooking meals on a brazier for
passers by. Although for her that might be opportunity
enough.
Wherever there were a lot of slaves, there were usually quite a
few blacks. The canal boats were often moved along through the
countryside by slaves, turning capstans or pulling their ropes
directly, like mules or camels. Possibly the two of them could take
on such a role and hide in it; he could pretend to be a slave
himself but no, they needed a master to account for them. If
they could slip onto the end of a rope line ... He couldn't believe
he was thinking about joining a canal boat ropeline, when he had
been waiting tables in a restaurant! It made him so angry at Kyu
that he hissed.
And now Kyu needed him. Bold could abandon the boy and he would
stand a much better chance of slipping into obscurity, among the
many traders and Buddhist monks and beggars on the roads of China;
even their famous bureaucracy of local yamens and district
officials could not keep track of all the poor people slipping
around in the hills and the back country. While with a black boy he
stood out like a festival clown with his monkey.
But he was not going to abandon Kyu, not really, so he just
hissed. On they ran through the outer city, Kyu pulling Bold by the
hand from time to time and urging him in Arabic to hurry. 'You know
this is what you really wanted, you're a great Mongol warrior, you
told me, a barbarian of the steppes, feared by all the peoples, you
were only just pretending not to mind being someone's kitchen
slave, you're good at not thinking about things, about not seeing
things, but it's all an act, of course you always knew, you just
pretend not to know, you wanted to escape all the while.' Bold was
amazed to think anyone could have misunderstood him that
completely.
The suburbs of Hangzhou were much greener than the old central
quarter, every household compound marked by trees, even small
mulberry orchards. Behind them the fire alarm bells were waking the
whole city, the day starting in a panic. From a slight rise they
could look back between walls and see the lakefront aglow; the
entire district appeared to have caught fire as quickly as Kyu's
little balls of wax and kindling, fanned by a good stiff west wind.
Bold wondered if Kyu had waited for a windy night to make his
break. The thought chilled him. He had known the boy was clever,
but this ruthlessness he had never suspected, despite the preta
look he sometimes had, which reminded Bold of Temur's look -- some
intensity of focus, some totemic aspect, his raptor nafs looking
out no doubt. Each person was in some crucial sense his or her
nafs, and Bold had already concluded Kyu's was a falcon, hooded and
tied. Temur's had been an eagle on high, stooping to tear at the
world.
So he had seen some sign, had had some idea. And there was that
closed aspect of Kyu too, the sense that his true thoughts were
many rooms away, ever since his castration. Of course that would
have had its effects. The original boy was gone, leaving the nafs
to negotiate with some new person.
They hurried through the northernmost sub prefecture of
Hangzhou, and out of the gate in the last city wall. The road rose
higher into the Su Tung po Hills, and they got a view back to
the lakefront district, the flames less visible in the dawn, more a
matter of clouds of black smoke, no doubt throwing sparks east to
spread the blaze. 'This fire will kill a lot of people!' Bold
exclaimed.
'They're Chinese,' Kyu said. 'There's more than enough to take
their place.'
Walking hard to the north, paralleling the Grand Canal on its
west side, they saw again how crowded China was. Up here a whole
country of rice paddies and villages fed the great city on the
coast. Farmers were out in the morning light,
Sticking rice starts into the submerged fields, Bending over
time after time. A man walks Behind a water buffalo. Strange to see
Such rain polished black poverty,
Tiny farms, rundown crossroad villages,
After all the colourful glories of Hangzhou.
'I don't see why they all don't move to the city,' Kyu said. 'I
would.'
'They never think of it,' Bold said, marvelling that Kyu would
suppose other people thought like he did. 'Besides, their families
are here.'
They could just see the Grand Canal through the trees lining it,
some two or three li to the east. Mounds of earth and timber stood
by it, marking repairs or improvements. They kept their distance,
hoping to avoid any army detachments or prefecture posses that
might be patrolling the canal on this unfortunate day.
'Do you want a drink of water?' Kyu asked. 'Do you think we can
drink it here?'
He was very solicitous, Bold saw; but of course now he had to
be. Near the Grand Canal the sight of Kyu would probably pass for
normal, but Bold had no paperwork, and local prefects or canal
officials might very well ask him to produce some. So neither the
Grand Canal nor the country away from it would work all the time.
They would have to slip on and off it as they went, depending on
who was around. They might even have to move by night, which would
slow them down and be more dangerous. Then again it seemed unlikely
that all the hordes of people moving up and down the canal and its
corridor were being checked for papers, or had them either.
So they moved over into the crowd walking the canal road, and
Kyu carried his bundle and wore his chains, and fetched water for
Bold, and pretended ignorance of any but the simplest commands. He
could do a scarily believable imitation of an idiot. Gangs of men
hauled barges, or turned the capstans that raised and lowered the
lock gates that interrupted the flow of the canal at regular
intervals. Pairs of men, master and servant or slave, were common.
Bold ordered Kyu about, but was too worried to enjoy it. Who knew
what trouble Kyu might cause in the north. Bold didn't know what he
felt, it changed minute by minute. He still couldn't believe Kyu
had forced this escape on him. He hissed again; he had
life or death power over the boy, yet he remained afraid
of him.
At a new little paved square, next to locks made of new raw
timber, a local yamen and his deputies were stopping every fourth
or fifth group. Suddenly they waved at Bold, and when he led Kyu
over, suddenly hopeless, they asked to see his papers. The yamen
was accompanied by a higher official in robes, a prefect wearing a
patch with twinned sparrow hawks embroidered on it. The prefects'
symbols of rank were easy to read -- the lowest rank showed quail
pecking the ground, the highest, cranes sporting over the clouds.
So this was a fairly senior figure here, possibly on the hunt for
the arsonist of Hangzhou, and Bold was trying to think of lies, his
body tensing to run, when Kyu reached into his bag and gave Bold a
packet of papers tied with a silk ribbon. Bold undid the ribbon's
knot and gave the packet to the yamen, wondering what it said. He
knew the Tibetan letters for 'om mani padme hum', as who could not
with them carved on every rock in the Himalaya, but other than that
he was illiterate, and the Chinese alphabet looked like chicken
tracks, each letter different from all the rest.
The yamen and the sparrow hawk official read the top two sheets,
then handed them back to Bold, who tied them up and gave them to
Kyu without looking at him.
'Take care around Nanjing,' Sparrow Hawk said. 'There are
bandits in the hills just south of it.'
'We'll stick to the canal,' Bold said.
When they were out of sight of the patrol, Bold struck Kyu hard
for the first time. 'What was that! Why didn't you tell me about
the papers! How can you expect me to know what to say to
people?'
'I was afraid you would take them and leave me.'
'What do you mean? If they say I have a black slave, then I need
a black slave, don't I? What do they say?'
'They say you are a horse merchant from the treasure fleet,
travelling to Nanjing to complete business in horses. And that I am
your slave.'
'Where did you get them?'
'A rice boatman who does them wrote one for me.'
'So he knows our plans?'
Kyu said nothing, and Bold wondered if the boatman too was dead.
The boy seemed capable of anything. Getting a key, getting papers
forged, preparing the little fireballs ... If the time came where
he thought he didn't need Bold, Bold would no doubt wake up one
morning with a slit throat. He would most certainly be safer on his
own.
As they trudged past the barge ropelines, he brooded on this. He
could abandon the boy to whatever fate befell him -- more
enslavement, or quick death as a runaway, or slow death as an
arsonist and murderer -- and then work his way north and west to
the great wall and the steppes beyond, and thence home.
From the way Kyu avoided his gaze and slunk behind him, it was
apparent that he knew more or less what Bold was thinking. So for a
day or two Bold ordered him about harshly, and Kyu jumped at every
word.
But Bold did not leave him, and Kyu did not slit Bold's throat.
Thinking it over, Bold had to admit to himself that his karma was
somehow tied up with the boy's. He was part of it somehow. Very
possibly he was there to help the boy.
'Listen,' Bold said one day as they walked. 'You can't go to the
capital and kill the Emperor. It isn't possible. And why would you
want to anyway?'
Hunched, sullen, the boy eventually said in Arabic, 'To bring
them down.'
Again the term he used came from camel driving.
'To what?'
'To stop them.'
'But killing the Emperor, even if you could, wouldn't do that.
They'd just replace him with another one, and it would all go on
the same as before. That's how it works.'
Much trudging, and then: 'They wouldn't fight over who got to be
the new emperor?'
'Over the succession? Sometimes that happens. It depends on
who's in line to succeed. I don't know about that any more. This
Emperor, the Yongle, is a usurper himself. He took it away from his
nephew, or uncle. But usually the eldest son has a clear right. Or
the Emperor designates a different successor. In any case the
dynasty continues. It isn't often there is a problem.'
'But there might be?'
'There might be and there might not. Meanwhile they'd be staying
up at night working out better ways to torture you. What they did
to you on the ship would be nothing compared to it. The Ming
emperors have the best torturers in the world, everyone knows
that.'
More trudging. 'They have the best everything in the world,' the
boy complained. 'The best canals, the best cities, the best ships,
the best armies. They sail around the seas and everywhere they go
people kotow to them. They land and see the tooth of the Buddha,
they take it with them. They instal a king that will serve them,
and move on and do the same everywhere they go. They'll conquer the
whole world, cut all the boys, and all the children will be theirs,
and the whole world will end up Chinese.'
'Maybe so,' Bold said. 'It's possible. There certainly are a lot
of them. And those treasure ships are impressive, no doubt of that.
But you can't sail into the heart of the world, the steppes where I
came from. And the people out there are much tougher than the
Chinese. They've conquered the Chinese before. So things should be
all right. And listen, no matter what happens, you can't do
anything about it.'
'We'll see about that in Nanjing.'
It was crazy, of course. The boy was deluded. Nevertheless there
was that look that came into his eye -- inhuman, totemic, his nafs
looking out at things -- the sight of which gave Bold a chill down
the chakra nerve right to the first centre, behind his balls. Aside
from the raptor nafs, which he had been born with, there was
something scary in the hatred of a eunuch, something impersonal and
uncanny. Bold had no doubt that he was travelling with some kind of
power, some African witch child or shaman, a tulku, who had been
captured out of the jungles and mutilated, so that his power had
been redoubled, and was now turning to revenge. Revenge, against
the Chinese! Despite his belief that it was crazy, Bold was curious
to see what might come of that.
Nanjing was bigger even than Hangzhou. Bold had to give up being
amazed. It was also the home harbour for the great treasure fleet.
An entire city of shipbuilders had been established down by the
Yangzi River estuary, the shipyards including seven enormous
drydocks running perpendicular to the river, behind high dams with
guards patrolling their gates so that no one could sabotage them.
Thousands of shipwrights, carpenters and sailmakers lived in
quarters behind the drydocks, and this sprawling town of workshops,
called Longjiang, included scores of inns for visiting labourers,
and sailors ashore. Evening discussions in these inns concerned
mainly the fate of the treasure fleet and of Zheng He, who
currently was occupied building a temple to Tianfei, while he
worked on another great expedition to the west.
It was easy for Bold and Kyu to slip into this scene as
small time trader and slave, and they rented sleeping spaces
on the mattresses at the South Sea Inn. Here in the evenings they
learned of the construction of a new capital up in Beiping, a
project which was absorbing a great deal of the Yongle Emperor's
attention and cash. Beiping, a provin cial northern outpost
except during the Mongol dynasties, had been Zhu Di's first power
base before he usurped the Dragon Throne and became the Yongle
Emperor, and he was now rewarding it by making it the imperial
capital once again, changing its name from Beiping ('northern
peace') to Beijing ('northern capital'). Hundreds of thousands of
workers had been sent north from Nanjing to build a truly enormous
palace, indeed from all accounts the whole city was being made into
a kind of palace the Great Within, it was called, forbidden
to any but the Emperor and his concubines and eunuchs. Outside this
precious ground was to be a larger imperial city, also new.
All this construction was said to be opposed by the Confucian
bureaucracy who ruled the country for the Emperor. The new capital,
like the treasure fleet, was a huge expense, an imperial
extravagance that the officials disliked, for bleeding the country
of its wealth. They must not have seen the treasures being
unloaded, or did not believe them equal to what had been spent to
gain them. They understood Confucius to say that the wealth of the
empire ought to be land based, a matter of expanded
agriculture and assimilation of border people, in the traditional
style. All this innovation, this shipbuilding and travel, seemed to
them to be manifestations of the growing power of the imperial
eunuchs, whom they hated as their rivals in influence. The talk in
the sailors' inns supported the eunuchs, for the most part, as the
sailors were loyal to sailing, to the fleet and Zheng He, and the
other eunuch admirals. But the officials didn't agree.
Bold saw the way Kyu picked up on this talk, and even asked
further questions to learn more. After only a few days in Nanjing,
he had found out all kinds of gossip Bold had not heard: the
Emperor had been thrown by a horse given to him by the Temurid
emissaries, a horse once owned by Temur himself (Bold wondered
which horse it was; strange to think an animal had lived so long,
though on reflection he realized it had been less than two years
since Temur's death). Then lightning had struck the new palace in
Beijing and burned it all down. The Emperor had released an edict
blaming himself for this disfavour from Heaven, causing fear and
confusion and criticism. In the wake of these events, certain
bureaucrats had openly criticized the monstrous expenditures of the
new capital and the treasure fleet, draining the treasury surplus
just as famine and rebellion in the south cried out for imperial
relief. Very quickly the Yongle Emperor had tired of this
criticism, and had had one of the most prominent critics exiled
from China, and the rest banished to the provinces.
'That's all bad,' one sailor said, a little bit the worse for
drink, 'but worst of all for the Emperor is the fact that he's
sixty years old. There's no help for that, even when you're
Emperor. It may even be worse for him.'
Everyone nodded. 'Bad, very bad.' 'He won't be able to keep the
eunuchs and officials from fighting.' 'We could see a civil war
before too long.'
'To Beijing,' Kyu said to Bold.
But before they left, Kyu insisted they go up to Zheng He's
house, a rambling mansion with a front door carved to look like the
stern of one of his treasure ships. The rooms inside
(seventy two, the sailors said) were each supposed to be
decorated to resemble a different Muslim country, and in the
courtyard the gardens were planted to resemble Yunnan.
Bold complained all the way up the hill. 'He will never see a
poor trader and his slave. His servants will kick us away from the
door, this is ridiculous!'
It happened just as Bold had predicted. The gatekeeper sized
them up and told them to be on their way.
'All right,' Kyu said. 'Off to the temple for Tianfei.'
This was a grand complex of buildings, built by Zheng He to
honour the Celestial Consort, and to thank her for her miraculous
rescue of them in the storm.
The centrepiece of the temple Is a nine storeyed octagonal
pagoda,
Tiled in white porcelain fired with Persian cobalt That the
treasure fleet brought back with it.
Each level of the pagoda must be built With the same number of
tiles, this Pleases Tianfei, so the tiles get smaller As each
storey narrows to a graceful peak, Far above the treetops.
Beautiful offering And testament to a goddess of pure mercy.
There in the midst of the construction, conversing with men who
looked no better than Bold or Kyu, was Zheng He himself. He looked
at Kyu as they approached, and paused to talk to him. Bold shook
his head to see this example of the boy's power revealing
itself.
Zheng nodded as Kyu explained they had been part of his last
expedition. 'You looked familiar.' He frowned, however, when Kyu
went on to explain that they wanted to serve the Emperor in
Beijing.
'Zhu Di is off campaigning in the west. On horseback, with his
rheumatism.' He sighed. 'He needs to understand that the fleet's
way of conquering is best. Arrive with the ships, start trading,
instal a local ruler who will cooperate, and for the rest, simply
let them be. Trade with them. Make sure the man at the top is
friendly. There are sixteen countries sending tribute to the
Emperor as a direct result of the voyages of our fleet.
Sixteen!'
'It's hard to get the fleet to Mongolia,' Kyu said, frightening
Bold. But Zheng He laughed.
'Yes, the Great Without is high and dry. We have to convince the
Emperor to forget the Mongols, and look to the sea.'
'We want to do that,' Kyu said earnestly. 'In Beijing we will
argue the case every chance we get. Will you give us introductions
to the eunuch officials at the palace? I could join them, and my
master here would be good in the imperial stables.'
Zheng looked amused. 'It won't make any difference. But I'll
help you for old times' sake, and wish you luck.'
He shook his head as he wrote a memorial, his brush wielded like
a little hand broom. What happened to him afterwards is
well known: grounded by the Emperor, given a land locked
military command, spending his days constructing the
nine storeyed porcelain pagoda honouring Tianfei; we imagine
he missed his voyages over the distant seas of the world, but
cannot say for sure. But we do know what happened to Bold and Kyu,
and we will tell you in the next chapter.
SEVEN
New capital, new emperor, plots reach their ends.
Boy against China; you can guess who wins.
Beijing was raw in every sense, the wind frigid and damp, the
wood of the buildings still white and dripping with sap, the smell
of pitch and turned earth and wet cement everywhere. It was
crowded, too, though not like Hangzhou or Nanjing, so that Bold and
Kyu felt cosmopolitan and sophisticated, as if this huge
construction site were beneath them somehow. A lot of people here
had that attitude.
They made their way to the eunuch clinic named in Zheng He's
memorial, located just south of the Meridian Gate, the southern
entrance to the Forbidden City. Kyu presented his introduction, and
he and Bold were whisked inside to see the clinic's head eunuch. 'A
reference from Zheng He will take you far in the palace,' this
eunuch told them, 'even if Zheng himself is having troubles with
the imperial officials. I know the palace's Director of Ceremonies,
Wu Han, very well, and will introduce you. He is an old friend of
Zheng's, and needs eunuchs in the Literary Depth Pavilion for
rescript writing. But wait, you are not literate, are you? But Wu
also administers the eunuch priests maintained to attend to the
spiritual welfare of the concubines.'
'My master here is a lama,' Kyu said, indicating Bold. 'He has
trained me in all the mysteries of the bardo.'
The eunuch regarded Bold sceptically. 'Be that as it may, one
way or another the memorial from Zheng will get you in. He has
recommended you very highly. But you will need your pao, of
course.'
'Pao?' Kyu said. 'My precious?'
'You know.' The eunuch gestured at Kyu's groin. 'It is necessary
to prove your status, even after I have inspected and certified
you. Also, more importantly perhaps, when you die you will be
buried with it on your chest, to fool the gods. You don't want to
come back as a shemule, after all.' He glanced at Kyu curiously.
'You don't have yours?'
Kyu shook his head.
'Well, we have many here you can choose from, left over from
patients who died. I doubt you can tell black from Chinese after
the pickling!' He laughed and led them down a hall.
His name was jiang, he said; he was an ex sailor from
Fukian, and was puzzled that anyone young and fit would ever leave
the coast to come to a place like Beijing. 'But as black as you
are, you'll be like the quillin that the fleet brought back last
time for the Emperor, the spotted unicorn with the long neck. I
think it also was from Zanj. Do you know it?'
' It was a big fleet,' Kyu said.
'I see. Well, Wu and the other palace eunuchs love exotics like
you and the quillin, and so does the Emperor, so you'll be fine.
Keep quiet and don't get mixed up in any conspiracies, and you'll
do well.'
In a cool storage building they went into a room filled with
sealed porcelain and glass jars, and found a black penis for Kyu to
take with him. The head eunuch then inspected him personally, to
make sure he was what he said he was, and then brushed his
certification onto the introduction from Zheng, and put his chop to
it in red ink. 'Some people try to fake it, of course, but if
they're caught they get it handed to them, and then they aren't
faking it any more, are they. You know, I noticed they didn't put
in a quill when they cut you. You should have a quill to keep it
open, and then the plug goes in the quill. It's much more
comfortable that way. They should have done that when you were
cut.'
'I seem to be all right without it,' Kyu said. He held the glass
jar up against the light, looking closely at his new pao. Bold
shuddered and led the way out of the creepy room.
While further arrangements were made in the palace, Kyu was
assigned a bed in the dorm, and Bold was offered a room in the
clinic's men's building. 'Temporary, you understand. Unless you
care to join us in the main building. Great opportunities for
advancement ... 'No thank you,' Bold said politely. But he saw that
many men were coming in to request the operation, desperate for a
job. When there was famine in the countryside there was no shortage
of applicants, they even had to turn people away. As with
everything in China, there was a whole bureaucracy at work here,
the palace requiring as it did several thousand eunuchs for its
operation. This clinic was just a small part of that.
So they were launched in Beijing. Indeed, things had gone so
well that Bold wondered if Kyu, no longer needing Bold as he had
during their journey north, would now abandon him -- move into the
Forbidden City and disappear from his life. The idea made him sad,
despite all.
But Kyu, after being assigned to the concubines of Zhu Gaozhi,
the Emperor's eldest legitimate son and the Heir Designate, asked
Bold to come with him and apply to be a stabler for the Heir. 'I
still need your help,' he said simply, looking like the boy who had
boarded the treasure ship so long ago.
'I'll try,' Bold said.
Kyu was able to ask the favour of an interview from Zhu Gaozhi's
stable master, and Bold went in and displayed his expertise with
some big beautiful horses, and was given a job. Mongolians had the
same kind of advantage in the stable that eunuchs had in the
palace.
It was easy work, Bold found; the Heir Designate was an indolent
man, his horses seldom ridden, so that the stablers had to exercise
them on a track, and in the new parks of the palace grounds. The
horses were all very big and white, but slow and weak winded;
Bold saw now why the Chinese could never go north of their Great
Wall and attack the Mongols to any great effect, despite their
stupendous numbers. Mongols lived on their horses, and lived off
them too made their clothes and shelter from their felt and
wool, drank their milk and blood, ate them when they had to.
Mongolian horses were the life of the people; whereas these big
clodhoppers might as well have been driving millstones in a circle
with blinkers on, for all the wind and spirit they had.
It turned out Zhu Gaozhi spent a lot of time in Nanjing, where
he had been brought up, visiting his mother the Empress Xu. So as
the months passed, Bold and Kyu made the trip between the two
capitals many times, travelling on barges on the Grand Canal, or on
horseback beside it. Zhu Gaozhi preferred Nanjing to Beijing, for
obvious reasons of climate and culture; late at night, after
drinking vast quantities of rice wine, he could be heard declaring
to his intimates that he would move the capital back to Nanjing on
the very day of his father's death. This made the enormous labour
of building Beijing look odd to them when they were there.
But more and more they were in Nanjing. Kyu helped run the
Heir's harem, and spent most of his time inside their enclosure. He
never told Bold a thing about what he did in there, except one
time, when he came out to the stables late at night, a bit drunk.
This was almost the only time Bold saw him any more, and he looked
forward to these nocturnal visits, despite the way they made him
nervous.
On this occasion Kyu remarked that his main task these days was
to find husbands for those of the Emperor's concubines who had
reached the age of thirty without ever having relations with the
Emperor. Zhu Di farmed these out to his son, with instructions to
marry them off.
'Would you like a wife?' Kyu asked Bold slyly. 'A
thirty year old virgin, expertly trained?'
'No thanks,' Bold said uneasily. He already had an arrangement
with one of the servant women in the compound in Nanking, and
though he supposed Kyu was joking, it made him feel strange.
Usually when Kyu made these midnight visits out to the stables,
he was deep in thought. He did not hear things Bold said to him, or
answered oddly, as if replying to some other question. Bold had
heard that the young eunuch was well liked, knew many people
in the palace, and had the favour of Wu, the Director of
Ceremonies. But what they all did in the concubines' quarters
during the long nights of the Beijing winters, he had no idea.
Usually Kyu came out to the stables reeking of wine and perfume,
sometimes urine, once even vomit. 'To stink like a eunuch' -- the
common phrase came back to Bold at those times with unpleasant
force. He saw how people made fun of the mincing eunuch walk, the
hunched little steps with feet pointing outwards, something that
was either a physical necessity or a group style, Bold didn't know.
They were called crows for their falsetto voices, among other
names; but always behind their backs; and everyone agreed that as
they fattened and then wizened in their characteristic fashion,
they came to look like bent old women.
Kyu was still young and pretty, however, and drunk and
dishevelled as he was during his night visits to Bold, he seemed
very pleased with himself. 'Let me know if you ever want women,' he
said. 'We've got more than we need in there.'
During one of the Heir's visits to Beijing, Bold caught a
glimpse of the Emperor and his heir together, as he brought their
perfectly groomed horses out to the Gate of Heavenly Purity, so
that the two could ride to ether in the parks of the imperial
garden. Except the Emperor wanted to leave the enclosure and ride
well to the north of the city, apparently, and sleep out in tents.
Clearly the Heir Designate was unenthusiastic, and the officials
accompanying the Emperor were as well. Finally he gave in and
agreed to make it a day ride, but outside the imperial city, by the
river.
As they were mounting the horses he exclaimed to his son, 'You
have to learn to fit the punishment to the crime! People need to
feel the justice of your decision! When the Board of Punishments
recommended that Xu Pei yi be put to the lingering death, and
all his male relations over sixteen put to death and all his female
relations and children enslaved, I was merciful! I lowered his
sentence to beheading, sparing all the relatives. And so they say,
"the Emperor has a sense of proportion, he understands
things".'
'Of course they do,' the Heir agreed blandly.
The Emperor glanced sharply at him, and off they rode.
When they returned, late in the day, he was still lecturing his
son, sounding even more peeved than he had in the morning. 'If you
know nothing but the court, you will never be able to rule! The
people expect the Emperor to understand them, to be a man who rides
and shoots as well as the Heavenly Envoy! Why do you think your
governors will do what you say if they think you are womanly? They
will only obey you to your face, and behind your back they will
mock you and do whatever they like.'
'Of course they will,' said the Heir, looking the other way.
The Emperor glared at him. 'Off the horse,' he said in a heavy
voice.
The Heir sighed and slid from his mount. Bold caught the reins
and calmed the horse with a quick hand while leading it towards the
Emperor's mount, ready when the Emperor leapt off and roared
'Obey!'
The Heir fell to his knees and kotowed.
'You think the bureaucrats care about you!' the Emperor shouted.
'But they don't! Your mother is wrong about that, like she is about
everything else! They have their own ideas, and they won't support
you when there's the least trouble. You need your own men.'
' Or eunuchs,' the Heir said into the gravel.
The Yongle Emperor stared at him. 'Yes. My eunuchs know they
depend on my good will above all else. No one else will back them.
So they're the only people in the world you know will back
you.'
No reply from the prostrated elder son. Bold, facing away and
moving to the very edge of earshot, risked a glance back. The
Emperor, shaking his head heavily, was walking away, leaving his
son kneeling on the ground.
'You may be backing the wrong horse,' Bold said to Kyu the next
time they met, on one of Kyu's increasingly rare night visits to
the stables. 'The Emperor is going out with his second son now.
They ride, they hunt, they laugh. One day they killed three hundred
deer we had enclosed. While with the Heir Designate, the Emperor
has to drag him out of doors, can't get him off the palace grounds,
and spends the whole time yelling at him. And the Heir nearly mocks
him to his face. Comes as close as he dares. And the Emperor knows
it too. I wouldn't be surprised if he changed the Heir
Designate.'
'He can't,' Kyu said. 'He wants to, but he can't.'
'Whyever not?'
'The eldest is the son of the Empress. The second born is
the son of a courtesan. A low ranking courtesan at that.'
'But the Emperor can do what he wants, right?'
'Wrong. It only works when they all follow the laws together. If
anyone breaks the laws, it can mean civil war, and the end of the
dynasty.'
Bold had seen this in the Chinggurid wars of succession, which
had gone on for generations. Indeed it was said now that Temur's
sons had been fighting ever since his death, with the Khan's empire
divided into four parts, and no sign of it ever coming together
again.
But Bold also knew that a strong ruler could get away with
things. 'You're parroting what you've heard from the Empress and
the Heir and their officials. But it isn't that simple. People make
the laws, and sometimes they change them. Or ignore them. And if
they've got the swords, that's it.'
Kyu considered this in silence. Then he said, 'There's talk that
the countryside is suffering. Famine in Hunan, piracy on the coast,
diseases in the south. The officials don't like it. They think the
great treasure fleet brought back disease instead of treasure, and
wasted huge sums of money. They don't understand what trade brings
back, they don't believe in it. They don't believe in the new
capital. They tell the Empress and the Heir that they should help
the people, that we should get back to agriculture, and stop
wasting so much cash on extravagant projects.'
Bold nodded. 'I'm sure they do.'
'But the Emperor persists. He does what he wants, and he has the
army behind him, and his eunuchs. The eunuchs like the foreign
trade, as they see it makes them rich. And they like the new
capital, and all the rest. Right?'
Bold nodded again. 'So it seems.'
'The regular officials hate the eunuchs.'
Bold glanced at him. 'Do you see that yourself?'
'Yes. Although it's the Emperor's eunuchs they really hate.'
'No doubt. Whoever is closest to power is feared by all the
rest.'
Again Kyu thought things over. He seemed to Bold to be happy,
these days; but then again Bold had thought that in Hangzhou. So it
always made Bold nervous to see Kyu's little smile.
Soon after that conversation, when they were all in Beijing, a
great storm came.
Yellow dust makes the first raindrops muddy; Lightning cracks
down bronze through it,
Stitching together earth and sky,
Visible through closed eyelids.
About an hour later word comes: The new palaces have caught
fire.
The whole centre of the Forbidden City Burning as though
drenched in pitch,
Flames licking the wet clouds,
Pillar of smoke merging with the storm,
Rain downwind baked out of the air, replaced by ash.
Running back and forth with terrified horses, then with buckets
of water, Bold kept an eye out, and finally, at dawn, when they had
given up fighting the blaze, for it was useless, he caught sight of
Kyu there among the evacuated imperial concubines. All the Heir
Designate's people had a hectic look, but Kyu in particular seemed
to Bold elated, the whites of his eyes visible all the way around.
Like a shaman after a successful voyage to the spirit world. He
started this fire, Bold thought, just like in Hangzhou, this time
using the lightning as his cover.
The next time Kyu made one of his midnight visits to the
stables, Bold was almost afraid to speak to him.
Nevertheless he said, 'Did you set that fire?' -- whispering in
Arabic, even though they were alone, outside the stables, with no
chance of being overheard.
Kyu just stared at him. The look said Yes, but he didn't
elaborate.
Finally he said calmly, 'An exciting night, wasn't it? I saved
one of the Script Pavilion's cabinets, and some concubines as well.
The redjackets were very grateful about their documents.'
He went on about the beauty of the fire, and the panic of the
concu bines, and the rage, and later the fear, of the
Emperor, who took the fire to be a sign of heavenly disapproval,
the worst bad portent ever to smite him; but Bold could not follow
the boy's talk, his mind filled as it was with images of the
various forms of the lingering death. To burn down a merchant in
Hangzhou was one thing, but the Emperor of all China! The Dragon
Throne! He glimpsed again that thing inside the boy, the black nafs
banging its wings around inside, and felt the distance between them
grown vast and unbridgeable.
'Be quiet!' he said sharply in Arabic. 'You're a fool. You'll
get yourself killed, and me too.'
Kyu smiled grimly. 'On to a better life, right? Isn't that what
you told me? Why should I fear dying?'
Bold had no answer.
After that they saw less of each other than ever. Days passed,
festivals, seasons. Kyu grew up. When Bold caught sight of him, he
saw a tall slender black eunuch, pretty and perfumed, mincing along
with a flash of the eye, and, once, that raptor look as he regarded
the people around him. Bejewelled, plump, perfumed, dressed in
elaborate silk: a favourite of the Empress and the Heir, even
though they hated the eunuchs of the Emperor. Kyu was their pet,
and perhaps even a spy in the Emperor's harem. Bold feared for him
at the same time that he feared him. The boy was wreaking havoc
among the concubines of both Emperor and Heir, many said, even
people in the stables who had no way of knowing directly. The way
he moved through them was too forward, he was bound to be making
enemies. Cliques would be plotting to bring him down. He must know
that, he must be courting it; he laughed in their faces, so that
they would hate him even more. It all seemed to delight him. But
imperial revenge had a long reach. If someone fell, everyone he
knew came down too.
So when the news spread that two of the Emperor's concubines had
hanged themselves, and the furious Emperor demanded an accounting,
and the whole nest of corruption began to unravel before everyone,
fear rippling through the court like the plague itself, lies
spreading the blame wider and wider, until fully three thousand
concubines and eunuchs were implicated in the scandal, Bold
expected to hear any hour of his young friend's torture and
lingering death, perhaps from the mouths of guards come to execute
him as well.
But it didn't happen. Kyu existed under a spell of protection
like that of a sorcerer, it was so obvious that everyone saw it.
The Emperor executed forty of his concubines with his own hand,
swinging the sword furiously, cutting them in half or decapitating
them with single strokes, or running them through over and over,
until the steps of the rebuilt Hall of Great Harmony ran with their
blood; but Kyu stood just to the side, unharmed. One concubine even
cried out towards Kyu as she stood naked before them all, a
wordless shriek, and then she cursed the Emperor to his face, 'It's
your fault, you're too old, your yang is gone, the eunuchs do it
better than you!' Then snick, her head was falling into the puddles
of blood like a sacrificed sheep's. All that beauty wasted. And yet
no one touched Kyu; the Emperor dared not look at him; and the
black youth watched it all with a gleam in his eye, enjoying the
wastage, and the way the bureaucrats hated him for it. The court
was literally a shambles, they were feeding on each other now; and
yet none of them had the courage to take on the weird black
eunuch.
Bold's last meeting with him happened just before Bold was to
accompany the Emperor on an expedition to the west, to destroy the
Tartars led by Arughtai. It was a hopeless cause; the Tartars were
too fast, the Emperor not well. Nothing would come of it. They
would be back when winter came on, in just a few months. So Bold
was surprised when Kyu came to the stables to say farewell.
It was like talking to a stranger now. But the youth clasped
Bold by the arm suddenly, affectionate and serious, like a prince
talking to a trusted old retainer.
' Do you never want to go home?' he asked.
'Home,' Bold said.
'Isn't your family out there?'
'I don't know. It's been years. I'm sure they think I died. They
could be anywhere.'
'But not just anywhere. You could find them.'
'Maybe.' He looked at Kyu curiously. 'Why do you ask?'
Kyu didn't answer at first. He was still clutching Bold's arm.
Finally he said, 'Do you know the story of the eunuch Chao Kao, who
caused the downfall of the Chin dynasty?'
'No. Surely you're not still talking about that.'
Kyu smiled. 'No.' He pulled a little carving from his sleeve
half of a tiger, carved from black ironwood, its stripes cut
into the smooth surface. The amputation across its middle was
mortised; it was a tally, like those used by officials to
authenticate their communications with the capital when they were
in the provinces. 'Take this with you when you go. I'll keep the
other half. It will help you. We'll meet again.'
Bold took it, frightened. It seemed to him like Kyu's nafs, but
of course that was something that couldn't be given away.
'We'll meet again. In our lives to come at least, as you always
used to tell me. Your prayers for the dead give them instructions
on how to proceed in the bardo, right?'
'That's right.'
'I must go.' And with a kiss to the cheek Kyu was off into the
night.
The expedition to conquer the Tartars was a miserable failure,
as expected, and one rainy night the Yongle Emperor died. Bold
stayed up all through that night, pumping the bellows for a fire
the officers used to melt all the tin cups they had, to make a
coffin to carry the imperial body back to Beijing. It rained all
the way back, the heavens crying. Only when they reached Beijing
did the officers let the news be known.
The imperial body lay in state in a proper coffin for a hundred
days. Music, weddings and all religious ceremonies were forbidden
during this interval, and all the temples in the land were required
to ring their bells thirty thousand times.
For the funeral Bold joined the ten thousand members of the
escort, Sixty li's march to the imperial tomb site,
Northwest of Beijing. Three days zigzagging To foil evil
spirits, who only travel in straight lines. The funeral complex
deep underground,
Filled with the dead Emperor's best clothes and goods, At the
end of a tunnel three li long,
Lined with stone servants awaiting his next command. How many
lifetimes will they stand waiting?
Sixteen of his concubines are hanged, Their bodies buried around
his coffin.
The day the Successor ascended the Dragon Throne, his first
edict was read aloud to all in the Great Within and the Great
Without. Near the end of the edict, the reader in the palace
proclaimed to all assembled there before the Hall of Great
Harmony,
'All voyages of the treasure fleet are to be stopped. All the
ships moored in Hangzhou are ordered to return to Nanjing, and all
goods on the ships are to be turned over to the Department of
Internal Affairs, and stored. Officials abroad on business are to
return to the capital immediately; and all those called to go on
future voyages are ordered back to their homes. The building and
repair of all treasure ships is to stop immediately. All official
procurement for going abroad must also be stopped, and all those
involved in purchasing should return to the capital.'
When the reader had finished, the new Emperor, who had just
named himself the Hongxi Emperor, spoke for himself. 'We have spent
too much on extravagance. The capital will return to Nanjing, and
Beijing will be designated an auxiliary capital. There will be no
more waste of imperial resources. The people are suffering.
Relieving people's poverty ought to be handled as though one were
rescuing them from fire, or saving them from drowning. One cannot
hesitate.'
Bold saw Kyu's face across the great courtyard, a little black
figurine with blazing eyes. The new Emperor turned to look at his
dead father's retinue, so many of them eunuchs. 'For years you
eunuchs have only been thinking of yourselves, at the expense of
China. The Yongle Emperor thought you were on his side. But you
were not. You have betrayed all China.'
Kyu spoke up before his fellows could stop him. 'Your Highness,
it's the officials who are betraying China! They are trying to be
as regent to you, and make you a boy emperor for ever!'
With a roar a gang of the officials rushed at Kyu and some of
the other eunuchs, pulling knives from their sleeves as they
pounced. The eunuchs struggled or fled, but many were cut down on
the spot. Kyu they stabbed a thousand times.
The Hongxi Emperor stood and watched. When it was over he said,
'Take the bodies and hang them outside the Meridian Gate. Let all
the eunuchs beware.'
Later, in the stables, Bold sat holding the half tiger
tally in his hand. He had thought they would kill him too, and was
ashamed how much that thought had dominated him during the
slaughter of the eunuchs; but no one had paid the slightest
attention to him. It was possible no one else even remembered his
connection to Kyu.
He knew he was leaving, but he didn't know where to go. If he
went to Nanjing and helped burn the treasure fleet, and all its
docks and warehouses, he would certainly be continuing his young
friend's project. But all that would be done in any case.
Bold recalled their last conversation. Time to go home, perhaps,
to start a new life.
But guards appeared in the doorway. We know what happened next;
and so do you; so let's go on to the next chapter.
EIGHT
In the bardo, Bold explains to Kyu the true nature
of reality; Their jati regathered, they are cast back into the
world.
At the moment of death Kyu saw the clear white light. It was
everywhere, it bathed the void in itself, and he was part of it,
and sang it out into the void.
Some eternity later he thought: This is what you strive for.
And so he fell out of it, into awareness of himself. His
thoughts were continuing in their tumbling monologue reverie, even
after death. Incredible but true. Perhaps he wasn't dead yet. But
there was his body, hacked to pieces on the sand of the Forbidden
City.
He heard Bold's voice, there inside his thoughts, speaking a
prayer. 'Kyu my boy, my beautiful boy,
The time has come for you to seek the path. This life is over.
You are now Face to face with the clear light.'
I'm past that, Kyu thought. What happens next? But Bold couldn't
know where he was along his way. Prayers for the dead were useless
in that regard.
' You are about to experience reality In its pure state. All
things are void. You will be like a clear sky,
Empty and pure. Your named mind Will be like clear still
water.'
I'm past that! Kyu thought. Get to the next part!
'Use the mind to question the mind. Don't sleep at this crucial
time. Your soul must leave your body awake, and go out through the
Brahma hole.'
The dead can't sleep, Kyu thought irritably. And my soul is
already out of my body.
His guide was far behind him. But it had always been that way
with Bold. Kyu would have to find his own way. Emptiness still
surrounded the single thread of his thoughts. Some of the dreams he
had had during his life had been of this place.
He blinked, or slept, and then he was in a vast court of
judgment. The dais of the judge was on a broad deck, a plateau in a
sea of clouds. The judge was a huge black faced deity, sitting
potbellied on the dais. Its hair was fire, burning wildly on its
head. Behind it a black man held a pagoda roof that might have come
straight out of the palace in Beijing. Above the roof floated a
little seated Buddha, radiating calm. To his left and right were
peaceful deities, standing with gifts in their arms; but these were
all a great distance away, and not for him. The righteous dead were
climbing long flying roads up to these gods. On the deck
surrounding the dais, less fortunate dead were being hacked to
pieces by demons, demons as black as the Lord of Death, but smaller
and more agile. Below the deck more demons were torturing yet more
souls. It was a busy scene and Kyu was annoyed. This is my
judgment, and it's like a morning abattoir! How am I supposed to
concentrate?
A creature like a monkey approached him and raised a hand:
'Judg ment,' it said in a deep voice.
Bold's prayer sounded in his mind, and Kyu realized that Bold
and this monkey were related somehow. 'Remember, whatever you
suffer now is the result of your own karma,' Bold was saying. 'It's
yours and no one else's. Pray for mercy. A little white god and a
little black demon will appear, and count out the white and black
pebbles of your good and evil deeds.'
Indeed it was so. The white imp was pale as an egg, the black
imp like onyx; and they were hoeing great piles of white and black
stones into heaps, which to Kyu's surprise appeared about equal in
size. He could not remember doing any good deeds.
'You will be frightened, awed, terrified.'
I will not! These prayers were for a different kind of dead, for
people like Bold.
'You will attempt to tell lies, saying I have not committed any
evil deed.'
I will not say any such ridiculous thing.
Then the Lord of Death, up on its throne, suddenly took notice
of Kyu, and despite himself Kyu flinched.
'Bring the mirror of karma,' the god said, grinning horribly.
Its eyes were burning coals.
'Don't be frightened,' Bold's voice said inside him. 'Don't tell
any lies, don't be terrified, don't fear the Lord of Death. The
body you're in now is only a mental body. You can't die in the
bardo, even if they hack you to pieces.'
Thanks, Kyu thought uneasily. That is such a comfort.
'Now comes the moment of judgment. Hold fast, think good
thoughts; remember, all these events are your own hallucinations,
and what life comes next depends on your thoughts now. In a single
moment of time a great difference is created. Don't be distracted
when the six lights appear. Regard them all with compassion. Face
the Lord of Death without fear.'
The black god held a mirror up with such practised accuracy that
Kyu saw in the glass his own face, dark as the god's. He saw that
the face is the naked soul itself, always, and that his was as dark
and dire as the Lord of Death's. This was the moment of truth! And
he had to concentrate on it, as Bold kept reminding him. And yet
all the while the whole antic festival shouted and shrieked and
clanged around him, every possible punishment or reward given out
at once, and he couldn't help it, he was annoyed.
'Why is black evil and white good?' he demanded of the Lord of
Death. 'I never saw it that way. If this is all my own thinking,
then why is that so? Why is my Lord of Death not a big Arab slave
trader, as it would be in my own village? Why are your agents not
lions and leopards?'
But the Lord of Death was an Arab slave trader, he saw now, an
Arab intaglioed in miniature in the surface of the god's black
forehead, looking out at Kyu and waving. The one who had captured
him and taken him to the coast. And among the shrieks of the
rendered there were lions and leopards, hungrily gnawing the
intestines of living victims.
All just my thoughts, Kyu reminded himself, feeling fear rise in
his throat. This realm was like the dream world, but more solid;
more solid even than the waking world of his just completed
life; everything trebly stuffed with itself, so that the leaves on
the round ornamental bushes (in ceramic pots!) hung like jade
leaves, while the jade throne of the god pulsed with a solidity far
beyond that of stone. Of all the worlds the bardo was the one of
the utmost reality.
The white Arab face in the black forehead laughed and squeaked,
'Condemned!' and the huge black face of the Lord of Death roared,
'Condemned to hell!' It threw a rope around Kyu's neck and dragged
him off the dais. It cut off Kyu's head, tore out his heart, pulled
out his entrails, drank his blood, gnawed his bones; yet Kyu did
not die. Body hacked to pieces, yet it revived. And it all began
again. Intense pain throughout. Tortured by reality. Life is a
thing of extreme reality; death also.
Ideas are planted in the mind of the child like seeds, and may
grow to dominate the life completely.
The plea: I have done no evil.
Agony disassembled into anguish, regret, remorse; nausea at his
past lives and how little they had gained him. In this terrible
hour he sensed them all without actually being able to remember
them. But they had happened. Oh, to get off the endless wheel of
fire and tears. The sorrow and grief he felt then was worse than
the pain of dismemberment. The solidity of the bardo fell apart,
and he was bombarded by light exploding in his thoughts, through
which the palace of judgment could only be seen as a kind of veil,
or a painting on the air.
But there was Bold up there, being judged in his turn. Bold, a
cowering monkey, the only person after Kyu's capture who had meant
anything at all to him. Kyu wanted to cry out to him for help, but
stifled the thought, as he did not want to distract his friend at
the very moment, of all the infinity of moments, when he needed not
to be distracted. Nevertheless something must have escaped from
Kyu, some groan of the mind, some anguished thought or cry for
help; for a gang of furious four armed demons dragged Kyu down
and away, out of sight of Bold's judgment.
Then he was indeed in hell, and pain the least of his burdens,
as superficial as mosquito bites, compared to the deep, oceanic
ache of his loss. The anguish of solitude! Coloured explosions,
tangerine, lime, quicksilver, each shade more acid than the last,
burned his consciousness with an anguish ever deeper. I'm wandering
in the bardo, rescue me, rescue me!
And then Bold was there with him.
They stood in their old bodies, looking at each other. The
lights grew clearer, less painful to the eyes; a single ray of hope
pierced the depth of Kyu's despair, like a lone paper lantern seen
across West Lake. You found me, Kyu said.
Yes.
It's a miracle you could find me here.
No. We always meet in the bardo. We will cross paths for as long
as the six worlds turn in this cycle of the cosmos. We are part of
a karmic jati.
What's that?
Jati, subcaste, family, village. It manifests differently. We
all came into the cosmos together. New souls are born out of the
void, but infrequently, especially at this point in the cycle, for
we are in the Kali yuga, the Age of Destruction. When new
souls do appear it happens like a dandelion pod, souls like seeds,
floating away on the dharma wind. We are all seeds of what we could
be. But the new seeds float together and never separate by much,
that's my point. We have gone through many lives together already.
Our jati has been particularly tight since the avalanche. That fate
bound us together. We rise or fall together.
But I don't remember any other lives. And I don't remember
anyone from this past life but you. I only recognize you! Where are
the rest of them?
You didn't recognize me either. We found you. You have been
falling away from the jati for many reincarnations now, down and
down into yourself alone, in lower and lower lokas. There are six
lokas; they are t e orlds, the realms of rebirth and illusion.
Heaven, the world of the devas; then the world of the asuras, those
giants full of dissension; then the human world; then the animal
world; then the world of pretas, or hungry ghosts; then hell. We
move between them as our karma changes, life by life.
How many of us are there in this jati?
I don't know. A dozen perhaps, or half a dozen. The group blurs
at the boundaries. Some go away and don't come back until much
later. We were a village, that time in Tibet. But there were
visitors, traders. Fewer every time. People get lost, or fall away.
As you have been doing. When the despair strikes.
At the mere sound of the word it washed through Kyu: Despair.
Bold's figure grew transparent.
Bold, help me! What do I do?
Think good thoughts. Listen, Kyu, listen -- as we think, so we
are. Both here and hereafter, in all the worlds. For thoughts are
things, the parents of all actions, good and bad alike. And as the
sowing has been, so the harvest will be.
I'll think good thoughts, or try, but what should I do? What
should I look for?
The lights will lead you. Each world has its own colour. White
light from the devas, green from the asuras, yellow from the human,
blue from the beasts, red from ghosts, smoke coloured from
hell. Your body will appear the colour of the world you are to
return to.
But we're yellow! Kyu said, looking at his hand. And Bold was as
yellow as a flower.
That means we must try again. We try and try again, life after
life, until we achieve Buddha wisdom, and are released at
last. Or some then choose to return to the human world, to help
others along their way to release. Those are called bodhisattvas.
You could be one of those, Kyu. I can see it inside you. Listen to
me now. Soon you'll run for it. Things will chase you, and you'll
hide. In a house, a cave, a jungle, a lotus blossom. These are all
wombs. You'll want to stay in your hiding place, to escape the
terrors of the bardo. That way lies preta, and you will become a
ghost. You must emerge again to have any hope. Choose your womb
door without any feelings of attraction or repulsion. Looks can be
deceiving. Go as you see fit. Follow the heart. Try helping other
spirits first, as if you were a bodhisattva already.
I don't know how!
Learn. Pay attention and learn. You must follow, or lose the
jati for good.
Then they were attacked by huge male lions, manes already matted
with blood, roaring angrily. Bold took off in one direction and Kyu
in another. Kyu ran and ran, the lion on his heels. He dodged
through two trees and onto a path. The lion ran on and lost
him.
To the east he saw a lake, adorned with black and white swans.
To the west, a lake with horses standing in it; to the south, a
scattering of pagodas; to the north a lake with a castle in it. He
moved south towards the pagodas, feeling vaguely that this would
have been Bold's choice; feeling also that Bold and the rest of his
jati were already there, in one of the temples waiting for him.
He reached the pagodas. He wandered from one building to the
next, looking in doorways, shocked by visions of crowds in
disarray, fighting or fleeing from hyena headed guards and
wardens; a hell of a village, each possible future catastrophic,
terrifying. Death's home town.
A long time passed in this horrible search, and then he was
looking through the gates of a temple at his jati, his cohort, Bold
and all the rest of them, Shen, I li Dem his mother, Zheng He,
Psin, all of them immediately known to him -- oh, he thought, of
course. They were naked and bloodied, but putting on the gear of
war nevertheless. Then hyenas howled, and Kyu fled through the raw
yellow light of morning, through trees into the protection of
elephant grass. The hyenas prowled between the huge tufts of grass,
and he pressed through the knife edges of one broken down
clump to take refuge inside it.
For a long time he cowered in the grass, until the hyenas went
away, also the cries of his jati as they looked for him, telling
him to stick with them. He hid there through a long night of awful
sounds, creatures being killed and eaten; but he was safe; and
morning came again. He decided to venture forth, and found the way
out was closed. The knife edged grass blades had grown, and
were like long swords caging him, even pressing in on him, cutting
him as they grew. Ah, he realized; this is a womb. I've chosen one
without trying to, without listening to Bold's advice, separated
from my family, unaware and in fear. The worst kind of
choosing.
And yet to stay here would be to become a hungry ghost. He would
have to submit. He would have to be born again. He groaned at the
thought, cursed himself for a fool. Try to have a little more
presence of mind next time, he thought, a little more courage! It
would not be easy, the bardo was a scary place. But now, when it
was too late, he decided he had to try. Next time!
And so he re entered the human realm. What happened to him
and to his companions that time around, it is not our task to tell.
Gone, gone, gone altogether beyond! All hail!
One. The Cuckoo in the Village
What happens is that sometimes there is a confusion, and
the reincarnating soul enters into a womb already occupied. Then
there are two souls in the same baby, and a fight breaks out.
Mothers can feel that kind, the babies that thrash around inside,
wrestling themselves. Then they're born and the shock of that
ejection stills them for a while, they're fully occupied learning
to breathe and otherwise coming to grips with this world. After
that the fight between the two souls for the possession of the one
body recommences. That's colic.
A baby suffering colic will cry out as if struck, arch
its back in pain, even writhe in agony, for many of its waking
hours. This should be no surprise, two souls are struggling within
it, and so for weeks the baby cries all the time, its guts twisted
by the conflict. Nothing can ease its distress. It's not a
situation that can last for long, it's too much for any little body
to bear. In most cases the cuckoo soul drives out the original, and
then the body finally calms down. Or sometimes the first soul
successfully drives out the cuckoo and is restored to itself. Or
else, in rare cases, neither one is strong enough to drive the
other out, and the colic finally subsides but the baby grows up a
divided person, confused, erratic, unreliable, prone to
insanity.
Kokila was born at midnight, and the dai pulled her out
and said, 'It's a girl, poor thing.' Her mother Zaneeta hugged the
little creature to her breast, saying, 'We will love you
anyway.'
She was a week old when the colic struck. She spat up her
mother's milk and cried inconsolably all through the nights. Very
quickly Zaneeta forgot what the cheerful new babe had been like, a
kind of placid grub at her breast sucking, gurgling amazedly at the
world. Under the assault of the colic she screamed, cried, moaned,
writhed. It was painful to see it. Zaneeta could do nothing but
hold her, hands under her stomach as it banded with cramping
muscles, letting her hang face downwards from Zaneeta's hip.
Something about this posture, perhaps just the effort of keeping
her head upright, quieted Kokila. But it did not always work, and
never for long. Then the writhing and screams began again, until
Zaneeta was near distraction. She had to keep her husband Rajit fed
and her two older daughters as well, and having borne three
daughters in a row she was already out of Rajit's favour, and the
babe was intolerable. Zaneeta tried sleeping with her out in the
women's ground, but the menstruating women, while sympathetic, did
not appreciate the noise. They enjoyed getting out of the home away
with the girls, and it was not a place for babies. So Zaneeta was
driven to sleeping with Kokila out against the side of their
family's house, where they both dozed fitfully between bouts of
crying.
This went on for a couple of months, and then it ended.
Afterwards the baby had a different look in her eye. The dai who
had delivered her, Insef, checked her pulse and her irises and her
urine, and declared that a different soul had indeed taken over the
body, but that this was not really important -- it happened to many
babies, and could be an improvement, as usually in colic battles
the stronger soul won out.
But after all that internal violence, Zaneeta regarded
Kokila with trepi dation, and all through her infancy and
childhood Kokila looked back at her, and at the rest of the world,
with a kind of black wild look, as if she were uncertain where she
was or what she was doing there. A confused and often angry little
girl, in fact, although clever in manipu lating others, quick
to caress or to yell, and very beautiful. She was strong, too, and
quick, and by the time she was five she was more help than harm
around the home. By then Zaneeta had had two more children, the
younger of them a son, the sun of their lives, all thanks to Ganesh
and Kartik, and with all the work there was to be done she
appreciated Kokila's self reliance and quick abilities.
Naturally the new son, jahan, was the centre of the
household, and Kokila only the most capable of Zaneeta's daughters,
absorbed in the business of her childhood and youth, not
particularly well known to Zaneeta compared to Rajit
and jahan, whom naturally she had to study in depth.
So Kokila was free to follow her own thoughts for a few
years. Insef often said that childhood was the best time in a
woman's life, because as a girl she was somewhat free of men, and
mostly just another worker around the house and in the fields. But
the dai was old, and cynical about love and marriage, having seen
their results so often turn bad, for herself and for others. Kokila
was no more inclined to listen to her than to anyone else. To tell
the truth she didn't seem to listen much to anybody. She watched
everyone with that startled wary look you see on animals you come
upon suddenly in the forest, and spoke little. She seemed to enjoy
going off to do the daily work. She stayed silent and observant
around her father, and the other children of the village didn't
interest her, except for one girl, who had been found abandoned as
an infant, one morning in the women's ground. This foundling Insef
was raising to be the dai after her. Insef had named her Bihari,
and often Kokila went to the dai's hut and took Bihari with her on
her morning round of chores, not talking to her very much more than
she did to anyone else, but pointing things out to her, and most of
all, bothering to bring her along in the first place, which
surprised Zaneeta. The foundling was nothing unusual, after all,
just a little girl like all the rest. It was another of Kokila's
mysteries.
In the months before monsoon, the work for Kokila and all
the rest of them got harder for several weeks on end. Wake in the
morning and stoke the fire. Cross the cool village, the air not yet
dusty. Pick up Bihari at the dai's little hut in the woods.
Downstream to the defecation grounds, wash afterwards, then back
through the village to pick up the water jars and head upstream.
Past the laundry pools, where women were already congregating, and
on to the watering hole. Fill up and hump the big heavy jars back
home, stopping several times to rest. Then off into the forest to
forage for firewood. This could take most of the morning. Then back
to the fields west of the village, where her father and his
brothers had some land, to sow pulse of wheat and barley. They put
it in over a few weeks, so that it would ripen through the long
harvest month. This week's row was weak, the tops small, but Kokila
thrust them in the ploughed earth without thought, then in the heat
of the day sat with the other women and girls, mixing grain and
water to make a pasty dough, throwing chapatis, cooking some of
them. After that she went out to their cow. A few rhythmic downward
tugs of her finger in its rectum started a spill of dung that she
collected warm in her hands, slapped into patties with some straw
for drying, and put on the stoneand turf wall bordering her
father's field. After that she took some dried dung cakes by the
house, put one on the fire, went out to the stream to wash her
hands and the dirty clothes: four saris, dhotis, wraps. Then back
to the house in the waning light of the day, the heat and dust
making everything golden in the slant air, to the hearth in the
central room of their house, to cook chapatis and daal bhat on the
little clay stove next to the firepit.
Some time after dark Rajit would come home, and Zaneeta
and the girls would surround him with care, and after he had eaten
the daal bhat and chapatis he would relax and tell Zaneeta
something about his day, as long as it had not gone too badly. If
it had, he wouldn't speak of it. But usually he told them something
of his juggling of land and cattle deals. The village families used
marginal pastures as securities for new animals, or vice versa, and
brokering trade in calves and kids and pasture rights was what her
father did, mostly between Yelapur and Sivapur. Then also he was
always making marriage arrangements for his daughters, a bad
business as he had so many of them, but he made up dowries when he
could, and had no hesitation in marrying them down. Had no choice,
really.
So the evening would end and they slept on rush
mattresses unrolled for the night on the floor, by the fire for
warmth if it was cool, for the smoke's protection from mosquitos if
it was warm. Another night would pass.
One evening after dinner, a few days before Durga Puja
marked the end of the harvest, her father told her mother that he
had arranged a possible marriage for Kokila, whose turn it was, to
a man from Dharwar, the market village just the other side of
Sivapur. The prospective husband was a Lingayat, like Rajit's
family and most of Yelapur, and the third son of Dharwar's headman.
He had quarrelled with his father, however, and this left him
unable to ask Rajit for much of a dowry. Probably he was
unmarriageable in Dharwar, Kokila guessed, but she was excited
anyway. Zaneeta seemed pleased, and said she would look the
candidate over during the Durga Puja.
Ordinary life was pegged to whichever festival was coming
next, and the festivals all had different natures, colouring the
feel of the days leading up to them. Thus the Car Festival of
Krishna takes place in the monsoon, and its colour and gaiety stand
in contrast to the lowering grey overhead; boys blow their
palm leaf trumpets as if to hold off the rain by the blast of
their breath, and everyone would go crazy from the noise if the
blowing itself didn't reduce the trumpets quickly to palm leaves
again. Then the Swing Festival of Krishna takes place at the end of
monsoon, and the fair associated with it is full of stalls selling
superfluous things like sitars and drums, or silks, or embroidered
caps, or chairs and tables and cabinets. The time for the ld shifts
through the year, making it seem a very human event somehow, free
of the earth and its gods, and during it all the Muslims come to
Sivapur to watch their elephant parade.
Then Durga Puja marks the harvest, the grand climax of
the year, honouring the mother goddess and all her works.
So the women gathered on the first day, and mixed a batch
of vermilion bindi paste, while drinking some of the dai's fiery
chang, and they scattered after that, painted and giggling,
following the Muslim drummers in the opening parade, shouting 'To
the victory of Mother Durga!' The goddess's slant eyed statue,
made of clay and dressed in coloured pith and gilding, looked
faintly Tibetan. Placed around it were similarly dressed statues of
Laksmi and Saraswati, and her sons Ganesh and Kartik. Two goats
were tethered in turn to a sacrificial post before these statues
and decapitated, the bleeding heads staring up from the dust.
The sacrifice of the buffalo was an even greater matter;
a special priest came from Bbadrapur, with a big scimitar sharpened
for the occasion. This was important, for if the blade didn't make
it all the way through the buffalo's big neck, it meant that the
goddess was displeased and had refused the offering. Boys spent the
morning rubbing the skin on the top of its neck with ghee, to
soften it.
This time the heavy stroke of the priest was successful,
and all the shouting celebrants charged the body to make little
balls of blood and dust, and throw them at each other,
shrieking.
An hour or two later the mood was entirely different. One
of the old men started singing 'The world is pain, its load past
bearing', and then the women took it up, for it was dangerous for
the men to be heard questioning the Great Mother; even the women
had to pretend to be wounded demons in the song: 'Who is she
that walks the fields as Death, She that fights and swoops as
Death? A mother will not destroy her child, Her own flesh,
creation's joy, yet we see the Killer looking here then there . .
.'
Later, as night fell, the women went home and dressed in
their best saris, and came back out and stood in two lines, and the
boys and men shouted 'Victory to the Great Goddess!' and the music
began, wild and carefree, the whole crowd dancing and talking
around the bonfire, looking beautiful and dangerous in their
firelit finery.
Then people from Dharwar turned up, and the dancing grew
wild. Kokila's father took her by the hand out of the line and
introduced her to the parents of her intended. Apparently a
reconciliation had been patched together for the sake of this
formality. The father she had seen before, headman of Dharwar as he
was, named Shastri; the mother she had never seen before, as the
father had pretensions of purdah, though he was not really
wealthy.
The mother looked Kokila over with a sharp, not
unfriendly eye, bindi paste running down between her eyebrows, face
sweaty in the hot night. Possibly a decent mother in law.
Then the son was produced: Gopal, third son of Shastri. Kokila
nodded stiffly, looking aslant at him, not knowing what she felt.
He was a thin faced, intent looking youth, perhaps
nervous -- she couldn't tell. She was taller than he was. But that
might change.
They were swept back into their respective parties
without exchanging a word. Nothing but that single nervous glance,
and she did not see him again for three years. All the while,
however, she knew they were destined to marry, and it was a good
thing, as her affairs were therefore settled, and her father could
stop worrying about her, and treat her without irritation.
Over time she learned from the women's gossip a bit more
about the family she was going to join. Shastri was an unpopular
headman. His latest offence was to have exiled a Dharwar
blacksmith, for visiting a brother in the hills without asking his
permission first. He had not called the panchayat together to
discuss or approve this decision. He had never called the panchayat
together, in fact, since inheriting the headman position
from his deceased father a few years before. Why, people muttered,
he and his eldest son ran Dharwar as if they were the zamindars of
the place!
Kokila took all this in without too much concern, and
spent as much time as she could with Bihari, who was learning the
herbs the dai used as medicines. Thus when they were out collecting
firewood, Bihari was also inspecting the forest floor and finding
plants to bring back -- bittersweet in sunny patches, whiteroot in
wet shade, castor bean under saal trees among their roots, and so
on. Back at their hut Kokila helped grind the dried plants, or
otherwise prepare them, using oils or spirits, for use by Insef in
her midwifery, for the most part: to stimulate contractions, relax
the womb, reduce pain, open the cervix, slow bleeding and so on.
There were scores of source plants and animal parts that the dai
wanted them to learn. 'I'm old,' she would say, 'I'm
thirty six, and my mother died at thirty. Her mother taught
her the lore, and the dai who taught my grandmother was from a
Dravidian village to the south, where names and even property were
reckoned down through the women, and she taught my grandmother all
the Dravidians know, and that goes back through all the dais of
time to Saraswati, the goddess of learning herself, so we can't let
it go forgotten, you must learn it and teach your daughters, so
that birthing is made as easy as it can be, poor things, and as
many kept alive as possible.' People said of Insef that she had a
centipede in her head (this was mostly an expression said of
eccentrics, although in fact mothers searched your ears for them if
you had been lying with your head on the grass, and sometimes
rinsed out your ears with oil, for centipedes detest oil), and she
often talked as fast as you ever heard anyone talk, rambling on and
on, mostly to herself, but Kokila liked to hear her.
And it took very little for Insef to convince Bihari of
the importance of these things. She was a lively sweet girl with a
good eye in the forest, a good memory for plants, and always a
cheerful smile and a kind word for people. She was if anything too
cheery and attractive, because in the year Kokila was to be married
to Gopal, Shardul, his older brother, the eldest son of Shastri,
soon to become Kokila's brother in law -- one of those in
her husband's family who would have the right to tell her what to
do he started looking at Bihari in an interested way, and
after that, no matter what she did, he watched her. It couldn't
lead to any good, as Bihari was perhaps untouchable and therefore
unmarriageable, and Insef did what she could to seclude her. But
the festivals brought the single men and women together, and the
daily life of the village afforded various glimpses and encounters
as well. And Bihari was interested, anyway, even though she knew
she was unmarriageable. She liked the idea of being normal, no
matter how vehemently the dai warned her against it.
The day came when Kokila was married to Gopal and moved
to Dharwan. Her new mother in law turned out to be
withdrawn and irritable, and Gopal himself was no prize. An anxious
man with little to say, dominated by his parents, never reconciled
with his father, he at first tried to lord it over Kokila the way
they did over him, but without much conviction, particularly after
she had snapped at him a few times. He was used to that, and
quickly enough she had the upper hand. She didn't much like him,
and looked forward to dropping by to see Bihari and the dai in the
forest. Really only the second son, Prithvi, seemed to her at all
admirable in the headman's family, and he left early every day and
had as little to do with his family as he could, keeping quiet with
a distant air.
There was a lot of traffic between the two villages, more
than Kokila had ever noticed before it became so important to her,
and she made do -- secretly taking a preparation that the dai had
made for her, to keep from having a baby. She was fourteen years
old but she wanted to wait.
Before long things went bad. The dai got so crippled by
her swollen joints that Bihari had to take over her work, and she
was much more frequently seen in Dharwar. Meanwhile Shastri and
Shardul were conspiring to make money by betraying their village,
changing the tax assessment with the agent of the zamindar,
shifting it to the zamindar's great advantage, with Shastri
skimming off some for himself. Basically they were colluding to
change Dharwar over to the Muslim form of farm tax rather than the
Hindu law. The Hindu law, which was a religious injunction and
sacred, allowed a tax of no more than one sixth of all
produce, while the Muslim claim was to everything, with whatever
the farmers kept being a matter of the pleasure of the zamindar. In
practice this often meant little difference, but Muslim allowances
varied for crops and circumstance, and this is where Shastri and
Shardul were helping the zamindar, by calculating what more could
be taken without starving the villagers. Kokila lay there at
night with Gopal, and through the open doorway as he slept she
heard Shastri and Shardul going over the possibilities.
'Wheat and barley, two fifths when naturally
watered, three tenths when watered by wheels.'
'That sounds good. Then dates, vines, green crops and
gardens, onethird.'
'But summer crops one fourth.'
Eventually, to aid in this work, the zamindar gave
Shardul the post of qanungo, assessor for the village; and he was
already an awful man. And he still had an eye for Bihari. The night
of the car festival he took her in the forest. From her account
afterwards it was clear to Kokila that Bihari hadn't completely
minded it, she relished telling the details, 'I was on my back in
the mud, it was raining on my face and he was licking the rain off
it, saying I love you I love you.'
'But he won't marry you,' Kokila pointed out, worried.
'And his brothers won't like it if they hear about this.'
'They won't hear. And it was so passionate, Kokila, you
have no idea.' She knew Kokila was not impressed by Gopal.
'Yes yes. But it could lead to trouble. Is a few minutes'
passion worth that?'
'It is, it is. Believe me.'
For a while she was happy, and sang all the old love
songs, especially one they used to sing together, an old one:
'I like sleeping with somebody different, Often. It's nicest
when my husband is in a far country, Far away. And there's rain in
the streets at night and wind And nobody.'
But Bihari got pregnant, despite Insef's preparations.
She tried to keep to herself, but with the dai crippled there were
births that she had to attend, and so she went and her condition
was noted, and people put together what they had seen or heard, and
said that Shardul had got her with child. Then Prithvi's wife was
giving birth and Bihari went to help, and the baby, a boy, died a
few minutes after it was born, and outside their house Shastri
struck Bihari in the face, calling her a witch and a whore.
All this Kokila heard about when she visited Prithvi's
house, from Prithvi's wife, who said the birth had gone faster than
anyone expected, and that she doubted Bihari had done anything bad.
Kokila hurried off to the dai's hut, and found the gnarled old
woman puffing with effort between Bihari's legs, trying to get the
baby out. 'She's miscarrying,' she told Kokila. So Kokila took over
and did what the dai told her to, forgetting her own family until
night fell, when she remembered and exclaimed, 'I have to go!' and
Bihari whispered, 'Go. It will be all right.'
Kokila rushed home through the forest to Dharwar, where
her mother in law slapped her, but perhaps just to
pre empt Gopal, who punched her hard in the arm and forbade
her to return to the forest or Sivapur ever again, a ludicrous
command given the realities of their life, and she almost said 'How
will I fetch your water then?' but bit her lip and rubbed her arm,
looking daggers at them, until she judged they were as frightened
as they could get without beating her, after which she glared like
Kali at the floor instead, and cleaned up after their impromptu
dinner, which had been hobbled by her absence. They could not even
cat without her. This fury was the thing she would remember for
ever.
Before dawn next morning she slipped out with the water
jugs and hurried through the wet grey forest, leaves scattered at
every level from the ground to the high canopy overhead, and
arrived at the dai's hut frightened and breathing hard.
Bihari was dead. The baby was dead, Bihari was dead, even
the old woman lay stretched on her pallet, gasping with the pain of
her exertions, looking as if she too might expire and leave this
world at any minute. 'They went an hour ago,' she said. 'The baby
should have lived, I don't know what happened. Bihari bled too
much. I tried to stop it but I couldn't reach.'
'Teach me a poison.'
'What?'
'Teach me a good poison to use. I know you know them.
Teach me the strongest one you know, right now.'
The old woman turned her head to the wall, weeping.
Kokila pulled her around roughly and shouted, 'Teach me!'
The old woman looked over at the two bodies under a
spread sari, but there was no one else there to be alarmed. Kokila
began to raise a hand to threaten her, then stopped herself.
'Please,' she begged. 'I have to know.'
'It's too dangerous.'
'Not as dangerous as sticking a knife in Shastri.'
'No.'
'I'll stab him if you don't tell me, and they'll burn me
on a bonfire.'
'They'll do that if you poison him.'
'No one will know.'
'They'll think I did it.'
'Everyone knows you can't move.'
'That won't matter. Or they'll think you did it.'
'I'll do it cleverly, believe me. I'll be at my
parents'.'
'It won't matter. They'll blame us anyway. And Shardul is
as bad as Shastri, or worse.'
'Tell me.'
The old woman looked into her face for a time. Then she
rolled over, opened her sewing basket. She showed Kokila a small
dried plant, then some berries. 'This is water hemlock. These are
castor bean seeds. Grind the hemlock leaves to a paste, add seeds
to the paste just before you place it. It's bitter, but you don't
need much. A pinch in spicy food will kill without any taste. But
it looks like poisoning afterwards, I warn you. It's not like being
sick.'
So Kokila watched and made her plan. Shastri and Shardul
continued their work for the zamindar, gaining new enemies every
month. And it was rumoured Shardul had raped another girl in the
forest, the night of Gaurl Hunnime, the woman's festival when mud
images of Siva and Parvati are worshipped.
Meanwhile Kokila had learned every detail of their
routine. Shastri and Shardul ate a leisurely breakfast, and then
Shastri heard cases at the pavilion between his house and the well,
while Shardul did accounting beside the house. In the heat of
midday they napped and received visitors on the verandah facing
north into the forest. In the afternoons of most days they ate a
small meal while lying on couches, like little zamindars, then
walked with Gopal or one or two associates to that day's market,
where they 'did business' until the sun was low.
They returned to the village drunk or drinking, stumbling
cheerfully through the dusk to their home and dinner. It was as
steady a routine as any in the village.
So Kokila considered her plans while spending some of her
firewood walks on the hunt for water hemlock and castor beans.
These grew in the dankest parts of the forest, where it shaded into
swamp, and hid every manner of dangerous creature, from mosquito to
tiger. But at midday all such pests were resting; indeed in the hot
months everything alive seemed sleeping at midday, even the
drooping plants. Insects buzzed sleepily in the sleepy silence, and
the two poison plants glowed in the dim light like little green
lanterns. A prayer to Kali and she plucked them out, while she was
bleeding, and pulled apart a bean pod for the seeds, and tucked
them in the band of her sari, and hid them for the night in the
forest near the defecation grounds, the day before the Durga Puja.
That night she did not sleep at all, except for during short
dreams, in which Bihari came to her and told her not to be sad.
'Bad things happen in every life,' Bihari said. 'No anger.' There
was more but on waking it all slipped away, and Kokila went to her
hiding place and found the plant parts and ground the hemlock
leaves furiously together in a gourd with a stone, then cast the
stone and gourd away in beds of ferns. With the paste on a leaf in
her hand she went to Shastri's house, and waited until their
afternoon nap, a day that seemed to last for ever; then put the
little seeds in the paste, and smeared a tiny dab of the paste
inside the doughballs made for Shastri and Shardul's afternoon
snack. Then she ran from the house and through the forest, her
heart taking flight like a deer ahead of her -- too like a deer, in
that she ran wild with the thrill of what she had done, and fell
into an unseen deer snare, set by a man from Bhadrapur. By the time
he found her, stunned and just starting to struggle in the lines,
with some of the paste still on her fingers, and took her to
Dharwar, Shastri and Shardul were dead, and Prithvi was the new
headman of the village, and Kokila was declared a witch and
poisoner and killed on the spot.
Two. Back in the Bardo
Back in the bardo Kokila and Bihari sat next to each
other on the black floor of the universe, waiting their turn for
judgment.
' You're not getting it,' said Bihari -- also Bold, and
Bel, and Borondi, and many, many other incarnations before, back to
her original birth in the dawn of this Kali--yuga, this age of
destruction, fourth of the four ages, when as a new soul she had
spun out of the Void, an eruption of Being out of Non being, a
miracle inexplicable by natural law and indicative of the existence
of some higher realm, a realm above that even of the deva gods who
now sat on the dais looking down at them. The realm that they all
sought instinctively to return to.
Bihari continued: 'The dharma is a matter that can't be
short changed, you have to work at it step by step, doing what
you can in each given situation. You can't leap up to heaven.'
'I shit on all that,' Kokila said, making a rude gesture
at the gods. She was still so angry she could spit, and terrified
too, weeping and wiping her nose on the back of her hand, 'I'll be
damned if I cooperate in such a horrible thing.'
'Yes, you will! That's why we keep almost losing you.
That's why you never recognize your jati when you're in the world,
why you keep doing your own family harm. We rise and fall
together.'
'I don't see why.'
Now Shastri was being judged, kneeling with his hands
together in supplication.
'He'd better be sent to hell!' Kokila shouted at the black god.
'The lowest nastiest level of hell!'
Bihari shook her head. 'It's step by step, as I said.
Little steps up and down. And it's you they're likely to judge
down, after what you did.'
'It was justice!' Kokila exclaimed with vehement
bitterness. 'I took justice into my own hands because no one else
would do it! And I would do it again, too.' She shouted up at the
black god: 'Justice, damn it!'
'Shh!' Bihari said urgently. 'You'll get your turn. You
don't want to be sent back as an animal.'
Kokila glared at her. 'We are animals already, and don't
you forget it.' She took a slap at Bihari's arm and her hand went
right through Bihari's which somewhat deflated her point. They were
in the realm of souls, there was no denying it. 'Forget these
gods,' she snarled, 'it's justice we need! I'll bring the revolt
right into the bardo itself if that's what it takes!'
'First things first,' Bihari's said. 'One step at a time.
just try to recognize your jati, and take care of them first. Then
on from there.'
Three. Tiger Mercy
Kya the tiger moved through elephant grass, stomach full
and fur warm in the sun. The grass was a green wall around her,
pressing in on every side. Above her the grass tips waved in the
breeze, crossing the blue of the sky. The grass grew in giant
bunches, radiating out from their centre and bending over at the
tops, and though the clumps were very close, her way forward was to
find the narrow breaks at the bottom between clumps, pushing
through the fallen stalks. Eventually she came to the edge of the
grass, bordering a parklike maidan, burned annually by humans to
keep it clear. Here grazed great numbers of chital and other deer,
wild pig, and antelopes, especially the nilghai.
This morning there stood a lone wapiti doe, nibbling
grass. Kya could imitate the sound of a wapiti stag, and when she
was in heat, she did it just to do it; but now she simply waited.
The doe sensed something and jolted away. But a young gaur wandered
into the clearing, dark chestnut in colour, white socked. As
it approached Kya lifted her left forepaw, straightened her tail
back, and swayed slightly fore and back, getting her balance. Then
she threw her tail up and leapt across the park in a series of
twenty foot bounds, roaring all the while. She hit the gaur
and knocked it down, bit its neck until it died.
She ate.
Ba loo ah!
Her kol babl, a jackal that had been kicked out of
his pack and was now following her around, showed his ugly face at
the far end of the maidan, and barked again. She growled at him to
leave, and he slunk back into the grass.
When she was full she got up and padded downhill. The
kol bahl and ravens would finish the gaur.
She came to the river that wound its way through this
part of the country. The shallow expanse was studded with islands,
each a little jungle under its canopy of sal and shisharn trees,
and several of these held nests of hers, in the matted undergrowth
of brake and creepers, under tamarisk trees overhanging the warm
sand on the banks of the stream. The tiger padded over pebbles to
the water's edge, drank. She stepped in the river and stood,
feeling the current push her fur downstream. The water was clear
and warmed by the sun. In the sand at the stream's edge were
pawprints of a number of animals, and in the grass their scents:
wapiti and mouse deer, jackal and hyena, rhinoceros and gaur, pig
and pangolin; the whole village, but none in sight. She waded
across to one of her islands, lay in the smashed grass of her bed,
in the shade. A nap. No cubs this year, no need to hunt for another
day or two: Kya yawned hugely in her bed. She fell asleep in the
silence that extends out from tigers in the jungle.
She dreamed that she was a little brown village girl. Her
tail twitched as she felt again the heat of a cooking fire, the
feel of sex face to face, the impact of witch--killing stones. A
sleeping rumble, big fangs exposed. The fear of it woke her up and
she stirred, trying to fall back into a different dream.
Noises pulled her back into the world. Birds and monkeys
were talking about the arrival of people, coming in from the west,
no doubt to the ford they used downstream. Kya rose quickly and
splashed off the island, slipped into thickets of elephant grass
backing the curve of the stream. People could be dangerous,
especially in groups. Individually they were helpless, it was only
a question of picking one's moment and attacking from behind. But
groups of them could drive animals into traps or ambushes, and that
had been the end of many tigers, left skinned and beheaded. Once
she had seen a male tiger try to walk a pole to some meat, slip on
a slippery patch, and fall onto spikes hidden in leaves. People had
arranged that.
But today, no drums, no shouts, no bells. And it was too
late in the day for humans to hunt. More likely they were
travellers. Kya slipped through the elephant grass
unobtrusively, testing the air with ear and nose, and moving
towards a long glade in the grass that would give her a view of
their ford.
She settled down in a broken clump to watch them pass.
She lay there with her eyes slitted.
There were other humans there, she saw, hiding like she
was, scattered through the sal forest, lying in wait for the humans
to arrive at the ford.
As she noticed this, a column of people reached the ford,
and the hidden ones leapt out of their hiding places and screamed
as they fired arrows at the others. A big hunt, it seemed. Kya
settled down and watched more closely, ears flattened. She had come
upon such a scene once before, and the number of humans killed had
been surprising. It was where she had first tasted their flesh, as
she had had twins to feed that summer. They were certainly the most
dangerous beast in the jungle, apart from the elephant. They killed
wantonly, like kol bahls sometimes did. There would be meat
left here afterwards, no matter what else happened. Kya hunkered
down and listened more than watched. Screams, cries, roars, shouts,
trumpet blasts, death rattles; somewhat like the end of one of her
hunts, only multiplied many times.
Eventually it grew quiet. The hunters left the scene.
When they had been gone a long time, and the ordinary shush of the
jungle had returned, Kya shifted onto her paws and looked around.
The air reeked of blood, and her mouth watered. Dead bodies lay on
both banks of the river, and were caught on snags against the banks
of the stream, or had rolled into shallows. The tiger padded among
them cautiously, pulled a large one into the shadows and ate some
of it. But she was not very hungry. A noise caused her to slink
swiftly back into the shadows, hair erect on her back, looking for
the source of the sound, which had been a cracked branch. Now a
footfall, over there. Ah. A human, still standing. A survivor.
Kya relaxed. Sated already, she approached the man out of
no more than curiosity. He saw her and jumped backwards, startling
her; his body had done it without his volition. He stood there
looking at her in the way hurt animals sometimes did, accepting
their fate; only in this one's face there was also a little roll of
the eyes, as if to say, what else could go wrong, or, not this too.
It was a gesture so like that of the girls she had watched
gathering wood in the forest that she paused, unllungry. The
hunters who had ambushed this man's group still occupied the trail
to the nearest village. He would soon be caught and killed.
He expected her to do it. Humans were so sure of
themselves, so sure they had the world worked out and were lords of
it all. And with their monkey numbers and their arrows, so often
they were right. This as much as anything was why she killed them
when she did. They were a scrawny meal in all truth, which of
course was not the main consideration, many a tiger had died trying
to reach the tasty flesh of the porcupine; but humans tasted
strange. With the things they ate, it was no surprise.
The confounding thing would be to help him; so she padded
to his side. His teeth chattered with his trembling. He was no
longer stunned, but holding his place on purpose. She nosed up one
of his hands, rested it on her head between her ears. She held
still until he stroked her head, then moved until he was stroking
between her shoulders, and she was standing by his side, facing the
same direction. Then very slowly she began to walk, indicating by
her speed that he should come along. He did, hand stroking her back
with every step.
She led him through the sal forest. Sunlight blinked
through trees onto them. There was a sudden noise and clatter, then
voices from the trail below, in the trees, and the hand clutched at
her fur. She stopped and listened. Voices of the people--hunters.
She growled, then coughed deeply, then gave a short roar.
Dead silence from below. In the absence of an organized
beat, no human could find her up here. Sounds of them hurrying off
came to her on the wind.
The way was now free. The man's hand was clenched in the
fur between her shoulderblades. She turned her head and nuzzled his
shoulder and he let go. He was more afraid of the other men than of
her, which showed sense. He was like a helpless cub in some ways,
but quick. Her own mother had held her by biting the same fold of
skin between the shoulderblades that he had seized, and at the same
pressure -- as if he too had once been a tigress mother, and was
making an unremembered appeal to her.
She walked the man slowly to the next ford, across it and
along one of the deer trails. Wapiti were bigger than humans, and
it was an easy trail. She took him to one of her entrances
to the big nullah of the region, a steep and narrow ravine, so
precipitous and cragbound that its floor was only accessible at a
couple of points. This was one, and she led the man down to the
ravine floor, then downstream towards a village where the people
smelled much like he did. The man had to walk fast to match her
gait, but she did not slow down. Only a few pools dotted the ravine
floor, as it had been hot for a long time. Springs dripped over
ferny rockfalls. As they padded and stumbled along she thought
about it, and seemed to recall a hut, near the edge of the village
she was headed for, that had smelled almost exactly like him. She
led him through a dense grove of date palms filling the floor of
the nullah, then still denser clumps of bamboo. Green coverts of
jaman fruit bushes covered the sides of the ravine, mixed with the
ber thorn bush, dotted with its acid orange fruit.
A gap in this fragrant shrubbery led her up and out of
the nullah. She sniffed, a male tiger had been here recently,
spraying the exit from the nullah to mark it as his. She growled,
and the man clutched the fur between her shoulders again, held on
for help as she climbed the last pitch out.
Back in the forested hills flanking the nullah, angling
uphill, she had to nudge him with her shoulder -- he wanted to
contour the slope, or go directly down to the village, not up and
around to it. A few bumps from her and he gave that up, and
followed her without resistance. Now he had a male tiger to avoid
too, but he did not know that.
She led him through the ruins of an old hill fort,
overgrown with bamboo, a place that humans avoided, and that she
had made her lair several winters running. She had borne her cubs
here, near the human village and among human ruins, to make them
safer from male tigers. The man recognized the place, and calmed
down. They continued on towards the backside of the village.
At his pace it was a long way. His body hung from his
joints, and she saw how hard it must be to walk on two feet. Never
a moment's rest, always balancing, falling forwards and catching
himself, as if always crossing a log over a creek. Shaky as a new
cub, blind and wet.
But they reached the village margin, a barley field
rippling in the afternoon light, and stopped in the last elephant
grass under the sal trees. The barley field had furrows of earth
into which they poured water,
Clever monkeys that they were, tiptoeing through life in their
perpetual balancing act.
At the sight of the field, the exhausted creature looked
up and around. He led the tiger now, around the field, and Kya
followed him closer to the village than she would have dared in
most situations, though the afternoon's mix of sun and shadow
provided her with maximum cover, rendering her nearly invisible to
others, a mere mind ripple in the landscape, if she moved
quickly. But she had to keep to his faltering pace. It took a bit
of boldness; but there were bold tigers and timid tigers, and she
was one of the bold ones.
Finally she stopped. A hut lay before them, under a pipal
tree. The man pointed it out to her. She sniffed; it was his home,
sure enough. He whispered in his language, gave her a final squeeze
expressing his gratitude, and then he was stumbling forwards
through the barley, in the last stages of exhaustion. When he
reached the door there were cries from inside, and a woman and two
children rushed out and hugged him. But then to the tiger's
surprise an older man strode out heavily and beat him across the
back, several heavy blows.
The tiger settled down to watch.
The older man refused to allow her refugee into the hut.
The woman and children brought out food to him. Finally he curled
up outside the door, on the ground, and slept.
Through the following days he remained in disfavour with
the old man, though he fed at the house, and worked in the fields
around it. Kya watched and saw the pattern of his life, strange as
it was. It seemed also that he had forgotten her; or would not risk
the jungle to come out and look for her. Or did not imagine she was
still there, perhaps.
She was surprised, therefore, when he came out one dusk
with his hands held before him, a bird carcass plucked and cooked,
it appeared even boned! He walked right to her, and greeted
her very quietly and respectfully, holding out the offering. He was
tentative, frightened; he did not know that when her whiskers were
down she was feeling relaxed. The offered titbit smelled of its own
hot juices, and some other mix of scents -- nutmeg, lavender -- she
took it gently in her mouth and let it cool, tasting it between her
teeth as it dripped hot on her tongue. A very odd perfumed meat.
She chewed it, growling a little purr growl, and swallowed. He
said his farewells and backed away, returning to the hut.
After that she came by from time to time in the lancing
horizontal light of sunrise, when he was going off to work. After a
while he usually came out with a gift for her, some scrap or
morsel, nothing like the bird, but tastier than it had been, simple
uncooked bits of meat; somehow he knew. He still slept outside the
hut, and one cold night she slunk in and slept curled around him,
till dawn greyed the skies. The monkeys in the trees were
scandalized.
Then the old man beat him again, hard enough to make him
bleed from one car. Kya went off to her hill fort then, growling
and making long scratches in the ground. The huge mohua tree on the
hill was dropping its great weight of flowers, and she ate some of
the fleshy, intoxicating petals. She returned to the village
perimeter, and deliberately sniffed out the old man, and found him
on the well--travelled road to the village west of theirs. He had
met several other men there, and they talked for a long time,
drinking fermented drinks and getting drunk. He laughed like her
kol bahl.
On his way home she struck him down and killed him with a
bite to the neck. She ate part of his entrails, tasting again all
the strange tastes; they ate such odd things that they ended up
tasting peculiar themselves, rich and various. Not unlike the first
offering her young man had brought out to her. An acquired taste;
and perhaps she had acquired it.
Other people were hurrying towards them now, and she
slipped away, hearing behind her their cries, shocked and then
dismayed, although with that note of triumph or celebration one
often heard in monkeys relating bad news -- that whatever it was,
it hadn't happened to them.
No one would care about that old man, he had left this
life as lonely as a male tiger, unregretted even by those in his
own hut. It was not his death but the presence of a man eating
tiger that these people lamented. Tigers who learned to like
manfiesh were dangerous; usually they were mothers who were having
trouble feeding their cubs, or old males who had broken their
fangs; so that they were likely to do it often. Certainly a
campaign to exterminate her would now begin. But she did not regret
the killing. On the contrary, she leapt through the trees and
shadows like a young tigress just out on her own, licking her chops
and growling. Kya, Queen of the jungle!
But the next time she came to visit her young man, he
brought out a morsel of goat meat, and then tapped her gently on
the nose, talking very seriously. He was warning ber of something,
and was worried that the details of the warning were escaping her,
which they were. Next time she came by he shouted at her to leave,
and even threw rocks at her, but it was too late; she hit a trip
line connected to spring loaded bows, and poisoned arrows
pierced her and she died.
Four. Akbar
As they carried the body of the tigress into the village,
four men working hard, huffing and puffing under its weight as it
swung by its tied paws from a stout bamboo bouncing on their
shoulders, Bistami understood: God is in all things. And God, may
all his ninety nine names prosper and fall into our souls, did
not want any killing. From the doorway of his older brother's hut,
Bistami shouted through his tears, 'She was my sister, she was my
aunt, she saved me from the Hindu rebels, you ought not to have
killed her, she was protecting us all!'
But of course no one was listening. No one understands
us, not ever.
And it was perhaps just as well, given that this tigress
had undoubtedly killed his brother. But he would have given his
brother's life ten times over for the sake of that tiger.
Despite himself he followed the procession into the
village centre. Everyone was drinking rahkshi, and the drummers
were running out of their homes with their drums, pounding happily.
'Kya Kya Kya Kya, leave us alone forevermore!' A tiger holiday was
upon them, and the rest of the day and perhaps the next would be
devoted to the impromptu festivalizing. They would burn its
whiskers to make sure that its soul would not pass into a killer in
another world. The whiskers were poisonous: one ground up in tiger
meat would kill a man, while a whole one placed inside a tender
bamboo shoot would give those who ate it cysts, leading to a slower
death. Or so it was said. The hypochondriacal Chinese believed in
the efficacious properties of almost everything, including every
part of tigers, it seemed. Much of the body of this Kya would be
saved and taken north by traders, no doubt. The skin would go to
the zamindar.
Bistami sat miserably on the ground at the edge of the
village centre. There was no one to explain himself to. He had done
everything he could to warn the tigress off, but to no avail. He
had addressed her not as Kya but as madam, or Madam Thirty, which
was what the villagers called tigers when they were out in the
jungle, so as not to offend them. He had given her offerings, and
checked to make sure that the markings on her forehead did not form
the letter 's', a sign that the beast was a were--tiger, and would
change to human form for good at the moment of death. That had not
happened, and indeed there had been no 's' on her forehead; the
mark was more like a birdwing in flight. He had kept eye contact
with ber, as one is supposed to do when coming on tigers
unexpectedly; he had stayed calm, and been saved by her from death.
Indeed all the stories he had heard of helpful tigers -- the one
that had led two lost children back to the village, the one who had
kissed a sleeping hunter on the cheek -- all these stories paled in
comparison to his, although they had prepared him as well. She had
been his sister, and now he was distraught with grief.
The villagers began to dismember her body. Bistami left
the village, unable to watch. His brutal older brother was dead;
his other relatives, like his brother, had no sympathy for his sufi
interests. 'The high look to the high, and so they can see each
other from a great distance off.' But he was so far away from
anyone of wisdom, he could see nothing at all. He remembered what
his sufi master Tutsami had told him when he left Allahabad: 'Keep
the haj in your heart, and make your way to Mecca as Allah wills
it. Slow or fast, but always on your tariqat, the path to
enlightenment.'
He gathered his few possessions in his shoulder bag. The
death of the tiger began to take on the cast of a destiny, a
message to Bistami, to accept the gift of God and put it to use in
his actions, and regret nothing. So that now it was time to say
Thank you God, thank you Kya my sister, and leave his home village
for ever.
Bistami walked to Agra, and there he spent the last of
his money to buy a sufi wanderer's robe. He asked for shelter in
the sufi lodge, a long old building in the southernmost district of
the old capital, and he bathed in their pool, purifying himself
inside and out.
Then he left the city and walked out to Fatepur Sikri,
the new capital of Akbar's empire. He saw that the
not yet completed city replicated in stone the vast tent
camps of Mughal armies, even down to marble pillars standing free
of the walls, like tent poles. The city was dusty, or muddy, its
white stone already stained. The trees were all short, the gardens
raw and new. The long wall of the Emperor's palace fronted the
great avenue that bisected the city north and south, leading to a
big marble mosque, and a dargah Bistami had heard about in Agra,
the tomb of the sufi saint Shaikh Salim Chishti. At the end of his
long life Chishti had instructed the young Akbar, and now his
memory was said to be Akbar's strongest link to Islam. And this
same Chishti in his youth had travelled in Iran, and studied under
Shah Esmail, who had also instructed Bistami's master Tutsami.
So Bistami approached Chishti's great white tomb walking
backwards, and reciting from the Quran. 'In the name of God, the
compassionate, the merciful. Be patient with those who call upon
their Lord at morn and even, seeking his face: and let not thine
eyes be turned away from them in quest of the pomp of this life;
neither obey him whose heart we have made careless of the
remembrance of Us, and who followeth his own lusts, and whose ways
are unbridled.'
At the entry he prostrated himself towards Mecca and said
the morning prayer, then entered the walled in courtyard of
the tomb, and made his tribute to Chishti. Others were doing the
same, of course, and when he had finished paying his respects he
spoke to some of them, describing his journey all the way back to
his time in Iran, eliding the stops along the way. Eventually he
told this tale to one of the ulama of Akbar's own court, and
emphasized his master's relation by teaching to Chishti,
and returned to his prayers. He came back to the tomb day after
day, establishing a routine of prayer, purification rites, the
answering of questions from pilgrims who spoke only Persian, and
socializing with all the people visiting the shrine. This finally
led to the grandson of Chishti speaking to him, and this man then
spoke well of him to Akbar, or so he heard. He ate his one meal a
day at the sufi lodge, and persevered, hungry but hopeful.
One morning at the very first light, when he was already
in the tomb's courtyard at prayers, the Emperor Akbar himself came
in to the shrine, and took up an ordinary broom, and swept the courtyard. It was a
cool morning, the night chill still in the air, and yet Bistami was
sweating as Akbar finished his devotions, and Chishti's grandson
arrived, and asked Bistami to come when he had finished his
prayers, to be introduced.
'A great honour,' he replied, and returned to his
prayers, murmuring them thoughtlessly as the things he might say
raced through his head; and he wondered how long he should delay
before approaching the Emperor, to show that prayer came first. The
tomb was still relatively empty and cool, the sun just rising. When
it cleared the trees entirely, Bistami stood and walked to the
Emperor and Chishti's grandson, and bowed deeply. Greeting,
obeisances, and then he was obeying a polite request to tell his
story to the watchful young man in the imperial finery, whose
unblinking gaze never left his face, or indeed his eyes. Study in
Iran with Tutsami, pilgrimage to Qom, return home, a year's work as
a teacher of the Quran in Gujarat, a journey to visit his family,
ambush by Hindu rebels, salvation by tiger: by the end of the story
Bistami had been approved, he could see it.
'We welcome you,' Akbar said. The whole city of Fatepur
Sikri served to show how devout he was, as well as displaying his
ability to create devotion in others. Now he had seen Bistami's
devotion, exhibited in all the forms of piety, and as they
continued their conversation, and the tomb began to fill with the
day's visitors, Bistami managed to lead the discussion to the one
hadith he knew that had come by way of Chishti to Iran, so that the
isnad, or genealogy of the phrase, made a short link between his
education and the Emperor's.
'I had it from Tutsami, who had it from the Shah Esmail,
teacher of Shaikh Chishti, who had it from Bahr ibn Kaniz
al Saqqa, that Uthman ibn Saj related to him, from Said ibn
Jubair, God's mercy on him, who said, "Let him give a general
greeting to all the Muslims, including the young boys and the
adolescents, and when he has arrived at class, let him restrain
whoever was sitting from standing up for him, since neglecting this
is one of the banes of the soul. -- Akbar frowned,
trying to follow it. It occurred to Bistami that it could be
interpreted as meaning that he had been the one who had refrained
from asking for any kind of obeisance from the other. He began to
sweat in the chill morning air.
Akbar turned to one of his retainers, standing
unobtrusively against the marble wall of the tomb. 'Bring
this man with us on our return to the palace.'
After another hour of prayer for Bistami, and
consultations for Akbar, who was relaxed but increasingly terse as
the morning wore on and the line of supplicants grew rather than
shrank before him, the Emperor bid the line to disperse and come
back again later. After that he led Bistami and his retinue through
the raw worksites of the city, to his palace.
The city was being built in the shape of a big square,
like any other Mughal military encampment -- indeed, in the form of
the empire itself, Bistami's guard told him, which was a
quadrilateral protected by the four cities of Lahore, Agra,
Allahabad and Ajimer. These were all big compared to the new
capital, and Bistami's guard was particularly fond of Agra, where
he had worked in the construction of the Emperor's great fort, now
finished. 'Inside it are more than five hundred buildings,' he said
as he must always have said when speaking of it. He was of the
opinion that Akbar had founded Fatepur Sikri because the fort of
Agra was mostly complete, and the Emperor liked beginning great
projects. 'He is a builder, that one, he will remake the world
itself before he is done, I assure you. Islam has never had such a
servant as him.'
'It must be so,' Bistami said, looking around at the
construction, white buildings rising out of cocoons of scaffolding,
set in seas of black mud. 'Praise be to God.'
The guard, whose name was Husain Ali, looked at Bistami
suspi ciously. Pious pilgrims were no doubt a commonplace. He
led Bistami after the Emperor and through the gate of the new
palace. Inside the outer wall were gardens that looked as if they
had been in place for years: big pine trees over jasmines, flower
beds in all directions. The palace itself was smaller than the
mosque, or the tomb of Chishti, but exquisite in every detail. A
white marble tent, broad and low, its interior filled by room after
cool room, all surrounding a fountain filled central courtyard
and garden. The whole wing at the back of the courtyard consisted
of a long gallery walled with paintings: hunting scenes, the skies
always turquoise; the dogs and deer and lions rendered to the life;
the skirted hunters carrying bow or flintlock. Opposite these
scenes were suites of white walled rooms, finished but empty.
Bistami was given one of these to stay in.
That night's meal was a feast, set sumptuously in a long
hall opening onto the central courtyard. As it proceeded, Bistami
understood that it was simply the ordinary evening meal in the
palace. He ate roast quail, cucumber yoghurts, shredded pork in
curry, and tastes of many dishes he didn't recognize.
That began a dreamlike period for him, in which he felt
like Manjushri in the tale, fallen upwards into the land of milk
and honey. Food dominated his days and his thoughts. One day he was
visited in his rooms by a team of black slaves dressed better than
he was, who quickly brought him up to their level of raiment and
beyond, outfitting him in a fine white gown that looked well but
hung heavily on him. After that he was given another audience with
the Emperor.
This meeting, surrounded by sharp eyed counsellors,
generals and imperial retainers of all kinds, felt very different
from the dawn meeting at the tomb, when two young men out to smell
the morning air and see the sunrise, and sing the glory of Allah's
world, had spoken to each other chest to chest. And yet in all
these trappings, it was the same face looking at him -- curious,
serious, interested in what he had to say. Focusing on that face
allowed Bistami to relax.
The Emperor said, 'We invite you to join us and share
your knowledge of the law. In return for your wisdom, and the
rendering of judg ments on certain cases and questions that
will be brought before you, you will be made zamindar of the late
Shah Muzaffar's estates, may Allah honour his name.'
'Praise be to God,' Bistami murmured, looking down. 'I
will ask God's help in fulfilling this great task to your
satisfaction.'
Even with his gaze steadfast to the ground, or returned
to the Emperor's face, Bistami could sense that some of the
imperial retinue were less than pleased by this decision. But
afterwards, some who had seemed least pleased came up to him and
introduced themselves, spoke kindly, led him around the palace,
probed in a most gentle way concerning his background and history,
and told him more about the estate he was to administer. This, it
appeared, would mostly be overseen by local assistants on site, and
was mainly his title and source of income. And in return he was to
outfit and provide one hundred soldiers to the Emperor's armies,
when required, and teach all he knew of the Quran, and judge
various civil disputes given to his charge.
'There are disputes that only the ulama are fit to
judge,' the Emperor's adviser Raja Todor Mai told him. 'The
Emperor has great responsibilities. The empire itself is not yet
secure from its enemies. Akbar's grandfather Babur came here from
the Punjab, and established a Muslim kingdom only forty years ago,
and the infidels still attack us from the south and the east. Every
year some campaigns are necessary to drive them back. All the
faithful in his empire are under his care, in theory, but the
burden of his responsibilities means in practice he simp y oesn't
have time.'
'Of course not.'
'Meanwhile, there is no other system of justice for
disputes among people. As the law is based on the Quran, the qadis,
the ulama and other holy men such as yourself are the logical
choice to take on this burden.'
'Of course.'
In the weeks following, Bistami did indeed find himself
sitting in judgment in disputes brought before him by some of the
Emperor's slave assistants. Two men claimed the same land; Bistami
asked where their fathers had lived, and their fathers' fathers,
and determined that one's family had lived in the region longer
than the other's. In ways like this he made his judgments.
More new clothes came from the tailors; a new house and
complete retinue of servants and slaves were provided; he was given
a trunk of gold and silver coins numbering one hundred thousand.
And for all this he merely had to consult the Quran and recall the
hadith he had learned (really very few, and even fewer relevant),
and render judgments that were usually obvious to all. When they
were not obvious, he made them as best he could and retired to the
mosque and prayed uneasily, then attended the Emperor and the
evening meal. He went on his own at dawn every day to the tomb of
Chishti, and so saw the Emperor again in the same informal
circumstances as their first meeting, perhaps once or twice a month
enough to keep the very busy Emperor aware of his existence.
He always had prepared the story he would relate to Akbar that day,
when asked what he had been doing; each story was chosen for what
it might teach the Emperor, about himself, or Bistami, or the
empire or the world. Surely a decent and thoughtful lesson was the
least he could do for the incredible bounty that Akbar had bestowed
on him.
One morning he told him the story from Sura Eighteen,
about the men who lived in a city that had forsaken God, and God
took them apart to a cave, and made them to sleep as it were a
single night, to them; and when they went out they found that three
hundred and nine years had passed. 'Thus with your work, mighty
Akbar, you shoot us into the future.'
Another morning he told him the story of El Khadir,
the reputed vizier of Dhoulkarnain, who was said to have drunk of
the fountain of life, by virtue of which he still lives, and will
live till the day of judgment; who appeared, clad in green robes,
to Muslims in distress, to help them. 'Thus your work here, great
Akbar, will continue deathless through the years to help Muslims in
distress.'
The Emperor appeared to appreciate these cool dewy
conversations. He invited Bistami to join him in several hunts, and
Bistami and his retinue occupied a big white tent, and spent the
hot days riding horses as they crashed through the jungle after the
howling dogs or beaters; or, more to Bistami's taste, sat on the
howdah of an elephant, and watched the great falcons leave Akbar's
wrist and soar high above, thence to dive in terrific stoops onto
hare or fowl. Akbar fixed his attention on you in just the same way
the falcons did.
Akbar loved his falcons, in fact, as kin, and always
spent the days of the hunt in excellent spirits. He would call
Bistami to his side to speak a blessing over the great birds, who
looked off to the horizon, unimpressed. Then they were cast into
the air, and flapped hard as they made their way quickly up to
their hunting height, splaying wide their big wing feathers. When
they were settled in their gyres overhead, a few doves were
released. These birds flew as fast as they could for cover in trees
or bush, but they were not usually fast enough to escape the attack
of the hawks. Their broken bodies were returned by the great
raptors to the feet of the Emperor's retainers, and then the
falcons flew back to Akbar's wrist, where they were greeted with a
stare as fixed as their own, and bits of raw mutton.
It was just such a happy day that was interrupted by bad
news from the south. A messenger arrived saying that Adharn Khan's
campaign against the Sultan of Malwa, Baz Bahadur, had succeeded,
but that the Khan's army had gone on to slaughter all of the
captured men, women and children of the town of Malwa, including
many Muslim theologians, and even some Sayyids, that is to say
direct descendants of the Prophet.
Akbar's fair complexion turned red all over his neck and
face, leaving only the mole on the left side of his face untouched,
like a white raisin embedded in his skin. 'No more,' he declared to
his falcon, and then he began to give orders, the bird thrown to
its falconer and the hunt forgotten. 'He thinks I am still under
age.'
He rode off hard, leaving all his retinue behind except
for Pir Muhammed Khan, his most trusted general. Bistami heard
later that Akbar had personally relieved Adharn Khan of his
command.
Bistami had the Chishti tomb to himself for a month. Then
he found the Emperor there one morning, with a dark look. Adharn
Khan had been replaced as vakil, the chief minister, by Zein. 'It
will enrage him but it must be done,' Akbar said. 'We will have to
put him under house arrest.'
Bistami nodded and continued to sweep the cool dry floor
of the inner chamber. The idea of Adharn Khan under permanent
guard, usually a prelude to execution, was disturbing to
contemplate. He had a lot of friends in Agra. He might be so bold
as to try to rebel. As the Emperor must very well know.
Indeed, two days later, when Bistami was standing at the
edge of Akbar's afternoon group at the palace, he was frightened
but not surprised to see Adharn Khan appear and stamp to the top of
the stairs, armed, bloody, shouting that he had killed Zein not an
hour before, in the man's own audience chamber, for usurping what
was rightfully his.
Hearing this Akbar went red faced again, and struck
the Khan hard on the side of the head with his drinking cup. He
grabbed the man by the front of his jacket, and pulled him across
the room. The slightest resistance from Adharn would have been
instant death from the Emperor's guards, who stood at each side of
them, swords at the ready; and so he allowed himself to be dragged
out to the balcony, where Akbar flung him over the railing into
space. Then Akbar, redder than ever, raced down the stairs, ran to
the half conscious Khan, seized him by the hair and dragged
him bodily up the stairs, armoured though he was, over the carpet
and out to the balcony, where he heaved him over the rail again.
Adhere Khan hit the patio below with a loose heavy thud.
Indeed he had been killed. The Emperor retired into his
private quarters in the palace.
The next morning Bistami swept the shrine of Chishti with a
tightness all through his body.
Akbar appeared, and Bistami's heart hammered in his
chest. Akbar seemed calm, though distracted. The tomb was a place
to give himself some serenity. But the vigorous brushing he gave
the floor that Bistami had already cleaned belied the calm of his
speech. He's the Emperor, Bistami thought suddenly, he can do what
he wants.
But then again, as a Muslim emperor, he was subservient
to God, and the sharia. All powerful and yet
all submissive, all at once. No wonder he seemed thoughtful to
the point of distraction, sweeping the shrine in the early morning.
It was hard to imagine him mad with anger, like a bull elephant in
must, throwing a man bodily to his death. There was within him a
deep well of rage.
Rebellion of ostensibly Muslim subjects struck deepest
into this well. A new rebellion in the Punjab was reported, an army
sent to put it down. The innocents of the region were spared, and
even those who had fought for the rebellion. But its leaders, some
forty of them, were brought to Agra and placed in a circle of war
elephants that had long blades like giant swords attached to their
tusks. The elephants were unleashed on the traitors, who screamed
as they were mowed down and trampled underfoot, their bodies then
tossed high in the air by the blood maddened elephants.
Bistami had not realized that elephants could be driven to such
blood lust. Akbar stood high on a throne howdah perched on the
biggest elephant of all, an elephant that stood still before the
spectacle, the two of them observing the carnage.
Some days later, when the Emperor came to the tomb at
dawn, it felt strange to sweep the shadowed courtyard of the tomb
with him. Bistami swept assiduously, trying not to meet Akbar's
gaze.
Finally he had to acknowledge the sovereign's presence.
Akbar was already staring at him.
'You seem troubled,' Akbar said.
'No, mighty Akbar -- not at all.'
'You don't approve of the execution of traitors to
Islam?'
'Not at all, yes, of course I do.'
Akbar stared at him in the same way one of his falcons
would have.
'But didn't Ibn Khaldun say that the caliph has to submit
to Allah in the same way as the humblest slave? Didn't he say that
the caliph has a duty to obey Muslim law? And doesn't Muslim
law forbid torture of prisoners? Isn't that Khaldun's point?'
'Khaldun was just a historian,' Bistami said.
Akbar laughed. 'And what about the hadith, that has it
from Abu Taiba by way of Murra Ibn Harridan by way of Sufyan
al Thawri, who had it related to him by Ali Ibn Abi Talaib,
that the Messenger of God, may God bless his name for ever, said,
"You shall not torture slaves?" What about the lines of the Quran
that command the ruler to imitate Allah and to show compassion and
mercy to prisoners? Did I not break the spirit of these
commandments, 0 wise sufi pilgrim?'
Bistami studied the flagstones of the courtyard. 'Perhaps
so, great Akbar. Only you know.'
Akbar regarded him. 'Leave the tomb of Chishti,' he
said.
Bistami hurried out of the gate.
The next time Bistami saw Akbar was at the palace, where
he had been commanded to appear; as it turned out, to explain why,
as the Emperor put it icily, 'your friends in Gujarat are rebelling
against me'?
Bistami said uneasily, 'I left Ahmadabad precisely
because there was so much strife. The mirzas were always having
trouble. The King Muzaffar Shah the Third was no longer in control.
You know all this. This is why you took Gujarat under your
protection.'
Akbar nodded, seeming to remember that campaign. 'But now
Husain Mirza has come back out of the Deccan, and many of the
nobles of Gujarat have joined him in rebellion. If word spreads
that I can be defied so easily, who knows what will follow?'
'Surely Gujarat must be retaken,' Bistami said
uncertainly; perhaps, as last time, this was exactly what Akbar did
not want to hear. What was expected of Bistami was not clear to
him; he was an official of the court, a qadi, but his advice before
had all been religious, or legal. Now, with a previous residence of
his in revolt, he was apparently on the spot; not where one wanted
to be when Akbar was angry.
'It may already be too late,' Akbar said. 'The coast is
two months away.'
'Must it be?' Bistami asked. 'I have made the trip by
myself in ten days. Perhaps if you took only your best hundreds, on
female camels, you could surprise the rebels.'
Akbar favoured him with his hawk look. He called for Raja
Todor Mal, and soon it was arranged as Bistami had suggested. A
cavalry of three thousand soldiers, led by Akbar, with Bistami
ordered along, covered the distance between Agra and Ahmadabad in
eleven dusty long days, and this cavalry, made strong and bold by
the swift march, shattered a ragtag horde of many thousands of
rebels, fifteen thousand by one general's count, most of them
killed in the battle.
Bistami spent that day on camelback, following the main
charges of the front, trying to stay within sight of Akbar, and
when that failed, helping wounded men into the shade. Even without
Akbar's great siege guns, the noise of the battle was shocking --
most of it created by the screaming of men and camels. Dust
blanketing the hot air smelled of blood.
Late in the afternoon, desperately thirsty, Bistami made
his way down to the river. Scores of wounded and dying were already
there, staining the river red. Even at the upstream edge of the
crowd it was impossible to drink a mouthful that did not taste of
blood.
Then Raja Todor Mal and a gang of soldiers arrived among
them, executing with swords the mirzas and Afghans who had led the
rebellion. One of the mirzas caught sight of Bistami and cried out
'Bistami, save me! Save me!'
The next moment he was headless, his body pouring its
blood onto the bankside from the open neck. Bistami turned away,
Raja Todor Mal staring after him.
Clearly Akbar heard of this later, for all during the
leisurely march back to Fatepur Sikri, despite the triumphant
nature of the procession, and Akbar's evident high spirits, he did
not call Bistami into his presence. This despite the fact that the
lightning assault on the rebels had been Bistami's idea. Or perhaps
this also was part of it. Raja Todor Mal and his cronies could not
be pleased by that.
It looked bad, and nothing in the great victory festival
on their return to Fatepur Sikri, only forty three days after
their departure, made Bistami feel any better. On the contrary, he
felt more and more apprehensive, as the days passed and Akbar did
not come to the tomb of Chishti.
Instead, one morning, three guards appeared there. They
had been assigned to guard Bistami at the tomb, also back at his
own compound. They informed him that he was not allowed to go
anywhere else but these two places. He was under house arrest.
This was the usual prelude to the interrogation and
execution of traitors. Bistami could see in his guards' eyes that
this time was no exception, and that they considered him a dead
man. It was hard for him to believe that Akbar had turned on him;
he struggled to understand it. Fear grew daily in him. The image
of the mirza's headless body, gushing blood, kept recurring to him,
and each time it did the blood in his own body would pound through
him as if testing the means of escape, eager for release in a
bursting red fountain.
He went to the Chishti tomb on one of these frightful
mornings, and decided not to leave it. He sent orders for one of
his retainers to bring him food every day at sundown, and after
eating outside the gate of the tomb, he slept on a mat in the
corner of the courtyard. He fasted through the days as if it were
Ramadan, and alternated days reciting from the Quran and from
Rumi's 'Mathnawi', and other Persian sufi texts. Some part of him
hoped and expected that one of the guards would speak Persian, so
that the words of the Mowlana, Rumi the great poet and voice of the
sufis, would be understood as they came pouring out of him.
'Here are the miracle signs you want,' he would say in a
loud voice, that you cry through the night and get up at dawn,
asking that in the absence of what you ask for, your day gets dark,
your neck thin as a spindle, that what you give away is all you
own, that you sacrifice belongings, sleep, health, your head, that
you often sit down in a fire like aloes wood, and often go out
to meet a blade like a battered helmet. When acts of helplessness
become habitual, those are the signs. You run back and forth
listening for unusual events, peering into the faces of travellers.
Why are you looking at me like a madman? I have lost a Friend.
Please forgive me. Searching like that does not fail. There will
come a rider who holds you close. You faint and gibber. The
uninitiated say, he's faking. How could they know? Water washes
over a beached fish.
'Blessed is that intelligence into whose heart's ear from
heaven the sound of "come hither" is coming. The defiled ear hears
not that sound -- only the deserving gets his desserts. Defile not
your eye with human cheek and mole, for that emperor of eternal
life is coming; and if it has become defiled, wash it with tears,
for the cure comes from those tears. A caravan of sugar has arrived
from Egypt; the sound of a footfall and bell is coming. Ha, be
silent, for to complete the ode our speaking King is coming.'
After many days of that, Bistami began to repeat the
Quran sura by sura, returning often to the first sura, the Opening
of the Book, the Fatiha, the Healer, which the guards would never
fail to recognize: 'Praise be to God, Lord of the worlds!
The compassionate, the merciful! King on the day of reckoning! Thee
only do we worship, and to Thee do we cry for help. Guide Thou us
on the straight path, the path of those to whom Thou has been
gracious; -- and with whom Thou are not angry, and who go not
astray.'
This great opening prayer, so appropriate to his
situation, Bistami repeated hundreds of times per day. Sometimes he
repeated only the prayer 'Sufficient for us is God and excellent
the Protector'; once he said it thirty three thousand times in
a row. Then he switched to 'Allah is merciful, submit to Allah,
Allah is merciful, submit to Allah', which he repeated until his
mouth was parched, his voice hoarse, and the muscles of his face
cramped with exhaustion.
All the while he swept the courtyard clear, and then all
the rooms of the shrine, one by one, and he filled the lamps and
trimmed the wicks, and swept some more, looking at the skies as
they changed through the days, and he said the same things over and
over, feeling the wind push through him, watching the leaves of the
trees surrounding the shrine pulse, each in its own transparent
light. Arabic is learning, but Persian is sugar. He tasted his food
at sundown as he had never tasted food before. Nevertheless it
became easy to fast, perhaps because it was winter and the days
were a bit shorter. Fear still stabbed him frequently, causing his
blood to surge in him at enormous pressure, and he prayed aloud in
every waking moment, no doubt driving his guards mad with the
droning of it.
Eventually the whole world contracted to the tomb, and he
began to forget the things that had happened before to him, or the
things that presumably were still happening in the world outside
the shrine grounds. He forgot them. His mind was becoming
clarified, indeed everything in the world seemed to be becoming
slightly transparent. He could see into leaves, and sometimes
through them, as if they were made of glass; and it was the same
with the white marble and alabaster of the tomb, which glowed as if
alive in the dusks; and with his own flesh. 'All save the face
of God doth perish. To Him shall we return.' These were the
words from the Quran embedded in the Mowlana's beautiful poem of
reincarnation,
'I died as mineral and became a plant, I died as plant
and rose as animal, I died as animal and I was Man. Why should I
fear? When was I less by dying? Yet once more I shall die as Man,
to soar With angels blessed; but even from angelhood I must pass
on: "All save the face of God doth perish." When I have sacrificed
my angelic soul, I shall become what no mind has ever conceived,
Oh, let me not exist! for non existence Proclaims in organ
tones: "To Him shall we return".'
He repeated this poem a thousand times, always whispering
the last part, for fear the guards would report to Akbar that he
was preparing himself for death.
Days passed; weeks passed. He grew hungrier, and
hypersensitive to all tastes and smells, then to the air and the
light. He could feel the nights that stayed hot and steamy as if
they were blankets swaddling him, and in the brief cool of dawn he
walked around sweeping and praying, looking at the sky over the
leafy trees growing lighter and lighter; and then one morning as
dawn grew, everything began to turn into light. '0 he, 0 he who is
He, 0 he who is naught but He!' Over and over he cried these words
out into the world of light, and even the words were shards of
light bursting out of his mouth. The tomb became a thing of pure
white light, glowing in the cool green light of the trees, the
trees of green light, and the fountain poured its water of light up
into the lit air, and the walls of the courtyard were bricks of
light, and everything was light, pulsing lightly. He could see
through the Earth, and back through time, over a Khyber Pass made
of slabs of yellow light, back to the time of his birth, in the
tenth day of Moharram, the day when the Imam Hosain, the only
living grandson of Mohammed, had died defending the faith, and he
saw that whether or not Akbar had him killed he would live on, for
he had lived before many times, and was not going to be done when
this life ended. 'Why should I be afraid?
When did I ever lose by dying?' He was a creature of light as
everything else was, and had once been a village girl, another time
a horseman on the steppes, another time the servant of the Twelfth
Imam, so that he knew how and why the Imam had disappeared, and
when he would return to save the world. Knowing that, there was no
reason to fear anything. 'Why should I be afraid? 0 he, 0 he who is
He, sufficient is God and excellent the Protector, Allah the
merciful, the beneficent!' Allah who had sent Mohammed on his isra,
his journey into light, just as Bistami was being sent now, towards
the ascension of miraj, when all would become a light utterly
transparent and invisible.
Understanding this, Bistami looked through the
transparent walls and trees and earth to Akbar, across the city in
his clear palace, robed in light like an angel, a man surely more
than half angel already, an angel spirit that he had known in
previous lives, and that he would know again in future lives, until
they all came to one place and Allah rang down the universe.
Except this Akbar of light turned his head, and looked
through the lit space between them, and Bistami saw then that his
eyes were black balls in his head, black as onyx; and he said to
Bistami, We have never met before; I am not the one you seek; the
one you seek is elsewhere.
Bistami reeled, fell back in the corner made by the two
walls.
When he came to himself, still in a colourful glassine
world, Akbar in the flesh stood there before him, sweeping the
courtyard with Bistami's broom.
'Master,' Bistami said, and began to weep. 'Mowlana.'
Akbar stopped over him, stared down at him.
Finally he put a hand to Bistami's head. 'You are a
servant of God,' he said.
'Yes, Mowlana.'
'"Now hath God been gracious to
us",' Akbar recited in Arabic. For whoso feareth
God and endureth, God verily will not suffer the reward of the
righteous to perish. --
This was from Sura Twelve, the story of Joseph and his
brothers. Bistami, encouraged, still seeing through the edges of
things, including Akbar and his luminous hand and face, a creature
of light pulsing through lives like days, recited verses from the
end of the next sura, 'Thunder':
Those who lived before them made plots; but
all plotting is controlled by God: He knoweth the works of every
one. --
Akbar nodded, looking to Chishti's tomb and thinking his
own thoughts.
No blame be on you this day",' he
muttered, speaking the words Joseph spoke as he forgave his
brothers. God will forgive you, for He is the most
merciful of those who show mercy."'
'Yes, mowlana. God gives us all things, God the merciful
and compassionate, he who is He. 0 he who is He, 0 he who is He, 0
he who is He . . .' With difficulty he stopped himself.
'Yes.' Akbar looked back down at him again. 'Now,
whatever may have happened in Gujarat, I don't wish to hear any
more of it. I don't believe you had anything to do with the
rebellion. Stop weeping. But Abul Fazl and Shaikh Abdul Nabi do
believe this, and they are among my chief advisers. In most matters
I trust them. I am loyal to them, as they are to me. So I can
ignore them in this, and instruct them to leave you alone, but even
if I do that, your life here will not be as comfortable as it was
before. You understand.'
'Yes, master.'
'So I am going to send you away 'No, master!'
'Be silent. I am going to send you on the haj.'
Bistami's mouth fell open. After all these days of
endless talking, his jaw hung from his face like a broken gate.
White light filled everything, and for a moment he swooned.
Then colours returned, and he began to hear again:
' you will ride to Surat and sail on my pilgrim ship, llahi,
across the Arabian Sea to Jiddah. The waqf has generated a good
donation to Mecca and Medina, and I have appointed Wazir as the mir
haj, and the party will include my aunt, Bulbadan Begam, and my
wife Salima. I would like to go myself, but Abul FazI insists that
I am needed here.'
Bistami nodded. 'You are indispensable, master.'
Akbar contemplated him. 'Unlike you.'
He removed his hand from Bistami's head. 'But the mir haj
can always use another cladi. And I wish to establish a permanent
Timurid school in Mecca. You can help with that.'
'But -- and not come back?'
'Not if you value this existence.'
Bistami stared down at the ground, feeling a chill.
' Come now,' the Emperor said. 'For such a devout scholar
as you, a life in Mecca should be pure joy.'
'Yes, master. Of course.' But his voice choked on the
words.
Akbar laughed. 'It's better than beheading, you must
admit! And who knows. Life is long. Perhaps you will come back one
day.'
They both knew it was not likely. Life was not long.
'Whatever God wills,' Bistami murmured, looking around.
This courtyard, this tomb, these trees, which he knew stone by
stone, branch by branch, leaf by leaf this life, which had
filled a hundred years in the last month -- it was over. All that
he knew so well would pass from him, including this beloved awesome
young man. Strange to think that each true life was only a few
years long that one passed through several in each bodily
span. He said, 'God is great. We will never meet again.'
Five. The Haj to Mecca
From the port of jiddah to Mecca, the pilgrims' camels
were continuous from horizon to horizon, looking as if they might
continue unbroken all the way across Arabia, or the world. The
rocky shallow valleys around Mecca were filled with encampments,
and the mutton greased smoke of cooking fires rose into the
clear skies at sunset. Cool nights, warm days, never a cloud in the
whitish blue sky, and thousands of pilgrims, enthusiastically
making the final rounds of the haj, everyone in the city
participating in the same ecstatic ritual, all dressed in white,
accented by the green turbans in the crowd, worn by the sayyids,
those who claimed direct descent from the Prophet: a big family, if
the turbans were to be believed, all reciting verses from the Quran
following the people in front of them, who followed those before
them, and those before them, in a line that extended back nine
centuries.
On the voyage to Arabia, Bistami had fasted more
seriously than ever in his life, even in the tomb of Chishti. Now
he flowed through the stone streets of Mecca light as a feather,
looking up at the palms dusting the sky with their gently waving
green fronds, feeling so airy in God's grace that it sometimes
seemed he looked down on the palm tops, or around the corners into
the Kaaba, and he would have to stare at his feet for a while to
regain his balance and his sense of self, though as he did so his
feet began to seem like distant creatures of their own, thrusting
forwards one after the other, time after time. 0 he, 0 he who is He
...
He had separated himself from the representatives of
Fatepur Sikri, as Akbar's family he found an unwelcome reminder of
his lost master.
With them it was always Akbar this and Akbar that, his wife
Salima (a second wife, not the Empress) plaintive in a
self satisfied way, his aunt egging her on -- no. Women were
on their own pilgrimage in any case, but the men in the Mughal
retinue were almost as bad. And Wazir the mir haj was an ally of
Abul Fazl, and therefore suspicious of Bistami, dismissive of him
to the point of contempt. There would be no place for Bistami in
the Mughal school, assuming that they established one at all,
rather than just disbursing some alms and city funds from an
embassy, which was how it looked as if it would come about. Either
way Bistami would not be welcome among them, that was clear.
But this was one of those blessed moments when the future
was no matter for concern, when both past and future were absent
from the world. That was what struck Bistami most, even at the
time, even in the act of floating along in the line of belief, one
of a million whiterobed hajjis pilgrims from all over Dar
al Islam, from the Maghrib to Mindanao, from Siberia to the
Seychelles: how they were all there together in this one moment,
the sky and the town under it all glowing with their presence, not
transparently as at Chishti's tomb, but full of colour, stuffed
with all the colours of the world. All the people of the world were
one.
This holiness radiated outwards from the Kaaba. Bistami
moved with the line of humanity into the holiest mosque, and passed
by the big smooth black stone, blacker than ebony or jet, black as
the night sky without stars, like a boulder--shaped hole in
reality. He felt his body and soul pulsing in the same rhythm as
the line, as the world. Touching the black stone was like touching
flesh. It seemed to revolve around him. The dream image of Akbar's
black eyes came to him and he shrugged them away, aware they were
distractions out of his own mind, aware of Allah's ban on images.
The stone was all and it was just a stone, black reality itself,
made solid by God. He kept his place in the line and felt the
spirits of the people ahead of him lifting as they passed out of
the square, as if they were climbing a stairway into heaven.
Dispersal; return to camp; the first sips of soup and
coffee at sundown; all occurred in a silent cool evening under the
evening star. Everyone at such peace. Washed clean inside. Looking
around at all the faces, Bistami thought, Oh why don't we live like
this all the time? What is important enough to take us away from
this moment? Firelit faces, starry night overhead, ripples
of song or soft laughter, peace, peace: no one seemed to want to
fall asleep, to end this moment and wake up the next day, back in
the sensible world.
Akbar's family and haj left in a caravan back to Jiddah
Bistami went to the outskirts of town to see them off; Akbar's wife
and aunt said goodbye to him, waving from camel back. The rest
were already intent on the long journey to Fatepur Sikri.
After that Bistami was alone in Mecca, a city of
strangers. Most were leaving now, in caravan after caravan. It was
a lugubrious, uncanny sight: hundreds of caravans, thousands of
people, happy but deflated, their white robes packed away or
revealed suddenly to be dusty, fringed at the foot with brown dirt.
So many were leaving that it seemed the city was being abandoned
before some approaching disaster, as perhaps had happened once or
twice, in time of war or famine or plague.
But a week or two later the ordinary Mecca was revealed,
a whitewashed dusty little town of a few thousand people. Many of
them were clerics or scholars or sufis or qadis or ulema, or
heterodox refugees of one sort or another, claiming the sanctuary
of the holy city. Most, however, were merchants and tradespeople.
In the aftermath of the haj they looked exhausted, drained, almost
stunned it seemed, and inclined to disappear into their
blank walled compounds, leaving the remaining outsiders in
town to fend for themselves for a month or two. For the remnant
ulema and scholars, it was as if they were camping out in the empty
heart of Islam, making it full by their own devotions, cooking over
fires on the edges of town at dusk, trading for food with passing
nomads. Many sang songs through most of the night.
The Persian speaking group was big, and congregated
nightly around fires of its khitta on the eastern edge of town,
where the canals came in from the hills. Thus they were the first
to experience the spate that burst onto the town after storms to
the north, which they heard but never saw. A wall of muddy black
water slammed down the canals and spread out through the streets,
rolling palm trunks and boulders like weapons into the upper half
of the town. Everything flooded after that, until even the Kaaba
itself stood in water up to the silver ring that held it in
place.
Bistami threw himself with great pleasure into the
efforts to drain the waters, and then to clean up the town. After
the experience of the light in Chishti's tomb, and the supreme
experience of the haj, there was little more he felt he could do in
the mystic realm. He lived now in the aftermath of those events,
and felt himself utterly changed; but what he wanted to do now was
to read Persian poetry for an hour in the brief cool of the
mornings, then work outside in the low hot winter sun in the
afternoons. With the town broken and waist deep in mud, there
was a lot of work to be done. Pray, read, work, eat, pray, sleep;
this was the pattern of a good day. Day after day passed in this
satisfying round.
Then as the winter wore on, he began to study at a sufi
madressa established by scholars from the Maghrib, that western end
of the world that was becoming more powerful, extending as it was
both north into al Andalus and Firanja, and south into the
Sahel. Bistami and the others there read and discussed not just
Rumi and Shams, but also the philosophers Ibn Sina and Ibn Rashd,
and the ancient Greek Aristotle, and the historian Ibn Khaldun. The
Maghribis in the madressa were not as interested in contesting
points of doctrine as they were in exchanging new information about
the world; they were full of stories of the reoccupation of
al Andalus and Firanja, and tales of the lost Frankish
civilization. They were friendly to Bistami; they had no opinion of
him one way or another; they thought of him as Persian, and so it
was much more pleasant to be among them than with the Mughalis in
the Timurid embassy, where he was regarded uneasily at best.
Bistami saw that if his being stationed in Mecca was punishment in
the form of exile from Akbar and Sind, then the other Mughalis
assigned here had to wonder if they too were in disfavour, rather
than honoured for their religious devotion. Seeing Bistami reminded
them of this possibility, and so he was shunned like a leper. He
therefore spent more and more of his time at the Maghribi madressa,
and out in the Persian--speaking khitta, now set a bit higher in
the hills above the canals east of town.
The year in Mecca always oriented itself in time to the
haj, in just the same way that Islam oriented itself in space to
Mecca. As the months passed, all began to make their preparations,
and as Ramadan approached, nothing else in the world mattered but
the upcoming haj. Much of the effort involved simply feeding the
masses that would descend on the town. A whole system had developed
to accomplish this miraculous feat, astonishing in its size and
efficiency, here on this out of the way
corner of a nearly lifeless desert peninsula. Though of course Aden
and Yemen were rich, to the south below them. No doubt, Bistami
thought as he walked by the pastures now filling up with sheep and
goats, mulling over his readings in Ibn Khaldun, the system had
grown with the growth of the haj itself. Which must have been
rapid: Islam had exploded out of Arabia in the first century after
the hegira, he was coming to understand. Al Andalus had been
Islamicized by the year 100, the far reaches of the Spice Islands
by the year 200; the whole span of the known world had been
converted, only two centuries after the Prophet had received the
Word and spread it to the people of this little land in the middle.
Ever since then people had been coming here in greater and greater
numbers.
One day he and a few other young scholars went to Medina,
walking all the way, reciting prayers as they went, to see
Mohammed's first mosque again. Past endless pens of sheep and
goats, past cheese dairies, granaries, date palm groves, then into
the outskirts of Medina, a sleepy, sandy, dilapidated little
settlement when the haj was not there to bring it alive. In one
stand of thick ancient palms, the little whitewashed mosque hid in
the shade, as polished as a pearl. Here the Prophet had preached
during his exile, and taken down most of the verses of the Quran
from Allah.
Bistami wandered the garden outside this holy place,
trying to imagine how it had happened. Reading Khaldun had made him
understand: these things had all happened. In the beginning, the
Prophet had stood in this grove, speaking in the open air. Later he
had leaned against a palm tree when he spoke, and some of his
followers had suggested a chair. He had agreed to it only as long
as it was low enough that there was no suggestion he was claiming
any sort of privilege for himself. The Prophet, perfect man that he
had been, was modest. He had agreed to the construction of a mosque
where he taught, but for many years it had gone roofless; Mohammed
had declared there was more important business for the faithful to
accomplish first. And then they had made their return to Mecca, and
the Prophet had led twenty six military campaigns himself: the
jihad. After that, how quickly the word had spread. Khaldun
attributed this rapidity to a readiness in people for the next
stage in civilization, and to the manifest truth of the Quran
Bistami, troubled by something he could not pin down,
wondered about this explanation. In India, civilizations had come
and gone, come and gone. Islam itself had conquered India. But
under the Mughals the ancient beliefs of the Indians endured, and
Islam itself changed in its constant contact with them. This had
become clearer to Bistami as he studied the pure religion in the
madressa. Although sufism itself was perhaps more than a simple
return to the pure source. An advance, or (could one say M) a
clarification, even an improvement. An effort to bypass the ulemas.
In any case, change. It did not seem that it could be prevented.
Everything changed. As the sufi junnaiyd at the madressa said, the
word of God came down to man as rain to soil, and the result was
mud, not clear water. After the winter's great flood, this image
was particularly vivid and troubling. Islam, spreading over the
world like a spate of mud, a mix of God and man; it did not seem
very much like what had happened to him in the tomb of Chishti, or
at the moment of the haj, when it seemed the Kaaba had revolved
around him. But even his memory of those events was changing.
Everything changed in this world.
Including Medina and Mecca, which grew in population
rapidly as the haj approached, and shepherds poured into town with
their flocks, tradesmen with their wares -- clothing, travelling
equipment to replace things broken or lost, religious scripts,
mementos of the haj, and so on. In the final month of preparation
the early pilgrims began to arrive, long strings of camels carrying
dusty, happy travellers, their faces alight with the feeling
Bistami remembered from the year before, a year which seemed to
have gone so fast and yet his own haj at the same time
seemed as if it were on the far side of a great abyss in his mind.
He could not call up in himself the feeling that he saw on their
faces. He was no pilgrim this time, but a resident, and he found
himself feeling some of the residents' resentment, that his
peaceful village, like a big madressa really, was swelling to a
ridiculous engorgement, as if a great family of enthusiastic
relatives had descended on them all at once. Not a happy way of
thinking of it, and Bistami set himself guiltily to a full round of
prayers, fasting, and aid of the influx, especially those exhausted
or sick: leading them to khittas and finas and caravanserai and
hostelries, throwing himself into a routine to make himself feel he
was more in the spirit of the haj. But daily exposure to the
ecstatic faces of the pilgrims reminded him how far he was from
that. Their faces were alight with God. He saw how clearly
faces revealed the soul, they were like windows into a deeper
world.
So he hoped that his pleasure at greeting the pilgrims
from Akbar's court was obvious on his face. But Akbar himself had
not come, nor any of his immediate family, and no one in the group
looked at all happy to be there, or to see Bistami. The news from
home was ominous. Akbar had become critical of his ulema. He
received Hindu rajas, and listened sympathetically to their
concerns. He had even begun openly to worship the sun, prostrating
himself four times a day before a sacred fire, abstaining from
meat, alcohol and sexual intercourse. These were Hindu practices,
and indeed on every Sunday he was initiating twelve of his amirs in
his service. The neophytes placed their heads directly on Akbar's
feet during this ceremony, an extreme form of prostration known as
sijdah, a form of submission to another human being that was
blasphemous to Muslims. And he had not been willing to fund much of
a pilgrimage; indeed, he had had to be convinced to send any at
all. He had sent Shaikh Abdul Nabi and Malauna Abdulla as a way of
exiling them, just as he had Bistami the year before. In short, he
appeared to be falling away from the faith. Akbar, falling away
from Islam!
And, Abdul Nabi told Bistami bluntly, many at the court
blamed him, Bistami, for this change in Akbar. It was a matter of
convenience only, Abdul Nabi assured him. 'Blaming someone who is
far away is safest for all, you see. But now they have it that you
were sent to Mecca with the idea of reforming you. You were
babbling about the light, the light, and you were sent away, and
now Akbar is worshipping the sun like a Zoroastrian or some pagan
from the ancient times.'
'So I can't return,' Bistami said.
Abdul Nabi shook his head. 'Not only that, but I judge
that it isn't even safe for you to stay here. If you do, the ulema
may accuse you of heresy, and come and take you back for judgment.
Or even judge you here.'
'You're saying I should leave here?'
Abdul Nabi nodded, slowly and deeply. 'Surely there are
more interesting places for you than Mecca. A qadi like you can
find good work to do, anywhere the ruler is a Muslim. Nothing will
happen during the haj, of course. But when it's over .
Bistami nodded and thanked the shaikh for his honesty.
He realized that he wanted to leave anyway. He didn't
want to stay in Mecca. He wanted to go back to Akbar, and the
timeless hours in Chishti's tomb, and live in that space for ever;
but if that was not possible, he would have to begin his tariqat
again, and wander in search of his real life. He recalled what had
happened to Shams when the disciples of Rumi got tired of Rumi's
infatuation with his friend. Shams had disappeared, never to be
seen again, some said tied to rocks and thrown in a river. If
people in Fatepur Sikri thought that Akbar had found his Shams in
Bistami -- which struck Bistami as backwards -- but they had spent
a lot of time together, more than seemed explicable; and no one
else knew what had gone on between them in those meetings, how much
it had been a matter of Akbar teaching the teacher. It is always
the teacher who must learn the most, Bistami thought, or else
nothing real has happened in the exchange.
The rest of that haj was strange. The crowds seemed huge,
inhuman, possessed, a pestilence consuming hundreds of sheep a day,
and all the ulema like shepherds, organizing this cannibalism. Of
course one could not speak of these things, but only repeat some of
the phrases that had burned their way into his soul so deeply, 0 he
who is He, 0 he who is He, Allah the Merciful the Compassionate.
Why should I be afraid? God sets all in action. No doubt he was
supposed to continue his tariclat until he found something more.
After the haj one was supposed to move on.
The Maghribi scholars were the friendliest he knew, they
exhibited the sufi hospitality at its finest, as well as a keen
curiosity about the world. He could go back up to Isfahan, of
course, but something drew him westwards. Clarified as he had been
in the realm of light, he did not care to go back to the richness
of the Iranian gardens. In the Quran the word for Paradise, and all
of Mohammed's words for describing Paradise, came out of Persian
words; while the word for Hell, in the very same suras, came from
Hebrew, a desert language. That was a sign. Bistami did not want
Paradise. He wanted something he could not define, a human
challenge of some indefinable kind. Say the human was a mix of
material and divine, and that the divine soul lived on; there must
then be some purpose to this travel through the days, some movement
up towards higher realms of being, so that the Khaldunian model of
cycling dynasties, moving endlessly from youthful vigour to
lethargic bloated old age, had to be altered by the addition of
reason to human affairs. Thus the notion of the cycle being in fact
a rising gyre, in which the possibility of the next young dynasty
beginning at a higher level than the last time around was
acknowledged and made a goal. This is what he wanted to teach, this
is what he wanted to learn. Westwards, following the sun, he would
find it, and all would be well.
Six. Al Andalus
Everywhere he went seemed the new centre of the world. When he
was young, Isfahan had seemed the capital of everywhere; then
Gujarat, then Agra and Fatepur Sikri; then Mecca and the black
stone of Abraham, the true heart of all. Now Cairo appeared to him
the ultimate metropolis, impossibly ancient, dusty and huge. The
Marnlukes walked through the crowded streets with their retinues in
train, powerful men wearing feathered helmets, confident in their
mastery of Cairo, Egypt and most of the Levant. When Bistami saw
them he usually followed for a while, as did many others, and he
found himself both reminded of Akbar's pomp, and struck by how
different the Marnlukes were, how they formed a jati that was
brought into being anew with each generation. Nothing could be less
imperial; there was no dynasty; and yet their control over the
populace was even stronger than a dynasty's. It could be that
everything Khaldun had said about dynastic cycling was rendered
irrelevant by this new system of governance, which had not existed
in his time. Things changed, so that even the greatest historian of
all could not speak the last word.
Thus the days in the great old city were exciting. But
the Maghribi scholars were anxious to begin their long journey
home, and so Bistami helped them prepare their caravan, and when
they were ready, he joined them continuing westwards on the road to
Fez.
This part of the tariqat led them first north, to
Alexandria ' They led their camels to a caravanserai and went down
to have a look at the historic harbour, with its long
curving dock against the pale water of the Mediterranean. Looking
at it Bistami was struck by the feeling one sometimes gets, that he
had seen this place before. He waited for the sensation to pass,
and followed the others on.
As the caravan moved through the Libyan desert, the talk
at night around the fires was of the Marnlukes, and of Suleiman the
Magnificent, the Ottoman Emperor who had recently died. Among his
conquests had been the very coast they were now skirting, though
there was no way to tell that, except for an extra measure of
respect given to Ottoman officials in the towns and caravanserai
they passed through. These people never bothered them, or put a
tariff on their passing. Bistami saw that the world of the sufis
was, among many other things, a refuge from worldly power. In each
region of the earth there were sultans and emperors, Suleimans and
Akbars and Marnlukes, all ostensibly Muslim, and yet worldly,
powerful, capricious, dangerous. Most of these were in the
Khaldunian state of late dynastic corruption. Then there were the
sufis. Bistami watched his fellow scholars around the fire in the
evenings, intent on a point of doctrine, or the questionable isnad
of a hadith, and what that meant, arguing with exaggerated
punctilio and little debater's jokes and flourishes, while a pot of
thick hot coffee was poured with solemn attention into little
glazed clay cups, all eyes gleaming with firelight and pleasure in
the argument; and he thought, these are the Muslims who make Islam
good. These are the men who have conquered the world, not the
warriors. The armies could have done nothing without the word.
Worldly but not powerful, devout but not pedantic (most of them,
anyway); men interested in a direct relation to God, without any
human authority's intervention; a relation to God, and a fellowship
among men.
One night the talk turned to al Andalus, and Bistami
listened with an extra measure of interest.
'It must be strange to re enter an empty land like
that.'
Fishermen have been living on the coast for a long time
now, and zott scavengers. The Zott and Armenians have moved inland
as well.'
'Dangerous, I should think. The plague might return.'
'No one appears to be affected.'
'Khaldun says that the plague is an effect of
overpopulation,' said Ibn Ezra, the chief scholar of Khaldun among
them. 'In his chapter on dynasties in "The Muqaddimah",
forty ninth section, he says that plagues result from
corruption of the air caused by overpopulation, and the
putrefaction and evil moistures that result from so many people
living close together. The lungs are affected, and so disease is
conveyed. He makes the ironic point that these things result from
the early success of a dynasty, so that good government, kindness,
safety, and light taxation lead to growth and thence to pestilence.
He says, 'Therefore, science has made it clear that it is necessary
to have empty spaces and waste regions interspersed between urban
areas. This makes circulation of the air possible, and removes the
corruption and putrefaction affecting the air after contact with
living beings, and brings healthy air." If he is right, well --
Firanja has been empty for a long time, and can be expected to be
healthy again. No danger of plague should exist, until the time
comes when the region is heavily populated once again. But that
will be a long time from now.'
'It was God's judgment,' one of the other scholars said.
'The Christians were exterminated by Allah for their persecution of
Muslims, and Jews too.'
'But al Andalus was still Muslim at the time of the
plague,' Ibn Ezra pointed out. 'Granada was still Muslim, the whole
south of Iberia was Muslim. And they too died. As did the Muslims
in the Balkans, or so says al Gazzabi in his history of the
Greeks. It was a matter of location, it seems. Firanja was
stricken, perhaps from overpopulation as Khaldun says, perhaps from
its many moist valleys, that held the bad air. No one can say.'
'It was Christianity that died. They were people of the
Book, but they persecuted Islam. They made war on Islam for
centuries, and tortured every Muslim prisoner to death. Allah put
an end to them.'
'But al Andalus died too,' Ibn Ezra repeated. 'And
there were Christians in the Maghrib and in Ethiopia that survived,
and in Armenia. There are still little pockets of Christians in
these places, living in the mountains.' He shook his head. 'I don't
think we know what happened. Allah judges.'
'That's what I'm saying.'
'So al Andalus is reinhabited,' Bistami said.
'Yes.'
'And, sufis are there?'
'Of course. Sufis are everywhere. In al Andalus they lead
the way, I have heard. They go north into still empty land, in
Allah's name, exploring and exorcising the past. Proving the way is
safe. Al Andalus was a great garden in its time. Good land,
and empty.'
Bistami looked in the bottom of his clay cup, feeling the
sparks in him of those two words struck together. Good and empty,
empty and good. This was how he had felt in Mecca.
Bistami felt that he was now cast loose, a wandering sufi
dervish, homeless and searching. On his tariqat. He kept himself as
clean as the dusty, sandy Maghrib would allow, remembering the
words of Mohammed concerning holy behaviour: one came to prosper
after washing hands and face, and eating no garlic. He fasted
often, and found himself growing light in the air, his vision
altering each day, from the glassy clarity of dawn, to the blurred
yellow haze of midday, to the semi--transparency of sunset, when
glories of gold and bronze haloed every tree and rock and skyline.
The towns of the Maghrib were small and handsome, often set out on
hillsides, and planted with palms and exotic trees that made each
town and rooftop a garden. Houses were square whitewashed blocks in
nests of palm, with rooftop patios and interior courtyard gardens,
cool and green and watered by fountains. Towns had been set where
water leaked out of the hillsides, and the biggest town turned out
to have the biggest springs: Fez, the end of their caravan.
Bistami stayed at the sufi lodge in Fez, and then he and
Ibn Ezra travelled by camel north to Ceuta, and paid for a crossing
by ship to Malaga. The ships here were rounder than in the Persian
Sea, with pronounced high ended keels, smaller sails, and
rudders under their centreposts. The crossing of the narrow strait
at the west end of the Mediterranean was rough, but they could see
al Andalus from the moment they left Ceuta, and the strong
current pouring into the Mediterranean, combined with a westerly
gale, bounced them over the waves at a great rate.
The coast of al Andalus proved cliffy, and above one
indentation towered a huge rock mountain. Beyond it the coast
curved to the north, and they took the offshore breezes in their
little sails and heeled in towards Malaga. Inland they could see a
distant white mountain range.
Bistami, exalted by the dramatic sea crossing, was reminded of
the view of the Zagros Mountains from Isfahan, and suddenly his
heart ached for a home he had almost forgotten. But here and now,
bouncing on the wild ocean of this new life, he was about to set
foot on a new land.
Al Andalus was a garden everywhere, green trees
foresting the slopes of the hills, snowy mountains to the north,
and on the coastal plains great sweeps of grain, and groves of
round green trees bearing round orange fruit, lovely to taste. The
sky dawned blue every day, and as the sun crossed the sky it was
warm in the sun, cool in the shade.
Malaga was a fine little city, with a rough stone fort
and a big ancient mosque filling the city centre. Wide
tree shaded streets rayed away from the mosque, which was
being refurbished, up to the hills, and from their slopes one
looked out at the blue Mediterranean, sheeting off to the Maghrib's
dry bony mountains, over the water to the south.
Al Andalus!
Bistami and Ibn Ezra found a little lodge like the
Persian ribats, in a kind of village at the edge of the town,
between fields and orange groves. Sufis grew the oranges, and
cultivated grapevines. Bistami went out in the mornings to help
them work. Most of their time was spent in the wheat field
stretching off to the west. The oranges were easy: 'We trim the
trees to keep the fruit off the ground,' a ribat worker named Zeya
told Bistami and Ibn Ezra one morning, 'as you see. I've been
trying various degrees of thinning, to see what the fruit does, but
the trees left alone develop a shape like an olive, and if you keep
branches off the ground at the bottom, then the fruit can't pick up
any groundbased rots. They are fairly susceptible to diseases, I
must say. The fruit gets green or black moulds, the leaves go
brittle or white or brown. The bark crusts over with orange or
white fungi. Lady bugs help, and smoking with smudge pots,
which is what we do to save the trees during frosts.'
'It gets that cold here?'
'Sometimes, in the late winter, yes. It's not paradise
here you know.'
'I was thinking it was.'
The call of the muezzin came from the house, and they
pulled out their prayer mats and knelt to the southeast, a
direction Bistami had still not got used to. Afterwards Zeya led
them to a stone stove holding a fire, and brewed them a cup of
coffee.
'It does not seem like new land,' Bistami noted, sipping
blissfully.
'It was Muslim land for many centuries. The Umayyads
ruled here from the second century until the Christians took the
region, and the plague killed them.'
'People of the Book,' Bistami murmured.
'Yes, but corrupt. Cruel taskmasters to free men or
slave. And always fighting among themselves. It was chaos
then.'
'As in Arabia before the Prophet.'
'Yes, exactly the same, even thought the Christians had
the idea of one God. They were strange that way, contentious. They
even tried to split God himself in three. So Islam prevailed. But
then after a few centuries, life here was so easy that even Muslims
grew corrupt. The Umayyads; were defeated, and no strong dynasty
replaced them. The taifa states numbered more than thirty, and they
fought constantly. Then the Almoravids invaded from Africa, in the
fifth century, and in the sixth century the Almohads from Morocco
ousted the Almoravids, and made Sevilla their capital. The
Christians meanwhile had continued to fight in the north, in
Catalonia and over the mountains in Navarre and Firanja, and they
came back and retook most of al Andalus. But never the
southernmost part, the Nasrid kingdom, including Malaga and
Granada. These lands remained Islam to the very end.'
'And yet they too died,' Bistami said.
'Yes. Everyone died.'
'I don't understand that. They say Allah punished the
infidels for their persecution of Islam, but if that were true, why
would He kill the Muslims here as well?'
Ibn Ezra shook his head decisively. 'Allah did not kill
the Christians. People are wrong about that.'
Bistami said, 'But even if He didn't, He allowed it to
happen. He didn't protect them. And yet Allah is all powerful.
I don't understand that.'
Ibn Ezra shrugged. 'Well, this is another manifestation
of the problem of death and evil in the world. This world is not
Paradise, and Allah, when he created us, gave us free will. This
world is ours to prove ourselves devout or corrupt. This is very
clear, because even more than Allah is powerful, He is good. He
cannot create evil. And yet evil exists in the world. So clearly we
create that ourselves. Therefore our destinies cannot have been
fixed or predetermined by Allah. We must work them out for
ourselves. And sometimes we create evil, out of fear, or greed, or
laziness. That's our fault.'
'But the plague,' Zeya said.
'That wasn't us or Allah. Look, all living things cat
each other, and often the smaller eats the larger. The dynasty ends
and the little warriors cat it up. This fungus, for instance,
eating this fallen orange. The fungus is like a field of a million
small mushrooms. I can show you in a magni fying glass I
have. And see the orange it's a blood orange, see, dark red
inside. You people must have bred them for that, right?'
Zeya nodded.
'You get hybrids, like mules. Then with plants you can do
it again, and again, until you've bred a new orange. That's just
how Allah made us. The two parents mix their stock in the
offspring. All traits are mixed, I suspect, though only some show.
Some are carried unseen to a later generation. Anyway, say some
mould like this, in their bread, or even living in their water,
bred with another mould, and made some new creature that was
poison. It spread, and being stronger than its parents, supplanted
them. And so the people died. Maybe it drifted through the air like
pollen in spring, maybe it lived inside the people it poisoned for
weeks before it killed them, and passed on their breath, or at the
touch. And then it was such a poison that in the end it killed off
all its food, in effect, and then died out itself, for lack of
sustenance.'
Bistami stared at the segments of blood red orange
still in his hand, feeling faintly sick. The red fleshed
segments were like wedges of bright death.
Zeya laughed at him. 'Come now, eat up! We can't live
like angels! All that happened over a hundred years ago, and people
have been coming back and living here without any problems for a
long time. Now we are as free from the plague as any other country.
I've lived here all my life. So finish your orange.'
Bistami did so, thinking it over. 'So it was all an
accident.'
'Yes,' Ibn Ezra said. 'I think so.'
'It doesn't seem like Allah should allow it.'
'All living things are free in this world. Besides, it
could be that it was not entirely accident. The Quran teaches us to
live cleanly, and it could be that the Christians ignored the laws
at their peril. They ate pigs, they kept dogs, they drank wine
'
'We here don't believe that wine was the problem,' Zeya
said with another laugh.'
Ibn Ezra smiled. 'But if they lived in their sewage,
among the tanneries and shambles, and ate pork and touched dogs,
and killed each other like the barbarians of the cast, and tortured
each other, and had their way with boys, and left the dead bodies
of their enemies hanging at the gates -- and they did all these
things then perhaps they made their own plague, do you see
what I mean? They created the conditions that killed them.'
'But were they so different than anyone else?' Bistami
asked, thinking of the crowds and filth in Cairo, or Agra.
Ibn Ezra shrugged. 'They were cruel.'
'More cruel than Temur the Lame?'
'I don't know.'
'Did they conquer cities and put every person to the
sword?'
'I don't know.'
'The Mongols did that, and they became Muslim. Temur was
a Muslim.'
'So they changed their ways. I don't know. But the
Christians were torturers. Maybe it mattered, maybe it didn't. All
living things are free. Anyway they're gone now, and we're
here.'
'And healthy, by and large,' said Zeya. 'Of course
sometimes a child catches a fever and dies. And everyone dies
eventually. But it's a sweet life here, while it lasts.'
When the orange and grape harvests were over, the days
grew short. Bistami had not felt such a chill in the air since his
years in Isfahan. And yet in this very season, during the coldest
nights, the orange trees blossomed, near the shortest day of the
year: little white flowers all over the green round trees, fragrant
with a smell reminiscent of their taste but heavier, and very
sweet, almost cloying.
Through this giddy air came a cavalry, leading a long
caravan of camels and mules, and then, in the evening, slaves on
foot.
This was the Sultan of Carmona, near Sevilla, someone
said; one Mawji Darya, and his travelling party. The Sultan was the
youngest son of the new caliph, and had suffered a disagreement
with his elder brothers in Sevilla and al Majriti, and had
therefore decamped with his retainers with the intent of moving
north across the Pyrenees, and establishing a new city. His father
and elder brothers ruled in Cordoba, Sevilla and Toledo, and he
planned to lead his group out of al Andalus, up the
Mediterranean coast on the old road to Valencia, then inland to
Saragossa, where there was a bridge, he said, over the River
Ebro.
At the outset of this 'hegira of the heart', as the
Sultan called it, a dozen or more like minded nobles and their
people had joined him. And it became clear as the motley crowd
filed into the ribat yard, that along with the young Sevillan
nobles' families, retainers, friends and dependants, they had been
joined by many more followers from the villages and farms that had
sprung up in the countryside between Sevilla and Malaga. Sufi
dervishes, Armenian traders, Turks, Jews, Zott, Berbers, all were
represented; it was like a trade caravan, or some dream haj in
which all the wrong people were on their way to Mecca, all the
people who would never become hajjis Here there were a pair of
dwarves on ponies, behind them a group of one handed and
handless ex criminals, then some musicians, then two men
dressed as women; this caravan had them all.
The Sultan spread a broad hand. 'They are calling us the
Caravan of Fools, like the Ship of Fools. We will sail over the
mountains to a land of grace, and be fools for God. God will guide
us.'
From among them appeared his sultana, riding a horse. She
dismounted from it without regard for the big servant there to help
her down, and joined the Sultan as he was greeted by the Zeya and
the other members of the ribat. 'My wife, the Sultana Katima,
originally from al Majriti.'
The Castilian woman was bare headed, short and
slender armed, her riding skirts fringed with gold that swung
through the dust, ber long black hair swept back in a glossy curve
from her forehead, held by a string of pearls. Her face was slender
and her eyes a pale blue, making her gaze odd. She smiled at
Bistami when they were introduced, and later smiled at the farm,
and the water wheels, and the orange groves. Small things amused
her that no one else saw. The men there began to do what they could
to accommodate the Sultan and stay by his side, so that they could
remain in her presence. Bistami did it himself. She looked at him
and said something inconsequential, her voice like a Turkish oboe,
nasal and low, and hearing it he remembered what the vision
of Akbar had said to him during his immersion in the light: the one
you seek is elsewhere.
Ibn Ezra bowed low when he was introduced. 'I am a sufi
pilgrim, Sultana, and a humble student of the world. I intend to
make the haj, but I like the idea of your hegira very much; I would
like to see Firanja for myself. I study the ancient ruins.'
'Of the Christians?' the Sultana asked, fixing him with
her look.
'Yes, but also of the Romans, who came before them, in
the time before the Prophet. Perhaps I can make my haj the wrong
way around.'
'All are welcome who have the spirit to join us,' she
said.
Bistami cleared his throat, and Ibn Ezra smoothly brought
him forward. 'This is my young friend Bistami, a sufi scholar from
Sind, who has been on the haj and is now continuing his studies in
the west.'
Sultana Katima looked at him closely for the first time,
and stopped short, visibly startled. Her thick black eyebrows
knitted together in concentration over her pale eyes, and suddenly
Bistami saw that it was the birdwing mark that had crossed the
forehead of his tiger, the mark that had always made the tigress
look faintly surprised or perplexed, as it did with this woman.
' I am happy to meet you, Bistami. We always look forward
to learning from scholars of the Quran.'
Later that same day she sent a slave asking him to join
her for a private audience, in the garden designated hers for the
duration of her stay. Bistami went, plucking helplessly at his
robe, grubby beyond all aid.
It was sunset. Clouds shone in the western sky between
the black silhouettes of cypresses. Lemon blossoms lent the air
their fragrance, and seeing her standing alone by a gurgling
fountain, Bistami felt as if he had entered a place he had been
before; but everything here was turned around. Different in
particulars, but more than anything, strangely, terribly familiar,
like the feeling that had come over him briefly in Alexandria. She
was not like Akbar, nor even the tigress, not really. But this had
happened before. He became aware of his breathing.
She saw him standing under the arabesqued arches of the
entryway, and beckoned him to her. She smiled at him. People said
she had suffered a serious illness some years before, and that when
she had recovered, she had seemed different.
'I hope you do not mind me not wearing the veil. I will never do
so. The Quran says nothing about the veil, except for an injunction
to veil the bosom, which is obvious. As for the face, Mohammed's
wife Khadijeh never wore the veil, nor did the other wives of the
Prophet after Khadijeh died. While she lived he was faithful to her
alone, you know. If she had not died he never would have married
any other woman, he says so himself. So if she didn't wear the
veil, I feel no need to. The veil began when the caliphs in Baghdad
wore them, to separate themselves from the masses, and from any
khajirites who might be among them. It was a sign of power in
danger, a sign of fear. Certainly women are dangerous to men, but
not so much so that they need hide their faces. Indeed when you see
faces you understand better that we are all the same before God. No
veils between us and God, this is what each Muslim has gained by
his submission, don't you agree?'
'I do,' Bistami said, still shocked by the sense of
alreadyness that had overcome him. Even the shapes of the clouds in
the west were familiar at this moment.
'And I don't believe there is any sanction given in the
Quran for the husband to beat his wife, do you? The only possible
suggestion of such a thing is Sura 4:34, "As to those women on
whose part you fear disloyalty and ill conduct, admonish them,
next refuse to share their beds", how horrible that would be, "last
beat them lightly". Daraba, not darraba, which is really the word
"to beat" after all. Daraba is nudge, or even stroke with a
feather, as in the poem, or even to provoke while lovemaking, you
know, daraba, daraba. Mohammed made it very clear.'
Shocked, Bistami managed to nod. He could feel that there
was an astonished look on his face.
She saw it and smiled. 'This is what the Quran tells me,'
she said. 'Sura 2:223 says that "your wives are as your farm to
you, so treat her as you would your farm". The ulema have quoted
this as if it meant you could treat women like the dirt under your
feet, but these clerics, who stand as unneeded intercessors between
us and God, are never farmers, and farmers read the Quran right,
and see their wives are their food, their drink, their work, the
bed they lie on at night, the very ground under their feet! Yes, of
course you treat your wife as the ground under your feet! Give
thanks to God for giving us the sacred Quran and all its
wisdom.'
'Thanks to God,' Bistami said.
She looked at him and laughed out loud. 'You think I am
forward.'
'Not at all.'
'Oh but I am forward, believe me. I am very forward. But
don't you agree with my reading of the holy Quran? Have I not
cleaved to its every phrase, as a good wife cleaves to her
husband's every move?'
'So it seems to me, Sultana. I think the Quran ...
insists everywhere that all are equal before God. And thus, men and
women. There are hierarchies in all things, but each member of the
hierarchy has equal status before God, and this is the only status
that really matters. So the high and the low in station here on
Earth must have consideration for each other, as fellow members of
the faith. Brothers and sisters in belief, no matter caliph or
slave. And thus all the Quranic rules concerning treatment of
others. Constraints, even of an emperor over his lowest slave, or
the enemy he has captured.'
'The Christians' holy book had very few rules,' she said
obliquely, following her own train of thought.
'I didn't know that. You have read it?'
'An emperor over his slave, you said. There are rules
even for that. But still, no one would choose to be a slave rather
than an emperor. And the ulema have twisted the Quran with all
their hadith, always twisting it towards those in power, until the
message Mohammed laid out so clearly, straight from God, has been
reversed, and good Muslim women are made like slaves again, or
worse. Not cattle quite, but not like men, either. Wife to husband
portrayed as slave to emperor, rather than feminine to masculine,
power to power, equal to equal.'
By now her cheeks were flushed, he could see their colour
even in the dusk's poor light. Her eyes were so pale they seemed
like little pools of the twilit sky. When servants brought out
torches her blush was enhanced, and now there was a glitter in her
pale eyes, the torchfire dancing in those windows to her soul.
There was a lot of anger in there, hot anger, but Bistami had never
seen such beauty. He stared at her, trying to fix the moment in his
memory, thinking, You will never forget this, never forget
this!
After the silence had gone on a while, Bistami realized
that if he did not say something, the conversation might come to an
end.
'The sufis,' he said, I speak often of the direct
approach to God. It is a matter of illumination; I have . . . I
have experienced it myself, in a time of extremity. To the senses
it is like being filled with light; for the soul it is the state of
baraka, divine grace. And this is available to all equally.'
'But do the sufis mean women when they say "all"?'
He thought it over. Sufis were men, it was true. They
formed brotherhoods, they travelled alone and stayed in ribat or
zawiya, the lodges where there were no women, nor women's quarters;
if they were married they were sufis, and their wives were wives of
sufis.
'It depends where you are,' he temporized, 'and which
sufi teacher you follow.'
She looked at him with a small smile, and he realized he
had made a move without knowing he had done it, in this game to
stay near her.
'But the sufi teacher could not be a woman,' she
said.
'Well, no. They sometimes lead the prayers.'
'And a woman could never lead prayers.'
'Well,' Bistami said, shocked. 'I have never heard of
such a thing happening.'
'Just as a man has never given birth.'
'Exactly.' Feeling relieved.
'But men cannot give birth,' she pointed out. 'While
women could very easily lead prayers. Within the harem I lead them
every day.'
Bistami didn't know what to say. He was still surprised
at the idea.
'And mothers always instruct their children what to
pray.'
'Yes, that's true.'
'The Arabs before Mohammed worshipped goddesses, you
know.'
'Idols.'
'But the idea was there. Women are powers in the realm of
the soul.' 'Yes.'
'And as above, so below. This is true in everything.'
And she stepped towards him, suddenly, and put her hand
to his bare arm.
'Yes,' he said.
'We need scholars of the Quran to come north with us, to
help us to clear the Quran of these webs obscuring it, and to teach
us about illumination. Will you come with us? Will you do
that?'
'Yes.'
Seven. The Caravan of Fools
Sultan Mawji Darya was almost as handsome and gracious as
his wife, and just as interested in talking about his ideas, which
often returned to the topic of 'the convivencia'. Ibn Ezra informed
Bistami that this was the current enthusiasm among some of the
young nobles of al Andalus: to re create the golden age
of the Umayyad caliphate of the sixth century, when Muslim rulers
had allowed the Christians and Jews among them to flourish, and all
together had created the beautiful civilization that had been
al Andalus before the inquisition and the plague.
As the caravan in its ragged glory rode out of Malaga,
Ibn Ezra told Bistami more about this period, which Khaldun had
treated only very briefly, and the scholars of Mecca and Cairo not
at all. The Andalusi Jews in particular had flourished, translating
a great many ancient Greek texts into Arabic, with commentaries of
their own, and also making original investigations in medicine and
astronomy. Andalusi Muslim scholars had then used what they learned
of Greek logic, chiefly Aristotle, to defend all the tenets of
Islam with the full force of reason, Ibn Sina and Ibn Rashd being
the two most important of these. Ibn Ezra was full of praise for
the work of these men. 'I hope to extend it in my own small way,
God willing, with a particular application to nature and to the
ruins of the past.'
They fell back into the rhythms of caravan, known to them
all. Dawn: stoke the campfires, brew the coffee, feed the camels.
Pack and load, get the camels moving. Their column stretched out
more than a league with various groups falling behind, catching up, stopping,
starting; mostly moving slowly along. Afternoon: into camp or
caravanserai, though as they went farther north they seldom found
anything but deserted ruins, and even the road was nearly gone,
overgrown by fully mature trees, as thick trunked as
barrels.
The beautiful land they crossed was stitched by mountain
ridges, between which stood high, broad plateaux. Crossing them,
Bistami felt they had travelled up into a higher space, where
sunsets threw long shadows over a vast, dark, windy world. Once
when a last shard of sunset light shot under dark lowering clouds,
Bistami heard from somewhere in their camp a musician playing a
Turkish oboe, carving in the air a long plaintive melody that wound
on and on, the song of the dusky plateau's own voice or soul, it
seemed. The Sultana stood at the edge of camp, listening with him,
her fine head turned like a hawk's as she watched the sun descend.
It dropped at the very speed of time itself. There was no need to
speak in this singing world, so huge, so knotted; no human mind
could ever comprehend it, even the music only touched the hem of
it, and even that strand they failed to understand -- they only
felt it. The universal whole was beyond them.
And yet; and yet; sometimes, as at this moment, at dusk,
in the wind, we catch, with a sixth sense we don't know we have,
glimpses of that larger world -- vast shapes of cosmic
significance, a sense of everything holy to dimensions beyond sense
or thought or even feeling this visible world of ours, lit
from within, stuffed vibrant with reality.
The Sultana stirred. The stars were shining in the indigo
sky. She went to one of the fires. She had chosen him as their
qadi, Bistami realized, to give herself more room for her own
ideas. A community like theirs needed a sufi teacher rather than a
mere scholar.
Well, it would become clearer as it happened. Meanwhile,
the Sultana; the sound of the oboe; this vast plateau. These things
only happen once. The force of this sensation struck him just as
strongly as the feel of alreadyness had in the ribat garden.
Just as the Andalusi plateaux stood high under the sun,
its rivers were likewise deep in ravines, like the wadi of the
Maghrib, but always running. The rivers were also long, and
crossing them was no easy matter. The town of Saragossa had grown
in the past because of its great stone bridge, which spanned
one of the biggest of these rivers, called the Ebro. Now the town
was still substantially abandoned, with only some road merchants
and vendors and shepherds clustered around the bridge, in stone
buildings that looked as if they had been built by the bridge
itself, in its sleep. The rest of the town was gone, overgrown by
pine trees and shrubbery.
But the bridge remained. It was made of dressed stones,
big squarish blocks worn so smooth they appeared bevelled, though
they eventually met in lines that would not admit a coin or even a
fingernail. The foundations on each bank were squat massive stone
towers, resting on bedrock, Ibn Ezra said. He studied them with
great interest as the backed up caravan crossed it and set
camp on the other side. Bistami looked at his drawing of it.
'Beautiful, isn't it? Like an equation. Seven semi--circular
arches, with a big one in the middle, over the deep part of the
stream. Every Roman bridge I've seen is very nicely fitted to the
site. Almost always they use semi circular arches, which make
for strength, although they don't cover much distance, so they
needed a lot of them. And always ashlar, that's the squared stones.
So they sit squarely on each other, and nothing ever moves them.
There's nothing tricky about it. We could do it ourselves, if we
took the time and trouble. The only real problem is protecting the
foundations from floods. I've seen some done really well, with
iron tipped piles driven into the river bottom. But if
anything's going to go, it's the foundations. When they tried to do
those quicker, with a big weight of rock, they dammed the water,
and increased its force against what they put in.'
'Where I come from bridges are washed out all the time,'
Bistami said. 'People just build another one.'
'Yes, but this is so much more elegant. I wonder if they
put any of this down on paper. I haven't seen any books of theirs.
The libraries left behind here are terrible, all account books,
with the occasional bit of pornography. If there was ever anything
more it's been burned to start fires. Anyway, the stones tell the
story. See, the stones were cut so well there was no need for
mortar. The iron pegs you see sticking out were probably used to
anchor scaffolding.'
'The Mughals build well in Sind,' Bistami said, thinking
of the perfect joints in Chishti's tomb. 'But mostly the temples
and forts. The bridges are usually bamboo, set in piles of
stone.'
Ibn nodded. 'You see a lot of that. But maybe this river doesn't
flood as much. It seems like dry country.'
In the evenings Ibn Ezra showed them a little model of
the hoists the Romans must have used to move the great stones:
stick tripods, string ropes. The Sultan and Sultana were his
principal audience, but many others watched too, while others
wandered in and out of the torchlight. These people asked Ibn Ezra
questions, they made comments; they stayed around when the Sultan's
cavalry head, Sharif jalil, came into the circle with two of his
horsemen holding between them a third, who had been accused of
theft, apparently not for the first time. As the Sultan discussed
his case with Sharif, Bistami gathered that the accused man had an
unsavoury reputation, for reasons known to them but left unsaid --
an interest in boys perhaps. Apprehension very like dread filled
Bistami, recalling scenes from Fatepur Sikri; strict sharia called
for thieves' hands to be cut off, and sodomy, the infamous vice of
the Christian crusaders, was punishable by death.
But Mawji Darya merely strode up to the man and yanked
him down by the ear, as if chastising a child. 'You want for
nothing with us. You joined us in Malaga, and need only work
honestly to be part of our city.'
The Sultana nodded at this.
'If we wanted to, we would have the right to punish you
in ways you would not like at all. Go talk to our handless
penitents if you doubt me! Or we could simply leave you behind, and
see how you fare with the locals. The Zott don't like anyone but
themselves doing things like this. They would dispose of you
quickly. I tell you now, this will happen if Sharif brings you
before me again. You will be cast out of your family. Believe me
'glancing significantly towards his wife -- 'you would regret
that.'
The man blubbered something submissive (he was drunk,
Bistami saw) and was hauled away. The Sultan told Ibn Ezra to
continue his exposition on Roman bridges.
Later Bistami joined the Sultana in the big royal tent,
and remarked on the general openness of their court.
'No veils,' Katima said sharply. 'Not the izar nor the
hijab, the veil that kept the caliph from the people. The hijab was
the first step on the road to the despotism of the caliph. Mohammed
was never like that, never. He made the first mosque an assembly of friends.
Everyone had access to him, and everyone spoke their mind. It could
have stayed like that, and the mosque become the place of ... of a
different way. With both women and men speaking. This was what
Mohammed began, and who are we to change it? Why follow the ways of
those who build barriers, who turned into despots? Mohammed wanted
group feeling to lead, and the person in charge to be no more than
a hakam, an arbiter. This was the title he loved the most and was
most proud of, did you know that?'
'Yes.'
'But when he was gone to Heaven, Muawiya established the
caliphate, and put guards in the mosques to protect himself, and it
has been tyranny ever since. Islam changed from submission to
subjugation, and women were banned from the mosques and from their
rightful place. It's a travesty of Islam!'
She was red cheeked, vibrant with suppressed
emotion. Bistami had never seen such fervour and beauty together in
one face, and he could hardly think; or, he was full of thought on
several levels at once, so that focus on any one stream of ideas
left him fluttering in all the others, restless and inclined to
stop following that tributary; inclined merely to let all rivers of
thought roll at once.
'Yes,' he said.
She stalked away towards the next fire, squatted down all
at once in a fluff of skirts, in the group of handless and
one handed men. They greeted her cheerfully and offered her
one of their cups, and she drank deeply, then put it down and said,
'Come on then, it's time, you're looking ratty again.' They pulled
out a stool, she sat on it, and one of them knelt before her, his
broad back to her. She took the offered comb and a vial of oil, and
began to work the comb through the man's long tangled hair. The
motley crew of their ship of fools settled in around her
contentedly.
North of the Ebro the caravan stopped growing. There were
fewer towns on the old road to the north, and they were smaller,
composed of recent Maghribi settlers, Berbers who had sailed
straight across from Algiers and even Tunis. They were growing
barley and cucumbers, and pasturing sheep and goats in the long
fertile valleys with their rocky ridgelines,
Not far inland from the Mediterranean. Catalonia, this had been
called, very fine land, heavily forested on the hills. They had
left behind the taifa kingdoms to the south, and the people here
were content; they felt no need to follow a dispossessed sufi
sultan and his motley caravan, over the Pyrenees and into wild
Firanja. And in any case, as Ibn Ezra pointed out, the caravan did
not boast food enough to feed many more dependants, nor the gold or
money to buy more food than they already were from the villages
they passed.
So they continued on the old road, and at the head of a
long narrowing valley they found themselves on a broad, dry, rocky
plateau, leading up to the forested flanks of a range of mountains,
formed of rock darker than the rock of the Himalaya. The old road
wound up the flattest part of the tilted plateau, by the side of a
gravelly streambed almost devoid of water. Further along it
followed a cut in the hills, just above the bed of this small
stream, wandering up into mountains that grew rockier and taller.
Now when they camped at night they met no one at all, but bedded
down in tents or under the stars, sleeping to the sound of the wind
in the trees, and the clattering brooks, and the shifting horses
against their harness lines. Eventually the road wound up among
rocks, a flat way leading through a rockbound pass, then across a
mountain meadow among the peaks, then up through another tight
pass, flanked by granite battlements; and then down at last.
Compared to the Khyber Pass it was not much of a struggle, Bistami
thought, but many in the caravan were shivering and afraid.
On the other side of the pass, rockslides had buried the
old road repeatedly, and each time the road became a mere foot
trail, switchbacking at sharp angles across the rockslides. These
were hard going, and the Sultana often got off her horse and
walked, leading her women with no tolerance for ineptitude or
complaint. Indeed she had a sharp tongue when she was annoyed,
sharp and scornful.
Ibn Ezra inspected the roads every evening when they
stopped, and the rockslides too when they passed them, making
drawings of any exposed roadbeds, coping stones or drainage
ditches. 'It's classic Roman,' he said one evening by the fire as
they ate roast mutton. 'They knitted all the land around the
Mediterranean with these roads. I wonder if this was their main
route over the Pyrenees. I don't suppose so, it's so far to the
west. It will lead us to the western ocean rather than the
Mediterranean. But perhaps it's the easiest pass. It's hard to
believe this is not the main road, it's so big.'
'Perhaps they're all that way,' said the Sultana.
'Possibly. They may have used things like these carts the
people have found, so they needed their roads to be wider than
ours. Camels of course need no road at all. Or this may be their
main road after all. It may be the road Hannibal used on his way to
attack Rome, with his army of Carthaginians and their elephants! I
have seen those ruins, north of Tunis. It was a very great city.
But Hannibal lost and Carthage lost, and the Romans pulled their
city down and sowed salt in the fields, and the Maghrib dried up.
No more Carthage.'
'So elephants may have walked this road,' the Sultana
said. The Sultan looked down at the track, shaking his head in
wonder. These were the kinds of things the two of them liked to
know.
Coming down out of the mountains, they found themselves
in a colder land. The midday sun cleared the peaks of the Pyrenees,
but only just. The land was flat and grey, and often swathed in
ground mist. The ocean lay to the west, grey and cold and wild with
high surf.
The caravan came to a river that emptied into this
western sea, flanked by the ruins of an ancient city. On the
outskirts of the ruins stood some modest new buildings, fishermen's
shacks they seemed, on each side of a newly built wooden
bridge.
'Look how much less skilful we are than the Romans,' Ibn
Ezra said, but hurried over to look at the new work anyway.
He came back. 'I believe this was a city called Bayonne.
There's an inscription on the remaining bridge tower over there.
The maps indicate there was a bigger city to the north, called
Bordeaux. Water's Edge.'
The Sultan shook his head. 'We've come far enough. This
will do. Over the mountains, but yet only a moderate journey back
to al Andalus. That's just what I want. We'll settle
here.'
Sultana Katima nodded, and the caravan began the long
process of settling in.
Eight. Baraka
In general, they built upstream from the ruins of the
ancient town, scavenging stone and beams until very little of the
old buildings remained, except for the church, a big stone barn of
a structure, stripped of all idols and images. It was not a
beautiful structure compared to the mosques of the civilized world,
being a rude squat rectangular thing, but it was big, and situated
on a prominence overlooking a turn in the river. So after
discussion among all the members of the caravan, they decided to
make it their grand or Friday mosque.
Modifications began immediately. This project became
Bistami's responsibility, and he spent a lot of time with Ibn Ezra,
describing what he remembered of the Chishti shrine and the other
great buildings of Akbar's empire, poring over Ibn Ezra's drawings
to see what might be done to make the old church more
mosque like. They settled on a plan to tear the roof off the
old structure, which in any case was showing the sky in many
places, and to keep the walls as the interior buttressing of a
circular or rather egg shaped mosque, with a dome. The Sultana
wanted the prayer courtyard to open onto a larger city square, to
indicate the all embracing quality of their version of Islam,
and Bistami did what he could to oblige her, despite signs that it
would rain often in this region, and snow perhaps in the winter. It
wasn't important; the place of worship would continue out from the
grand mosque into a plaza and then the city at large, and by
extension, the whole world.
Ibn Ezra happily designed scaffolding, hods, carts,
braces, buttressing, cements and so on, and he determined by the stars and
such maps as they had, the direction of Mecca, which would be
indicated not only by the usual signs, but also by the orientation
of the mosque itself. The rest of the town moved in towards the
grand mosque, all the old ruins removed and used for new
construction as people settled closer and closer. The scattering of
Armenians and Zott who had been living in the ruins before their
arrival either joined the community, or moved off to the north.
'We should save room near the mosque for a madressa,' Ibn
Ezra said, 'before the town fills this whole district.'
Sultan Mawji thought this was a good idea, and he ordered
those who had settled next to the mosque while working on it to
move. Some of the workers objected to this, and then refused
outright. In a meeting the Sultan lost his temper and threatened
this group with expulsion from the town, though the fact was he
commanded only a very small personal bodyguard, barely enough to
defend himself, in Bistami's opinion. Bistami recalled the giant
cavalries of Akbar, the Marnlukes' soldiers; nothing like that here
for the Sultan, who now faced a mere dozen or two sullen
recalcitrants, and yet could do nothing with them. And the open
tradition of the caravan, the feel of it, was in danger.
But Sultana Katima rode up on her Arabian mare, and slid
down from it and went to the Sultan's side. She put her hand to his
arm, said something just to him. He looked startled, thinking fast.
The Sultana shot a fierce glance at the uncooperative squatters,
such a bitter rebuke that Bistami shuddered; not for the world
would he risk such a glance from her. And indeed the miscreants
paled and looked down in shame.
She said, 'Mohammed told us that learning is God's great
hope for humanity. The mosque is the heart of learning, the Quran's
home. The madressa is an extension of the mosque. It must be so in
any Muslim community, to know God more completely. And so it will
be here. Of course.'
She then led her husband away from the place, to the
palace on the other side of the city's old bridge. In the middle of
the night the Sultan's guards returned with swords drawn and pikes
at the ready, to rouse the squatters and send them off; but the
area was already deserted.
Ibn Ezra nodded with relief when he heard the news. 'In
the future we must plan ahead well enough to avoid such scenes,' he
said in a low voice to Bistami. 'This incident adds to the
reputation of the Sultana, perhaps, in some ways, but at a
cost.'
Bistami didn't want to think about it. 'At least now we
will have mosque and madressa side by side.'
'They are two parts of the same thing, as the Sultana
said. Especially if the study of the sensible world is included in
the curriculum of the madressa. I hope so. I can't stand for such a
place to be wasted on mere devotionals. God put us in this world to
understand it! That is the highest form of devotion to God, as Ibn
Sina said.'
This small crisis was soon forgotten, and the new town,
named by the Sultana Baraka, that term for grace that Bistami had
mentioned to her, took shape as if there could never have been any
other plan. The ruins of the old town disappeared under the new
city's streets and plazas, gardens and workshops; the architecture
and city plan both resembled Malaga, and the other Andalusi coastal
cities, but with higher walls, and smaller windows, for the winters
here were cold, and a raw wind blew in from the ocean in the autumn
and spring. The Sultan's palace was the only structure in the town
as open and light as a Mediterranean building; this reminded people
of their origins, and showed them that the Sultan lived above the
usual demands of nature. Across the bridge from it, the plazas were
small, the streets and alleyways narrow, so that a riverside medina
or casbah developed that was, as in any Maghribi or Arabian city, a
veritable warren of buildings, mostly three storeys tall, with the
upper windows facing each other across alleyways so tight that one
could, as was said everywhere, pass condiments from window to
window across the streets.
The first time snow fell, everyone rushed out to the
plaza before the grand mosque, dressed in most of their clothes. A
great bonfire was lit, the muezzin made his call, prayers were
recited, and the palace musicians played with blue lips and frozen
fingers as people danced in the sufi way around the bonfire.
Whirling dervishes in the snow: all laughed to see it, feeling they
had brought Islam to a new place, a new climate. They were making a
new world! There was plenty of wood in the undisturbed forests to
the north, and a constant supply of fish and fowl; they would be
warm, they would be fed; in the winters the life of the city would
go on, under a thin blanket of wet melting snow, as if they
lived in high mountains, and yet the river poured out its long
estuary into the grey ocean, which pounded the beach with
unrelenting ferocity, eating instantly the snowflakes that fell
into the waves. This was their country.
One day in spring another caravan arrived, full of
strangers and their possessions; they had heard of the new town
Baraka, and wanted to move there. It was another ship of fools,
come from the Armenian and Zott settlements in Portugal and
Castile, its criminal tendencies made obvious by the high incidence
of handlessness and musical instruments, puppeteers and fortune
tellers.
'I'm surprised they made it over the mountains,' Bistami
said to Ibn Ezra.
'Necessity made them inventive, no doubt. Al Andalus
is a dangerous place for people like these. The Sultan's brother is
proving a very strict caliph, I have heard, almost Almohad in his
purity. The form of Islam he enforces is so pure that I don't
believe it was ever lived before, even in the time of the Prophet.
No, this caravan is made of people on the run. And so was
ours.'
'Sanctuary,' Bistami said. 'That's what the Christians
called a place of protection. Usually their churches, or else a
royal court. Like some of the sufi ribat in Persia. It's a good
thing. The good people come to you when the law elsewhere becomes
too harsh.'
So they came. Some were apostates or heretics, and
Bistami debated these in the mosque itself, trying as he spoke to
create an atmosphere in which all these matters could be discussed
freely, without a sense of danger hanging overhead -- it existed,
but far away, back over the Pyrenees -- but also without anything
blasphemous against God or Mohammed being affirmed. It did not
matter whether one was Sunni or Shiite Arabian or Andalusi, Turk or
Zott, man or woman; what mattered was devotion, and the Quran.
It was interesting to Bistami that this religious
balancing act got easier to maintain the longer he worked at it, as
if he were practising something physical, on a ledge or high wall.
A challenge to the authority of the caliph? See what the Quran said
about it. Ignore the hadith that had encrusted the holy book, and
so often distorted it: cut through to the source. There the
messages might be ambiguous, often they were.
But the book had come to Mohammed over a period of many years,
and important concepts were usually repeated in it, in slightly
different ways each time. They would read all the relevant
passages, and discuss the differences. 'When I was in Mecca
studying, the true scholars would say . . .' This was as much
authority as Bistami would claim for himself; that he had heard
true authorities speak. It was the method of the hadith, of course,
but with a different content: that the hadith could not be trusted,
only the Quran.
'I was speaking with the Sultana about this matter This
was another common gambit. Indeed, he consulted with her about
almost every question that came up, and without fail in all matters
having to do with women or child rearing; concerning family
life he always deferred to ber judgment, which he learned to trust
more and more as the first years passed. She knew the Quran inside
out, and had memorized every sura that aided her case against undue
hierarchy, and her protectiveness for the weak of the city grew
unabated. Above all she commanded the eye and the heart, wherever
she went, and never more so than in the mosque. There was no longer
any question of her right to be there, and occasionally even to
lead the prayers. It would have seemed unnatural to bar such a
being, so full of divine grace, from the place of worship in a city
named Baraka. As she herself said, 'Did God make me? Did He give me
a mind and a soul as great as any man's? Did men's children come
out of a woman? Would you deny your own mother a place in heaven?
Can anyone gain heaven who is not admitted to the sight of God on
this Earth?'
No one who would answer these questions in the negative
stayed long in Baraka. There were other towns being settled
upstream and to the north, founded by Armenians and Zott who were
less full of Muslim fervour. A fair number of the Sultan's subjects
moved away as time passed. Nevertheless, the crowds at the grand
mosque grew. They built smaller ones on the expanding outskirts of
town, the usual neighbourhood mosques, but always the Friday mosque
remained the meeting place of the city, its plaza and the madressa
grounds filled by the whole population on holy days, and during the
festivals and Ramadan, and on the first day of snow every year,
when the bonfire of winter was lit. Baraka was a single family
then, and Sultana Katima its mother and sister.
The madressa grew as fast as the town, or faster. Every
spring, after the snows on the mountain roads had melted, new
caravans arrived, guided by mountain folk. Some in each group had
come to study in the madressa, which grew famous for Ibn Ezra's
investigations into plants and animals, the Romans, building
technique, and the stars. When they came from al Andalus they
sometimes brought with them newly recovered books by Ibn Rashd or
Maimonides, or new Arabic translations of the ancient Greeks, and
they brought also the desire to share what they knew, and learn
more. The new convivencia had its heart in Baraka's madressa, and
word spread.
Then one bad day, late in the sixth year of the Barakan
hegira, Sultan Mawji Darya fell gravely ill. He had grown fat in
the previous months, and Ibn Ezra had tried to be his doctor,
putting him on a strict diet of grain and milk, which seemed to
help his complexion and energy; but then one night he took ill. Ibn
Ezra woke Bistami from his bed: 'Come along. The Sultan is so ill
he needs the prayers.'
This coming from Ibn Ezra was bad indeed, as he was not
much of a one for prayer. Bistami hurried after him, and joined the
royal family in their part of the big palace. Sultana Katima was
white faced, and Bistami was shocked to see how unhappy his
arrival made her. It wasn't anything personal, but she knew why Ibn
Ezra had brought him at such an hour, and she bit her lip and
looked away, the tears streaming down her cheeks.
Inside their bedroom the Sultan writhed, silent but for
heavy, choked breathing. His face was a dark red colour.
'Has he been poisoned?' Bistami asked Ibn Ezra in a
whisper.
'No, I don't think so. Their taster is fine,' indicating
the big cat sleeping curled in its little bed in the corner.
'Unless someone pricked him with a poisoned needle. But I see no
sign of that.'
Bistami sat by the roiling Sultan and took his hot hand.
Before a word had escaped him, the Sultan gave a weak groan and
arched back. His breathing stopped. Ibn Ezra grabbed his arms and
crossed them before his chest and pressed hard, grunting himself.
To no avail; the Sultan had died, his body still locked in its last
paroxysm. The Sultana burst weeping into the room, tried to revive
him herself, calling to him and to God, and begging Ibn Ezra to
keep up his efforts. It took both men some time to convince her
that it was all in vain; they had failed; the Sultan was dead.
Funerals in Islam harked back to earlier times. Men and
women congregated in different areas during the ceremonies, and
only mingled in the cemetery afterwards, during the brief
interment.
But of course this was the first funeral for a sultan of
Baraka, and the Sultana herself led the whole population into the
grand mosque plaza, where she had ordered the body to lie in state.
Bistami could only go along with the crowd and stand before them,
saying the old prayers of the service as if they were always
announced to all together. And why not? Certain lines of the
service made sense only if said to eve one in the community: and
suddenly, looking out at the stripped, desolate faces of every
person in the city, he understood that the tradition had been
wrong, that it was plainly wrong and even cruel to split the
community apart at the very moment it needed to see itself all
together as one. He had never felt such a heterodox opinion so
strongly before; he had always agreed with the Sultana's ideas out
of the unexamined principle that she ought always to be right.
Shaken by this sudden conversion in his ideas, and by the sight of
the beloved Sultan's body there in its coffin on its dais, he
reminded them all that the sun only shone a certain number of hours
on any life. He spoke the words of this impromptu sermon in a
hoarse tearing voice which sounded even to him as if it were coming
from some other throat; it was the same as it had been during those
eternal days long ago, reciting the Quran under the cloud of
Akbar's anger. This association was too much, and he began to weep,
struggled to speak. All in the plaza wept, the wailing began again,
many striking themselves in the self flagellation that took
some of the pain away.
The whole town followed the cortege, Sultana Katima
leading it on her bay mare. The crowd roared in its sorrow like the
sea on its pebble beach. They buried him overlooking the great grey
ocean, and after that it was black cloth and ashes for many
months.
Somehow they never came out of that year of mourning. It
was more than the death of the ruler; it was that the Sultana
continued to rule on alone.
Now Bistami, and everyone else, would have said that
Sultana Katima had been the true leader all along, and the Sultan
merely her gracious and beloved consort. No doubt that was true.
But now, when Sultana Katima of Baraka came into the grand mosque
and spoke in the Friday prayers, Bistami was once again uneasy, and
he could see the townspeople were as well. Katima had spoken before
many times in this manner, but now all felt the absence of the
covering angel provided by the lenient Sultan's presence across the
river.
This unease communicated itself to Katima, of course, and
her talks became more strident and plaintive. 'God wants relations
in marriage between husband and wife to be between equals. What the
husband can be the wife can be also! In the time of the chaos
before the year one, in the zero time, you see, men treated women
like domestic beasts. God spoke through Mohammed, and made it clear
that women were souls equal to men, to be treated as such. They
were given by God many specific rights, in inheritance, divorce,
power of choice, power to command their children -- given their
lives, do you understand? Before the first hegira, before the year
one, right in the middle of this tribal chaos of murder and theft,
this monkey society, God told Mohammed to change it all. He said,
Oh yes, of course you can marry more than one wife, if you want to
-- if you can do it without strife. Then the next verse says "But
it cannot be done without strife!" What is this but a ban on
polygamy stated in two parts, in the form of a riddle or a lesson,
for men who could not otherwise imagine it?'
But now it was very clear that she was trying to change
the way things worked, the way Islam worked. Of course they all had
been, all along -- but secretly, perhaps, not admitting it to
anyone, not even to themselves. Now it faced them with the face of
their only ruler, a woman. There were no queens in Islam. None of
the hadith applied any more.
Bistami, desperate to help, made up his own hadith, and
either supplied them with plausible but false isnads, attributing
them to ancient sufi authorities made up out of whole cloth; or
else he ascribed them to their Sultan, Mawji Darya, or to some old
Persian sufi he knew about; or he left them to be understood as
wisdom too common to need ascription. The Sultana did the same,
following his lead, he thought, but took most of her refuge in the
Quran itself, returning obsessively to the suras that supported her
positions.
But everyone knew how things were done in al Andalus, and
the Maghrib, and in Mecca, and indeed everywhere across Dar
al Islam, from the western ocean to the eastern ocean (which
Ibn Ezra now claimed were the two shores of the same ocean,
spanning the greater part of the Earth, which was a globe covered
mostly by water). Women did not lead prayers. When the Sultana did,
it remained shocking, and triply so with the Sultan gone. Everyone
said it; if she wished to continue along this path, she needed to
remarry.
But she showed no sign of interest in that. She wore her
widow's black, and held herself aloof from everyone in the town,
and had no royal communications with anyone in al Andalus. The
man other than Mawji Darya who had spent the most time in her
company was Bistami himself; and when he understood the looks some
townspeople were giving him, implying that lie might conceivably
marry the Sultana and remove them from their difficulty, it made
him feel light headed, almost nauseous. He loved her so much
that he could not imagine himself married to her. It wasn't that
kind of love. He didn't think she could imagine it either, so there
was no question of testing the idea, which was both attractive and
terrifying, and so in the end painful in the extreme. Once she was
talking to Ibn Ezra when Bistami was present, asking him about his
claims concerning the ocean fronting them.
'You say this is the same ocean as the one seen by the
Moluccans and Sumatrans, on the other side of the world? How could
this be?'
'The world is most certainly a globe,' said Ibn Ezra.
'It's round like the moon, or the sun. A spherical ball. And we
have come to the western end of the land in the world, and around
the globe is the eastern end of the land in the world. And this
ocean covers the rest of the world, you see.'
'So we could sail to Sumatra?'
'In theory, yes. But I've been trying to calculate the
size of the earth, using some calculations made by the ancient
Greeks, and Brahmagupta of south India, and by my studies of the
sky, and though I cannot be sure, I believe it must be some ten
thousand leagues around. Brahmagupta said five thousand yoganda,
which as I understand it is about the same distance. And the land
mass of the world, from Morocco to the Moluccas, I reckon to be
about five thousand leagues. So this ocean we look out on covers
half the world, five thousand leagues or more. No ship could make
it across.'
'Are you sure it is so big as that?'
Ibn Ezra waggled a hand uncertainly. 'Not sure, Sultana.
But I think it must be something like that.'
'What about islands? Surely this ocean is not completely
empty for five thousand leagues! Surely there are islands!'
'Undoubtedly, Sultana. I mean, it seems likely. Andalusi
fishermen have reported running into islands when storms or
currents carried them far to the west, but they don't describe how
far, or in what direction.'
The Sultana looked hopeful. 'So we could perhaps sail
away, and find the same islands, or others like them.'
Ibn Ezra waggled his hand again.
'Well?' she said sharply. 'Do you not think you could
build a seaworthy ship?'
'Possibly, Sultana. But supplying it for a voyage that
long . . . We don't know how long it would be.'
' Well,' she said darkly, 'we may have to find out. With
the Sultan dead, and no one for me to remarry ' and she shot
a single glance at Bistami -- 'there will be Andalusi villains
thinking to rule us.'
It was like a stab to his heart. That night Bistami lay
twisting on his bed, seeing that short glance over and over. But
what could he do? How could he be expected to help such a
situation? He could not sleep, not the entire night long.
Because a husband would have helped. There was no longer
a feeling of harmony in Baraka, and word of the situation certainly
had made its way over the Pyrenees, for early in the following
spring, when the rivers were still running high and the mountains
protecting them still stood white and jagged edged to the
south, horsemen came down the road out of the hills, just ahead of
a cold spring storm, pouring in from the ocean: a long column of
cavalry, in fact, with pennants from Toledo and Granada flying, and
swords and pikes at their hips gleaming in the sun. They rode right
into the mosque plaza at the centre of town, colourful under the
lowering clouds, and lowered their pikes until they all pointed
forwards. Their leader was one of the Sultan's elder brothers, Said
Darya, and he stood in his silver stirrups so that he towered over
the people gathering there, and said, 'We claim this town in the
name of the Caliph of al Andalus, to save it from apostasy,
and from the witch who threw her spell over my brother and killed
him in his bed.'
'The crowd, growing by the moment, stared stupidly up at the
horsemen. Some of the townspeople were red faced and
tight lipped, some pleased, most confused or sullen. A few of
the rabble from the original Ship of Fools were already pulling
cobblestones out of the ground.
Bistami saw all this from the avenue leading to the
river, and all of a sudden something about the sight struck him
like a blow; those pikes and crossbows, pointing inwards: it was
like the tiger trap, back in India. These people were like the
Bagh mari, the professional tiger killing clans that went
about the country disposing of problem tigers for a fee. He had
seen them before! And not only with the tigress, but before that as
well, some other time that he couldn't remember but remembered
anyway, some ambush for Katima, a death trap, men stabbing her when
she was tall and black skinned -- oh, this had all happened
before!
In a panic he ran across the bridge to the palace.
Sultana Katima was about to get on her horse to go and confront the
invaders, and he threw himself between her and the horse; she was
furious and tried to brush by him, and he put his arm around her
waist, as slender as a girl's, which shocked them both, and he
cried, 'No, no, no, no, no! No, Sultana, I beg you, I beg you,
don't go over there! They'll kill you, it's a trap! I've seen it!
They will kill you!'
'I have to go,' she said, cheeks flushed. 'The people
need me 'No they don't! They need you alive! We can leave
and they can follow! They will follow! We have to let those people
have this town, the buildings mean nothing, we can move north and
your people will follow! Listen to me, listen!' And he caught her
up by the shoulders and held her fast, looked ber in the eye: 'I
have seen all this play out before. I have been given knowledge. We
have to escape or we will be killed.'
Across the river they could hear screams. The Andalusi
horsemen were not used to opposition from a population without any
soldiers, without cavalry, and they were charging down the streets
after mobs who threw stones as they fled. A lot of Barakis were
crazy with rage, certainly the one handed ones would die to
the man to defend her, and the invaders were not going to have as
easy a time of it as they had thought. Snow was now twirling down
through the dark air, flying sideways on the wind out of grey
clouds streaming low overhead, and already there were fires
in the city, the district around the grand mosque beginning to
burn.
'Come on, Sultana, there's no time to waste! I've seen
how this happens, they'll have no mercy, they're on their way here
to the palace, we need to leave now! This has happened before! We
can make a new city in the north, some of the people will come with
us, gather a caravan and start over, defend ourselves
properly!'
' All right!' Sultana Katima shouted suddenly, looking
across at the burning town. The wind gusted, and they could just
hear screaming in the town over the whoosh of the air. 'Damn them!
Damn them! Get a horse then, come on, all of you come on! We'll
need to ride hard.'
Nine. Another Meeting in the Bardo
And so it was that when they all reconvened in the bardo,
many years later, after going north and founding the city of Nsara
at the mouth of the Lawiyya River, and defending it successfully
from the Andalusi taifa sultans coming up to attack them in after
years, and building the beginnings of a maritime power, fishing
all the way across the sea, and trading farther yet than that,
Bistami was well pleased. He and Katima had never married, the
matter had never come up again, but he had been Nsara's principal
ulema for many years, and had helped to create a religious
legitimacy for this new thing, a queen in Islam. And he and Katima
had worked together on this project almost every day of those
lives.
'I recognized you!' he reminded Katima. 'In the midst of
life, through the veil of forgetting, when it mattered, I saw who
you were, and you -- you saw something too. You knew something from
a higher reality was going on! We're making progress.'
Katima did not reply. They were sitting on the flagstones
of a courtyard in a place very like Chishti's shrine in Fatepur
Sikri, except that the courtyard was vastly bigger. People waited
in a line to go in the shrine and be judged. They looked like
hajjis in line to see the Kaaba. Bistami could hear Mohammed's
voice inside, praising some, admonishing others. 'You need to try
again,' be heard a voice like Mohammed's say to someone. Everything
was quiet and subdued. It was the hour before sunrise, cool and
damp, the air filled with distant birdsong. Sitting there beside
her, Bistami could see very clearly now how Katima was not
at all like Akbar. Akbar had no doubt been sent down to a lower
realm, and was even now prowling the jungle hunting for his food,
as Katima had been in the existence before last, when she had been
a tigress, a killer who had nevertheless befriended Bistami. She
had saved him from the Hindu rebels, then picked him out of the
ribat in al Andalus: 'You recognized me too,' he said. 'And we
both knew Ibn Ezra,' who was at this moment inspecting the wall of
the courtyard, running his fingernail down the line between two
blocks, admiring the stonework of the bardo.
'This is genuine progress,' Bistami repeated. 'We are
finally getting somewhere!'
Katima gave him a sceptical glance. 'You call that
progress? Chased to a hole at the far corner of the world?'
'But who cares where we were? We recognized each other,
you didn't get killed '
'Wonderful.'
'It was wonderful! I saw through time, I felt the touch
of the eternal. We made a place where people could love the good.
Little steps, life after life; and eventually we will be there for
good, in the white light.'
Katima gestured; her brother in law, Said
Darya, was entering the palace of judgment.
'Look at him, a miserable creature, and yet he is not
thrown down into hell, nor even become a worm or a jackal, as he
deserves. He will return to the human realm, and wreak havoc all
over again. He too is part of our jati, did you recognize him? Did
you know he was part of our little band, like Ibn Ezra here?'
Ibn Ezra sat beside them. The line moved up and they
shifted with it. 'The walls are solid,' he reported. 'Very well
built, in fact. I don't think we're going to able to escape.'
'Escape!' Bistami cried. 'This is God's judgment! No one
escapes that!'
Katima and Ibn Ezra looked at each other. Ibn Ezra said,
'My impression is that any improvement in the tenor of existence
will have to be anthropogenic.'
'What?' Bistami cried.
'It's up to us. No one will help us.'
'I'm not saying they will. Although God always helps if
you ask. But it is up to us, that's what I've been saying all
along, and we are doing what we can, we are making progress.'
Katima was not at all convinced. 'We'll see,' she said.
'Time will tell. For now, I myself withhold judgment.' She faced
the white tomb, drew herself up queenlike, spoke with a tigerish
curl of the lip: 'And no one judges me.'
With a wave of the hand she dismissed the tomb. 'It's not
here that matters. What matters is what happens in the world.'
* * *
In the thirty fifth year of his reign, the Wanli
Emperor turned his feverish and permanently dissatisfied eye on
Nippon. Ten years earlier the Nipponese general Hideyoshi had had
the temerity to attempt the conquest of China, and when the Koreans
had refused him passage, his army had invaded Korea as the first
step in its path. It had taken a large Chinese army three years to
drive the invaders off the Korean peninsula, and the
twenty six million ounces of silver it had cost the Wanli
Emperor had put his treasury in acute difficulties, difficulties
from which it had never recovered. The Emperor was inclined to
avenge this unprovoked assault (if you did not count the two
unsuccessful attacks on Nippon made by Kublai Khan), and to remove
the danger of any future problem arising from Nippon, by
subjugating it to Chinese suzerainty. Hideyoshi had died, and
leyasu, the head of a new Tokugawa. Shogunate, had successfully
united all the Nipponese islands under his command, and then closed
the country to foreigners. All Nipponese were forbidden to leave,
and those who did were forbidden to return. The building of
seaworthy ships was also forbidden, although the Wanli noted
irritably in his vermilion memoranda that this did not stop hordes
of Nipponese pirates attacking on the long Chinese coastline using
smaller craft. He thought leyasu's retreat from the world signalled
weakness, and yet at the same time, a fortress nation of warriors
just offshore from the Middle Kingdom was not something to be
tolerated either. It pleased the Wanli to think of returning this
bastard child of Chinese culture to its rightful place under the
Dragon Throne, joining there Korea, Annam, Tibet, Mindanao and the
Spice Islands.
His advisers were not enthusiastic about the plan. For
one thing, the treasury was still depleted. For another, the Ming
court was already drained by all the previous dramatic events of
the Wanli reign, not only the defence of Korea but also the racking
dissension caused by the succession problem, still only nominally
solved by the Wanli's choice of his elder son, and his younger
son's banishment to the provinces; all that could change in a week.
And around that highly combustible situation, like a civil war in
waiting, constellated all the conflicts and jealous manoeuvrings of
the court powers: the Empress Mother, the Empress, the senior civil
servants, the eunuchs and the generals. Something in the Wanli's
combination of intelligence and vacillation, his permanent
discontent and his occasional bursts of vengeful fury, made the
court of his old age a flayed and exhausted nest of intrigues. To
his advisers, particularly the generals and the heads of the
treasury, conquering Nippon did not seem even remotely
possible.
The Emperor, true to form, insisted that it be done.
His senior generals came back with an alternative plan,
which they hoped very much would satisfy his desire. They proposed
that the Emperor's diplomats arrange a treaty with one of the minor
Nipponese shoguns, the Tozama Daimyo, who were out of leyasu's
favour because they had joined him only after his military victory
at Sekigahara. The treaty would stipulate that this minor shogun
would invite the Chinese to come to one of his ports, and open it
permanently to Chinese trade. A Chinese navy would then land at
this port in force, and in essence make the port a Chinese port,
defended by the full power of the Chinese navy, grown so much
bigger during the Wanli's reign in the attempt to defend the coast
against pirates. Most of the pirates were from Nippon, so there was
a kind of justice there; and a chance to trade with Nippon as well.
After that, the treaty port could serve as the staging centre of a
slower conquest of Nippon, conceived of as happening in stages
rather than all at once. That would make it affordable.
The Wanli grumbled about his advisers' meagre, partial,
eunuchlike enactments of his desires, but patient advocacy by his
most trusted advisers of that period finally won him over, and he
approved the plan. A secret treaty was arranged with a local lord,
Omura, who invited the Chinese to land and trade at a small fishing
village with an excellent harbour, called Nagasaki.
Preparations for an expedition that would arrive there with
overwhelming force were made in the rebuilt shipyards of Longjiang,
near Nanjing, also on the Cantonese coast. The big new ships of the
invading fleet were filled with supplies to enable the landing
force to withstand a long siege, and they assembled for the first
time off the coast of Taiwan, with no one in Nippon except for
Omura and his advisers any the wiser.
The fleet was, by the Wanli's direct order, put under the
command of one Admiral Kheim, of Annam. This admiral had already
led a fleet for the Emperor, in the subjugation of Taiwan some
years before, but he was still seen by the Chinese bureaucracy and
military as an outsider, an expert in pirate suppression who had
achieved his expertise by spending much of his youth as a pirate
himself, plundering the Fujian coast. The Wanli Emperor did not
care about this, and even regarded it as a point in Kheim's favour;
he wanted someone who could get results, and if he came from
outside the military bureaucracy, with its many entanglements at
court and in the provinces, so much the better.
The fleet set out in the thirty eighth year of the
Wanli, on the third day of the first month. The spring winds were
constant from the northwest for eight days, and the fleet
positioned itself in the Kuroshio, the Black River, that great
ocean current which runs like a river a hundred li wide, up the
long southern shores of the Nipponese islands.
This was as planned, and they were on their way; but then
the winds died. Nothing in the air stirred. No bird was seen, and
the paper sails of the fleet hung limp, their cross slats
ticking the masts only because of the rippling of the Kuroshio
itself, which carried them north and east past the main Nipponese
islands, past Hokkaido, and out onto the empty expanse of the
Dahai, the Great Ocean. This shoreless blue expanse was bisected by
their invisible but powerful Black River, flowing relentlessly
cast.
Admiral Kheim ordered all the captains of the Eight Great
Ships and of the Lesser Eighteen Ships to row over to the flagship,
where they consulted. Many of the most experienced ocean sailors of
Taiwan, Annam, Fujian and Canton were among these men, and their
faces were grave; to be carried off by the Kuroshio was a dangerous
business. All of them had heard stories of junks that had been
becalmed in the current, or dismasted by squalls, or had had to
chop down their masts in order to avoid being capsized, and after
that disappeared for years in onestory nine years, in
another thirty -- after which they had drifted back out of the
southeast, bleached and empty, or manned by skeletons. These
stories, and the eyewitness evidence of the flagship's doctor,
I Chen, who claimed to have ridden around the Dahai
successfully in his youth on a fishing junk disabled by a typhoon,
led them to agree that there was probably a big circular current
flowing around the vast sea, and. That if they could stay alive
long enough, they might be able to sail around in it, back to
home.
It was not a plan any of them would have chosen to
undertake deliberately, but at that point they had no other option
but to try it. The captains sat in the Admiral's cabin on the
flagship and regarded each other unhappily. Many of the Chinese
there knew the legend of Hsu Fu, admiral of the Han dynasty of
ancient times, who had sailed off with his fleet in search of lands
to settle on the other side of the Dahai, and never been heard from
again. They knew as well the story of Kubla Khan's two attempts at
invading Nippon, both demolished by unseasonable typhoons, which
had given the Nipponese the conviction that there was a divine wind
that would defend their home islands from foreign attack. Who could
disagree? And it seemed all too possible that this divine wind was
now doing its work in a kind of joke or ironic reversal,
manifesting itself as a divine calm while they were in the
Kuroshio, causing their destruction just as effectively as any
typhoon. The calm after all was uncannily complete, its timing
miraculously good; it could be they had got caught up in gods'
business. That being the case, they could only give their fate over
to their own gods, and hope to ride things out.
This was not Admiral Kheim's favoured mode of being.
'Enough,' he said darkly, ending the meeting. He had no faith in
the sea gods' good will, and took no stock in old stories, except
as they were useful. They were caught in the Kuroshio; they had
some knowledge of the currents of the Dahai -- that north of the
equator they ran cast, south of the equator, west. They knew the
prevailing winds tended to follow likewise. The doctor,
I Chen, had successfully ridden the entirety of this great
circle, his unprepared ship's crew living off fish and seaweed,
drinking rainwater, and stopping for supplies at islands they
passed. This was cause for hope. And as the air remained eerily
calm, hope was all they had. It was not as if they had any
other options; the ships were dead in the water, and the big ones
were too big to row anywhere. In truth they had no choice but to
make the best of it.
Admiral Kheim therefore ordered most of the men of the
fleet to get on board the Eighteen Lesser Ships, and ordered half
of these to row north, half south, with the idea they could row at
an angle out of the Black Stream, and sail home when the wind
returned, to get word to the Emperor concerning what had happened.
The Eight Great Ships, manned by the smallest crews that could sail
them, with as much of the fleet's supplies as could be fitted in
their holds, settled in to wait out the ride around the ocean on
the currents. If the smaller ones succeeded in sailing back to
China, they were to tell the Emperor to expect the Great Eight to
return at some later date, out of the southeast.
In a couple of days the smaller ships all disappeared
over the horizon, and the Eight Great Ships drifted on, roped
together in a perfect calm, off the maps to the unknown east. There
was nothing else they could do.
Thirty days passed without the slightest breeze. Each day
they rode the current farther to the cast.
No one had ever seen anything like it. Admiral Kheim
rejected all talk of the Divine Calm, however; as he pointed out,
the weather had gone strange in recent years, mostly much colder,
with lakes freezing over that had never frozen before, and freak
winds, such as certain whirlwinds that had stood in place for weeks
at a time. Something was wrong in the heavens. This was just part
of that.
When the wind returned at last, it was strong from the
west, pushing them even farther along. They angled south across the
prevailing wind, but cautiously now, hoping to stay within the
hypothetical great circle current, as being the fastest way around
the ocean and back home. In the middle of the circle there was
rumoured to be a permanent zone of calm, perhaps the very
centrepoint of the Dahai, as it was near the equator, and perhaps
equidistant from shores east and west, though no one could say for
sure about that. A doldrums that no junk could escape, in any case.
They had to go out far enough to the east to get around that, then
head south, then, below the equator, back west again.
They saw no islands. Seabirds sometimes flew over, and they shot
a few with arrows and ate them for luck. They fished day and night
with nets, and caught flying fish in their sails, and pulled in
snarls of seaweed that grew increasingly rare, and refilled their
water casks when it rained, setting funnels like inverted umbrellas
over them. And they were seldom thirsty, and never hungry.
But never a sight of land. The voyage went on, day after
day, week after week, month after month. The rattan and the rigging
began to wear thin. The sails grew transparent. Their skin began to
grow transparent.
The sailors grumbled. They no longer approved of the plan
to ride the circle of currents around the great sea; but there was
no turning back, as Kheim pointed out to them. So they passed
through their grumbling, as through a storm. Kheim was not an
admiral anyone wanted to cross.
They rode out storms in the sky, and felt the rocking of
storms under the sea. So many days passed that their lives before
the voyage grew distant and indistinct; Nippon, Taiwan, even China
itself began to seem like dreams of a former existence. Sailing
became the whole world: a water world, with its blue plate of waves
under an inverted bowl of blue sky, and nothing else. They no
longer even looked for land. A mass of seaweed was as astonishing
as an island would once have been. Rain was always welcome, as the
occasional periods of rationing and thirst had taught them
painfully their utter reliance on fresh water. This mostly came
from rain, despite the little stills that I Chen had
constructed to clarify salt water, which gave them a few buckets a
day.
All things were reduced to their elemental being. Water
was ocean; air was sky; earth, their ships; fire, the sun, and
their thoughts. The fires banked down. Some days Kheim woke, and
lived, and watched the sun go down again, and realized that he had
forgotten to think a single thought that whole day. And he was the
admiral.
Once they passed the bleached wreckage of a huge junk,
intertwined with seaweed and whitened with bird droppings, barely
afloat. Another time they saw a sea serpent out to the east, near
the horizon, perhaps leading them on.
Perhaps the fire had left their minds entirely, and was
in the sun alone, burning above through rainless days. But
something must have remained -- grey coals, almost burnt out -- for
when land poked over the horizon to the cast, late one afternoon,
they shouted as if it was all they had ever thought of, in
every moment of the hundred and sixty days of their unexpected
journey. Green mountainsides, falling precipitously into the sea,
apparently empty; it didn't matter; it was land. What looked to be
a large island.
The next morning it was still there ahead of them. Land
ho!
Very steep land, however, so steep that there was no
obvious place to make landfall: no bays, no river mouths of any
size; just a great wall of green hills, rising wetly out of the
sea.
Kheim ordered them to sail south, thinking even now of
the return to China. The wind was in their favour for once, and the
current also. They sailed south all that day and the next, without
a single harbour to be seen. Then, as light fog lifted one morning,
they saw they had passed a cape, which protected a sandy southern
reach; and farther south there was a gap in the hills, dramatic and
obvious. A bay. There was a patch of turbulent white water on the
north side of this majestic entrance strait, but beyond that it was
clear sailing, and the flood tide helping to usher them in.
So they sailed into a bay like nothing any of them had
ever seen in all their travels. An inland sea, really, with three
or four rocky islands in it, and hills all around, and marshes
bordering most of its shores. The hills were rocky on top but
mostly forested, the marshes lime green, yellowed by autumn
colours. Beautiful land; and empty!
They turned north and anchored in a shallow inlet,
protected by a hilly spine that ran down into the water. Then some
of them spotted a line of smoke rising up into the evening air.
'People,' I Chen said. 'But I don't think this can
be the western end of the Muslim lands. We haven't sailed far
enough for that, if Hsing Ho is correct. We shouldn't even be close
yet.'
'Maybe it was a stronger current than you thought.'
'Maybe. I can refine our distance from equator
tonight.'
'Good.'
But a distance from China would have been
better, and that was the calculation they could not make. Dead
reckoning had been impossible during the long period of their
drift, and despite I Chen's continual guesses, Kheim didn't
think they knew their distance from China to within a
thousand li.
As for distance from equator, I Chen reported
that night, after measuring the stars, that they were at about the
same line as Edo or Beijing a little higher than Edo, a little
lower than Beijing. I Chen tapped his astrolabe thoughtfully.
'It's the same level as the hui countries in the far west, in Fulan
where all the people died. If Hsing Ho's map can be trusted. Fulan,
see? A harbour called Lisboa. But there's no Fulan chi here. I
don't think this can be Fulan. We must have come upon an
island.'
'A big island!'
'Yes, a big island.' I Chen sighed. 'If we could
only solve the distancefrom China problem.'
It was an everlasting complaint with him, causing an
obsession with clockmaking; an accurate clock would have made it
possible to calculate longitude, using an almanac to give the star
times in China, and timing from there. The Emperor had some fine
timepieces in his palace, it was said, but they had no clock on
their ship. Kheim left him to his muttering.
The next morning they woke to find a group of locals,
men, women and children, dressed in leather skirts, shell
necklaces, and feather headdresses, standing on the beach watching
them. They had no cloth, it appeared, and no metal except small
bits of hammered gold, copper and silver. Their arrowheads and
spear tips were flaked obsidian, their baskets woven of reeds and
pine needles. Great mounds of shells lay heaped on the beach above
the high tide mark, and the visitors could see smoke rising
from fires set inside wicker hovels, little shelters like those the
poor farmers in China used for their pigs in winter.
The sailors laughed and chattered to see such people.
They were partly relieved and partly amazed, but it was impossible
to be frightened of these folk.
Kheim was not so sure. 'They're like the wild people on
Taiwan,' he said. 'We had some terrible fights with them when we
went after pirates in the mountains. We have to be careful.'
I Chen said, 'Tribes like that exist on some of the
Spice Islands too, I've seen them. But even those people have more
things than these.'
'No brick or wood houses, no iron that I can see, meaning
no guns . . .'
'No fields for that matter. They must cat the clams,'
pointing at the great shell heaps, 'and fish. And whatever
they can hunt or glean. These are poor people.'
'That won't leave much for us.'
'No.'
The sailors were shouting down at them: 'Hello!
Hello!'
Kheim ordered them to be quiet. He and I Chen got in
one of the little rowing boats they had on the great ship, and had
four sailors row them ashore.
From the shallows Kheim stood and greeted the locals,
palms up and out, as one did in the Spice Islands with the wild
ones. The locals didn't understand anything he said, but his
gestures made plain his peaceful intent, and they seemed to
recognize it. After a while he stepped ashore, confident of a
peaceful welcome, but instructing the sailors to keep their
flintlocks and crossbows below the seats at the ready, just in
case.
On shore he was surrounded by curious people, babbling in
their own tongue. Somewhat distracted by the sight of the women's
breasts, he greeted a man who stepped forward, whose elaborate and
colourful headdress perhaps confirmed him as their headman. Kheim's
silk neck scarf, much salt damaged and faded, had the image of
a phoenix on it, and Kheim untied it and gave it to the man,
holding it flat so he could see the image. The silk itself
interested the man more than the image on it. 'We should have
brought more silk,' Kheim said to I Chen I Chen
shook his head. 'We were invading Nippon. Get their words for
things if you can.'
I Chen was pointing to one thing after another,
their baskets, spears, dresses, headpieces, shell mounds; repeating
what they said, noting it quickly on his slate. 'Good, good. Well
met, well met. The Emperor of China and his humble servants send
their greetings.'
The thought of the Emperor made Kheim smile. What would
the Wanli, Heavenly Envoy, make of these poor
shell grubbers?
'We need to teach some of them Mandarin,' I Chen
said. 'Perhaps a young boy, they are quicker.'
'Or a young girl.'
'Don't let's get into that,' I Chen said. 'We need
to spend some time here, to repair the ships and restock. We don't
want the men here turning on us.'
Kheim mimed their intentions to the headman. Stay for a
while camp on shore -- cat, drink -- repair ships -- go back home,
beyond the, sunset to the west. It seemed they eventually
understood most of this. In return he understood from them that
they ate acorns and courgettes, fish and clams and birds, and
larger animals, probably they meant deer. They hunted in the hills
behind. There was lots of food, and the Chinese were welcome to it.
They liked Kheim's silk, and would trade fine baskets and food for
more of it. Their ornamental gold came from hills to the east,
beyond the delta of a big river that entered the bay across from
them, almost directly cast; they indicated where it flowed through
a gap in the hills, somewhat like the gap leading out to the
ocean.
As this information about the land obviously interested
I Chen, they conveyed more to him in a most ingenious way;
though they had no paper, nor ink, nor writing nor drawing, except
for the patterns in their baskets, they did have maps of a
particular kind, made in the sand on the beach. The headman and
some other notables crouched and shaped damp sand most minutely
with their hands, smoothing flat the part meant to represent the
bay, then getting into spirited discussions about the true shape of
the mountain between them and the ocean, which they called Tamalpi,
and which they indicated by gesture was a sleeping maiden, a
goddess apparently, though it was hard to be sure. They used grass
to represent a broad valley inland of the hills bracketing the bay
on the east, and wetted the channels of a delta and two rivers, one
draining the north, the other the south part of a great valley. To
the east of this big valley were foothills rising to mountains much
bigger than the coastal range, snow capped (indicated by
dandelion fluff) and holding in their midst a big lake or two.
All this they marked out with endless disputations
concerning the details, and care over fingernail creasings and bits
of grass or pine sprays; and all for a map that would be washed
away in the next high tide. But when they were done, the Chinese
knew that their gold came from people who lived in the foothills;
their salt from the shores of the bay; their obsidian from the
north and from beyond the high mountains, whence came also their
turquoise; and so on. And all without any language in common,
merely things displayed in mime, and their sand model of their
country.
In the days that followed, however, they exchanged words
for a host of daily objects and events, and I Chen kept lists
and started a glossary, and started teaching one of the local children, a girl of
about six years who was the child of the headman, and very forward;
a constant babbler in ber own tongue, whom the Chinese sailors
named Butterfly, both for her manner and for the joke that perhaps
at this point they were only her dream. She delighted in telling
I Chen what was what, very firmly; and quicker than Kheim
could have believed possible she was using Chinese as well as her
own language, mixing them together sometimes, but usually reserving
her Chinese for I Chen, as if it were his private tongue and
he some sort of freak, or inveterate joker, always making up fake
words for things neither opinion far from the truth.
Certainly her elders agreed that I Chen was a strange
foreigner, feeling their pulse and abdomens, looking in their
mouths, asking to inspect their urine (this they refused), and so
on. They had a kind of doctor themselves, who led them in ritual
purifications in a simple steam bath. This elderly raddled
wild eyed man was no doctor in the sense I Chen was, but
I Chen took great interest in the man's herbarium and his
explanations, as far as I Chen could make them out, using ever
more sophisticated sign languages, and Butterfly's growing facility
in Chinese. The locals' language was called Miwok, as the people
also called themselves; the word meant 'people' or something like.
They made it clear with their maps that their village controlled
the watershed of the stream that flowed into the bay. Other Miwok
lived in the nearly watersheds of the peninsula, between bay and
ocean; other people with different languages lived in other parts
of the country, each with its own name and territory, though the
Miwok could argue among themselves over the details of these things
endlessly. They told the Chinese that the great strait leading out
to the ocean had been created by an earthquake, and that the bay
had been fresh water before the cataclysm had let the ocean in.
This seemed unlikely to I Chen and Kheim, but then one morning
after they had slept on shore, they were awakened by a severe
shaking, and the earthquake lasted many heartbeats, and came back
twice that morning; so that after that they were not as sure about
the strait as they had been before.
They both enjoyed listening to the Miwok speak, but only
I Chen was interested in how the women made the bitter acorns
of the jaggedleaved oaks edible, by grinding and leeching the acorn
powder in beds of leaves and sand, giving them a sort of flour;
I Chen thought it was most ingenious. This flour, and salmon
both fresh and dried, were the staples of their diet, which they
offered the Chinese freely. They also ate deer, a kind of giant
deer, rabbits, and all manner of waterfowl. Indeed, as the autumn
descended mildly on them, and the months passed, the Chinese began
to understand that food was so plentiful in this place that there
was no need for agriculture as practised in China. Despite which
there were very few people living there. That was one of the
mysteries of this island.
The Miwok's hunts were big parties in the hills,
all day events that Kheim and his men were allowed to join.
The bows used by the Miwok were weak but adequate. Kheim ordered
his sailors to leave the crossbows and guns hidden on the ships,
and the cannon were simply left to view but not explained, and none
of the locals asked about them.
On one of these hunting trips Kheim and I Chen
followed the headman, Ta Ma, and some of the Miwok men up the
stream that poured through their village, up into hills to a high
meadow that had a view of the ocean to the west. To the cast they
could see across the bay, to range after range of green hills.
The meadow was marshy by the stream, grassy above it,
with stands of oak and other trees tufting the air. There was a
lake at the lower end of the meadow that was entirely covered with
geese -- a white blanket of living birds, all honking now, upset by
something, complaining. Then the whole flock thrashed into the air,
groups swirling and fragmenting, coming together, flying low over
the hunters, squawking or silently concentrating, on flight, the
distinctive creak of their pumping wing feathers loud in the air.
Thousands on thousands.
The men stood and watched the spectacle, eyes bright.
When the geese had all departed, they saw the reason they had left;
a herd of giant deer had come to the lake to drink. The stags had
huge racks of antlers. They stared across the water at the men,
vigilant but undeterred.
For a moment, all was still.
In the end the giant deer stepped away. Reality awoke
again. 'All sentient beings,' said I Chen, who had been
muttering his Buddhist sutras all along. Kheim normally had no time
for such claptrap, but now, as the day continued, and they hiked
over the hills on their hunt, seeing great numbers of peaceful
beaver, quail, rabbits, foxes, seagulls and crows, ordinary
deer, a bear and two cubs, a slinky long tailed grey hunting
creature, like a fox crossed with a squirrel -- on and on -- simply
a whole country of animals, living together under a silent blue sky
nothing disturbed, the land flourishing on its own, the people
there just a small part of it -- Kheim began to feel odd. He
realized that he had taken China for reality itself. Taiwan and the
Mindanaos and the other islands he had seen were like scraps of
land, leftovers; China had seemed to him the world. And China meant
people. Built up, cultivated, parcelled off ha by ha, it was so
completely a human world that Kheim had never considered that there
might once have been a natural world different to it. But here was
natural land, right before his eyes, full as could be with animals
of every kind, and obviously very much bigger than Taiwan; bigger
than China; bigger than the world he had known before.
'Where on Earth are we?' he said to I Chen
I Chen said, 'We have found the source of the
peach blossom stream.'
Winter arrived, and yet it stayed warm during the days,
cool at night. The Miwok gave them cloaks of sea otter pelts sewn
together with leather thread, and nothing could have been more
comfortable against the skin, they were as luxurious as the clothes
of the jade Emperor. During storms it rained and was cloudy, but
otherwise it was bright and sunny. This was all happening at the
same latitude as Beijing, according to I Chen, and at a time
of year when it would have been bitterly cold and windy there, so
the climate was much remarked on by the sailors. Kheim could
scarcely believe the locals when they said it was like this every
winter.
On the winter solstice, a sunny warm day like all the
rest, the Miwok invited Kheim and I Chen into their temple, a
little round thing like a dwarves' pagoda, the floor sunken into
the earth and the whole thing covered with sod, the weight of which
was held up by some tree trunks forking up into a nest of branches.
It was like being in a cave, and only the fire's light and the
smoky sun shafting down through a smokehole in the roof illuminated
the dim interior. The men were dressed in ceremonial feather
headdresses and many shell necklaces, which gleamed in the
firelight. To a constant drum rhythm they danced round the fire,
taking turns as night followed day, going on until it seemed to the
stupefied Kheim that they might never stop. He struggled to stay
awake, feeling the importance of the event for these men who looked
somehow like the animals they fed on. This day marked the return of
the sun, after all. But it was hard to stay awake. Eventually he
struggled to his feet and joined the younger dancers, and they made
room for him as he galumphed about, his sea legs bandying out to
the sides. On and on he danced, until it felt right to collapse in
a corner, and only emerge at the last part of dawn, the sky fully
lit, the sun about to burst over the hills backing the bay. The
happy loose limbed band of dancers and drummers was led by a
group of the young unmarried women to their sweat lodge, and in his
stupefied state Kheim saw how beautiful the women were, supremely
strong, as robust as the men, their feet unbound and their eyes
clear and without deference -- indeed they appeared to laugh
heartily at the weary men as they escorted them into the steam
bath, and helped them out of their headdresses and finery, making
what sounded like ribald commentary to Kheim, though it was
possible he was only making it up out of his own desire. But the
burnt air, the sweat pouring out of him, the abrupt clumsy plunge
into their little river, blasting him awake in the morning light;
all only increased his sense of the women's loveliness, beyond
anything he could remember exper encing in China, where a
sailor was always being taken by the precious blown flower girls in
the restaurants. Wonder and lust and the river's chill battled his
exhaustion, and then he slept on the beach in the sun.
He was back on the flagship when I Chen came to him,
mouth tight. 'One of them died last night. They brought me to see.
It was the pox.'
'What! Are you sure?'
I Chen nodded heavily, as grim as Kheim had ever
seen him.
Kheim rocked back. 'We will have to stay on board the
ships.'
'We should leave,' I Chen said. 'I think we brought
it to them.'
'But how? No one had pox on this trip.'
'None of the people here have any pox scars at all. I
suspect it is new to them. And some of us had it as children, as
you can see. Li and Peng are heavily pocked, and Peng has been
sleeping with one of the local women, and it was her child died of
it. And the woman is sick too.'
'No.'
'Yes. Alas. You know what happens to wild people when a
new sickness arrives. I've seen it in Aozhou. Most of them die. The
ones who don't will be balanced against it after that, but
they may still be able to tip others of the unexposed off their
balance, I don't know. In any case, it's bad.'
They could hear little Butterfly squealing up on the
deck, playing some game with the sailors. Kheim gestured above.
'What about her?'
'We could take her with us, I suppose. If we return her
to shore, she'll probably die with the rest.'
'But if she stays with us she may catch it and die
too.'
'True. But I could try to nurse her through it.'
Kheim frowned. Finally he said, 'We're provisioned and
watered. Tell the men. We'll sail south, and get in position for a
spring crossing back to China.'
Before they left, Kheim took Butterfly and rowed up to
the village's beach and stopped well offshore. Butterfly's father
spotted them and came down quickly, stood knee deep in the slack
tidal water and said something. His voice croaked, and Kheim saw
the pox blisters on him. Kheim's hands rowed the boat out a
stroke.
'What did he say?' he asked the girl.
'He said people are sick. People are dead.'
Kheim swallowed. 'Say to him, we brought a sickness with
us.'
She looked at him, not comprehending.
'Tell him we brought a sickness with us. By accident. Can
you say that to him? Say that.'
She shivered in the bottom of the boat.
Suddenly angry, Kheim said loudly to the Miwok headman,
'We brought a disease with us, by accident!'
Ta Ma stared at him.
'Butterfly, please tell him something. Say
something.'
She raised her head up and shouted something. Ta Ma took
two steps out, going waist deep in the water. Kheim rowed out
a couple of strokes, cursing. He was angry and there was no one to
be angry at.
'We have to leave!' he shouted. 'We're leaving! Tell him
that,' he said to Butterfly furiously. 'Tell him!'
She called out to Ta Ma, sounding distraught.
Kheim stood up in the boat, rocking it. He pointed at his
neck and face, then at Ta Ma. He mimicked distress, vomiting,
death. He pointed at the village and swept his hand as if erasing
it from a slate. He pointed at Ta Ma and gestured that he should
leave, that all of them should leave, should scatter. Not to other
villages but into the hills. He pointed at himself, at the girl
huddling in the boat. He mimed rowing out, sailing away. He pointed
at the girl, indicating her happy, playing, growing up, his teeth
clenched all the while.
Ta Ma appeared to understand not a single part of this
charade. Looking befuddled, he said something.
'What did he say?'
'He said, what do we do?'
Kheim waved at the bills again, indicating dispersion.
'Go!' he said loudly. 'Tell him, go away! Scatter!'
She said something to her father, miserably.
Ta Ma said something.
'What did he say, Butterfly? Can you tell me?'
'He said, fare well.'
The men regarded each other. Butterfly looked back and
forth between them, frightened.
'Scatter for two months!' Kheim said, realizing it was
useless but speaking anyway. 'Leave the sick ones and scatter.
After that you can regather, and the disease won't strike again. Go
away. We'll take Butterfly and keep her safe. We'll keep her on a
ship without anyone who has ever had smallpox. We'll take care of
her. Go!'
He gave up. 'Tell him what I said,' he asked Butterfly.
But she only whimpered and snivelled on the bottom of the boat.
Kheim rowed them back to the ship and they sailed away, out the
great mouth of the bay on the ebb tide, away to the south.
Butterfly cried often for the first three days after they
sailed, then ate ravenously, and after that began to talk
exclusively in Chinese. Kheim felt a stab every time he looked at
her, wondering if they had done the right thing to take her. She
would probably have died if they had left her, I Chen reminded
him. But Kheim wasn't sure even that was justification enough. And
the speed of her adjustment to her new life only made him more
uneasy. Was this what they were, then, to begin with? So tough as
this, so forgetful? Able to slip into whatever life was offered? It
made him feel strange to see such a thing.
One of his officers came to him. 'Peng isn't on board any
of the ships. We think he must have swum ashore and stayed with
them.'
Butterfly too fell ill, and I Chen sequestered her
in the bow of the flagship, in an airy nest under the bowsprit and
over the figurehead, which was a gold statue of Tianfei. He spent
many hours tending the girl through the six stages of the disease,
from the high fever and floating pulse of the Greater Yang, through
the Lesser Yang and Yang Brightness, with chills and fever coming
alternately; then into Greater Yin. He took her pulse every watch,
checked all her vital signs, lanced some of the blisters, dosed her
from his bags of medicines, mostly an admixture called Gift of the
Smallpox God, which contained ground rhinoceros horn, snow worms
from Tibet, crushed jade and pearl; but also, when it seemed she
was stuck in the Lesser Yin, and in danger of dying, tiny doses of
arsenic. The progress of the disease did not seem to Kheim to be
like the usual pox, but the sailors made the appropriate sacrifices
to the smallpox god nevertheless, burning incense and paper money
over a shrine that was copied on all eight of the ships.
Later, I Chen said that he thought being out on the
open sea had proven the key to her recovery. Her body lolled in its
bed on the groundswell, and her breathing and pulse fell into a
rhythm with it, he noticed, four breaths and six beats per swell,
in a fluttering pulse, over and over. This kind of confluence with
the elements was extremely helpful. And the salt air filled her
lungs with qi, and made her tongue less coated; he even fed her
little spoonfuls of ocean water, as well as all she would take of
fresh water, just recently removed from her home stream. And so she
recovered and got well, only lightly scarred by pox on her back and
neck.
They sailed south down the coast of the new island all
this while, and every day they became more amazed that they were
not reaching the southern end of it. One cape looked as if it would
be the turning point, but past it they saw the land curved south
again, behind some baked empty islands. Farther south they saw
villages on the beaches, and they knew enough now to identify the
bath temples. Kheim kept the fleet well offshore, but he did allow
one canoe to approach, and he had Butterfly try speaking to them,
but they didn't understand her, nor she them. Kheim made his dumb
show signifying sickness and danger, and the locals paddled quickly
away.
They began to sail against a current from the south, but
it was mild, and the winds were constant from the west. The fishing
here was excellent, the weather mild. Day followed day in a perfect
circle of sameness. The land fell away cast again, then ran south,
most of the way to the equator, past a big archipelago of low
islands, with good anchorages and good water, and seabirds with
blue feet.
They came at last to a steeply rising coastline, with
great snowy volcanoes in the distance, like Fuji only twice as big,
or more, punctuating the sky behind a steep coastal range, which
was already tall. This final giganticism put paid to anyone's
ability to think of this place as an island.
'Are you sure this isn't Africa?' Kheim said to
I Chen.
I Chen was not sure. 'Maybe. Maybe the people we
left up north are the only survivors of the Fulanchi, reduced to a
primitive state. Maybe this is the west coast of the world,
and we sailed past the opening to their middle sea in the night, or
in a fog. But I don't think so.'
'Then where are we?'
I Chen showed Kheim where he thought they were on
the long strips of their map; east of the final markings, out where
the map was entirely blank. But first he pointed to the far western
strip. 'See, Fulan and Africa look like this on their west sides.
The Muslim cartographers are very consistent about it. And Hsing Ho
calculated that the world is about seventy five thousand li
around. If he's right, we only sailed half as far as we should
have, or less, across the Dahai to Africa and Fulan.'
'Maybe he's wrong then. Maybe the world occupies more of
the globe than he thought. Or maybe the globe is smaller.'
'But his method was good. I made the same measurements on
our trip to the Moluccas, and did the geometry, and found he was
right.'
'But look!' Gesturing at the mountainous land before
them. 'If it isn't Africa, what is it?'
'An island, I suppose. A big island, far out in the
Dahai, where no one has ever sailed. Another world, like the real
one. An eastern one like the western one.'
'An island no one has ever sailed to before? That no one
ever knew about?' Kheim couldn't believe it.
'Well?' I Chen said, stubborn in the face of the
idea. 'Who else before us could have got here, and got back to tell
about it?'
Kheim took the point. 'And we're not back, either.'
'No. And no guarantee we will be able to do it. Could be
that Hsu Fu got here and tried to return, and failed. Maybe we'll
find his descendants on this very shore.'
'Maybe.'
Closing on the immense land, they saw a city on the
coast. It was nothing very big compared to back home, but
substantial compared to the tiny villages to the north. It was
mud coloured for the most part, but several gigantic buildings
in the city and behind it were roofed by gleaming expanses of
beaten gold. These were no Miwok!
So they sailed inshore warily, feeling unnerved, their
ships' cannons loaded and primed. They were startled to see the
primitive boats pulled up on the beaches fishing canoes like
those some of them had seen in the Moluccas, mostly two prowed
and made of bundled reeds. There were no guns to be seen; no sails;
no wharves or docks, except for one og pier that seemed to float,
anchored out away from the beach. It was perplexing to see the
terrestrial magnificence of the gold roofed buildings combined
with such maritime poverty. I--Chen said, 'It must have been an
inland kingdom to start with.'
'Lucky for us, the way those buildings look.'
'I suppose if the Han dynasty had never fallen, this is
what the coast of China would look like.'
A strange idea. But even mentioning China was a comfort.
After that they pointed at features of the town, saying 'That's
like in Cham,' or 'They build like that in Lanka,' and so forth;
and though it still looked bizarre, it was clear, even before they
made out people on the beach gaping at them, that it would be
people and not monkeys or birds populating the town.
Though they had no great hope that Butterfly would be
understood here, they took her near the shore with them
nevertheless, in the biggest landing boat. They kept the flintlocks
and crossbows concealed under their seats while Kheim stood in the
bow making the peaceful gestures that had won over the Miwok. Then
he got Butterfly to greet them kindly in her language, which she
did in a high, clear, penetrating voice. The crowd on the beach
watched, and some with hats like feathered crowns spoke to them,
but it was not Butterfly's language, nor one that any of them had
ever heard.
The elaborate headdresses of part of the crowd seemed
faintly military to Kheim, and so he had them row offshore a little
bit, and keep a lookout for bows or spears or any other weapons.
Something in the look of these people suggested the possibility of
an ambush.
Nothing of the sort happened. In fact, the next day when
they rowed in, a whole contingent of men, wearing checked tunics
and feathered headdresses, prostrated themselves on the beach.
Uneasily Kheim ordered a landing, on the lookout for trouble.
All went well. Communication by gesture, and quick basic
language lessons, was fair, although the locals seemed to take
Butterfly to be the visitors' leader, or rather talisman, or
priestess, it was impossible to say; certainly they venerated her.
Their mimed interchanges were mostly made by an older man in a
headdress with a fringe hanging over his forehead to his
eyes, and a badge extending high above the feathers. These
communications remained cordial, full of curiosity and good will.
They were offered cakes made of some kind of dense, substantial
flour; also huge tubers that could be cooked and eaten; and a weak
sour beer, which was all they ever saw the locals drink. Also a
stack of finely woven blankets, very warm and soft, made of a wool
from sheep that looked like sheep bred with camels, but were
clearly some entirely other creature, unknown to the real
world.
Eventually Kheim felt comfortable enough to accept an
invitation to leave the beach and visit the local king or emperor,
in the huge goldroofed palace or temple on the hilltop behind the
city. It was the gold that had done it, Kheim realized as he
prepared for the trip, still feeling uneasy. He loaded a short
flintlock and put it in a shoulder bag tucked under his arm, hidden
by his coat; and he left instructions with I Chen for a relief
operation if one proved necessary. Off they went, Kheim and
Butterfly and a dozen of the biggest sailors from the flagship,
accompanied by a crowd of local men in checked tunics.
They walked up a track past fields and houses. The women
in the fields carried their babies strapped to boards on their
backs, and they spun wool as they walked. They hung looms from
ropes tied to trees, to get the necessary tension to weave. Checked
patterns seemed the only ones they used, usually black and tan,
sometimes black and red. Their fields consisted of raised mounds,
rectangular in shape, standing out of wetlands by the river.
Presumably they grew their tubers in the mounds. They were flooded
like rice fields, but not. Everything was similar but different.
Gold here seemed as common as iron in China, while on the other
hand there was no iron at all to be seen.
The palace above the city was huge, bigger than the
Forbidden City in Beijing, with many rectangular buildings arranged
in rectangular patterns. Everything was arranged like their cloth.
Stone plinths in the courtyard outside the palace were carved into
strange figures, birds and animals all mixed up, painted all
colours, so that Kheim found it hard to look at them. He wondered
if the strange creatures represented on them would be found living
in the back country, or were their versions of dragon and phoenix.
He saw lots of copper, and some bronze or brass, but mostly gold.
The guards standing in rows around the palace held long spears
tipped with gold, and their shields were gold too; decorative, but
not very practical. Their enemies must not have had iron
either.
Inside the palace they were led into a vast room with one
wall open onto a courtyard, the other three covered in gold
filigree. Here blankets were spread, and Kheim and Butterfly and
the other Chinese were invited to sit on one.
Into the room came their emperor. All bowed and then sat
on the ground. The Emperor sat on a checked cloth next to the
visitors, and said something politely. He was a man of about forty
years, white toothed and handsome, with a broad forehead, high
prominent cheekbones, clear brown eyes, a pointed chin and a strong
hawkish nose. His crown was gold, and was decorated with small gold
heads, dangling in holes cut into the crown, like pirates' beads at
the gates of Hangzhou.
This too made Kheim uneasy, and he shifted his pistol
under his coat, looking around surreptitiously. There were no other
signs to trouble him. Of course there were hard looking men
there, clearly the Emperor's guard, ready to pounce if anything
threatened him; but other than that, nothing; and that seemed an
ordinary precaution to take when strangers were around.
A priest wearing a cape made of cobalt blue bird feathers
came in, and performed a ceremony for the Emperor, and after that
they feasted through the day, on a meat like lamb, and vegetables
and mashes that Kheim did not recognize. The weak beer was all they
drank, except for a truly fiery brandy. Eventually Kheim began to
feel drunk, and he could see his men were worse. Butterfly did not
like any of the flavours, and ate and drank very little. Out on the
courtyard, men danced to drums and reed pipes, sounding very like
Korean musicians, which gave Kheim a start; he wondered if these
people's ancestors had drifted over from Korea ages ago, carried on
the Kuroshio. Perhaps just a few lost ships had populated this
whole land, many dynasties before; indeed the music sounded like an
echo from a past age. But who could say? He would talk to
I Chen about it when he got back to the ship.
At sundown Kheim indicated their desire to return to
their ships. The Emperor only looked at him, and gestured to his
caped priest, and then rose. Everyone stood and bowed again. He
left the room.
When he had gone, Kheim stood and took Butterfly by the
hand, and tried to lead ber out the way they had come (although
he was not sure he could remember it); but the guards blocked them,
their goldtipped spears held crossways, in a position as ceremonial
as their dances had been.
Kheim mimed displeasure, very easy to do, and indicated
that Butterfly would be sad and angry if she were kept from their
ships. But the guards did not move.
So. There they were. Kheim cursed himself for leaving the
beach with such strange people. He felt the pistol under his coat.
One shot only. He would have to hope that I Chen could rescue
them. It was a good thing he had insisted the doctor stay behind,
as he felt I Chen would do the best job of organizing such an
operation.
The captives spent the night huddled together on their
blanket, surrounded by standing guards who did not sleep, but spent
their time chewing small leaves they took from shoulder bags tucked
under their chequered tunics. They watched bright eyed. Kheim
huddled around Butterfly, and she snuggled like a cat against him.
It was cold. Kheim got the others to crowd around, all of them
together, protecting her by a single touch or at least the
proximity of their warmth.
At dawn the Emperor returned, dressed like a giant
peacock or phoenix, accompanied by women wearing gold breast cones,
shaped uncannily like real breasts, with ruby nipples. The sight of
these women gave Kheim an absurd hope that they would be all right.
Then behind them entered the caped high priest, and a chequered
masked figure, whose headdress dangled everywhere with tiny gold
skulls. Some form of their death god, there was no mistaking it. He
was there to execute them, Kheim thought, and the realization
jolted him into a heightened state of awareness, in which all the
gold sheeted white in the sun, and the space they walked through
had an extra dimension of depth and solidity, the chequered people
as solid and vivid as festival demons.
They were led out into the misty horizontal light of
dawn, cast and uphill. Uphill all that day, and the next day too,
until Kheim gasped as he climbed, and looked back amazed from the
occasional ridge, down and down to the sea, which was a blue
textured surface, extremely flat and very far below. He had never
imagined he could get so far above the ocean, it was like flying.
And yet there were higher hills still ahead to the cast, and on
certain crests of the range, massive white volcanoes, like
super Fujis.
They walked up towards these. They were fed well, and
given a tea as bitter as alum; and then, in a musical ritual
ceremony, given little bags of the tea leaves, the same
ragged edged green leaves their guards had been chewing on the
first night. The leaves also were bitter to the taste, but they
soon numbed the mouth and throat, and after that Kheim felt better.
The leaves were a stimulant, like tea or coffee. He told Butterfly
and his men to chew theirs down as well. The thin strength that
poured through his nerves gave him the qi energy to think about the
problem of escape.
It did not seem likely that I Chen would be able to
get through the mud and gold city to follow them, but
Kheim could not stop hoping for it, a kind of furious hope, felt
every time he looked at Butterfly's face, unblemished yet by doubt
or fear; as far as she was concerned this was just the next stage
of a journey that was already as strange as it could get. This part
was interesting to her, in fact, with its bird--throat colours, its
gold and its mountains. She didn't seem affected by the height to
which they had climbed.
Kheim began to understand that clouds, which often now
lay below them, existed in a colder and less fulfilling air than
the precious salty soup they breathed on the sea surface. Once he
caught a whiff of that sea air, perhaps just the salt still in his
hair, and he longed for it as for food. Hungry for air! He
shuddered to think how high they were.
Yet they had not finished. They climbed to a ridge
covered by snow. The trail was pounded glistening into the hard
white stuff. They were given soft wood soled boots with fur on
the inside, and heavier tunics, and blankets with holes for the
head and arms, all elaborately checked, with small figures filling
small squares. The blanket given to Butterfly was so long it looked
as if she was wearing a Buddhist nun's dress, and it was made of
such fine cloth that Kheim grew suddenly afraid. There was another
child travelling with them, a boy Kheim thought, though he was not
sure; and this child too was dressed as finely as the caped
priest.
They came to a campsite made of flat rocks set on the
snow. They made a big fire in a sunken pit in this platform, and
around it erected a number of yurts. Their captors settled
on their blankets and ate a meal, followed by many ritual cups of
their hot tea, and beer and brandy, after which they performed a
ceremony to honour the setting sun, which fell into clouds scudding
over the ocean. They were well above the clouds now, yet above them
to the east a great volcano poked into the indigo sky, its snowy
flanks glowing a deep pink in the moments after sunset.
That night was frigid. Again Kheim held Butterfly, fear
waking him whenever she stirred. The girl even seemed to stop
breathing from time to time, but she always started again.
At dawn they were roused, and Kheim was thankful to be
given more of the hot tea, then a substantial meal, followed by
more of the little green leaves to chew; though these last were
handed to them by the executioner god.
They started up the side of the volcano while it was
still a grey snow slope under a white dawn sky. The ocean to the
west was covered by clouds, but they were breaking up, and the
great blue plate lay there far, far below, looking to Kheim like
his home village or his childhood.
It got colder as they ascended, and hard to walk. The
snow was brittle underfoot, and icy bits of it clinked and
glittered. It was extremely bright, but everything else was too
dark: the sky blue black, the row of people dim. Kheim's eyes
ran, and the tears were cold on his face and in his thin grey
whiskers. On he hiked, placing his feet carefully in the footsteps
of the guard ahead of him, reaching back awkwardly to hold
Butterfly's hand and pull her along.
Finally, after he had forgotten to look up for a while,
no longer expecting anything ever to change, the slope of the snow
laid back. Bare black rocks appeared, thrusting out of the snow
left and right, and especially ahead, where he could see nothing
higher.
Indeed, it was the peak: a broad jumbled wasteland of
rock like torn and frozen mud, mixed with ice and snow. At the
highest point of the tortured mass a few poles obtruded, cloth
streamers and flags flying from them, as in the mountains of Tibet.
Perhaps these were Tibetans then.
The caped priest and the executioner god and the guards
assembled at the foot of these rocks. The two children were taken
to the priest, guards restraining Kheim all the while. He stepped
back as if giving up, put his hands under his blanket as if they were cold, which they
were; they fumbled like ice for the handle of his flintlock. He
cocked the lock and pulled the pistol free of his coat, hidden only
under the blanket.
The children were given more hot tea, which they drank willingly.
The priest and his minions sang facing the sun, drums pounding like
the painful pulse behind Kheim's half blinded eyes. He had a
bad headache, and everything looked like a shadow of itself.
Below them on the snowy ridge, figures were climbing fast. They
wore the local blankets, but Kheim thought they looked like
I Chen and his men. Much farther below them, another group
straggled up in pursuit.
Kheim's heart was already pounding; now it rolled inside him like
the ceremonial drums. The executioner god took a gold knife out of
an elaborate carved wooden scabbard, and cut the little boy's
throat. The blood he caught in a gold bowl, where it steamed in the
sun. To the sound of the drums and pipes and sung prayers, the body
was wrapped in a mantle of the soft chequered cloth, and lowered
tenderly into the peak, in a crack between two great rocks.
The executioner and the caped priest then turned to Butterfly, who
was tugging uselessly to get away. Kheim pulled his pistol free of
the blanket and checked the flint, then aimed it with both hands at
the executioner god. He shouted something, then held his breath.
The guards were moving towards him, the executioner had looked his
way. Kheim pulled the trigger and the pistol boomed and blossomed
smoke, knocking Kheim two steps back. The executioner god flew
backwards and skidded over a patch of snow, bleeding copiously from
the throat. The gold knife fell from his opened hand.
All the onlookers stared at the executioner god, stunned; they
didn't know what had happened.
Kheim kept the pistol pointed at them, while he rooted in his belt
bag for charge, plunger, ball, wad. He reloaded the pistol right in
front of them, shouting sharply once or twice, which made them
jump.
Pistol reloaded, he aimed it at the guards, who fell back. Some
kneeled, others stumbled away. He could see I Chen and his
sailors toiling up the snow of the last slope. The caped priest
said something, and Kheim aimed his pistol carefully at him and
shot.
Again the loud bang of the explosion, like thunder in the car, and
the plume of white smoke jetting out. The caped priest flew back as
if struck by a giant invisible fist, tumbled down and lay
writhing in the snow, his cape stained with blood.
Kheim strode through the smoke to Butterfly. He lifted her away
from her captors, who quivered as if paralysed. He carried her in
his arms down the trail. She was only semi conscious; very
possibly the tea had been drugged.
He came to I Chen, who was huffing and puffing at the head of
a gang of their sailors, all armed with flintlocks, a pistol and
musket for each. 'Back to the ships,' Kheim ordered. 'Shoot any
that get in the way.'
Going down the mountain was tremendously easier than
going up had been, indeed it was a danger in that it felt so easy,
while at the same time they were still light headed and
half blinded, and so tired that they tended to slip, and more
and more as it warmed and the snow softened and smashed under their
feet. Carrying Butterfly, Kheim had his view of his footing
obscured as well, and he slipped often, sometimes heavily. But two
of his men walked at his sides when it was possible, holding him up
by the elbows when he slipped, and despite all they made good time.
Crowds of people gathered each time they approached one of the
high villages, and Kheim then gave over Butterfly to the men, so
that he could hold the pistol aloft for all to see. If the
crowds got in their way, he shot the man with the biggest
headdress. The boom of the shot appeared to frighten the onlookers
even more than the sudden collapse and bloody death of their
priests and headmen, and Kheim thought it was probably a
system in which local leaders were frequently executed for one
thing or another by the guards of the Emperor.
In any case, the people they passed seemed paralysed mostly by the
Chinese command of sound. Claps of thunder, accompanied by
instant death, as in a lightning strike -- that must have happened
often enough in these exposed mountains to give them an idea of
what the Chinese had mastered. Lightning in a tube.
Eventually Kheim gave Butterfly to his men, and marched down
heavily at their head, reloading his gun and firing at any crowd
close enough to hit, feeling a strange exultation rise in him, a
terrible power over these ignorant primitives who could be awed to
paralysis by a gun.
He was their executioner god made real, and he passed through
them as if they were puppets whose strings had been cut.
He stopped his crew late in the day, to seize food from a
village and eat it, then continued down again until nightfall. They
took refuge in a storage building, a big stone walled
wooden roofed barn, stuffed to the rafters with cloth, grain
and gold. The men would have killed themselves carrying gold on
their backs, but Kheim restricted them to one item apiece, either
jewellery or a single disc ingot. 'We'll all come back some day,'
he told them, I and end up richer than the Emperor.' He chose for
himself a hummingbird moth figured in gold.
Though exhausted, he found it hard to lie down, or even
to stop walking. After a nightmare interval, sitting
half asleep by Butterfly's side, he woke them all before dawn
and began the march downhill again, their guns all loaded and
ready.
As they descended to the coast it became apparent that
runners had passed them in the night, and warned the locals below
of the disaster on the summit. A fighting force of men held the
crossroads just above the great coastal city, shouting to the beat
of drums, brandishing clubs, shields, spears and pikes. The
descending Chinese were obviously outnumbered, the fifty men
I Chen had brought approaching some four or five hundred local
warriors.
'Spread out,' Kheim told his men. 'March right down the
road at them, singing "Drunk Again on the Grand Canal" Get all the
guns out front, and when I say stop, stop and aim at their leaders
whoever has the most feathers on their head. All of you
shoot together when I say fire, and then reload. Reload as fast as
you can, but don't shoot again unless you hear me say so. If I do,
fire and reload yet again.'
So they marched down the road, roaring the old drinking
song at the top of their lungs, then stopped and fired a volley,
and their flintlocks might as well have been a row of cannon, they
had such an effect: many men knocked down and bleeding, the
survivors among them running in a complete panic.
It had only taken one volley, and the coastal city was
theirs. They could have burned it to the ground, taken anything in
it; but Kheim marched them through the streets as quickly as
possible, still singing as loudly as they could, until they were on
the beach among the Chinese landing boats, and safe. They never
even had to fire a second time.
Kheim went to I Chen and shook his hand. 'Many
thanks,' he said to him formally before all the others. 'You saved
us. They would have sacrificed Butterfly like a lamb, and killed
the rest of us like flies.'
It seemed to Kheim only reasonable that the locals would
soon recover from the shock of the guns, after which they would be
dangerous in their numbers. Even now crowds were gathering at a
safe distance to observe them. So after getting Butterfly and most
of the men onto the ships, Kheim consulted with I Chen and
their ships' provision masters, to see what they were still lacking
for a voyage back across the Dahai. Then he took a big armed party
ashore one last time, and after the ships' cannons were fired at
the city, he and his men marched straight for the palace, singing
again and stepping to the beat of their drums. At the palace they
raced around the wall, and caught a group of priests and women
escaping at a gate on the other side, and Kheim shot one priest,
and had his men tie the others up.
After that he stood before the priests, and mimed his
demands. His head still pounded painfully, he remained floating in
the strange exhil aration of killing, and it was remarkable
how easy it was to convey by mime alone a fairly elaborate list of
demands. He pointed to himself and his men, then to the west, and
made one hand sail away on the wind of the other one. He held up
samples of food and the bags of tea leaves, indicated that these
were wanted. He mimed them being brought to the beach. He went to
the chief hostage and imitated untying him and waving farewell. If
the goods didn't arrive ... He pointed the gun at each hostage. But
if they did, the Chinese would release everyone and sail away.
He acted out each step of the process, looking the
hostages in the eyes and speaking only a little, as he judged it
would only be a distraction to their comprehension. Then he had his
men release all the women captured, and a few of the men without
headdresses, and sent them out with clear instructions to get the
required goods. He could tell by their eyes that they understood
exactly what they were to do.
After that he marched the hostages to the beach, and they
waited. That same afternoon men appeared in one of the main
streets, bags slung down their backs from lines hung around their
foreheads. They deposited these bags on the beach, bowing, and then
retreated, still facing the Chinese. Dried meat; grain cakes; the
little green leaves; gold discs and ornaments (though Kheim had not
asked for these); blankets and bolts of the soft cloth. Looking at
it all spread on the beach, Kheim felt like a tax collector, heavy
and cruel; but also relieved; powerful in a tenuous fashion only,
as it was by a magic he didn't understand or control. Above all he
felt content. They had what they needed to get home.
He untied the hostages himself, gestured for them to go.
He gave each of them a pistol ball, curling their unresponsive
fingers around them. 'We'll be back some day,' he said to them.
'Us, or people worse than us.' He wondered briefly if they would
catch smallpox, like the Miwok; his sailors had slept on the
locals' blankets at the palace.
No way to tell. The locals stumbled away, clutching their
pistol balls or dropping them. Their women stood at a safe
distance, happy to see that Kheim had kept his pantomimed promise,
happy to see their men freed. Kheim ordered his men into the boats.
They rowed out to the ships and sailed away from the big mountain
island.
After all that, sailing the Great Ocean felt very
familiar, very peaceful. The days passed in their rounds. They
followed the sun west, always west. Most days were hot and sunny.
Then for a month clouds grew every day and broke in the afternoons,
in grey thundershowers that quickly dissipated. After that the
winds always blew from the southeast, making their way easy. Their
memories of the great island behind them began to seem like dreams,
or legends they had heard about the realm of the asuras. If it
weren't for Butterfly's presence it would have been hard to believe
they had done all that.
Butterfly played on the flagship. She swung through the
rigging like a little monkey. There were hundreds of men on board,
but the presence of one little girl changed everything: they sailed
under a blessing. The other ships stayed close to the flagship in
the hope of catching sight of her, or being blessed by an
occasional visit. Most of the sailors believed she was the goddess
Tianfei, travelling with them for their own safety, and that this
was why the return voyage was going so much easier than the voyage
out had. The weather was kinder, the air warmer, the fish more
plentiful. Three times they passed small atolls, uninhabited, and
were able to take on coconuts and palm hearts, and once water. Most
importantly, Kheim felt, they were headed west, back home to the
known world. It felt so different from the voyage out that it
seemed strange it was the same activity. That orientation alone
could make such a difference! But it was hard to sail into the
morning sun, hard to sail away from the world.
Sailing, day after day. Sun rising at the stern, sinking at the
bow, drawing them on. Even the sun was helping them -- perhaps too
much -- it was now the seventh month, and infernally hot; then
windless for most of a month. They prayed to Tianfei,
ostentatiously not looking at Butterfly as they did so.
She played in the rigging, oblivious to their sidelong
glances. She spoke Chinese pretty well now, and had taught
I Chen all the Miwok she could remember. I Chen had
written down every word, in a dictionary that he thought might be
useful to subsequent expeditions to the new island. It was
interesting, he told Kheim, because usually he was just choosing
the ideogram or combination of ideograms that sounded most like the
Miwok word as spoken, and writing down as precise a definition of
its Miwok meaning as he could, given the source of information; but
of course when looking at the ideographs for the sounds it was
impossible not to hear the Chinese meanings for them as well, so
that the whole Miwok language became yet another set of homonyms to
add to the already giant number that existed in Chinese. Many
Chinese literary or religious symbols relied on pure accidents of
homonymity to make their metaphorical connection, so that one said
the tenth day of the month, shi, was the birthday of the
stone, shi; or a picture of a heron and lotus, lu and lian, by
homynym became the message 'may your path (lu) be always upward
(lian)'; or the picture of a monkey on the back of another one
could be read in a similar way as 'may you rank as a governor from
generation to generation'. Now to I Chen the Miwok words for
'going home' looked like wu ya, five ducks, while the Miwok for
'swim' looked like Peng zu, the legendary character who
had lived for eight hundred years. So he would sing 'five ducks
swimming home, it will only take eight hundred years', or 'I'm
going to jump off the side and become Peng zu', and Butterfly
would shriek with laughter. Other similarities in the two
languages' maritime words made I Chen suspect that Hsu Fus
expedition to the cast had made it to the ocean continent of
Ying zhou after all, and left there some Chinese words if
nothing else; if, indeed, the Miwok themselves were not the
descendants of his expedition.
Some men already spoke of returning to the new land,
usually to the golden kingdom in the south, to subdue it by
arms and take its gold back to the real world. They did not say, We
will do this, which would be bad luck, obviously, but
rather, if one were to do this. Other men listened to this talk
from a distance behind their eyes, knowing that if Tianfei allowed
them to reach home, nothing ever again would induce them to cross
the great ocean.
Then they became entirely becalmed, in a patch of ocean
devoid of rain, cloud, wind or current. It was as if a curse had
fallen on them, possibly from the loose talk of return for gold.
They began to bake. There were sharks in the water, so they could
not swim freely to cool off, but had to set a sail in the water
between two of the ships, and let it sink until they could jump off
into a pool, very warm, about chest deep. Kheim had Butterfly wear
a shift and let her jump in. To refuse her wish would have been to
astound and infuriate the crew. It turned out she could swim like
an otter. The men treated her like the goddess she was, and she
laughed to see them sporting like boys. It was a relief to do
something different, but the sail couldn't sustain the wetness and
bouncing on it, and gradually came apart. So they only did it
once.
The doldrums began to endanger them. They would run out
of water, then food. Possibly subtle currents continued to carry
them west, but I Chen was not optimistic. 'It's more likely
we've wandered into the centre of the big circular current, like a
whirlpool's centre.' He advised sailing south when possible, to get
back into both wind and current, and Kheim agreed, but there was no
wind to sail. It was much like the first month of their expedition,
only without the Kuroshio. Again they discussed putting out the
boats and rowing the ships, but the vast junks were too big to move
by oar power alone, and I Chen judged it dangerous to tear the
skin off the palms of the men when they were already so dried out.
There was no recourse but to clean their stills, and keep them in
the sun and primed all day long, and ration what water remained in
the casks. And keep Butterfly fully watered, no matter what she
said about doing like all the rest. They would have given her the
last cask in the fleet.
It had come to the point at which I Chen was
proposing that they save their dark yellow urine and mix it with
their remaining water supplies, when black clouds appeared from the
south, and it quickly became clear that their problem was going to
change very swiftly from having too little water to having too
much. Wind struck hard, clouds rolled over them, water fell in
sheets and the funnels were deployed over the casks, which refilled
almost instantly. Then it was a matter of riding out the storm.
Only junks as big as theirs were high enough and flexible enough to
survive such an onslaught for long; and even the Eight Great Ships,
desiccated above the water as they had been in the doldrums, now
swelled in the rain, snapping many of the ropes and pins holding
them together, so that riding out the storm became a continuous
drenched frantic stemming of leaks, and fixing of broken spars and
staves and ropes.
All this time the waves were growing bigger, until
eventually the ships were rising and falling as over enormous
smoking bills, rolling south to north at a harried but inexorable,
even majestic pace. In the flagship they shot up the face of these
and crested in a smear of white foam over the deck, after which
they had a brief moment's view of the chaos from horizon to
horizon, with perhaps two or three of the other ships visible,
bobbing in different rhythms and being blown away into the watery
murk. For the most part there was nothing to do but hunker down in
the cabins, drenched and apprehensive, unable to hear each other
over the roar of wind and wave.
At the height of the storm they entered the fish's eye,
that strange and ominous calm in which disordered waves sloshed
about in all directions, crashing into each other and launching
solid bolts of white water into the dark air, while all around them
low black clouds obscured the horizon. A typhoon, therefore, and
none was surprised. As in the yin yang symbol, there were dots
of calm at the core of the wind. It would soon return from the
opposite direction.
So they worked on repairs in great haste, feeling, as one
always did, that having got halfway through it they should be able
to reach the end. Kheim peered through the murk at the nearest ship
to them, which appeared to be in difficulty. The men crowded its
railing, staring longingly at Butterfly, some even crying out to
her. No doubt they thought their trouble resulted from the fact
they did not have her on board with them. Its captain shouted to
Kheim that they might have to cut down their masts in the second
half of the storm to keep from being rolled over, and that the
others should hunt for them if necessary, after it had passed.
But when the other side of the typhoon struck, things
went badly on the flagship as well. An odd wave threw Butterfly
into a wall awkwardly, and after that the fear in the men was palpable. They
lost sight of the other ships. The huge waves again were torn to
foam by the wind, and their crests crashed over the ship as if
trying to sink it. The rudder snapped off at the rudder post, and
after that, though they tried to get a yard over the side to
replace the rudder, they were in effect a hulk, struck in the side
by every passing wave. While men fought to get steerage and save
the ship, and some were swept overboard, or drowned in the lines,
I Chen attended to Butterfly. He shouted to Kheim that she had
broken an arm and apparently some ribs. She was gasping for breath,
Kheim saw. He returned to the struggle for steerage, and finally
they got a sea anchor over the side, which quickly brought their
bow around into the wind. This saved them for the moment, but even
coming over the bow the waves were heavy blows, and it took every
effort they could make to keep the hatches from tearing off and the
ship's compartments from filling. All done in an agony of
apprehension about Butterfly; men shouted angrily that she should
have been cared for better, that it was inexcusable that something
like this should happen. Kheim knew that was his
responsibility.
When he could spare a moment he went to her side, in the
highest cabin on the rear deck, and looked beseechingly at
I Chen, who would not reassure him. She was coughing up a
foamy blood, very red, and I Chen was sucking her throat clear
of it from time to time with a tube he stuck down her mouth. 'A rib
has punctured a lung,' he said shortly, keeping his eyes on her.
She meanwhile was conscious, wide--eyed, in pain but quiet. She
said only, 'What's happening to me?' After I Chen cleared her
throat of another mass of blood, he told ber what he had told
Kheim. She panted like a dog, shallow and fast.
Kheim went back into the watery chaos above decks. The
wind and waves were no worse than before, perhaps a bit better.
There were scores of problems large and small to attend to, and he
threw himself at them in a fury, muttering to himself, or shouting
at the gods; it didn't matter, no one could hear anything above
decks, unless it was shouted directly in their ears. 'Please,
Tianfei, stay with us! Don't leave us! Let us go home. Let us
return to tell the Emperor what we have found for him. Let the girl
live.'
They survived the storm: but Butterfly died the next
day.
There were only three ships that found each other and regathered
on the quiet blank of the sea. They sewed Butterfly's body in a
man's robe and tied two of the gold discs from the mountain empire
into it, and let it slide over the side into the waves. All the men
were weeping, even I Chen, and Kheim could barely speak the words
of the funeral prayer. Who was there to pray to? It seemed
impossible that after all they had gone through, a mere storm could
kill the sea goddess; but there she was, slipping under the waves,
sacrificed to the sea just as that island boy had been sacrificed
to the mountain. Sun or seafloor, it was all the same.
'She died to save us,' he told the men shortly. 'She gave
that avatar of herself to the storm god, so he would let us be. Now
we have to carry on to honour her. We have to get back home.'
So they repaired the ship as best they could, and endured
another month of desiccated life. This was the longest month of the
trip, of their lives. Everything was breaking down, on the ships,
in their bodies. There wasn't enough food and water. Sores broke
out in their mouths and on their skin. They had very little qi, and
could hardly eat what food was left.
Kheim's thoughts left him. He found that when thoughts
leave, things just did themselves. Doing did not need thinking.
One day he thought: sail too big cannot be lifted.
Another day he thought: more than enough is too much. Too much is
less. Therefore least is most. Finally he saw what the Daoists
meant by that.
Go with the way. Breathe in and out. Move with the
swells. Sea doesn't know ship, ship doesn't know sea. Floating does
itself. A balance in balance. Sit without thinking.
The sea and sky melded. All blue. There was no one doing,
nothing being done. Sailing just happened.
Thus, when a great sea was crossed, there was no one
doing it.
Someone looked up and noticed an island. It turned out to
be Mindanao, and after the rest of its archipelago, Taiwan, and all
the familiar landfalls of the Inland Sea.
The three remaining Great Ships sailed into Nanking
almost exactly twenty months after their departure, surprising all
the inhabitants of the city, who thought they had joined Hsu Fu at
the bottom of the sea. And they were happy to be home, no
doubt about it, and bursting with stories to tell of the amazing
giant island to the cast.
But any time Kheim met the eye of any of his men, he saw
the pain there. He saw also that they blamed him for her death. So
he was happy to leave Nanking and travel with a gang of officials
up the Grand Canal to Beijing. He knew that his sailors would
scatter up and down the coast, go their ways so they wouldn't have
to see each other and remember; only after years had passed would
they want to meet, so that they could remember the pain when it had
become so distant and faint that they actually wanted it back, just
to feel again they had done all those things, that life had held
all those things.
But for now it was impossible not to feel they had
failed. And so when Kheim was led into the Forbidden City, and
brought before the Wanli Emperor to accept the acclaim of all the
officials there, and the interested and gracious thanks of the
Emperor himself, he said only, 'When a great sea has been crossed,
there is no one to take credit.'
The Wanli Emperor nodded, fingering one of the gold disc
ingots they had brought back, and then the big hummingbird moth of
beaten gold, its feathers and antennae perfectly delineated with
the utmost delicacy and skill. Kheim stared at the Heavenly Envoy,
trying to see in to the hidden Emperor, the Jade Emperor inside
him. Kheim said to him, 'That far country is lost in time, its
streets paved with gold, its palaces roofed with gold. You could
conquer it in a month, and rule over all its immensity, and bring
back all the treasure that it has, endless forest and furs,
turquoise and gold, more gold than there is yet now in the world;
and yet still the greatest treasure in that land is already
lost.'
Snowy peaks, towering over a dark land. The first blinding crack
of sunlight flooding all. He could have made it then
everything was so bright, he could have launched himself into pure
whiteness at that moment and never come back, flowed out for ever
into the All. Release, release. You have to have seen a lot to want
release that much.
But the moment passed and he was on the black stage floor
of the bardo's hall of judgment, on its Chinese side, a nightmare
warren of numbered levels and legal chambers and bureaucrats
wielding lists of souls to be remanded to the care of meticulous
torturers. Above this hellish bureaucracy loomed the usual Tibet of
a dais, occupied by its menagerie of demonic gods, chopping up
condemned souls and chasing the pieces off to hell or a new life in
the realm of preta or beast. The lurid glow, the giant dais like
the side of a mesa towering above, the hallucinatorily colourful
gods roaring and dancing, their swords flashing in the black air;
it was judgment -- an inhuman activity -- not the pot calling the
kettle black, but true judgment, by higher authorities, the makers
of this universe. Who were the ones, after all, that had made
humans as weak and craven and cruel as they so often were -- so
that there was a sense of doom enforced, of loaded dice, karma
lashing out at whatever little pleasures and beauties the miserable
subdivine sentiences might have concocted out of the mud of their
existence. A brave life, fought against the odds? Go back as a dog!
A dogged life, persisting despite all? Go back as a mule, go back
as a worm. That's the way things work.
Thus Kheim reflected as he strode up through the mists in
a growing rage, as he banged through the bureaucrats, smashing them
with their own slates, their lists and tallies, until he caught
sight of Kali and her court, standing in a semi circle
taunting Butterfly, judging her -- as if that poor simple soul had
anything to answer for, compared to these butcher gods and their
cons of evil evil insinuated right into the heart of the
cosmos they themselves had made!
Kheim roared in wordless fury, and charged up and seized
a sword from one of the death goddess's six arms, and cut off a
brace of them with a single stroke; the blade was very sharp. The
arms lay scattered and bleeding on the floor, flopping about --
then, to Kheim's unutterable consternation, they were grasping the
floorboards and moving themselves crabwise by the clenching of the
fingers. Worse yet, new shoulders were growing back behind the
wounds, which still bled copiously. Kheim screamed and kicked them
off the dais, then turned and chopped Kali in half at the waist,
ignoring the other members of his jati who stood up there with
Butterfly, all of them jumping up and down and shouting 'Oh no,
don't do that Kheim, don't do that, you don't understand, you have
to follow protocol,' even I--Chen, who was shouting loudly over the
rest of them, 'At least we might direct our efforts at the dais
struts, or the vials of forgetting, something a little more
technical, a little less direct!' Meanwhile Kali's upper body
fisted itself around the stage, while her legs and waist staggered,
but continued to stand; and the missing halves grew out of the cut
parts like snail horns. And then there were two Kalis advancing on
him, a dozen arms flailing swords.
He jumped off the dais, thumped down on the bare boards
of the cosmos. The rest of his jati crashed down beside him, crying
out in pain at the impact. 'You got us in trouble,' Shen
whined.
'It doesn't work like that,' Butterfly informed him as
they panted off together into the mists. 'I've seen a lot of people
try. They lash out in fury and cut the hideous gods down, and how
they deserve it -- and yet the gods spring back up, redoubled in
other people. A karmic law of this universe, my friend. Like
conservation of yin and yang, or gravity. We live in a universe
ruled by very few laws, but the redoubling of violence by violence
is one of the main ones.'
'I don't believe it,' Kheim said, and stopped to fend off
the two Kalis now pursuing them. He took a hard swing and
decapitated one of the new Kalis. Swiftly another head grew back,
swelling on top of the gusher on the neck of the black body, and
the new white teeth of her new head laughed at him, while her
bloody red eyes blazed. He was in trouble, he saw; he was going to
be backed to pieces. For resisting these evil unjust absurd and
horrible deities he was going to be hacked to pieces and returned
to the world as a mule or a monkey or a maimed old geezer.
Transmutation
Now it so happened that as the time approached for the
great alchemist's red work to reach its culmination, in the final
multiplication, the projection of the sophic hydrolith into the
ferment, causing tincture -- that is to say, the transmuting of
base metals into gold -- the son in law of the alchemist,
one Bahram al Bokhara, ran and jostled through the bazaar of
Samarqand on last minute errands, ignoring the calls of his
various friends and creditors. 'I can't stop,' he called to them,
'I'm late!'
'Late paying your debts!' said Divendi, whose coffee
stall was wedged into a slot next to Iwang's workshop.
'True,' Bahram said, but stopped for a coffee. 'Always
late but never bored.'
'Khalid keeps you hopping.'
'Literally so, yesterday. The big pelican cracked during
a descension, and it all spilled right next to me -- vitriol of
Cyprus mixed with sal ammoniac.'
'Dangerous?'
'Oh my God. Where it splashed on my trousers the cloth
was eaten away, and the smoke was worse. I had to run for my
life!'
'As always.'
'So true. I coughed my guts out, my eyes ran all night.
It was like drinking your coffee.'
'I always make yours from the dregs.'
'I know,' tossing down the last gritty shot. 'So are you
coming tomorrow?'
'To see lead turned into gold? I'll be there.'
Iwang's workshop was dominated by its brick furnace.
Familiar sizzle and smell of bellowed fire, tink of hammer, glowing
molten glass, Iwang twirling the rod attentively: Bahram greeted
the glassblower and silversmith, 'Khalid wants more of the
wolf.'
'Khalid always wants more of the wolf.' Iwang continued
turning his blob of hot glass. Tall and broad and big faced, a
Tibetan by birth, but long a resident of Samarqand, he was one of
Khalid's closest associates. 'Did he send payment this time?'
'Of course not. He said to put it on his tab.'
Iwang pursed his lips. 'He's got too many tabs these
days.'
'All paid after tomorrow. He finished the seven hundred
and seventyseventh distillation.'
Iwang put down his work and went to a wall stacked with
boxes. He handed Bahram a small leather pouch, heavy with small
beads of lead. 'Gold grows in the earth,' he said. 'Al Razi
himself couldn't grow it in a crucible.'
'Khalid would debate that. And Al Razi lived a long
time ago. He couldn't get the heat we can now.'
'Maybe.' Iwang was sceptical. 'Tell him to be
careful.'
'Of burning himself?'
'Of the Khan burning him.'
'You'll be there to see it?'
Iwang nodded reluctantly.
The day of the demonstration came, and for a wonder the
great Khalid Ali Abu al Samarqandi seemed nervous; and Bahram
could understand why. If Sayyed Abdul Aziz Khan, ruler of the
khanate of Bokhara, immensely rich and powerful, chose to support
Khalid's enterprises, all would be well; but he was not a man you
wanted to disappoint. Even his closest adviser, his treasury
secretary Nadir Devanbegi, avoided distressing him at all costs.
Recently, for instance, Nadir had caused a new caravanserai to be
built on the east side of Bokhara, and the Khan had been brought
out for its opening ceremony, and being a bit inattentive by
nature, he had congratulated them for building such a fine
madressa; and rather than correct him on the point, Nadir had
ordered the complex turned into a madressa. That was the kind of
khan Sayyed Abdul Aziz was, and he was the khan to whom Khalid was
going to demonstrate the tincture. It was enough to make
Bahram's stomach tight and his pulse fast, and while Khalid sounded
like he always did, sharp and impatient and sure of himself, Bahram
could see that his face was unusually pale.
But he had worked on the projection for years, and
studied all the alchemical texts he could obtain, including many
bought by Bahram in the Hindu caravanserai, including 'The Book of
the End of the Search' by jildaki, and jabir Ibn Hayyam's 'Book of
Balances', as well as 'The Secret of Secrets', once thought to be
lost, and the Chinese text 'Reference Book for the Penetration of
Reality'; and Khalid had in his extensive workshops the mechanical
capacity to repeat the required distillations at high heat and very
good clarities, all seven hundred and seventy--seven times. Two
weeks earlier he had declared that his final efforts had borne
fruit, and now all was ready for a public demonstration, which of
course had to include regal witnesses to matter.
So Bahram hurried around in Khalid's compound on the
northern edge of Samarqand, sprawling by the banks of the Zeravshan
River, which provided power to the foundries and the various
workshops. The walls of the establishment were ringed by great
heaps of charcoal waiting to be burned, and inside there were a
number of buildings, loosely grouped around the central work area,
a yard dotted with vats and discoloured chemical baths. Several
different stinks combined to form the single harsh smell that was
particular to Khalid's place. He was the khanate's principal
gunpowder producer and metallurgist, among other things, and these
practical enterprises supported the alchemy that was his ruling
passion.
Bahram wove through the clutter, making sure the
demonstration area was ready. The long tables in the
open walled shops were crowded with an orderly array of
equipment; the walls of the shops were neatly hung with tools. The
main athanor was roaring with heat.
But Khalid was not to be found. The puffers had not seen
him; Bahram's wife Esmerine, Khalid's daughter, had not seen him.
The house at the back of the compound seemed empty, and no one
answered Bahram's calls. He began to wonder if Khalid had run away
in fear.
Then Khalid appeared out of the library next to his
study, the only room in the compound with a door that locked.
'There you are,' Bahram said. 'Come on, Father,
Al Razi and Mary the Jewess will be no help to you now. It's
time to show the world the thing itself, the projection.'
Khalid, startled to see him, nodded curtly. 'I was making
the last preparations,' he said. He led Bahram into the furnace
shed, where the geared bellows, powered by the waterwheel on the
river, pumped air into the roaring fires.
The Khan and his party arrived quite late, when much of
the afternoon was spent. Twenty horsemen thundered in, their finery
gleaming, and then a camel train fifty beasts long, all foaming at
the gallop. The Khan dismounted from his white bay and walked
across the yard with Nadir Devanbegi at his side, and several court
officials at their heels.
Khalid's attempt at a formal greeting, including the
presentation of a gift of one of his most cherished alchemical
books, was cut short by Sayyed Adbul Aziz. 'Show us,' the Khan
commanded, taking the book without looking at it.
Khalid bowed. 'The alembic I used is this one here,
called a pelican. The base matter is mostly calcinated lead, with
some mercurials. They have been projected by continuous
distillation and re distillation, until all the matter has
passed through the pelican seven hundred and seventy seven
times. At that point the spirit in the lion well, to put it
in more worldly terms, the gold condenses out at the highest
athanor heat. So, we pour the wolf into this vessel, and put that
in the athanor, and wait for an hour, stirring meanwhile seven
times.'
'Show us.' The Khan was clearly bored by the details.
Without further ado Khalid led them into the furnace
shed, and his assistants opened the heavy thick door of the
athanor, and after allowing the visitors to handle and inspect the
ceramic bowl, Khalid grabbed up tongs and poured the grey
distillate into the bowl, and placed the tray in the athanor and
slid it into the intense heat. The air over the furnace shimmered
as Sayyed Abdul Aziz's mullah said prayers, and Khalid watched the
second hand of his best clock. Every five minutes he gestured to
the puffers, who opened the door and pulled out the tray, at which
point Khalid stirred the liquid metal, now glowing orange, with his
ladle, seven times seven circles, and then back into the heat of
the fire. In the last minutes of the operation, the crackle of the
charcoal was the only sound in the yard. The sweating observers,
including many acquaintances from the town, watched the clock tick
out the last minute of the hour in a silence like that of
sufis in a trance of speechlessness, or like, Bahram thought
uneasily, hawks inspecting the ground far below.
Finally Khalid nodded to the puffers, and he himself
hefted the bowl off the tray with big tongs, and carried it to a
table in the yard, cleared for this demonstration. 'Now we pour off
the dross, great Khan,' paddling the molten lead out of the bowl
into a stone tub on the table. 'And at the bottom we see -- ah . .
.'
He smiled and wiped his forehead with his sleeve,
gestured at the bowl. 'Even when molten it gleams to the eye.'
At the bottom of the bowl the liquid was a darker red.
With a spatula Khalid carefully skimmed off the remaining dross,
and there at the bottom of the bowl lay a cooling mass of liquid
gold.
'We can pour it into a bar mould while it is still soft,'
Khalid said with quiet satisfaction. 'It looks to be perhaps ten
ounces. That would be one seventh of the stock, as predicted.'
Sayyed Abdul Aziz's face shone like the gold. He turned
to his secretary Nadir Devanbegi, who was regarding the ceramic
bowl closely.
Without expression, Nadir gestured for one of the Khan's
guards to come forward. The rest of them rustled behind the
alchemist's crew. Their pikes were still upright, but they were now
at attention.
'Seize the instruments,' Nadir told the head guard.
Three soldiers helped him take possession of all the
tools used in the operation, including the great pelican itself.
When they were all in hand, Nadir went to one guard and took up the
ladle Khalid had used to stir the liquid metals. In a sudden move
he smashed it down on the table. It rang like a bell. He looked
over at Sayyed Abdul Aziz, who stared at his secretary, puzzled.
Nadir gestured with his head to one of the pikemen, then put the
ladle on the table.
'Cut it.'
The pike came down hard, and the ladle was sliced just
above its scoop. Nadir picked up the handle and the scoop and
inspected them. He showed them to the Khan.
'You see -- the shaft is hollow. The gold was in the tube
inside the handle, and when he stirred, the heat melted the gold,
and it slid out and into the lead in the bowl. Then as he continued
to stir, it moved to the bottom of the bowl.'
Bahram looked at Khalid, shocked, and saw that it was true. His
father in law's face was white, and he was no longer
sweating. Already a dead man.
The Khan roared wordlessly, then leaped at Khalid and
struck him down with the book he had been given. He beat him with
the book, and Khalid did not resist.
'Take him!' Sayyed Abdul Aziz shouted at his soldiers.
They picked up Khalid by the arms and dragged him through the dust,
not allowing him to get to his feet, and threw him over a camel. In
a minute they were all gone from the compound, leaving the air
filled with smoke and dust and echoing shouts.
The Mercy of the Khan No one expected Khalid to be
spared after this debacle. His wife Fedwa was in a state of
mourning already, and Esmerine was inconsolable. All the work of
the yard stopped. Bahram fretted in the strange silence of the
empty workshops, waiting to be given the word that they could
collect Khalid's body. He realized he didn't know enough to run the
compound properly.
Eventually the call came; they were ordered to attend the
execution. Iwang joined Bahram for the trip to Bokhara and the
palace there. Iwang was both sad and irritated. 'He should have
asked me, if he was so short of cash. I could have helped him.'
Bahram was a little surprised at this, as Iwang's shop
was a mere hole in the wall of the bazaar, and did not seem so very
prosperous. But he said nothing. When all was said and done he had
loved his father in law, and the black grief he felt left
little room for thinking about Iwang's finances. The impending
violent death of someone that close to him, his wife's father --
she would be distraught for months, perhaps for years -- a man so
full of energy; the prospect emptied him of other thought, and left
him sick with apprehension.
The next day they reached Bokhara, shimmering in the
summer heat, its array of brown and sandy tones capped by its deep
blue and turquoise mosque domes. Iwang pointed at one
minaret. 'The Tower of Death,' he noted. 'They'll probably throw
him off that.'
The sickness grew in Bahram. They entered the cast gate
of the city and made their way to the palace. Iwang explained their
business. Bahram wondered if they too would be taken and killed as
accomplices. This had not occurred to him before, and he was
shaking as they were led into a room that opened onto the palace
grounds.
Nadir Devanbegi arrived shortly thereafter. He looked at
them with his usual steady gaze: a short elegant man, black goatee,
pale blue eyes, a sayyed himself, and very wealthy.
' You are said to be as great an alchemist as Khalid,'
Nadir said abruptly to Iwang. 'Do you believe in the philosopher's
stone, in projection, in all the so called red work? Can base
metals be transmuted to gold?'
Iwang cleared his throat. 'Hard to say, effendi. I cannot
do it, and the adepts who claimed they could, never said precisely
how in their writing. Not in ways that I can use.'
'Use,' Nadir repeated. 'That's a word I want to
emphasize. People like you and Khalid have knowledge that the Khan
might use. Practical things, like gunpowder that is more
predictable in power. Or stronger metallurgy, or more effective
medicine. These could be real advantages in the world. To waste
such abilities on fraud ... Naturally the Khan is very angry.'
Iwang nodded, looking down.
'I have spoken with him at length about this matter,
reminding him of Khalid's distinction as an armourer and alchemist.
His past contributions as master of--arms. His many other
services to the Khan. And the Khan in his wisdom has decided to
show a mercy that Mohammed himself must have approved.'
Iwang looked up.
'He will be allowed to live, if he promises to work for
the khanate on things that are real.'
' I am sure he will agree to that,' Iwang said. 'That is
merciful indeed.'
'Yes. He will of course have his right hand chopped off
for thievery, as the law requires. But considering the effrontery
of his crime, this is a very light punishment indeed. As he himself
has admitted.'
The punishment was administered later that day, a Friday, after
the market and before prayers, in the great plaza of Bokhara, by
the side of the central pool. A big crowd gathered to witness it.
They were in high spirits as Khalid was led out by guards from the
palace, dressed in white robes as if celebrating Ramadan. Many of
the Bokharis shouted abuse at Khalid, as a Samarqandi as well as a
thief.
He knelt before Sayyed Abdul Aziz, who proclaimed the
mercy of Allah, and of he himself, and of Nadir Devanbegi for
arguing to spare the miscreant's life for his heinous fraud.
Khalid's arm, looking from a distance like a bird's scrawny leg and
claw, was lashed to the executioner's block. Then a soldier hefted
a big axe overhead and dropped it on Khalid's wrist. Khalid's hand
fell from the block and blood spurted onto the sand. The crowd
roared. Khalid toppled onto his side, and the soldiers held him
while one applied hot pitch from a pot on a brazier, using a short
stick to plaster the black stuff to the end of the stump.
Bahram and Iwang took him back to Samarqand, laid out in
the back of Iwang's bullock cart, which Iwang had had built in
order to move weights of metal and glass that camels couldn't
carry. It bumped horribly over the road, which was a broad dusty
track worn in the earth by centuries of camel traffic between the
two cities. The big wooden wheels jounced in every dip and over
every hump, and Khalid groaned in the back, semi conscious and
breathing stertorously, his left hand holding his pallid, burned
right wrist. Iwang had forced an opium laced potion down him,
and if it hadn't been for his groans it would have seemed he was
asleep.
Bahram regarded the new stump with a sickened
fascination. Seeing the left hand clutching the wrist, he said to
Iwang, 'He'll have to eat with his left hand. Do everything with
his left hand. He'll be unclean for ever.'
'That kind of cleanliness doesn't matter.'
They had to sleep by the road, as darkness caught them
out. Bahram sat by Khalid, and tried to get him to eat some of
Iwang's soup. 'Come on, Father. Come on, old man. Eat something and
you'll feel better. When you feel better it'll be all right.' But
Khalid only groaned and rolled from side to side. In the darkness,
under the great net of stars, it seemed to Bahram that everything
in their lives had been ruined.
Effect of the Punishment
But as Khalid recovered, it seemed that he didn't see it
that way. He boasted to Bahram and Iwang about his behaviour during
his punishment: 'I never said a word to any of them, and I had
tested my limits in jail, to see how long I could hold my breath
without fainting, so when I saw the time was near I simply held my
breath, and I timed it so well that I was fainting anyway when the
stroke fell. I never felt a thing. I don't even remember it.'
'We do,' said Iwang, frowning.
'Well, it was happening to me,' Khalid said sharply.
'Fine. You can use the method again when they chop off
your head. You can teach it to us for when they throw us off the
Tower of Death.'
Khalid stared at him. 'You're angry with me, I see.'
Truculent and hurt in his feelings.
Iwang said, 'You could have got us all killed. Sayyed
Abdul would command it without a second thought. If it weren't for
Nadir Devanbegi, it might have happened. You should have talked to
me. To Bahram here, and to me. We could have helped you.'
' Why were you in such trouble, anyway?' asked Bahram,
embold ened by Iwang's reproaches. 'Surely the works here
make a lot of money for you.'
Khalid sighed, ran his stump over his balding head. He
got up and went to a locked cabinet, unlocked it and drew out a
book and a box.
'This came from the Hindu caravanserai two years ago,' he
told them, showing them the book's old pages. 'It's the work of
Mary the Jewess, a very great alchemist. Very ancient. Her formula
for projection was very convincing, I thought. I needed only the
right furnaces, and a lot of sulphur and mercury. So I paid a lot
for the book, and for the preparations. And once in debt to the
Armenians, it only got worse. After that, I needed the gold to pay
for the gold.' He shrugged with disgust.
'You should have said so,' Iwang repeated, glancing
through the old book.
'You should always let me do the trading at the
caravanserai,' Bahram added. 'They know you really want things,
while I am ignorant, and so trade from the strength of
indifference.'
Khalid frowned.
Iwang tapped the book. 'This is just warmed over
Aristotle. You can't trust him to tell you anything useful. I've
read the translations out of Baghdad and Sevilla, and I judge he's
wrong more often than he's right.'
'What do you mean?' Khalid cried indignantly. Even Bahram
knew Aristotle was the wisest of the ancients, the supreme
authority for all alchemists.
'Where is he not wrong?' Iwang said dismissively. 'The
least country doctor in China can do more for you than Aristotle
can. He thought the heart did the thinking, he didn't know it
pumped the blood he has no idea of the spleen or the
meridian lines, and he never says a word about the pulse or the
tongue. He did some fair dissections of animals, but never
dissected a human as far as I can tell. Come with me to the bazaar
and I can show you five things he got wrong, any Friday you
like.'
Khalid was frowning. 'Have you read Al Farudi's
"Harmony Between Aristotle and Plato"?'
'Yes, but that is a harmony that can't be made.
Al Farudi only made the attempt because he didn't have
Aristotle's "Biology". If he knew that work, he would see that for
Aristotle it all remains material. His four elements all try to
reach their levels, and as they try, our world results. Obviously
it's not that simple.' He gestured around at the bright dusty day
and the clangour of Khalid's shop, the mills, the waterworks
powering the big blast furnaces, the noise and movement. 'The
Platonists knew that. They know it is all mathematical. Things
happen by number. They should be called Pythagoreans, to be
accurate. They are like Buddhists, in that for them the world is
alive. As is obviously the case. A great creature of creatures. For
Aristotle and Ibn Rashd, it's more like a broken clock.'
Khalid grumbled at this, but he was not in a good
position to argue. His philosophy had been cut off with his
hand.
He was often in some pain, and smoked hashish and drank
Iwang's opiated potions to dull the pain, which also dulled his
wits, which dulled his spirits. He could not leap in to teach the
boys the proper uses of the machinery; he could not shake people's
hands, or cat with others, having only his unclean hand left to him; he was
permanently unclean. That was part of the punishment.
The realization of this, and the shattering of all his
philosophical and alchemical inquiries, finally caught up with him,
and cast him into a melancholia. He left his sleeping quarters late
in the mornings, and moped around the works watching all the
activity like a ghost of himself. There everything continued much
as it had before. The great mills wheeled on the river's current,
powering the ore stamps and the bellows of the blast furnaces. The
crews of workers came in directly after the morning prayers, making
their marks on the sheets that kept record of their work hours,
then scattering through the compound to shovel salt or sift
saltpetre, or perform any other of the hundred activities that
Khalid's enterprises demanded, under the supervision of the group
of old artisans who had helped Khalid to organize the various
works.
But all this was known, accomplished, routinized, and
meant nothing to Khalid any more. Wandering around aimlessly or
sitting in his study, surrounded by his collections like a magpie
in its nest with a broken wing, he would stare at nothing for
hours, or else page through his manuscripts, Al Razid and
jildaki and jami, looking at who knew what. He would flick a finger
against the objects of wonder that used to fascinate him so -- a
chunk of pitted coral, a unicorn horn, ancient Indian coins, nested
polygons of ivory and horn, a goblet made of a rhinoceros horn
chased with gold leaf, stone shells, a tiger legbone, a gold tiger
statue, a laughing Buddha made of some unidentified black material,
Nipponese netsuke, forks and crucifixes from the lost civilization
of Frengistan -- all these objects, which used to give him such
delight, and which he would discuss for hours in a manner that grew
tedious to his regulars, now only seemed to irritate him. He sat
amid his treasures and he was no longer on the hunt, as Bahram used
to think of it, seeking resemblances, making conjectures and
speculations. Bahram had not understood before how important this
was to him.
As his mood grew blacker, Bahram went to the sufi ribat
in the Registan, and asked Ali, the sufi master in charge of the
place, about it. 'Mowlana, he has been punished worse than he
thought at first. He's no longer the same man.'
'He is the same soul,' said Ali. 'You are simply seeing
another aspect of him. There is a secret core in everyone that not
even Gabriel can know by trying to know. Listen now. The intellect
derives from the senses, which are limited, and come from the body.
The intellect therefore is also limited, and it can never truly
know reality, which is infinite and eternal. Khalid wanted to know
reality with his intellect, and he can't. Now he knows that, and is
downcast. Intellect has no real mettle, you see, and at the first
threat, into a hole it scuttles. But love is divine. It comes from
the realm of the infinite, and is entrusted to the heart as a gift
from God. Love has no calculating in it. "God loves you" is the
only possible sentence! So it's love you must follow to the heart
of your father in law. Love is the pearl of an oyster
living in the ocean, and intellect lives on the shore and cannot
swim. Bring up the oyster, sew the pearl onto your sleeve for all
to see. It will bring courage to the intellect. Love is the king
that must rescue his coward slave. Do you understand?'
'I think so.'
'You must be sincere and open, your love must be bright
as the lightning flash itself! Then his inner consciousness might
see it, and be snatched from itself in a twinkling. Go, feel the
love course through you, and out to him.'
Bahram tried this strategy. Waking in his bed with
Esmerine, he felt the love rising in him, for his wife and her
beautiful body, the child after all of the mutilated old man he
regarded so fondly. Full of love, he would make his way through the
workshops or into town, feeling the cool of the springtime air on
his skin, and the trees around the pools would gleam dustily, like
great living jewels, and the intense white clouds would accentuate
the deep blue of the sky, echoed underneath by the turquoise and
cobalt tiles of the mosque domes.
Beautiful town on a beautiful morning, at the very centre
of the world and the bazaar its usual massed chaos of noise and
colour, all human intercourse there to be seen at once, and yet
pointless as an anthill, unless it was infused with love. Everyone
did what they did for love of the people in their lives, day after
day -- or so it seemed to Bahram on those mornings, as he took on
more of Khalid's old assignments at the compound -- and in the
nights too, as Esmerine enfolded him.
But he could not seem to convey this apprehension to
Khalid. The old man snarled at any expression of high spirits, much
less love, and became irritated at any gesture of affection, not
just from Bahram but from his wife Fedwa, or Esmerine, or
Bahram and Esmerine's children, Fazi and Laila, or anyone else. The
bustle of the workshops would surround them in the sunlight with
their clangour and stink, all the protocols of metalworking and
gunpowder making that Khalid had formulated going on before them as
if in a giant loud dance, and Bahram would make a gesture
encompassing it all and say, 'Love fills all this so full!' and
Khalid would snarl, 'Shut up! Don't be a fool!'
One day he slammed out of his study with his single hand
holding two of his old alchemical texts, and threw them into the
door of a blazing athanor. 'Complete nonsense,' he replied bitterly
when Bahram cried out for him to stop. 'Get out of my way, I'm
burning them all.'
'But why?' Bahram cried. 'Those are your books! Why, why,
why?'
Khalid took a lump of dusty cinnabar in his one hand, and
shook it before Bahram. 'Why? I'll tell you why! Look at this! All
the great alchemists, from jabir to al Razi to Ibn Sina, all
agree that all the metals are various combinations of sulphur and
mercury. Iwang says the Chinese and Hindu alchemists agree on this
matter. But when we combine sulphur and mercury, as pure as we can
make them, we get exactly this: cinnabar! What does that mean? The
alchemists who actually speak to this problem, who are very few I
might add, say that when they talk about sulphur and mercury, they
don't really mean the substances we usually call sulphur and
mercury, but rather purer elements of dryness and moisture, that
are like sulphur and mercury, but finer! Well!' He threw the chunk
of cinnabar across the yard at the river. 'What use is that? Why
even call them that? Why believe anything they say?' He waved his
stump at his study and alchemical workshop, and all the apparatus
littering the yard outside. 'It's all so much junk. We don't know
anything. They never knew what they were talking about.'
'All right, Father, maybe so, but don't burn the books!
There may be something useful in some of them, you need to make
distinctions. And besides, they were expensive.'
Khalid only snarled and made the sound of spitting.
Bahram told Iwang about this incident the next time he
was in town. 'He burned a lot of books. I couldn't talk him out of
it. I try to get him to see the love filling everything, but he
doesn't see it.'
The big Tibetan blew air through his lips like a camel.
'That approach will never work with Khalid,' he said. 'It's easy
for you to be full of love, being young and whole. Khalid is old
and one handed. He is out of balance, yin and yang are
disarranged. Love has nothing to do with it.' Iwang was no
sufi.
Bahram sighed. 'Well, I don't know what to do then. You
need to help me, Iwang. He's going to burn all his books and
destroy all his apparatus, and then who knows what will happen to
him.'
Iwang grumbled something inaudible.
'what?'
'I'll think it over. Give me some time.'
'There isn't much time. He'll break all the apparatus
next.'
Aristotle was Wrong
The very next day Khalid ordered the blacksmith
apprentices to move everything in the alchemical shops out into the
yard to be destroyed. He had a black and wild look as he watched it
all shed dust in the sunlight. Sand baths, water baths, descensory
furnaces, stills, cucurbits, flasks, alumbixes, alembics with
double or even triple spouts; all stood in a haze of antique dust.
The largest battery alembic had last been used for distilling
rose water, and seeing it Khalid snorted. 'That's the only thing we
could make work. All this stuff, and we made rose water.'
Mortars and pestles, phials, flasks, basins and beakers,
glass crystallizing dishes, jugs, casseroles, candle lamps,
naphtha lamps, braziers, spatulas, tongs, ladles, shears,
hammers, aludels, funnels, miscellaneous lenses, filters of hair,
cloth and linen: finally everything was out in the sun. Khalid
waved it all away. 'Burn it all, or if it won't burn, break it up
and throw it in the river.'
But just then Iwang arrived, carrying a small
glass and silver mechanism. He frowned when he saw the
display. 'Some of this you could at least sell,' he said to Khalid.
'Don't you still have debts?'
'I don't care,' Khalid said. 'I won't sell lies.'
'It's not the apparatus that lies,' Iwang said. 'Some of
this stuff could prove very useful.'
Khalid glared at him blackly. Iwang decided to change the
subject, and raised his device to Khalid's attention. 'I brought
you a toy that refutes all Aristotle.'
Surprised, Khalid examined the thing. Two iron balls sat
in an arna ture that looked to Bahram like one of the
waterwheel triphammers in miniature.
'Water poured here will weight the rocker, here, and the
two doors are one, and open at the same time. One side can't open
before the other, see?'
'Of course.'
'Yes, obvious, but consider, Aristotle says that a
heavier mass will fall faster than a lighter mass, because it has
more of the predilection to join the Earth. But look. Here are the
two iron balls, one big and one small, heavy and light. Place them
on the doors, set the device level, using a bubble level, high on
your outside wall, where there is a good distance to fall. A
minaret would be better, the Tower of Death would be better yet,
but even from your wall it will work.'
They did as he suggested, Khalid climbing the ladder
slowly to inspect the arrangement.
'Now, pour water in the funnel, and watch.'
The water filled the lower basin until the doors suddenly
fell open. The two balls fell. They hit the ground at the same
time.
'Ho,' Khalid said, and clambered down the ladder to
retrieve the balls and try it again, after hefting them, and even
weighing them precisely on one of his scales.
'You see?' Iwang said. 'You can do it with balls of
unequal size or the same size , it doesn't matter. Everything falls
at the same rate, except if it is so light and broad, like a
feather, that it floats down on the air.'
Khalid tried it again.
Iwang said, 'So much for Aristotle.'
'Well,' said Khalid, looking at the balls, then lofting
them in his left hand. 'He could be wrong about this and right
about other things.'
'No doubt. But everything he says has to be tested, if
you ask me, and also compared with what Hsing Ho and Al Razi
say, and the Hindus. Demonstrated to be true or false, in the full
light of day.'
Khalid was nodding. 'I would have some questions, I
admit.'
Iwang gestured at the alchemical equipment in the yard.
'It's the same for all this -- you could test them, see what's
useful and what's not.'
Khalid frowned. Iwang returned his attention to the
falling balls. The two men dropped a number of different items from
the device, chattering away all the while.
'Look, something has to be bringing them down,' Khalid
said at one point. 'Bringing them, forcing them, drawing them, what
have you.'
'Of course,' said Iwang. 'Things happen by causes. An
attraction must be caused by an agent, acting according to certain
laws. What the agent might be, however . . .'
'But this is true of everything,' Khalid said, muttering.
'We know nothing, that's what it comes down to. We live in
darkness.'
'Too many conjoined factors,' Iwang said.
Khalid nodded, hefting a carved block of ironwood in his
hand. 'I'm tired of it, though.'
'So we try things. You do something, you get something
else. It looks like a causal chain. Describable as a logical
sequence, even as a mathematical operation. So that you might say,
reality manifests itself thus. Without worrying too much about
defining what force it is.'
'Perhaps love is the force,' Bahram offered. 'The same
attraction as of persons to persons, extended between things in a
general way.'
'It would explain how one's member rises away from the
Earth,' Iwang said with a smile.
Bahram laughed, but Khalid said only, 'A joke. What I am
speaking of could not be less like love. It is as constant as the
stars in their places, a physical force.'
'The sufis say that love is a force, filling everything,
impelling everything.'
'The sufis,' Khalid said scornfully. 'Those are the last
people on Earth I would consult if I wanted to know how the world
works. They moon about love and drink lots of wine and spin
themselves. Bah! Islam was an intellectual discipline before the
sufis came along, studying the world as it is, we had Ibn Sina and
Ibn Rashd and Ibn Khaldun and all the rest, and then the sufis
appeared and there hasn't been a single Muslim philosopher or
scholar since then who has advanced our understanding of things by
a single whit.'
'They have too,' Bahram said. 'They've made it clear how
important love is in the world.'
'Love, oh yes, all is love, God is love, but if
everything is love and all is one with Allah, then why do they have
to get so drunk every day?'
Iwang laughed. Bahram said, 'They don't really, you
know.'
'They do! And the good fellowship halls fill up with good
fellows looking for a good time, and the madressas grow emptier,
and the khans give them less, and here we are in the year 1020
arguing over the ideas of the ancient Frengis, without a single
idea why things act the way they do. We know nothing! Nothing!'
'We have to start small,' Iwang said.
'We can't start small! Everything is all tied
together!'
'Well, then we need to isolate one set of actions that we
can see and control, and then study that, and see if we can
understand it. Then work onwards from there. Something like this
falling, just the simplest movement. If we understood movement, we
could study its manifestations in other things.'
Khalid thought about that. He had finally stopped
dropping things through the device.
'Come here with me,' Iwang said. 'Let me show you
something that makes me curious.'
They followed him towards the shop containing the big
furnaces. 'See how you obtain such hot fires now. Your waterworks
drive the bellows faster than any number of puffers ever could, and
the heat of the fire is accordingly higher. Now, Aristotle says
fire is trapped in wood, and released by heat. Fair enough, but why
does more air inake the fire burn hotter? Why does wind drive a
wildfire so? Does it mean air is essential to fire? Could we find
out? If we built a chamber in which the air was pulled out by the
bellows rather than pushed in, would the fire burn less?'
'Suck air out of a chamber?' Khalid said.
'Yes. Arrange a valve that lets air out but won't let it
back in. Pump out what's there, and then hold any replacement air
out.'
'Interesting! But what would remain in the chamber
then?'
Iwang shrugged. 'I don't know. A void? A piece of the
original void, perhaps? Ask the lamas about that, or your sufis. Or
Aristotle. Or just make a glass chamber, and look in it.'
' I will,' Khalid said.
'And motion is easiest of all to study,' Iwang said. 'We
can try all manner of things with motion. We can time this
attraction of things to the Earth. We can see if the speed is the
same up in the hills and down in the valleys. Things speed up as
they fall, and this might be measurable too. Light itself might be
measurable. Certainly the angles of refraction are constant, I've
measured those already.'
Khalid was nodding. 'First this reverse bellows, to empty
a chamber. Although surely it cannot be a true void that results.
Nothingness is not possible in this world, I think. There will be
something in there, thinner than air.'
'That is more Aristotle,' Iwang
said. Natureabhors the void." But what if it
doesn't? We will only know when we try.'
Khalid nodded. If he had had two hands he would have been
rubbing them together.
The three of them walked out to the waterworks. Here a
canal brought a hard flow from the river, its gliding surface
gleaming in the morning light. The water powered a mill, which
geared out to axles turning a bank of heavy metal working
hammers and stamps, and finally the rotating bellows handles that
powered the blast furnaces. It was a noisy place, filled with
sounds of falling water, smashed rock, roaring fire, singed air;
all the elements raging with transmutation, hurting their cars and
leaving a burnt smell in the air. Khalid stood watching the
waterworks for a while. This was his achievement, he was the one
who had organized all the artisans' skills into this enormous
articulated machine, so much more powerful than people or horses
had ever been. They were the most powerful people in all the
history of the world, Bahram thought, because of Khalid's
enterprise; but with a wave Khalid dismissed it all. He wanted to
understand why it worked.
He led the other two back to the shop. 'We'll need your
glassblowing, and my leather and iron workers,' he said. 'The valve
you mention could perhaps be made of sheep intestines.'
'It might have to be stronger than that,' said Iwang. 'A
metal gate of some sort, pressed into a leather gasket by the suck
of the void.'
'Yes.'
No Jinn in This Bottle
Khalid set his artisans to the task, and Iwang did the
glassblowing, and after a few weeks they had a two part
mechanism: a thick glass globe to be emptied, and a powerful pump
to empty it. There were any number of collapses, leaks and valve
failures, but the old mechanists of the compound were ingenious,
and attacking the points of failure, they ended up with five very
similar versions of the device, all very heavy. The pump was
massive and lathed to newly precise fits of plunger, tube and
valves; the glass globes were thick flasks, with necks even
thicker, and knobs on the inside surfaces from which objects could
be hung, to see what would happen to them when the air in the globe
was evacu ated. When they solved the leakage problems, they
had to build a rackand pinion device to exert enough force on
the pump to evacuate the final traces of air from the globe. Iwang
advised them not to create such a perfect void that they ended up
sucking in the pump, the compound, or perchance the whole world,
like jinni returning to their confinement; and as always, Iwang's
stone face did not give them any clue as to whether he was joking
or serious.
When they had the mechanisms working fairly reliably
(occasionally one would still crack its glass, or break a valve),
they set one on a wooden frame, and Khalid began a sequence of
trials, inserting things in the glass globes, pumping out the air,
and seeing what resulted. All philosophical questions on the nature
of what remained inside the globe after the air was removed, he now
refused to address. 'Let's just see what happens,' he said. 'It is
what it is.' He kept big blank paged books on the table beside
the apparatus, and he or his clerks recorded every detail of the
trials, timing them on his best clock.
After a few weeks of learning the apparatus and trying
things, he asked Iwang and Bahram to arrange a small party,
inviting several of the qadi and teachers from the madressas in the
Registan, particularly the mathematicians and astronomers of Sher
Dor Madressa, who were already involved in discussions of ancient
Greek and classical caliphate notions of physical reality. On the
appointed day, when all those invited had gathered in the
open walled workshop next to Khalid's study, Khalid introduced
the apparatus to them, describing how it worked and indicating what
they could all see, that he had hung an alarm clock from a knob
inside the glass globe, so that it swung freely at the end of a
short length of silk thread. Khalid cranked the piston of the
rack and pinion down twenty times, working hard with his
left arm. He explained that the alarm clock was set to go off at
the sixth hour of the afternoon, shortly after the evening prayers
would be sung from Samarqand's northernmost minaret.
'To be sure the alarm is truly sounding,' Khalid said,
'we have exposed the clapper, so that you can see it hitting the
bells. I will also introduce air back into the globe little by
little, after we have seen the first results, so you can hear for
yourself the effect.'
He was gruff and direct. Bahram saw that he wanted to
distance himself from the portentous, magical style he had affected
during his alchemical transmutations. He made no claims, spoke no
incantations. The memory of his last disastrous demonstration --
his fraud must have been in his mind, as it was in everyone
else's. But he merely gestured with his hand at the clock, which
advanced steadily towards six.
Then the clock began to spin on its thread, and the
clapper was visibly smashing back and forth between the little
brass bells. But there was no sound coming from the glass. Khalid
gestured: 'You might think that the glass itself is stopping the
sound, but when the air is let back into the flask, you will see
that it isn't so. First I invite you to put your car to the glass,
so you can confirm that there is no sound at all.'
They did so one by one. Then Khalid unscrewed a stopcock
that released a valve set in the side of the flask, and a brief
penetrating hiss was joined by the muted banging of the alarm,
which grew louder quickly, until it sounded much like an alarm
heard from an adjoining room.
'It seems there is no sound without air to convey it,'
Khalid commented.
The visitors from the madressa were eager to inspect the
apparatus, and to discuss its uses in trials of various sorts, and
to speculate about what, if anything, remained in the globe when
the air was pumped out. Khalid was adamant in his refusal to
discuss this question, preferring to talk about what the
demonstration seemed to be indicating about the nature of sound and
its transmission.
'Echoes might elucidate this matter in another way,' one
of the qadis said. He and all the other visiting witnesses were
bright eyed, pleased, intrigued. 'Something strikes air,
pushes it, and the sound is a shock moving through the air, like
waves across water. They bounce back, like waves in water bounce
when they strike a wall. It takes time for this movement to cross
the intervening space, and thus echoes.'
Bahram said, 'With the aid of an echoing cliff we could
perhaps time the speed of sound.'
'The speed of sound!' Iwang said. 'Very nice!'
'A capital idea, Bahram,' Khalid said. He checked to make
sure his clerk was noting all done or said. He unscrewed the
stopcock all the way and removed it, so that they all heard the
noisy clanging of the alarm as he reached into the flask to turn
off the device. It was strange that the clapper should have been so
silent before. He rubbed his scalp with his right wrist. 'I
wonder,' he said, 'if we could establish a speed for light too,
using the same principle.'
'How would it echo?' Bahram asked.
'Well, if it were aimed at a distant mirror, say ... a
lantern unveiled, a distant mirror, a clock that one could read
very precisely, or start and stop, even better ...'
Iwang was shaking his head. 'The mirror might have to be
very far away to give the recorder time to determine an interval,
and then the lantern flash would not be visible unless the mirror
were perfectly angled.'
'Make a person the mirror,' Bahram suggested. 'When the
person on the far hill sees the first lantern light, he reveals
his, and a person next to the first person times the appearance of
the second light.'
'Very good,' several people said at once. Iwang added,
'It may still be too fast.'
'It remains to be seen,' Khalid said cheerfully. 'A
demonstration will clarify the issue.'
With that Esmerine and Fedwa wheeled in the ice tray and
its 'demonstration of sherbets' as Iwang termed it, and the crowd
fell to, talking happily, Iwang speaking of the thin sound of
goraks in the high Himalaya where the air itself was thin, and so
on.
The Khan Confronts the Void
So Iwang brought Khalid back out of his black melancholy,
and Bahram saw the wisdom of Iwang's approach to the matter. Every
day now, Khalid woke up in a hurry to get things done. The
businesses of the compound were given over to Bahram and Fedwa and
the old hands heading each of the shops, and Khalid was distracted
and uninterested if they came to him with matters of that sort. All
his time was taken by conceiving, planning, executing and recording
his demonstrations with the void pump, and later with other
equipment and phenomena. They went to the great western city wall
at dawn when all was quiet, and timed the sound of wood blocks
slapped together and their returning echoes, measuring their
distance from the wall with a length of string one third of an li
long. Iwang did the calculations, and soon declared that the speed
of sound was something like two thousand li an hour, a speed that
everyone marvelled at. 'About fifty times faster than the fastest
horse,' Khalid said, regarding Iwang's figures happily.
'And yet light will be much faster,' Iwang predicted.
'We will find out.'
Meanwhile Iwang was puzzling over the figures. 'There
remains the question of whether sound slows down as it moves along.
Or speeds up for that matter. But presumably it would slow, if it
did anything, as the air resisted the shock.'
'Noise gets quieter the further away it is,' Bahram
pointed out. 'Maybe it gets quieter rather than slower.'
'But why would that be?' Khalid asked, and then he and
Iwang were into a deep discussion of sound, movement, causation and
action at a distance. Quickly Bahram was out of his depth, being no
philosopher, and indeed Khalid did not like the metaphysical aspect
of the discussion, and concluded as he always did these days: 'We
will test it.'
Iwang was agreeable. Ruminating over his figures, he
said, 'We need a mathematics that could deal not only with fixed
speeds, but with the speed of the change of a speed. I wonder if
the Hindus have considered this.' He often said that the Hindu
mathematicians were the most advanced in the world, very far ahead
of the Chinese. Khalid had long ago given him access to all
the books of mathematics in his study, and Iwang spent many hours
in there reading, or making obscure calculations and drawings, on
slates with chalk.
The news of their void pump spread, and they frequently
met with the interested parties in the madressas, usually the
masters teaching mathematics and natural philosophy. These meetings
were often contentious, but everyone kept to the ostentatiously
formal disputation style of the madressa's theolo ical debates.
Meanwhile the Hindu caravanserai frequently sheltered
booksellers, and these men called Bahram over to have a look at old
scrolls, leatheror wood bound books, or boxes of
loose leaved pages. 'Old One Hand will be interested in
what this Brahmagupta has to say about the size of the earth, I
assure you,' they would say grinning, knowing that Bahram could not
judge.
'This one here is the wisdom of a hundred generations of
Buddhist monks, all killed by the Mughals.'
'This one is the compiled knowledge of the lost Frengis,
of Archimedes and Euclid.'
Bahram would look through the pages as if he could tell,
buying for the most part by bulk and antiquity, and the frequent
appearance of numbers, especially Hindu numbers, or the Tibetan
ticks that only Iwang could decipher. If he thought Khalid and
Iwang would be interested, he haggled with a firmness based on
ignorance, 'Look this isn't even in Arabic or Hindi or Persian or
Sanskrit, I don't even recognize this alphabet! How is Khalid to
make anything of this?'
'Oh, but this is from the Deccan, Buddhists everywhere
can read it, your Iwang will be very happy to learn this!'
Or, 'This is the alphabet of the Sikhs, their last guru
invented an alphabet for them, it's a lot like Sanskrit, and the
language is a form of Punjabi,' and so on. Bahram came home with
his finds, nervous at having spent good money on dusty tomes
incomprehensible to him, and Khalid and Iwang would inspect them,
and either page through them like vultures, congratulating Bahram
on his judgment and haggling skills, or else Khalid would curse him
for a fool while Iwang stared at him, marvelling that he could not
identify a Travancori accounting book full of shipping invoices
(this was the Deccan volume that any Buddhist could read).
Other attention drawn by their new device was not so welcome.
One morning Nadir Devanbegi appeared at the gate with some of the
Khan's guards. Khalid's servant Paxtakor ushered them across the
compound, and Khalid, carefully impassive and hospitable, ordered
coffee brought to his study.
Nadir was as friendly as could be, but soon came to the
point. 'I argued to the Khan that your life be spared because you
are a great scholar, philosopher and alchemist, an asset to the
khanate, a jewel of Samarqand's great glory.'
Khalid nodded uncomfortably, looking at his coffee cup.
He lifted a finger briefly, as if to say, Enough, and then
muttered, 'I am grateful, effendi.'
'Yes. Now it is clear that I was right to argue for your
life, as word comes to us of your many activities, and wonderful
investigations.'
Khalid looked up at him to see if he were being mocked,
and Nadir lifted a palm to show his sincerity. Khalid looked down
again.
'But I came here to remind you that all these fascinating
trials take place in a dangerous world. The khanate lies at the
centre of all the trade routes in the world, with armies in all
directions. The Khan is concerned to protect his subjects from
attack, and yet we hear of cannon that would reduce our cities'
walls in a week or less. The Khan wishes you to help him with this
problem. He is sure you will be happy to bring him some small part
of the fruits of your learning, to help him to defend the
khanate.'
'All my trials are the Khan's,' Khalid said seriously.
'My every breath is the Khan's.'
Nadir nodded his acknowledgement of this truth. 'And yet
you did not invite him to your demonstration with this pump that
creates a void in the air.'
'I did not think he would be interested in such a small
matter.'
'The Khan is interested in everything.'
None of them could tell by Nadir's face whether he was
joking or not.
'We would be happy to display the void pump to him.'
'Good. That would be appreciated. But remember also that
he wishes specific help with cannonry, and with defence against
cannonry.'
Khalid nodded. 'We will honour his wish, effendi.'
After Nadir was gone, Khalid grumbled unhappily.
'Interested in everything! How can he say that and not laugh!'
Nevertheless he sent a servant with a formal invitation to the
Khan, to witness the new apparatus. And before the visit occurred
he had the whole compound at work, developing a new demonstration
of the pump which he hoped would impress the Khan.
When Sayyed Abdul Aziz and his retinue made their visit,
the globe that was to hold the void this time was made of two half
globes, one edge mortised to fit the other precisely, with a thin
oiled leather gasket placed between the two before the air was
pumped out of the space between them, and thick steel braces for
each globe, to which ropes could be tied.
Sayyed Abdul sat on his cushions and inspected the two
halves of the globe closely. Khalid explained to him: 'When the air
is removed, the two halves of the globe will adhere together with
great strength.' He placed the halves together, pulled them apart;
placed them together again, screwed the pump into the one that had
the hole for it, and gestured for Paxtakor to wind the pump out and
in and out again, ten times. Then he brought the device over to the
Khan, and invited him to try to pull the two halves of the globe
apart.
It could not be done. The Khan looked bored. Khalid took
the device out to the central yard of the compound, where two teams
of three horses each were held waiting. Their draft harnesses were
hooked to the two sides of the globe, and the horses led apart
until the globe hung in the air between them. When the horses were
steadied, still facing away from each other, the horseboys cracked
their whips, and the two teams of horses snorted and shoved and
skipped as they attempted to pull away; they skittered sideways,
shifted, struggled, and all the while the globe hung from the
quivering horizontal ropes. The globe could not be pulled apart;
even little charges made by the horse teams only brought them up
short, staggering.
The Khan watched the horses with interest, but the globe
he seemed to disregard. After a few minutes of straining, Khalid
had the horses stopped, and he unhooked the apparatus and brought
it over to the Khan and Nadir and their group. When he unscrewed
the stopcock, the air hissed back into the globe, and the two
halves came apart as easily as slices of an orange. Khalid stripped
out the smashed leather gasket.
'You see,' he said, 'it was the force of the air, or rather the
pull of the void, that kept the halves together so strongly.'
The Khan got up to leave, and his retainers rose with
him. It seemed he was almost falling asleep. 'So?' he said. 'I want
to blow my enemies apart, not hold them together.' With a wave of
his hand he left.
Inside the Night, Inside the Light
This unenthusiastic response on the part of the Khan
worried Bahram. No interest in an apparatus that had fascinated the
scholars of the madressa; instead, a command to discover some new
weapon or fortification that had eluded the hard search of all the
armourers of all the ages. And if they failed, the possible
punishments were only too easy to imagine. Khalid's absent hand
mocked them from its own kind of void. Khalid would stare at the
end of his wrist and say, 'Someday all of me will look like
you.'
Now he merely looked around the compound. 'Tell Paxtakor
to obtain new cannon from Nadir for testing. Three at each weight,
and all manner of powder and shot.'
'We have powder here.'
'Of course.' A withering glare: 'I want to see what they
have that is not ours.'
In the days that followed, he revisited all the old
buildings of the compounds, the ones he and his old ironmongers had
built when they were first making guns and gunpowder for the Khan.
In those days, before he and his men had followed the Chinese
system and connected the power of their waterwheel to the furnaces,
making their first riverpowered blast furnaces and freeing up their
crew of young puffers for other work, everything had been small and
primitive, the iron more brittle, everything they made rougher,
bulkier. The buildings themselves showed it. Now the gears of the
waterwheels whirred with all the power of the river, pouring into
the bellows and roaring as fire. The chemical pits steamed lemon
and lime in the sun, and the puffers packed boxes and ran camels
and moved immense mounds of charcoal around the yards.
Khalid shook his head at the sight of it all, and made a new
gesture, a kind of sweep and punch with his ghost hand. 'We need
better clocks. We can only make progress if our measurement of time
is more exact.'
Iwang puffed his lips when he heard this. 'We need more
understanding.'
'Yes, yes, of course. Who could dispute that in this
miserable world. But all the wisdom of the ages cannot tell us how
long it takes flashpowder to ignite a charge.'
When the days ended the great compound fell silent,
except for the grinding of the watermill on the canal. After the
resident workers had washed and eaten and said their last prayers
of the day, they went to their apartments at the river end of the
compound, and fell asleep. The town workers went home.
Bahram dropped onto his bed beside Esmerine, across the
room from their two small children, Fazi and Laila. Most nights he
was out as soon his head hit the silk of his pillow, exhausted.
Blessed slumber.
But often he and Esmerine woke some time after midnight,
and sometimes they lay there breathing, touching, whispering
conversations that were usually brief and disjointed, other times
the longest and deepest conversations they ever had; and if ever
they were to make love, now that the children were there to exhaust
Esmerine, it would be in the blessed cool and quiet of these
midnight hours.
Afterwards Bahram might get up and walk around the
compound, to see it in moonlight and check that all was well,
feeling the afterglow of love pulse in him; and usually on these
occasions he would see the lamplight in Khalid's study, and pad by
to find Khalid slumped over a book, or scribbling left handed
at his writing stand, or recumbent on his couch, in murmured
conversation with Iwang, both of them holding tubes of a narghile
wreathed by the sweet smell of hashish. If Iwang was there and the
men seemed awake, Bahram would sometimes join them for a while,
before he got sleepy again and returned to Esmerine. Khalid and
Iwang might be speaking of the nature of motion, or the nature of
vision, sometimes holding up one of Iwang's lenses to look through
as they talked. Khalid held the position that the eye received
small impressions or images of things, sent through the air to it.
He had found many an old philosopher, from China to Frengistan, who
held the same view, calling the little images 'eidola' or
'simulacra' or 'species' or 'image' or 'idol' or 'phantasm' or
'form' or 'intention' or 'passion' or ,similitude of the agent', or
'shadow of the philosophers', a name that made Iwang smile. He
himself believed the eye sent out projections of a fluid as quick
as light itself, which returned to the eye like an echo, with the
contours of objects and their colours intact.
Bahram always maintained that none of these explanations
was adequate. Vision could not be explained by optics, he would
say; sight was a matter of spirit. The two men would hear him out,
then Khalid would shake his head. 'Perhaps optics are not
sufficient to explain it, but they are necessary to begin an
explanation. It's the part of the phenomenon that can be tested,
you see, and described mathematically, if we are clever
enough.'
The cannons arrived from the Khan, and Khalid spent part
of every day out on the bluff over the curve in the river, shooting
them off with old jalil and Paxtakor; but by far the bulk of his
time was spent thinking about optics and proposing tests to Iwang.
Iwang returned to his shop, blowing thick glass balls with cut
sides, mirrors concave and convex, and big, perfectly polished
triangular rods, which were for him objects of almost religious
reverence. He and Khalid spent afternoon hours in the old man's
study with the door closed, having made a little hole in the south
wall letting in a chink of light. They put the prism over the hole,
and its straight rainbow shone on the walls or a screen they set
up. Iwang said there were seven colours, Khalid six, as he called
Iwang's purple and lavender two parts of the same colour. They
argued endlessly about everything they saw, at least at first.
Iwang made diagrams of their arrangement that gave the precise
angles each band of colour bent as it went through the prism. They
held up glass balls and wondered why the light did not fractionate
in these balls as it did in the prism, when everyone could see that
a sky full of minuscule clear balls, that is to say raindrops, hit
by low afternoon sunlight, created the towering rainbows that hung
east of Samarqand after a rainshower had passed. Many a time when
black storms had passed over the city, Bahram stood outside with
the two older men observing some truly beautiful rainbows, often
double rainbows, a lighter one arched over the brighter one; and
sometimes even a third very faint one above that. Eventually Iwang
worked up a law of refraction which he assured Khalid would
account for all the colours. 'The primary rainbow is produced by a
refraction as the light enters the raindrop, an internal reflection
at the back surfaces, and a second refraction out of the raindrop.
The secondary bow is created by light reflected two or three times
inside the raindrops. Now look you, each colour has its own index
of refraction, and so to bounce around inside the raindrop is to
separate each colour out from the others, with them appearing to
the eye always in their correct sequence, reversed in the secondary
because there is an extra bounce making it upside down, as in my
drawing here, see?'
'So if raindrops were crystalline, there would be no
rainbows.'
'That's right, yes. That's snow. If there was only
reflection, the sky might sparkle everywhere with white light, as
if filled with mirrors. Sometimes you see that in a snowstorm, too.
But the roundness of raindrops means there is a steady change in
the angle of incidence between zero and ninety degrees, and that
spreads the different rays to an observer here, who must always
stand at an angle from forty to fortytwo degrees off from the
incoming sunlight. The secondary one appears when the angle is
between fifty and a half degrees and fifty four and a half.
See, the geometry predicts the angles, and out here we measure,
using this wonderful sky viewer Bahram found for you at the Chinese
caravanserai, and it confirms, as precisely as hand can hold, the
mathematical prediction!'
'Well, of course,' Khalid said, 'but that's circular
reasoning. You get your angles of incidence by observation of a
prism, then confirm the angles in the sky by more observation.'
'But one was colours on the wall, the other rainbows in
the sky!'
'As above, so below.' This of course was a truism of the
alchemists, so there was a dark edge to Khalid's comment.
The current rainbow was waning as a cloud in the west
blocked the sun. The two old men did not notice, however, absorbed
as they were in their discussion. Bahram alone was left to enjoy
the vibrant colours arcing across the sky, Allah's gift to show
that he would never again drown the world. The two men jabbed
fingers at Iwang's chalkboard and Khalid's sky device.
'It's leaving,' Bahram said, and they looked up, slightly
annoyed to be interrupted. While the rainbow had been bright, the
sky under it had been distinctly lighter than the sky over it; now
the inside and outside were the same shade of slate blue again.
The rainbow left the world, and they squelched back to
the compound, Khalid cheering up with every step, many of them
right into puddles, as he was still staring at Iwang's
chalkboard.
'So -- so -- well. I must admit, it is as neat as a proof
of Euclid. Two refractions, two or three reflections -- rain and
sun, an observer to see -- and there you have it! The rainbow!'
'And light itself, divisible into a banding of colours,'
Iwang mused, travelling all together out of the sun. So bright it
is! And when it strikes anything at all, it bounces off and into an
eye, if there be an eye to see it, and whatever part of the band,
hmm, how would that work ... are the surfaces of the world all
variously rounded, if you could but look at them close enough..
.'
'It's a wonder things don't change colour when you move,'
Bahram said, and the other two went silent, until Khalid started
laughing.
'Another mystery! Allah preserve us! They will just keep
coming for ever, until we are one with God.'
This thought appeared to please him immensely.
He set up a permanent dark room in the compound, all
boarded and draped until it was much darker than his study had
been, with shuttered chinks in the east wall that could let in
small shafts of light, and many a morning he was in there with
assistants, running in and out, arranging demonstrations one way or
another. One he was pleased enough with to invite the scholars of
the Sher Dor Madressa to witness it, because it so neatly refuted
Ibn Rashd's contention that white light was whole, and the colours
created by a prism an effect of the glass. If this were so, Khalid
argued, then light twice bent would change colour twice. To test
this, his assistants allowed sunlight in through the wall, and a
first prism's array was spread across a screen in the centre of the
room. Khalid himself opened an aperture in the screen small enough
only to allow the red part of the little rainbow through it, into a
draped closet where it immediately encountered another prism,
directing it onto another screen inside the closet.
'Now, if the bend of refraction caused by itself the
change in colour, surely the red band would change at this second
refraction. But look: it remains red. Each of the colours holds
when put through a second prism.'
He moved the aperture slowly from colour to colour, to
demonstrate. His guests crowded around the door of the closet,
examining the results closely.
'What does this mean?' one asked.
'Well, this you must help me with, or ask Iwang. I am no
philosopher, myself. But I think it proves the change in colour is
not just a matter of bending in itself. I think it shows sunlight,
white light if you will, or full light, or simply sunlight, is
composed of all the individual colours travelling together.'
The witnesses nodded. Khalid ordered the room opened up,
and they retired blinking into the sun to have coffee and
cakes.
'This is wonderful,' Zahhar, one of Sher Dor's senior
mathematicians said, 'very illuminating, so to speak. But what does
it tell us about light, do you think? What is light?'
Khalid shrugged. 'God knows, but not men. I think only
that we have clarified (so to speak) some of light's behaviour. And
that behaviour has a geometrical aspect. It seems regulated by
number, you see. As do so many things in this world. Allah appears
to like mathematics, as you yourself have often said, Zahhar. As
for the substance of light, what a mystery! It moves quickly, how
quickly we do not know; it would be good to find out. And it is
hot, as we know by the sun. And it will cross a void, if indeed
there is any such thing as a void in this world, in a way that
sound will not. It could be that the Hindus are right and there is
another element besides earth, fire, air and water, an ether so
fine we do not see it, that fills the universe to a plenum and is
the medium of movement. Perhaps little corpuscles, bouncing off
whatever they strike, as in a mirror, but usually less directly.
Depending on what it strikes, a particular colour band is reflected
into the eye. Perhaps.' He shrugged. 'It is a mystery.'
The Madressas Weigh In
The colour demonstrations caused a great deal of
discussion and debate in the madressas, and Khalid learned during
this period never to speak of causes in any opinionated way, or to
impinge on the realm of the madressa scholars by speaking of
Allah's will, or any other aspect of the nature of reality. He
would only say, 'Allah gave us our intelligence to better
understand the glory of his work,' or, 'the world often works
mathematically. Allah loves numbers, and mosquitos in springtime,
and beauty.'
The scholars went away amused, or irritated, but in any
case in a ferment of philosophy. The madressas of Registan Square
and elsewhere in the city, and out at Ulug Bek's old observatory,
were buzzing with the new fashion of making demonstrations of
various physical phenomena, and Khalid's was not the only
mechanical workshop that could build an ever more complex array of
new machines and devices. The mathematicians of Sher Dor Madressa,
for instance, interested everyone with a surprising new mercury
scale, simple to construct a bowl containing a pool of
mercury, with a narrow tube of mercury, scaled at the top but not
the bottom, set upright in the liquid in the bowl. The mercury in
the tube dropped a certain distance, creating another mysterious
void in the gap left at the top of the tube; but the remainder of
the tube stayed filled with a column of mercury. The Sher Dor
mathematicians asserted that it was the weight of the world's air
on the mercury in the bowl that pushed down on it enough to keep
the mercury in the cylinder from falling all the way down into the
bowl. Others maintained it was the disinclination of the void in
the top of the tube to grow. Following a suggestion of Iwang's,
they took their device to the top of Snow Mountain, in the
Zeravshan Range, and all there saw that the level of mercury in the
tube had dropped, presumably because there was less weight of air
on it up there, two or three thousand hands higher than the city.
This was a great support for Khalid's previous contention that air
weighed on them, and a refutation of Aristotle, and al Farabi and
the rest of the Aristotelian Arabs, who claimed that the four
elements want to be in their proper places, high or low. This claim
Khalid ridiculed, at least in private. 'As if stones or the wind
could want to be some place or other, as a man does. It's really
nothing but circular definition again. "Things fall because they
want to fall", as if they could want. Things fall because they
fall, that's all it means. Which is fine, no one knows why things
fall, certainly not me, it is a very great mystery. All the seeming
cases of action at a distance are a mystery. But first we must say
so, we must distinguish the mysteries as mysteries, and proceed
from there, demonstrating what happens, and then seeing if
that leads us to any thoughts concerning the how or the why.'
The sufi scholars were still inclined to extrapolate from
any given demonstration to the ultimate nature of the cosmos, while
the mathematically inclined were fascinated by the purely numerical
aspects of the results, the geometry of the world as it was
revealed. These and other approaches combined in a burst of
activity, consisting of demonstrations and talk, and private work
on slates over mathematical formulations, and artisanal labour on
new or improved devices. On some days it seemed to Bahram that
these investigations had filled all Samarqand: Khalid's compound
and the others, the madressas, the ribat, the bazaars, the coffee
stalls, the caravanserai, where the traders would take the news out
to all the world ... it was beautiful.
The Chest of Wisdom
Out beyond the western wall of
the city, where the old Silk Road ran towards Bokhara, the
Armenians were quiet in their little caravanserai, tucked beside
the large and raucous Hindu one. The Armenians were cooking in the
dusk over their braziers. Their women were bare headed and
bold eyed, laughing among themselves in their own language.
Armenians were good traders, and yet reclusive for all that. They
trafficked only in the most expensive goods, and knew everything
about everywhere, it seemed. Of all the trading peoples, they were
the most rich and powerful. Unlike the Jews and Nestorians and
Zott, they had a little homeland in the Caucasus to which most of
them regularly returned, and they were Muslim, most of them, which
gave them a tremendous advantage across Dar al Islam
which was to say all the world, except for China, and India below
the Deccan. Rumours that they only pretended to be Muslim, and were
secretly Christians all the while, struck Bahram as envious
backstabbing by other traders, probably the tricky Zott, who had
been cast out of India long before (some said Egypt), and now
wandered the world homeless, and did not like the Armenians' inside
position in so many of the most lucrative markets and products.
Bahram wandered among their fires and lamplight, stopping to
chat and accept a swallow of wine with familiars of his, until an
old man pointed out the bookseller Mantuni, even older, a wizened
hunchbacked little man who wore spectacles that made his eyes
appear the size of lemons. His Turkic was basic and heavily
accented, and Bahram switched to Persian, which Mantuni
acknowledged with a grateful dip of the head. The old man indicated
a wooden box on the ground, filled entirely with books he had
obtained for Khalid in Frengistan. 'Will you be able to carry it?'
he asked Bahram anxiously.
'Sure,' Bahram said, but he had his own worry: 'How much
is this going to cost?'
'Oh no, it's already paid for. Khalid sent me off with
the funds, otherwise I would not have been able to afford to buy
these. They're from an estate sale in Damascus, a very old
alchemical family that came to an end with a hermit who had no
issue. See here, Zosimos' 'Treatise on Instruments and Furnaces",
printed just two years ago, that's for you. I've got the rest
arranged chronologically by date of composition, as you can see,
here is Jabir's "Sum of perfection", and his "Ten Books of
Rectification", and look, 'The Secret of Creation".'
This was a huge sheepskin bound volume. 'Written by
the Greek Apollonius. One of its chapters is the fabled "Emerald
Table",' tapping its cover delicately. 'That chapter alone is worth
twice what I paid for this whole collection, but they didn't know.
The original of 'The Emerald Table" was found by Sara the wife of
Abraham, in a cave near Hebron, some time after the Great Flood. It
was inscribed on a plate of emerald, which Sara found clasped in
the hands of the mummified corpse of Thrice greatest Hermes,
the father of all alchemy. The writing was in Phoenician
characters. Although I must admit I have read other accounts that
have it discovered by Alexander the Great. In any case here it is,
in an Arabic translation from the time of the Baghdad
caliphate.'
'Fine,' Bahram said. He wasn't sure Khalid would still be
interested in this stuff.
'You will also find "The Complete Biographies of the
immortals", a rather slender volume, considering, and "The Chest of
Wisdom", and a book by a Frengi, Bartholomew the Englishman, "On
the Properties of Things", also "The Epistle of the Sun to the
Crescent Moon", and "The Book of Poisons", perhaps useful,
and "The Great Treasure", and "The Document Concerning the Three
Similars", in Chinese '
'Iwang will be able to read that,' Bahram said. 'Thank
you.' He tried to pick up the box. It was as if filled with rocks,
and he staggered.
'Are you sure you'll be able to get it back to the city,
and safely?'
'I'll be fine. I'm going to take them to Khalid's, where
Iwang has a room for his work. Thanks again. I'm sure Iwang will
want to call on you to talk about these, and perhaps Khalid too.
How long will you be in Samarqand?'
'Another month, no more.'
'They'll be out to talk to you about these.'
Bahram hiked along with the box balanced on his head. He
took breaks from time to time to case his head, and fortify himself
with more wine. By the time he got back to the compound it was late
and his head was swimming, but the lamps were lit in Khalid's
study, and Bahram found the old man in there reading and dropped
the box triumphantly before him.
'More to read,' he said, and collapsed on a chair.
The End of Alchemy
Shaking his head at Bahram's drunkenness, Khalid began
going through the box, whistling and chirping. 'Same old crap,' he
said at one point. Then he pulled one out and opened it. 'Ah,' he
said, 'a Frengi text, translated from Latin to Arabic by an Ibn
Rabi of Nsara. Original by one Bartholomew the Englishman, written
some time in the sixth century. Let's see what he has to say, hmm,
hmm . . .' He read with the forefinger of his left hand leading his
eyes on a rapid chase over the pages. 'What' That's Ibn Sina
direct! ... And this too!' He looked up at Bahram. 'The alchemical
sections are taken right out of Ibn Sina!'
He read on, laughed his brief unamused laugh. 'Listen to
this! "Quicksilver", that's mercury, "is of so great virtue and
strength, that though thou do a stone of an hundred pound weigh
upon quicksilver of the weight of two pounds, the quicksilver anon
withstandeth the weight. -- 'What?'
'Have you ever heard such nonsense? If he was going to
speak of measures of weight at all, you'd think he would have the
sense to understand them.'
He read on. 'Ah,' he said after a while, 'Here he quotes
Ibn Sina directly. "Glass, as Avicenna saith, is among stones as a
fool among men, for it taketh all manner of colour and painting."
Spoken by a very mirrorglass of a man ... ha ... look, here is
a story that could be about our Sayyed Abdul Aziz. "Long time past,
there was one that made glass pliant, which might be amended and
wrought with an hammer, and brought a vial made of such glass
before Tiberius the Emperor, and threw it down on the ground, and
it was not broken, but bent and folded. And he made it right and
amended it with a hammer." We must demand this glass from Iwang!
"Then the Emperor commanded to smite off his head anon, lest that
this craft were known. For then gold should be no better than clay,
and all other metal should be of little worth, for certain if glass
vessels were not brittle, they should be accounted of more value
than vessels of gold." That's a curious proposition. I suppose
glass was rare in his time.' He stood up, stretched, sighed.
'Tiberiases, on the other hand, will always be common.'
Most of the other books he paged through quickly and
dropped back in the box. He did go through 'The Emerald Table' page
by page, enlisting Iwang, and later some of the Sher Dor
mathematicians, to help him test every sentence in it that
contained any tangible suggestion for action in the shops, or out
in the world at large. They agreed in the end that it was mostly
false information, and that what was true in it was the most
trivial of commonplace observations in metallurgy or natural
behaviour.
Bahram thought this might be a disappointment to Khalid,
but in fact, after all that had passed, he actually seemed pleased
at these results , even reassured. Suddenly Bahram understood:
Khalid would have been shocked if something magical had occurred,
shocked and disappointed, for that would have rendered irregular
and unfathomable the very order that he now assumed must exist in
nature. So he watched all the tests fail with grim satisfaction,
and put the old book containing the wisdom of Hermes
Trimestigus high on a shelf with all its brethren, and ignored them
from then on. After that it was only his blank books that he cared
about, filling them immediately after his demonstrations, and later
through the long nights; they lay open everywhere, mostly on the
tables and floors of his study. One cold night when Bahram was out
for a walk around the compound, he went into Khalid's study and
found the old man asleep on his couch, and he pulled a blanket over
him and snuffed most of the lamps, but by the light of the one left
burning, he looked at the big books open on the floor. Khalid's
lefthanded writing was jagged to the point of illegibility, a
private code, but the little sketched drawings were rather fine in
their abrupt way: a crosssection of an eyeball, a big cart, bands
of light, cannonball flights, birds' wings, gearing systems, lists
of many varieties of damasked steel, athanor interiors,
thermometers, altimeters, clockworks of all kinds, little stick
figures fighting with swords or hanging from giant spirals like
linden seeds, leering nightmare faces, tigers couchant or rampant,
roaring at the scribbles from the margins.
Too cold to look at any more pages, Bahram stared at the
sleeping old man, his father in law whose brain was so
crowded. Strange the people who surround us in this life. He
stumbled back to bed and the warmth of Esmerine.
The Speed of Light
The many tests of light in a
prism brought back to Khalid the question of how fast it moved, and
despite the frequent visits from Nadir or his minions, he could
only speak of making a demonstration to determine this speed.
Finally he made his arrangements for a test of the matter: they
were to divide into two parties, with lanterns in hand, and
Khalid's party would bring along his most accurate timing clock,
which now could be stopped instantly with the push of a lever which
blocked its movement. A preliminary trial had determined that
during the dark of the moon, the biggest lanterns' light could be
seen from the top of Afrasiab Hill to the Shamiana Ridge, across
the river valley, about ten h as the crow flies. Using small
bonfires blocked and unblocked by rugs would no doubt have extended
the maximum distance visible, but Khalid did not think it would be
necessary.
They therefore went out at midnight during the next dark
of the moon, Bahram with Khalid and Paxkator and several other
servants to Afrasiab Hill, Iwang and jalil and other servants to
the Shamiana Ridge. Their lanterns had doors that would drop open
in an oiled groove at a speed they had timed, and was as close to
an instantaneous reply as they could devise. Khalid's team would
reveal a light and start the clock; when Iwang's team saw the
light, they would open their lantern, and when Khalid's team saw
its light, they would stop the clock. A very straightforward
test.
It was a long walk to Afrasiab Hill, over the old east
bridge, up a track through the ruins of the ancient city of
Afrasiab, dim but visible in the starlight. The dry night air was
lightly scented with verbena and rosemary and mint. Khalid was in
good spirits, as always before a demonstration. He saw Paxtakor and
the servants taking pulls from a bag of wine and said, 'You suck
harder than our void pump, be careful or you'll suck the Buddhist
void into existence, and we will all pop into your bag.'
Up on the flat treeless top of the hill, they stood and
waited for Iwang's crew to reach Shamiana ridge, black against the
stars. The peak of Afrasiab Hill, when seen from Shamiana, had the
mountains of the Dzhizak Range behind it, so that Iwang would see
no stars on top of Afrasiab to confuse him, but merely the black
mass of the empty Dzhizaks.
They had left marker sticks on the hill's top pointing to
the opposite station, and now Khalid grunted impatiently and said,
'Let's see if they're there yet.'
Bahram faced Shamiana Ridge and dropped open the box
lantern's door, then waved it back and forth. In a moment they saw
the yellow gleam of Iwang's lantern, perfectly visible just below
the black line of the ridge. 'Good,' Khalid said. 'Now cover.'
Bahram pulled up his door, and Iwang's lantern went dark as
well.
Bahram stood on Khalid's left. The clock and lantern were
set on a folding table, and fixed together in an armature that
would open the door of the lantern and start the finger of the
clock in one motion. Khalid's forefinger was on the tab that would
stop the clock short. Khalid muttered 'Now,' and Bahram, his
heart pounding absurdly, flicked the armature tab down, and the
light on Iwang's lantern appeared on the Shamiana Ridge in that
very same moment. Surprised, Khalid swore and stopped the clock.
'Allah preserve us!' he exclaimed. 'I was not ready. Let's do it
again.'
They had arranged to make twenty trials, so Bahram merely
nodded while Khalid checked the clock by a shielded second lantern,
and had Paxtakor mark down the time, which was two beats and a
third.
They tried it again, and again the light appeared from
Iwang the same moment Bahram opened their lantern. Once Khalid
became used to the speed of the exchange, the trials all took less
than a beat. For Bahram it was as if he was opening the door on the
lantern across the valley; it was shocking how fast Iwang was, not
to mention the light. Once he even pretended to open the door,
pushing lightly then stopping, to see if the Tibetan was perhaps
reading his mind.
'All right,' Khalid said after the twentieth trial. 'It's
a good thing we're only doing twenty. We would get so good we would
begin to see theirs before we opened ours.'
Everyone laughed. Khalid had become snappish during the
trials themselves, but now he seemed content, and they were
relieved. They made their way down the hill to town talking loudly
and drinking from the wine bag, even Khalid, who very seldom drank
any more, though it had once been one of his chief pleasures. They
had tested their reflexes back in the compound, and so knew that
most of their trials had been timed at that very same speed, or
faster. 'If we throw out the first trial, and average the rest,
it's going to be about the same speed as our procedure itself.'
Bahram said, 'Light must be instantaneous.'
'Instantaneous motion? Infinite speed? I don't think
Iwang will ever agree to that notion, certainly not as a result of
this demonstration alone.'
'What do you think?'
'Me? I think we need to be farther apart. But we have
demonstrated that light is fast, no doubt of that.'
They traversed the empty ruins of Afrasiab by taking the
ancient city's main north--south road to the bridge. The servants
began to hurry ahead, leaving Khalid and Bahram behind.
Khalid was humming urimusically, and hearing it, remembering the
full pages of the old man's notebooks, Bahram said, 'How is it you
are so happy these days, Father?'
Khalid looked at him, surprised. 'Me? I'm not happy.'
'But you are!'
Khalid laughed. 'My Bahram, you are a simple soul.'
Suddenly he waved his right wrist with its stump under
Bahram's nose. 'Look at this, boy. Look at this! How could I be
happy with this? Of course I couldn't. It's dishonour, it's all my
stupidity and greed, right there for everyone to see and remember,
every day. Allah is wise, even in his punishments. I am dishonoured
for ever in this life, and will never be able to recover from it.
Never eat cleanly, never clean myself cleanly, never stroke Fedwa's
hair at night. That life is over. And all because of fear, and
pride. Of course I'm ashamed, of course I'm angry -- at Nadir, the
Khan, at myself, at Allah, yes Him too! At all of you! I'll never
stop being angry, never!'
'Ah,' Bahram said, shocked.
They walked along a while in silence, through the starlit
ruins.
Khalid sighed. 'But look you, youth -- given all that --
what am I supposed to do? I'm only fifty years old, I have some
time left before Allah takes me, and I have to fill that time. And
I have my pride, despite all. And people are watching me, of
course. I was a prominent man, and people enjoyed watching my fall,
of course they did, and they watch still! So what kind of story am
I going to give them next? Because that's what we are to other
people, boy, we are their gossip. That's all civilization is, a
giant mill grinding out gossip. And so I could be the story of the
man who rode high and fell hard, and had his spirit broken and
crawled off into a hole like a dog, to die as soon as he could
manage it. Or I could be the story of a man who rode high and fell
hard, and then got up defiant, and walked away in a new direction.
Someone who never looked back, someone who never gave the mob any
satisfaction. And that's the story I'm going to make them all eat.
They can fuck themselves if they want any other kind of a story out
of me. I'm a tiger, boy, I was a tiger in a previous existence, I
must have been, I dream about it all the time, stalking through
trees and hunting things. Now I have my tiger hitched to my
chariot, and off we go!' He skimmed his left hand off
towards the city ahead of them. 'This is the key, youth, you must
learn to hitch your tiger to your chariot.'
Bahram nodded. 'Demonstrations to make.'
'Yes! Yes!' Khalid stopped and gestured up at the spangle
of stars. 'And this is the best part, boy, the most marvellous
thing, because it is all so very damned interesting! It isn't just
something to while away the time, or to get away from this,' waving
his stump again, 'it's the only thing that matters! I mean, why are
we here, youth? Why are we here?'
'To make more love.'
'All right, fair enough. But how do we best love this
world Allah gave us? We do it by learning it! It's here, all of a
piece, beautiful every morning, and we go and rub it in the dust,
making our khans and our caliphates and such. It's absurd. But if
you try to understand things, if you look at the world and say why
does that happen, why do things fall, why does the sun come up
every morning and shine on us, and warm the air and fill the leaves
with green how does all this happen? What rules has Allah
used to make this beautiful world? Then it is all transformed. God
sees that you appreciate it. And even if He doesn't, even if you
never know anything in the end, even if it's impossible to know,
you can still try.'
'And you're learning a lot,' Bahram said.
'Not really. Not at all. But with a mathematician like
Iwang on hand, we can maybe work out a few simple things, or make
little beginnings to pass on to others. This is God's real work,
Bahram. God didn't give us this world for us to stand around in it
chewing our food like camels. Mohammed himself said, Pursue
learning even if it take you to China! And now with Iwang, we have
brought China to us. It makes it all the more interesting.'
'So you are happy, you see? just as I said.'
'Happy and angry. Happily angry. Everything, all at once.
That's life, boy. You just keep getting fuller, until you burst and
Allah takes you and casts your soul into another life later on. And
so everything just keeps getting fuller.'
An early cock crowed on the edge of the town. In the sky
to the east the stars were winking out. The servants reached
Khalid's compound ahead of them and opened up, but Khalid stopped
outside among the great piles of charcoal, looking around with
evident satisfaction. 'There's Iwang now,' he said quietly.
The big Tibetan slouched up to them like a bear, body
weary but a grin on his face.
'Well?' he said.
'Too fast to measure,' Khalid admitted.
Iwang grunted.
Khalid handed him the wine bag, and he took a long
swig.
'Light,' he said. 'What can you say?'
The eastern sky was filling with this mysterious
substance or quality. Iwang swayed side to side like a bear dancing
to music, as obviously happy as Bahram had ever seen him. The two
old men had enjoyed their night's work. Iwang's party had had a
night of mishaps, drinking wine, getting lost, falling in ditches,
singing songs, mistaking other lights for Khalid's lantern, and
then, during the tests, having no idea what kind of times were
being registered back on Afrasiab Hill, an ignorance which had
struck them as funny. They had become silly.
But these adventures were not the source of Iwang's good
humour rather it was some train of thought of his own, which had
put him under a description, as the sufis said, murmuring things in
his own language, hummed deep in his chest. The servants were
singing a song for the coming of dawn.
He said to Khalid and Bahram, 'Coming down the ridge I
was falling asleep on my feet, and thinking about your
demonstration cast me into a vision. Thinking of your light,
winking in the darkness across the valley, I thought, if I could
see all moments at once, each distinct and alone as the world
sailed through the stars, each that little bit different ... if I
moved through each moment as if through different rooms in space, I
could map the world's own travel. Every step I took down the ridge
was as it were a separate world, a slice of infinity made up of
that step's world. So I stepped from world to world, step by step,
never seeing the ground in the dark, and it seemed to me that if
there was a number that would bespeak the location of each
footfall, then the whole ridge would be revealed thereby, by
drawing a line from one footfall to the next. Our blind feet do it
instinctively in the dark, and we are equally blind to the ultimate
reality, but we could nevertheless grasp the whole by
regular touches. Then we could say this is what is there, or that,
trusting that there were no great boulders or potholes between
steps, and so the whole shape of the ridge would be known. With
every step I walked from world to world.'
He looked at Khalid. 'Do you see what I mean?'
'Maybe,' Khalid said. 'You propose to chart movement with
numbers.'
'Yes, and also the movement within movement, changes in
speed, you know, which must always be occurring in this world, as
there is resistance or encouragement.'
'Resistance of air,' Khalid said luxuriously. 'We live at
the bottom of an ocean of air. It has weight, as the mercury scales
have shown. It bears down on us. It carries the beams of the sun to
us.'
'Which warm us,' Bahram added.
The sun cracked the distant mountains to the east, and
Bahram said, 'All praise and thanks to Allah for the glorious sun,
sign in this world of his infinite love.'
'And so,' Khalid said, yawning hugely, 'to bed.'
A Demonstration of Flight
Inevitably, however, all their various activities brought
them another visit from Nadir Devanbegi. This time Bahram was in
the bazaar, sack over his shoulder, buying melons, oranges,
chickens and rope, when Nadir suddenly appeared before him with his
personal bodyguard. It was an event Bahram could not regard as a
coincidence.
'Well met, Bahram. I hear you are busy these days.'
'Always, effendi,' Bahram said, ducking his head. The two
bodyguards were eyeing him like falcons, wearing armour and
carrying long barrelled muskets.
'And these many fine activities must include many
undertaken for the sake of Sayyed Abdul Aziz Khan, and the glory of
Samarqand?'
'Of course, effendi.'
'Tell me about them,' Nadir said. 'List them for me, and
tell me how each one is progressing.'
Bahram gulped apprehensively. Of course Nadir had nabbed him in
a public place like this because he thought he would learn more
from Bahram than from Khalid or Iwang, and more in a public space,
where Bahram might be too flustered to prevaricate.
So he frowned and tried to look serious but foolish, not
really much of a stretch at this moment. 'They do much that I don't
understand, effendi. But the work seems to fall roughly into the
camps of weapons and of fortifications.'
Nadir nodded, and Bahram gestured at the melon market
they were standing beside. 'Do you mind?'
'Not at all,' Nadir said, following him in.
So Bahram went to the honey and muskmelon trays, and
began to lift some onto the scale. He was certainly going to get a
good deal for them with Nadir Devanbegi and his bodyguards in the
shop!
'In weapons,' Bahram improvised as he pointed out the red
melons to a sullen seller, 'we are working on strengthening the
metal of cannon barrels, so they can be both lighter and stronger.
Then again, we have been conducting demonstrations of the flight of
cannonballs in different conditions, with different gunpowders and
guns, you know, and recording them and studying the results, so
that one would be able to determine where precisely one's shots
would land.'
Nadir said, 'That would be useful indeed. Have they done
that?'
'They are working on it, effendi.'
'And fortifications?'
'Strengthening walls,' Bahram said simply. Khalid would
be furious to hear of all these promises Bahram was so rashly
making, but Bahram did not see any good way out of it, except to
make his descriptions as vague as possible, and hope for the
best.
'Of course,' Nadir said. 'Please do me the courtesy of
arranging one of these famous demonstrations for the court's
edification.' He caught Bahram's eye to emphasize this was not a
casual invitation. 'Soon.'
'Of course, effendi.'
'Something that will get the Khan's attention as well.
Something exciting to him.'
'Of course.'
Nadir gestured with a finger to his men, and they moved
off through the bazaar, leaving behind a swirling wake in the press
of the crowd.
Bahram heaved a deep breath, wiped his brow. 'Hey there,'
he said sternly to the seller, who was slipping a melon off the
scale.
'Not fair,' the seller said.
'True,' Bahram said, 'but a deal's a deal.'
The seller couldn't deny it; in fact he grinned under his
moustache as Bahram sighed again.
Bahram went back to the compound and reported the
exchange to Khalid, who growled to hear it, as Bahram knew he
would. Khalid finished eating his evening meal in silence, stabbing
chunks of rabbit out of a bowl with a small silver prong held in
his left hand. He put the prong down and wiped his face with a
cloth, rose heavily. 'Come to my study and tell me exactly what you
said to him.'
Bahram repeated the conversation as closely as he could,
while Khalid spun a leather globe on which he had tried to map the
world. Most of it he had left blank, dismissing the claims of the
Chinese cartographers he had studied, their golden islands swimming
about in the ocean to the east of Nippon, located differently on
every map. He sighed when Bahram finished. 'You did well,' he said.
'Your promises were vague, and they follow good lines. We can
pursue them more or less directly, and they may even tell us some
things we wanted to know anyway.'
'More demonstrations,' Bahram said.
'Yes.' Khalid brightened at the thought.
In the weeks that followed, the furore of activity in the
compound took a new turn. Khalid took out all the cannons he had
obtained from Nadir, and the loud booms of the guns filled their
days. Khalid and Iwang and Bahram and the gunpowder artisans from
the shop fired the big things west of the city on the plain, where
they could relocate the cannonballs, after shots aimed at targets
that were very seldom struck.
Khalid growled, picking up one of the ropes they used to
pull the gun back up to the mark. 'I wonder if we could stake the
gun to the ground,' he said. 'Strong ropes, thick stakes ... it
might make the balls fly farther.'
' We can try it.'
They tried all manner of things. At the end of the days
their ears rang with reverberations, and Khalid took to stuffing
them with cotton balls to protect them some little bit.
Iwang became more and more absorbed in the flights of the
cannonballs. He and Khalid conferred over mathematical formulas and
diagrams that Bahram did not understand. It seemed to Bahram they
were losing sight of the goal of the exercise, and treating the gun
merely as a mechanism for making demonstrations of motion, of speed
and the change of speed.
But then Nadir came calling with news. The Khan and his
retinue were to visit the next day, to witness improvements and
discoveries.
Khalid spent the entire night awake in his study, making
lists of demonstrations to be considered. The next day at noon
everyone congregated on the sunny plain beside the Zeravshan River.
A big pavilion was set up for the Khan to rest under while he
observed events.
He did so lying on a couch covered with silks, spooning
sherbet and talking with a young courtesan more than watching the
demonstrations. But Nadir stood by the guns and watched everything
very closely, taking the cotton out of his ears to ask questions
after every shot.
'As to fortifications,' Khalid replied to him at one
point, 'this is an old matter, solved by the Frengis before they
died. A cannonball will break anything hard.' He had his men shoot
the gun at a wall of dressed stone that they had cemented together.
The ball shattered the wall very nicely, and the Khan and his party
cheered, although as a matter of fact both Samarqand and Bokhara
were protected by sandstone walls much like the one that had just
fallen.
' Now,' Khalid said. 'See what happens when a ball of the
same size, from the same gun loaded with the same charge, strikes
the next target.'
This was an earthen mound, dug with great effort by
Khalid's expuffers. The gun was fired, the acrid smoke cleared; the
earthen mound stood unchanged, except for a barely visible scar at
its centre.
'The cannonball can do nothing. It merely sinks into the
earth and is swallowed up. A hundred balls would make no difference
to such a wall. They would merely become part of it.'
The Khan heard this and was not amused. 'You're
suggesting we pile earth all around Samarqand? Impossible! It would
be too ugly! The other khans and emirs would laugh at us. We cannot
live like ants in an anthill!'
Khalid turned to Nadir, his face a polite blank.
'Next?' Nadir said.
'Of course. Now see, we have determined that at the
distances a gun can cast a ball, it cannot shoot straight. The
balls are tumbling through the air, and they can spin off in any
direction, and they do.'
'Surely air cannot offer any significant resistance to
iron,' Nadir said, sweeping a hand in illustration.
'Only a little resistance, it is true, but consider that
the ball passes through more than two li of air. Think of air as a
kind of thinned water. It certainly has an effect. We can see this
better with light wooden balls of the same size, thrown by hand so
you can still see their movement. We will throw into the wind, and
you can see how the balls dart this way and that.'
Bahram and Paxtakor palmed the light wooden balls off,
and they veered into the wind like bats.
'But this is absurd!' the Khan said. 'Cannonballs are
much heavier, they cut through the wind like knives through
butter!'
Khalid nodded. 'Very true, great Khan. We only use these
wooden balls to exaggerate an effect that must act on any object,
be it heavy as lead.'
'Or gold,' Sayyed Abdul Aziz joked.
'Or gold. In that case the cannonballs veer only
slightly, but over the great distances they are cast, it becomes
significant. And so one can never say exactly what the balls will
hit.'
'This must ever be true,' Nadir said.
Khalid waved his stump, oblivious for the moment of how
it looked. 'We can reduce the effect quite a great deal. See how
the wooden balls fly if they are cast with a spin to them.'
Bahram and Paxtakor threw the balsam balls with a final
pull of the fingertips to impart a spin to them. Though some of
these balls curved in flight, they went farther and faster than the
palmed balls had. Bahram hit an archery target with five throws in
a row, which pleased him greatly.
'The spin stabilizes their flight through the wind,'
Khalid explained. 'They are still pushed by the wind, of course.
That cannot be avoided. But they no longer dart unexpectedly when
they are caught on the face by a wind. It is the same effect you
get by fletching arrows to spin.'
'So you propose to fletch cannonballs?' the Khan inquired
with a guffaw.
'Not exactly, your Highness, but yes, in effect. To try
to get the same kind of spin. We have tried two different methods
to achieve this. One is to cut grooves into the balls. But this
means the balls fly much less far. Another is to cut the grooves
into the inside of the gun barrel, making a long spiral down the
barrel, only a turn or a bit less down the whole barrel's length.
This makes the balls leave the gun with a spin.'
Khalid had his men drag out a smaller cannon. A ball was
fired from it, and the ball tracked down by the helpers standing
by, then marked with a red flag. It was farther away than the
bigger gun's ball, though not by much.
' It is not distance so much as accuracy that would be
improved,' Khalid explained. 'The balls would always fly straight.
We are working up tables that would enable one to choose the
gunpowder by type and weight, and weigh the balls, and thus, with
the same cannons, of course, always send the balls precisely where
one wanted to.'
'Interesting,' Nadir said.
Sayyed Abdul Aziz Khan called Nadir to his side. 'We're
going back to the palace,' said, and led his retinue to the
horses.
'But not that interesting,' Nadir said to Khalid. 'Try
again.'
Better Gifts for the Khan
'I suppose I should make the Khan a new suit of damasked
armour,' Khalid said afterwards. 'Something pretty.'
Iwang grinned. 'Do you know how to do it?'
'Of course. It's watered steel. Not very mysterious. The
crucible charge is an iron sponge called a wootz, forged into an
iron plate together with wood, which yields its ash into the mix,
and some water too. Some crucibles are placed in the furnace, and
when they are melted their contents are poured into molten cast
iron, at a temperature below that of complete fusion of the two
elements. The resulting steel is then etched with a mineral
sulphate of one kind or another. You get different patterns and
colours depending on which sulphate you use, and what kind of
wootz, and what kind of temperatures. This blade here,' he rose and
took down a thick curved dagger with an ivory handle, and a blade
covered with a dense pattern of crosshatchings in white and
dark grey, 'is a good example of the etching called "Mohammed's
Ladder". Persian work, reputed to be from the forge of the
alchemist Jundi Shapur. They say there is alchemy in it.' He
paused, shrugged.
'And you think the Khan . . .'
'If we systematically played with the composition of the
wootz, the structure of the cakes, the temperatures, the etching
liquid, then we would certainly find some new patterns. I like some
of the swirls I've got with very woody steel.'
The silence stretched out. Khalid was unhappy, that was
clear.
Bahram said, 'You could treat it as a series of
tests.'
'As always,' Khalid said, irritated. 'But in this case
you can only do things in ignorance of their causes. There are too
many materials, too many substances and actions, all mixed
together. I suppose it is all happening at a level too small to
see. The breaks you see after the casting look like crystalline
structures when they are broken. It's interesting, what happens,
but there's no way to tell why, or predict it ahead of time. This
is the thing about a useful demonstration, you see. It tells you
something distinct. It answers a question.'
' We can try to ask questions that steelwork can answer,'
Bahram suggested.
Khalid nodded, still dissatisfied. But he glanced at
Iwang to see what he thought of this.
Iwang thought it was a good idea in theory, but in
practice he too had a hard time coming up with questions to ask
about the process. They knew how hot to make the furnace, what ores
and wood and water to introduce, how long to mix it, how hard it
would turn out. All questions on the matter of practice were long
since answered, ever since damasking had been done in Damascus.
More basic questions of cause, which yet could be answered, were
hard to formulate. Bahram himself tried mightily, without a single
idea coming to him. And good ideas were his strength, or so they
always told him.
While Khalid worked on this problem, Iwang was getting
terrifically absorbed in his mathematical labours, to the exclusion
even of his glassblowing and silversmithing, which he left mostly
to his new apprentices, huge gaunt Tibetan youths who had appeared
without explanation some time before. He pored over his Hindu books
and old Tibetan scrolls, marking up his chalk slates and then
adding to the notes he saved on paper: inked diagrams, patterns of
Hindu numerals, Chinese or Tibetan or Sanskrit symbols or letters;
a private alphabet for a private language, or so Bahram thought. A
rather useless enterprise, disturbing to contemplate, as the paper
sheets seemed to radiate a palpable power, magical or perhaps just
mad. All those foreign ideas, arranged in hexagonal patterns of
number and ideogram; to Bahram the shop in the bazaar began to seem
the dim cave of a magus, fingering the hems of reality ...
Iwang himself brushed all these cobwebs aside. Out in the
sun of Khalid's compound he sat down with Khalid, and Zahhar and
Tazi from Sher Dor, and with Bahram shading them and looking over
their shoulders, he outlined a mathematics of motion, what he
called the speed of the speed.
'Everything is moving,' he said. 'That is karma. The
Earth revolves around the Sun, the Sun travels through the stars,
the stars too travel. But for the sake of study here, for
demonstrations, we postulate a realm of non movement. Perhaps
some such motionless void contains the universe, but it doesn't
matter; for our purposes these are purely mathematical dimensions,
which can be marked by vertical and horizontal, thusly, or by
length, breadth and height, if you want the three dimensions of the
world. But start with two dimensions, for simplicity's sake. And
moving objects, say a cannonball, can be measured against these two
dimensions. How high or low, how left or right. Placed as if on a
map. Then again, the horizontal dimension can mark time passed, and
the vertical, movement in a single direction. That will make for
curved lines, representing the passage of objects through the air.
Then, lines drawn tangent to the curve indicate the speed of the
speed. So you measure what you can, mark those measurements, and
it's like passing through rooms of a house. Each room has a
different volume, like flasks, depending on how wide and how tall.
That is to say, how far, in how much time. Quantities of movement,
do you see? A bushel of movement, a dram.'
'Cannonball flights could be described precisely,' Khalid
said.
'Yes. More easily than most things, because a cannonball
pursues a single line. A curved line, but not something like an
eagle's flight, say, or a person in his daily rounds. The mathematics for that
would be . . .' Iwang became lost, jerked, came back to them. 'What
was I saying?'
'Cannonballs.'
'Ah. Very possible to measure them, yes.'
'Meaning if you knew the speed of departure from the gun,
and the angle of the gun . . .'
'You could say pretty closely where it was going to land,
yes.'
'We should tell Nadir about this privately.'
Khalid worked up a set of tables for calculating cannon
fire, with artful drawings of the curves describing the flight of
shot, and a little Tibetan book filled with Iwang's careful
numerics. These items were placed in an ornate carved ironwood box,
encrusted with silver, turquoise and lapis, and brought to the
Khanaka in Bokhara, along with a gorgeous damasked breastplate for
the Khan. The steel rectangle at the centre of this breastplate was
a dramatic swirl of white and grey steel, with iron flecks very
lightly etched by a treatment of sulphuric acids and other
caustics. The pattern was called by Khalid the Zeravshan Eddies,
and indeed the swirl resembled a standing eddy in the river,
spinning off the foundation of the Dagbit Bridge whenever the water
was high. It was one of the handsomest pieces of metalwork Bahram
had ever seen, and it seemed to him that it, and the decorated box
filled with Iwang's mathematics, made for a very impressive set of
gifts for Sayyed Abdul Aziz.
He and Khalid dressed in their best finery for their
audience, and Iwang joined them in the dark red robes and conical
winged hat of a Tibetan monk, indeed a lama of the highest
distinction. So the presenters were as impressive as their
presents, Bahram thought; although once in the Registan, under the
vast arch of the gold--covered Tilla Karia Madressa, he felt less
imposing. And once in the company of the court he felt slightly
plain, even shabby, as if they were children pretending to be
courtiers, or, simply, bumpkins.
The Khan, however, was delighted by the breastplate, and
praised Khalid's art highly, even putting the piece on over his
finery and leaving it there. The box he also admired, while handing
the papers inside to Nadir.
After a few moments more they were dismissed, and Nadir
guided them to the Tilla Karia garden. The diagrams were very
interesting, he said as he looked them over; he wanted to inquire
more closely into them; meanwhile, the Khan had been informed by
his armourers that cutting a spiral into the insides of their
cannon barrels had caused one to explode on firing, the rest to
lose range. So Nadir wanted Khalid to visit the armourers and speak
to them about it.
Khalid nodded easily, though Bahram could see the thought
in his eyes; once again he would be taken away from what he wanted
to be doing. Nadir did not see this, though he watched Khalid's
face closely. In fact, he went on cheerfully to say how much the
Khan appreciated Khalid's great wisdom and craft, and how much all
the people of the Khanate and in Dar al Islam generally would
owe to Khalid if, as seemed likely, his efforts helped them to
stave off any further encroachments of the Chinese, reputed to be
on the march in the west borders of their empire. Khalid nodded
politely, and the men were dismissed.
Walking back along the river road, Khalid was irritated.
'This trip accomplished nothing.'
'We don't know yet,' Iwang said, and Bahram nodded.
'We do. The Khan is a . He sighed. 'And Nadir clearly
thinks of us as his servants.'
'We are all servants of the Khan,' Iwang reminded
him.
That silenced him.
As they came back towards Samarqand, they passed by the
ruins of old Afrasiab. 'If only we had the Sogdian kings again,'
Bahram said.
Khalid shook his head. 'Those are not the ruins of the
Sogdian kings, but of Markanda, which stood here before Afrasiab.
Alexander the Great called it the most beautiful city he ever
conquered.'
'And look at it now,' Bahram said. 'Dusty old
foundations, broken walls . . .'
Iwang said, 'Samarqand too will come to this.'
'So it doesn't matter if we are at Nadir's beck and
call?' Khalid snapped.
'Well, it too will pass,' Iwang said.
Jewels in the Sky
Nadir asked for more and more of Khalid's time, and
Khalid grew very restive. One time he went to Devanbegi with a
proposal to build a complete system of drains underneath both
Bokhara and Samarqand, to move the water of the scores of stagnant
pools that dotted both cities, especially Bokhara. This would keep
the water from becoming foul, and decrease the number of mosquitos
and the incidence of disease, including the plague, which the Hindu
caravans reported to be devastating parts of Sind. Khalid suggested
sequestering all travellers outside the city whenever they heard
such news, and causing delays in caravans that came from affected
areas, to be sure of cleanliness. A purification delay, analogous
to the spiritual purifications of Ramadan.
But Nadir ignored all these ideas. An underground system
of pipes, though common in Persia from before the invasions of the
Mongols, was too expensive now to contemplate. Khalid was being
asked for military aid, not physic. Nadir did not believe he knew
anything about physic.
So Khalid returned to his compound and put the whole
place to work on the Khan's artillery, making every aspect of the
cannons a matter for demonstrations, but without trying to learn
anything of primary causes, as he called them, except occasionally
in motion. He worked on metal strength with Iwang, and made use of
Iwang's mathematics to do cannonflight studies, and tried a number
of methods to cause the cannonballs to spiral reliably in
flight.
All this was done with reluctance and ill humour;
and only in the afternoon, after a nap and a meal of yoghurt, or
late in the evening, after smoking from one of his narghiles, did
he recover his equanimity, and pursue his studies with soap bubbles
and prisms, air pumps and mercury scales. 'If you can measure the
weight of air you should be able to measure heat, up to
temperatures far beyond what we can distinguish with our blisters
and ouches.'
Nadir sent his men by on a monthly basis to receive the
latest news of Khalid's studies, and from time to time dropped by
himself unannounced, throwing the compound into a flurry, like an
anthill hit by water. Khalid was polite at all times, but
complained to Bahram bitterly about the monthly request for news,
particularly since they had very little. 'I thought I escaped the
moon curse when Fedwa went through menopause,' he groused.
Ironically, these unwelcome visits were also losing him
allies in the madressas, as he was thought to be favoured by the
treasurer, and he could not risk telling them the real situation.
So there were cold looks, and slights in the bazaar and the mosque;
also, many examples of grasping obsequiousness. It made him
irritable, indeed sometimes he rose to a veritable fury of
irritability. 'A little power and you see how awful people
are.'
To keep him from plunging back into black melancholy,
Bahram scoured the caravanserai for things that might please him,
visiting the Hindus and the Armenians in particular, also the
Chinese, and coming back with books, compasses, clocks, and a
curious nested astrolabe, which purported to show that the six
planets occupied orbits that filled polygons that were
progressively simpler by one side, so that Mercury circled inside a
decagon, Venus a nonagon just large enough to hold the decagon,
Earth an octagon outside the nonagon, and so on up to Saturn,
circling in a big square. This object astonished Khalid, and caused
night--long discussions with Iwang and Zahhar about the disposition
of the planets around the sun.
This new interest in astronomy quickly superseded all
others in Khalid, and grew to a passion after Iwang brought by a
curious device he had made in his shop, a long silver tube, hollow
except for glass lenses placed in both ends. Looking through the
tube, things appeared closer than they really were, with their
detail more fine.
'How can that work?' Khalid demanded when he looked
through it. The look of surprise on his face was that of the
puppets in the bazaar, pure and hilarious. It made Bahram happy to
see it.
'Like the prism?' Iwang suggested uncertainly.
Khalid shook his head. 'Not that you can see things as
bigger, or closer, but that you can see so much more detail! How
can that be?'
'The detail must always be there in the light,' Iwang
said, I and the eye only powerful enough to discern part of it. I
admit I am surprised, but consider, most people's eyes weaken as
they age, especially for things close by. I know mine have.
I made my first set of lenses to use as spectacles, you know, one
for each eye, in a frame. But while I was assembling one I looked
through the two lenses lined up together.' He grinned, miming the
action. 'I was really very anxious to confirm that you two saw the
same things I saw, to tell the truth. I couldn't quite believe my
own eyes.'
Khalid was looking through the thing again.
So now they looked at things. Distant ridges, birds in
flight, approaching caravans. Nadir was shown the glass, and its
military uses were immediately obvious to him. He took one they had
made for him, encrusted with garnets, to the Khan, and word came
back that the Khan was pleased. That did not ease the presence of
the Khanate in Khalid's compound, of course; on the contrary, Nadir
mentioned casually that they were looking forward to the next
remarkable development out of Khalid's shop, as the Chinese were
said to be in a turmoil. Who knew where that kind of thing might
end?
'It will never end,' Khalid said bitterly when Nadir had
gone. 'It's like a noose that tightens with our every move.'
'Feed him your discoveries in little pieces,' Iwang
suggested. 'It will seem as if there are more of them.'
Khalid followed this advice, which gave him a little more
time, and they worked on all manner of things that it seemed would
help the Khan's troops in battle. Khalid indulged his interest in
primary causes mostly at night, when they trained the new spyglass
on the stars, and later that month on the moon, which proved to be
a very rocky, mountainous, desolate world, ringed by innumerable
craters, as if fired upon by the cannon of some super emperor.
Then on one memorable night they looked through the spyglass at
Jupiter, and Khalid said, 'By God it's a world too, clearly. Banded
by latitude and look, those three stars near it, they're
brighter than stars. Could they be moons of Jupiter's?'
They could. They moved fast, around Jupiter, and the ones
closer to Jupiter moved faster, just like the planets around the
sun. Soon Khalid and Iwang had seen a fourth one, and mapped all
four orbits, so that they could prepare new viewers to comprehend
the sight, by looking at the diagrams first. They made it all into
a book, another gift to the Khan -- a gift with no military use,
but they named the moons after the Khan's four oldest wives, and he
liked that, it was clear. He was reported to have said, 'Jewels in
the sky! For me!'
Who is the Stranger?
There were factions in town who did not like them. When
Bahram walked through the Registan, and saw the eyes watching him,
the conversations begun or ended by his passage, he saw that he was
part of a coterie or faction, no matter how innocuous his behaviour
had been. He was related to Khalid, who was allied with Iwang and
Zahhar, and together they formed part of Nadir Devanbegi's power.
They were therefore Nadir's allies, even if he had forced them to
it like wet pulp in a paper press; even if they hated him. Many
other people in Samarqand hated Nadir, no doubt even more than
Khalid did, as Khalid was under his protection, while these other
people were his enemies: relatives of his dead or imprisoned or
exiled foes, perhaps, or the losers of many earlier palace
struggles. The Khan had other advisers courtiers, generals,
relatives at court -- all jealous of their own share of his regard,
and envious of Nadir's great influence. Bahram had heard rumours
from time to time of palace intrigues against Nadir, but he
remained unaware of the details. The fact that their involuntary
association with Nadir could cause them trouble elsewhere struck
him as grossly unfair; the association itself was already trouble
enough.
One day this sense of hidden enemies became more
material: Bahram was visiting Iwang, and two qadi Bahram had never
seen before appeared in the door of the Tibetan's shop, backed by
two of the Khan's soldiers, and a small gaggle of ulema from the
Tilla Karia Madressa, demanding that Iwang produce his tax
receipts.
'I am not a dhimmi,' Iwang said with his customary
calm.
The dhimmi, or people of the pact, were those
non believers who were born and lived their lives in the
khanate, who had to pay a special tax. Islam was the religion of
justice, and all Muslims were equal before God and the law; but of
the lesser ones, women, slaves and the dhimmi, the dhimmi were the
ones who could change their status by a simple decision to
convert to true belief. Indeed there had been times in the past
when it had been 'the book or the sword' for all pagans, and only
people of the book Jews, Zoroastrians, Christians and Sabians
-- had been allowed to keep their faith, if they insisted on it.
Nowadays pagans of all sort were allowed to keep their various
religions, as long as they were registered with the qadis, and paid
the annual dhimma tax.
This was clear, and ordinary. Ever since the shiite
Safavids had come to the throne in Iran, however, the legal
position of dhimmi had worsened -- markedly in Iran, where the
shiite mullahs were so concerned with purity, but also in the
khanates to the east, at least sometimes. It was a matter for
discretion, really. As Iwang had once remarked, the uncertainty
itself was a part of the tax.
'You are not a dhimmi?' one of the qadi said,
surprised.
'No, I come from Tibet. I am mustamin.'
The mustamin were foreign visitors, permitted to live in
Muslim lands for specified periods of time.
'Do you have an aman?'
'Yes.'
This was the safe conduct pass issued to mustamin,
renewed by the Khanaka on an annual basis. Now Iwang brought a
sheet of parchment out of his back room, and showed it to the
qadis. There were a number of wax seals at the bottom of the
document, and the qadis inspected these closely.
'He's been here eight years!' one of them complained.
'That's longer than allowed by the law.'
Iwang shrugged impassively. 'Renewal was granted this
spring.'
A heavy silence ruled as the men checked the document's
seals again. 'A mustamin cannot own property,' someone noted.
'Do you own this shop?' the chief qadi asked, surprised
again.
'No,' Iwang said. 'Naturally not. Rental only.'
'Monthly?'
'Lease by year. After my aman is renewed.'
'Where are you from?'
'Tibet.'
'You have a house there?'
'Yes. In Iwang.'
'A family?'
'Brothers and sisters. No wives or children.'
'So who's in your house?'
'Sister.'
'When are you going back?'
A short pause. 'I don't know.'
'You mean you have no plans to return to Tibet.'
'No, I plan to return. But -- business has been good.
Sister sends raw silver, I make it into things. This is
Samarqand.'
'And so business will always be good! Why would you ever
leave? You should be dhimmi, you are a permanent resident here, a
nonbelieving subject of the Khan.'
Iwang shrugged, gestured at the document. That was
something Nadir had brought to the khanate, it occurred to Bahram,
something from deep in the heart of Islam: the law was the law.
Dhimmi and mustamin were both protected by contract, each in their
way.
'He is not even one of the people of the book,' one of
the qadi said indignantly.
'We have many books in Tibet,' Iwang said calmly, as if
he had misunderstood.
The qadi were offended. 'What is your religion?'
'I am Buddhist.'
'So you don't believe in Allah, you don't pray to
Allah.'
Iwang did not reply.
'Buddhists are polytheists,' one of them said. 'Like the
pagans Mohammed converted in Arabia.'
Bahram stepped before them. Thereis no
compulsion in religion",' he recited hotly. Toyou
your religion, to me my religion." That's what the Quran tells
us!'
The visitors stared at him coldly.
'Are you not Muslim?' one said.
'I certainly am! You would know it if you knew the Sher
Dor mosque! I've never seen you there -- where do you pray on
Friday?'
'Tilla Karia Mosque,' the qadi said, angry now.
This was interesting, as the Tilla Karia Madressa was the
centre for the Shiite study group, which was opposed to Nadir.
"'Al kufou millatun wahida",' one of them said; a
counter quote, as theologians called it. Unbelief is one
religion.
'Only digaraz can make complaint to the law,' Bahram
snapped back. Digaraz were those who spoke without grudge or
malice, disinterested Muslims. 'You don't qualify.'
'Neither do you, young man.'
'You come here! Who sent you? You challenge the law of
the aman, who gives you the right? Get out of here! You have no
idea what this man does for Samarqand! You attack Sayyed Abdul
himself here, you attack Islam itself! Get out!'
The qadis did not move, but something in their gazes had
grown more guarded. Their leader said, 'Next spring we will talk
again,' with a glance at Iwang's aman. With a wave of his hand that
was just like the Khan's, he led the others out and down the narrow
passage of the bazaar.
For a long while the two friends stood silently in the
shop, awkward with each other.
Finally Iwang sighed. 'Did not Mohammed set laws
concerning the way men should be treated in Dar al Islam?'
'God set them. Mohammed only transmitted them.'
'All free men equal before the law. Women, children,
slaves and unbelievers less under the law.'
'Equal beings, but they all have their particular rights,
protected by law.'
'But not as many rights as those of Muslim free men.'
'They are not as strong, so their rights are not so
burdensome. They are all people to be protected by Muslim free men,
upholding God's laws.'
Iwang pursed his lips. Finally he said, 'God is the force
moving in everything. The shapes things take when they move.'
'God is love moving through all,' Bahram agreed. 'The
sufis say this.'
Iwang nodded. 'God is a mathematician. A very great and
subtle mathematician. As our bodies are to the crude furnaces and
stills of your compound, so God's mathematics is to our
mathematics.'
'So you agree there is a god? I thought Buddha denied
there was any god.'
'I don't know. I suppose some Buddhists might say not.
Being springs out of the Void. I don't know, myself. If there is
only the Void enveloping all we see, where did the mathematics come
from? it seems to me it could be the result of something
thinking.'
Bahram was surprised to bear Iwang say this. And he could
not be quite sure how sincere Iwang was, given what had just
happened with the qadis from Tilla Karia. Although it made sense,
in that it was obviously impossible that such an intricate and
glorious thing as the world could have come to pass without some
very great and loving god to make it.
'You should come to the sufi fellowship, and listen to
what my teacher there says,' Bahram finally said, smiling at the
thought of the big Tibetan in their group. Although their teacher
would probably like it.
Bahram returned to the compound by way of the western
caravanserai, where the Hindu traders were camped in their smell of
incense and milktea. Bahram completed the other business he had
there, buying scents and bags of calcinated minerals for Khalid,
and then when he saw Dol, an acquaintance from Ladakh, he joined
him and sat with him and drank tea for a while, then rakshi,
looking over the trader's pallets of spices and small bronze
figurines. Bahram gestured at the detailed little statues. 'Are
these your gods?'
Dol looked at him, surprised and amused. 'Some are gods,
yes. This is Shiva -- this Kali, the destroyer -- this Ganesh.'
'An elephant god?'
'This is how we picture him. They have other forms.'
'But an elephant?'
'Have you ever seen an elephant?'
'No.'
'They're impressive.'
'I know they're big.'
'It's more than that.'
Bahram sipped his tea. 'I think Iwang might convert to
Islam.'
'Trouble with his aman?'
Dol laughed at Bahram's expression, urged him to drink
from the jar of rakshi.
Bahram obliged him, then persisted. 'Do you think it's
possible to change religions?'
'Many people have.'
'Could you? Could you say, There is only one god?'
Gesturing at the figurines.
Dol smiled. 'They are all aspects of Brahman, you know.
Behind all, the great God Brahman, all one in him.'
'So Iwang could be like that too. He might already
believe in the one great god, the God of Gods.'
'He could. God manifests in different ways to different
people.'
Bahram sighed.
Bad Air
He had just gone inside the compound gate, and was on his
way to tell Khalid about the incident at Iwang's, when the
door of the chemical shed burst open and men crashed out, chased by
a shouting Khalid and a dense cloud of yellow smoke. Bahram
turned and ran for the house, intending to grab Esmerine and the
children, but they were out and running already, and he followed
them through the main gate, everyone shrieking and then, as the
cloud descended on them, dropping to the ground and crawling away
like rats, coughing and hacking and spitting and crying.
They rolled down the hill, throats and eyes burning, lungs aching
from the caustic stink of the poisonous yellow cloud. Most of them
followed Khalid's lead and plunged their heads into the river,
emerging only to puff shallow breaths, and then dunk
themselves again. When the cloud had dispersed and he had recovered
a little, Khalid began to curse.
'What was it?' Bahram said, coughing still.
'A crucible of acid exploded. We were testing it.'
'For what?'
Khalid didn't answer. Slowly the caustic burn of their
delicate membranes cooled. The wet and unhappy crew straggled back
into the compound. Khalid set some of the men to clean up the shed,
and Bahram went with him into his study, where he changed his
clothes and washed, then wrote in his big book notes, presumably
about the failed demonstration.
Except it had not been completely a failure, or so Bahram began
to gather from Khalid's muttering.
'What were you trying to do?'
Khalid did not answer directly. 'It seems certain to me
that there are different kinds of air,' he said instead. 'Different
constituents, perhaps, as in metals. Only all invisible to the eye.
We smell the differences, sometimes. And some can kill, as at the
bottom of wells. It isn't an absence of air, in those cases, but a
bad kind of air, or part of air. The heaviest no doubt. And
different distillations, different burnings ... you can suppress or
stoke a fire ... Anyway, I thought that sal ammoniac and saltpetre
and sulphur mixed, would make a different air. And it did, too, but
too much of it, too fast. Like an explosion. And clearly a poison.'
He coughed uncomfortably. 'It is like the Chinese alchemists'
recipe for wan--jen ti, which Iwang says means "killer of
myriads". . I supposed I could show Nadir this reaction, and
propose it as a weapon. You could perhaps kill a whole army with
it.'
They regarded the thought silently.
'Well,' Bahram said, 'it might help him keep his own
position more secure with the Khan.'
He explained what he had witnessed at Iwang's.
'And so you think Nadir is in trouble at the court?'
'Yes.'
'And you think Iwang might convert to Islam?'
'He seemed to be asking about it.'
Khalid laughed, then coughed painfully. 'That would be
odd.'
'People don't like to be laughed at.'
'Somehow I don't think Iwang would mind.'
'Did you know that's the name of his town, Iwang?,
'No. Is it?'
'Yes. So he seemed to say.'
Khalid shrugged.
'It means we don't know his real name.'
Another shrug. 'None of us know our real names.'
Love the Size of the World
The autumn harvests came and passed, and the caravanserai
emptied for the winter, when the passes to the east would close.
Bahram's days were enriched by Iwang's presence at the sufi ribat,
where Iwang sat at the back and listened closely to all that the
old master Ali said, very seldom speaking, and then only to ask the
simplest questions, usually the meaning of one word or another.
There were lots of Arabic and Persian words in the sufi
terminology, and though Iwang's Sogdi Turkic was good, the
religious language was opaque to him. Eventually the master gave
Iwang a lexicon of sufi technical terms, or istilahat, by Ansari,
titled 'One Hundred Fields and Resting Places', which had an
introduction that ended with the sentence, 'The real essence of the
spiritual states of the sufis is such that expressions are not
adequate to describe it: nevertheless, these expressions are fully
understood by those who have experienced these states.'
This, Bahram felt, was the main source of Iwang's
problem: he had not experienced the states being described.
'Very possibly,' Iwang would agree when Bahram said this
to him. 'But how am I to reach them?'
'With love,' Bahram would say. 'You must love everything
that is, especially people. You will see, it is love that moves
everything.'
Iwang would purse his lips. 'With love comes hate,' he
would say. 'They are two sides of an excess of feeling. Compassion
rather than love, that seems to me the best way. There is no bad
obverse side to compassion.'
'Indifference,' Bahram suggested.
Iwang would nod, thinking things over. But Bahram
wondered if he could ever come to the right view. The fount of
Bahram's own love, like a powerful artesian spring in the hills,
was his feeling for his wife and children, then for Allah, who had
allowed him the privilege of living his life among such beautiful
souls -- not only the three of them, but Khalid and Fedwa and all
their relatives, and the community of the compound, the mosque, the
ribat, Sher Dor, and indeed all of Samarqand and the wide world,
when he was feeling it. Iwang had no such starting point,
being single and childless, as far as Bahram knew, and an
infidel to boot. How was he to begin to feel the more generalized
and diffuse loves, if the specific ones were not there for him?
'The heart which is greater than the intellect is not
that which beats in the chest.' So Ali would say. It was a matter
of opening his heart to God, and letting the love appear from there
first. Iwang was already good at calming himself, at paying
attention to the world in its quiet moments, sitting out at the
compound some dawns after he had spent the night on a couch in the
shops. Bahram once or twice joined him in these sittings, and once
he was inspired by a windless pure gold sky to recite from Rumi
'How silent it has become in the house of the heart!
The heart as hearth and home Has encompassed the
world.'
When Iwang finally responded, after the sun had broken
over the eastern ridges and flooded the valley with buttered light,
it was only to say, 'I wonder if the world is as big as Brahmagupta
said it was.'
'He said it was a sphere, right?'
'Yes, of course. You can see that out on the steppes,
when a caravan comes over the horizon heads first. We are on the
surface of a great ball.'
'The heart of God.'
No reply but the swaying head, which meant that Iwang did
not agree but did not want to disagree. Bahram desisted, and asked
about the Hindu's estimate of the size of the Earth, which was
clearly what interested Iwang now.
'Brahmagupta noticed that the sun shone straight down a
well in the Deccan on a certain day, and the next year he arranged
to be a thousand yoganda north of there, and he measured the
angle of the shadows, and used spherical geometry to calculate what
percentage of the circle that arc of a thousand yoganda was. Very
simple, very interesting.'
Bahram nodded; no doubt true; but they would only ever
see a small fraction of those yoganda, and here, now, Iwang was in
need of spiritual illumination. Or -- in need of love. Bahram
invited him to eat with his family, to observe Esmerine serve the
meals, and instruct the children in their manners. The children
were a pleasure all their own, their liquid eyes huge in their
faces as they stopped in their racing about to listen
impatiently to Esmerine's lectures. Their racing about the compound
was a pleasure as well. Iwang nodded at all this. 'You're a lucky
man,' he told Bahram.
'We are all lucky men,' Bahram replied. And Iwang
agreed.
The Goddess and the Law
Parallel to his new
religious studies, Iwang continued his investigations and
demonstrations with Khalid. They devoted the greater portion of
these efforts to their projects for Nadir and the Khan. They worked
out a long range signalling system for the army that used
mirrors and small telescopes; they also cast bigger and bigger
cannons, with giant waggons to haul them by horse or camel train
from one battlefield to the next.
'We will need cart roads for these, if we are ever to
move them,' Iwang noted. Even the great Silk Road itself was
nothing but a camel track for most of its length.
Their latest private investigation into causes concerned
a little telescope which magnified objects too small to be seen by
the eye alone. The astronomers from the Ulug Bek Madressa had
devised the thing, which could only be focused on a very narrow
slice of air, so that translucent items caught between two plates
of glass were best, lit by mirrored sunlight from below. Then new
little worlds appeared, right under their fingers.
The three men spent hours looking through this telescope
at pond water, which proved to be full of strangely articulated
creatures, all swimming about. They looked at translucently thin
slabs of stone, wood and bone; and at their own blood, which was
filled with blobs that were frighteningly like the animals in the
pond water.
'The world just keeps getting smaller,' Khalid marvelled.
'If we could draw the blood of those little creatures in our blood,
and put it under a lens even more powerful than this one, I have no
doubt that their blood would contain animalcules just like ours
does; and so on for those animals as well, and down to. . .'He
trailed off, awe giving him a dazed look. Bahram had never seen him
so happy.
'There is probably some smallest possible size of things,' Iwang
said practically. 'So the ancient Greeks postulated. The ultimate
particulates, out of which all else is constructed. No doubt
smaller than we will ever see.'
Khalid frowned. 'This is just a start. Surely stronger
lenses will be made. And then who knows what will be seen? Maybe it
will allow us to understand the composition of metals at last, and
work the transmutations.'
'Maybe,' Iwang allowed. He stared into the eye of the
lens, humming to himself. 'Certainly the little crystals in granite
are made clear.'
Khalid nodded, wrote notes in one of his notebooks. He
returned to the glass, then drew the shapes he saw on the page.
'The very small and the very large,' he said.
'These lenses are a great gift from God,' Bahram said,
'reminding us that it is all one world. One substance, all
interpenetrated with structure, but still one, big to small.'
Khalid nodded. 'Thus the stars may have their sway over
us after all. Maybe the stars are animals too, like these
creatures, could we only see them better.'
Iwang shook his head. 'All one, yes. It seems more and
more obvious. But not all animal, surely. Perhaps the stars are
more like rocks than these fine creatures.'
'The stars are fire.'
'Rocks, fire -- but not animals.'
'But all one,' Bahram insisted.
And both of the older men nodded, Khalid emphatically,
Iwang reluctantly, and with a low humming in his throat.
After that day it seemed to Bahram that Iwang was always
humming. He came to the compound and joined Khalid in his
demonstrations, and went with Bahram to the ribat and listened to
Ali's lectures, and whenever Bahram visited him in his shop he was
playing with numbers, or clicking a Chinese abacus back and forth,
and always distracted, always humming. On Fridays he came to the
mosque and stood outside the door, listening to the prayers and the
readings, facing Mecca and blinking at the sun, but never kneeling
or prostrating or praying; and always humming.
Bahram did not think he should convert. Even if he had to
move back to Tibet for a time and then return, it seemed clear to
Bahram that he was no Muslim. And so it would not be right.
Indeed, as the weeks passed he began to seem more strange
and foreign, rather than less; even more an unbeliever, performing
little demonstrations for himself that were like sacrifices to
light, or magnetism, or the void, or gravity. An alchemist,
precisely, but in an eastern tradition stranger than any sufi's, as
if he were not only reverting to Buddhism but going beyond it, back
to Tibet's older religion, Bon as Iwang called it.
That winter he sat in his shop with Bahram, before the
open fire of his furnace, hands extended to keep the fingers warm
as they poked out of the glove ends like his little babies, smoking
hashish from a longstemmed pipe and handling it to Bahram
occasionally, until the two men sat there watching the coals' film
dance over the hot orange underneath. One night, deep in a
snowstorm, Iwang went out to get more wood for the fire, and Bahram
looked over at a movement and saw an old Chinese woman sitting by
the stove, dressed in a red dress, with her hair pulled up in a
knot on top of her head. Bahram jerked; the old woman turned her
head and looked at him, and he saw her black eyes were filled with
stars. He promptly fell off his stool, and groped to his feet to
find her no longer there. When Iwang came back in the room and
Bahram described her, Iwang shrugged, smiled slyly: 'There
are lots of old women in this quarter of the city. This is where
the poor people live, among them the widows, who have to sleep in
their dead husbands' shops on the floor, on the sufferance of the
new owners, and do what they can to keep hunger from the door.'
'But the red dress -- her face -- her eyes!'
'That all sounds like the goddess of the stove, actually.
She appears next to the hearth, if you're lucky.'
'I'm not smoking any more of your hashish.'
Iwang laughed. 'If only that was all it took!'
Another frosty night, a few weeks alter, Iwang knocked on
the gate of the compound, and came in greatly excited -- drunk, one
would have said of another man -- a man possessed.
'Look!' he said to Khalid, taking him by his shortened
arm and pulling him into the old man's study. 'Look, I've worked it
out at last.'
'The philosopher's stone?'
'No no! Nothing so trivial! It's the one law, the law
above all the others. An equation. See here.'
He got out a slate and chalked on it rapidly, using the
alchemical symbols Khalid and he had decided on to mark quantities
that were different in different situations.
'Same above, same below, just as Bahram is always saying.
Everything is attracted to everything else by precisely this level
of attraction. Multiply the two masses attracting each other,
divide that by the square of the distance they are apart from each
other multiply by whatever speed away from the central body
there might be, and the force of the attraction results. Here --
try it with the planets' orbits around the sun, they all work. And
they travel in ellipses around the sun, because they all attract
each other as well as being pulled down to the sun, so the sun sits
at one focus of the ellipse, while the sum of all other attractions
make the other focus.' He was sketching furiously as he spoke, as
agitated as Bahram had ever seen him. 'It explains the
discrepancies in the observations out at Ulug Beg. It works for the
planets, the stars in their constellations no doubt, and the flight
of a cannonball over the Earth, and the movement of those little
animalcules in pondwater or in our blood!'
Khalid was nodding. 'This is the power of gravity itself,
portrayed mathematically.'
'Yes.'
'The attraction is in inverse proportion to the square of
the distance away.'
'Yes.'
'And it acts on everything.'
'I think so.'
'What about light?'
'I don't know. Light itself must have so little mass. If
any. But what mass it has, is being attracted to all other masses.
Mass attracts mass.'
'But this,' Khalid said, 'is again action at a
distance.'
'Yes.' Iwang grinned. 'Your universal spirit, perhaps.
Acting through some agency we don't know. Thus gravity, magnetism,
lightning.'
'A kind of invisible fire.'
'Or perhaps to fire as the tiniest animals are to us.
Some subtle force.
And yet nothing escapes it. Everything has it. We all
live within it.'
'An active spirit in all things.'
'Like love,' Bahram put in.
'Yes, like love,' Iwang agreed for once. 'In that without
it, all would be dead on Earth. Nothing would attract or repel, or
circulate, or change form, or live in any way, but merely lie
there, dead and cold.'
And then he smiled, he grinned outright, his smooth shiny
Tibetan cheeks dimpled by deep creases, his big horsey teeth
gleaming: 'And here we are! So it must be, do you see? It all moves
-- it all lives. And the force acts exactly in inverse proportion
to the distance between things.'
Khalid began, 'I wonder if this could help us to
transmute But the other two men cut him off: 'Lead into
gold! Lead into gold!' Laughing at him.
'It's all gold already,' Bahram said, and Iwang's eyes
suddenly gleamed, it was as if the goddess of the stove had filled
him, he pulled Bahram to him and gave him a rough wet woolly hug,
humming again.
'You're a good man, Bahram. A very good man you are.
Listen, if I believe in your love, can I stay here? Will it be
blasphemy to you, if I believe in gravity and love, and the oneness
of all things?'
Theories without Application
Make Trouble
Bahram's days became busier than ever, as was true for
everyone in the compound. Khalid and Iwang continued to debate the
ramifications of Iwang's great figure, and to run demonstrations of
all kinds, either testing it or investigating matters related to
it. But their investigations did little to help Bahram in his work
at the forge, it being difficult or impossible to apply the two
explorers' esoteric and highly mathematical arguments to the daily
effort to make stronger steel or more powerful cannons. To the
Khan, bigger was better, and he had heard of new cannons of the
Chinese Emperor, that dwarfed even the old giants left stranded in
Byzantium by the great plagues of the seventh century. Bahram was
trying to match these rumoured guns, and finding it hard to cast
them, hard to move them, and hard to fire them without causing them
to crack. Khalid and Iwang both had suggestions, but these did not
work out, and Bahram was left with the same old
trial and error that metallurgists had used for
centuries, always coming back to the idea that if he could only get
the molten iron hot enough, and of the right mix of feed stocks,
then the resulting metal of the cannon would be stronger. So it was
a matter of increasing the amount of the river's force applied to
the blast furnaces, to create temperatures that turned the melts
incandescent white, so brilliant it hurt to look at them. Khalid
and Iwang observed the scene at dusk, and argued till dawn about
the origins of such vivid light, released out of iron by heat.
All well and good, but no matter how much air they
blasted into the charcoal fire, causing the iron to run white as
the sun and liquid as water, or even thinner, the cannons that
resulted were just as prone to cracks as before. And Nadir would
appear, unannounced, aware of even the latest results. Clearly he
had his spies in the compound, and did not care if Bahram knew it.
Or wanted him to know it. And so he would show up, not pleased. His
look would say, More, and quickly! even as his words
reassured them that he was confident they were doing the best they
could, that the Khan was pleased with the flight tables. He would
say, 'The Khan is impressed by the power of mathematics to stave
off Chinese invaders,' and Bahram would nod unhappily, to indicate
he had got the message even if Khalid had studiously avoided seeing
it, and he would hold back from asking after the assurance of an
amun for Iwang the following spring, thinking it might be best to
trust to Nadir's good will at a better time, and go back to the
shop to try something else.
A New Metal, a New Dynasty, a New Religion
Just as a practical matter, then, Bahram was getting
interested in a dull grey metal that looked like lead on the
outside and tin on its interior.
There was obviously very much sulphur in the mercury --
if that whole description of metals could be credited -- and it
was, at first, so nondescript as to pass notice. But it was proving
in various little demonstrations and trials to be less brittle than
iron, more ductile than gold, and, in short, a different metal than
those mentioned by Al Razi and Ibn Sina, strange though that
was to contemplate. A new metal! And it mixed with iron to form a
kind of steel that seemed as if it would work well as cannon barrel
material.
'How could there be a new metal?' Bahram asked Khalid and
Iwang. 'And what should it be called? I can't just keep calling it
the grey stuff.'
'It's not new,' Iwang said. 'It was always there among
the rest, but we're achieving heats never before reached, and so it
expresses out.'
Khalid called it leadgold as a joke, but the stuck name
stuck for lack of another. And the metal, found now every time they
smelted certain bluish copper ores, became part of their
armoury.
Days passed in a fever of work. Rumours of war to the
east increased. In China, it was said, barbarians were again
crashing over the Great Wall, bringing down the rotten Ming dynasty
and setting that whole giant off in a ferment of violence that was
now rippling outwards from it. This time the barbarians came not
from Mongolia but Manchuria, northeast of China, and they were the
most accomplished warriors ever yet seen in the world, it was said,
and very likely to conquer and destroy everything in their path,
including Islamic civilization, unless something was done to make a
defence against them possible.
So people said in the bazaar, and Nadir too, in his more
circuitous way, confirmed that something was happening; and the
feeling of danger grew as the winter passed, and the time for
military campaigns came around again. Spring, the time for war and
for plague, the two biggest arms of six armed death, as Iwang
put it.
Bahram worked through these months as if a great
thunderstorm were always visible, just topping the horizon to the
east, moving backwards against the prevailing winds, portending
catastrophe. Such a painful edge this added to the pleasure he took
in his little family, and in the larger familial existence of the
compound: his son and daughter racing about or fidgeting at
prayers, dressed impeccably by Esmerine, and the very politest of
children, except when enraged, which both of them had a tendency to
become to a degree that astonished both their parents. It was one
of their chief topics of conversation, in the depths of the night,
when they would stir and Esmerine go out briefly to relieve
herself, then return and pull off her shift again, her breasts
silvery raindrops spilling down her ribs in the moonlight, over
Bahram's hands as he warmed them, in that somnolent world of second
watch sex that was one of the beautiful spaces of daily life, the
salvation of sleep, the body's dream, so much warmer and more
loving than any other part of the day that it was sometimes hard in
the mornings to believe it had really happened, that he and
Esmerine, so severe in dress and manner, Esmerine who ran the women
at their work as hard as Khalid had at his most tyrannical, and who
never spoke to Bahram or looked at him except in the most
businesslike way, as was only fitting and proper, had in fact been
transported together with him to whole other worlds of rapture, in
the depths of the night in their bed. As he watched her work in the
afternoons, Bahram thought: love changed everything. They were all
just animals after all, creatures God had made not much different
from monkeys, and there was no real reason why a woman's breasts
should not be like the udders on a cow, swinging together
inelegantly as she leaned forwards to work at one labour or
another; but love made them orbs of the utmost beauty, and
the same was true of the whole world. Love put all things under a
description, and only love could save them.
In searching for a provenance for this new 'leadgold',
Khalid read through some of the more informative of his old tomes,
and he was interested when he came on a passage in jabir Ibn
Hayyam's ancient classic 'The Book of Properties', penned in the
first years of the jihad, in which jabir listed seven metals,
namely gold, silver, lead, tin, copper, iron and kharsini, meaning
'Chinese iron' dull grey, silver when polished, known to the
Chinese themselves as paitung, or 'white copper'. The Chinese,
jabir wrote, had made mirrors of it capable of curing the eye
diseases of those who looked into them. Khalid, whose eyes got
weaker every year, immediately set to the manufacture of a little
mirror of their own leadgold, just to see. Jabir also suggested
kharsini made bells of a particularly melodious tone, and so Khalid
had the rest of the quantity they had on hand cast into bells, to
see if their tone was especially pretty, which might help secure
the identification of the metal. All agreed that the bells
tinkled very prettily; but Khalid's eyes did not improve after
looking into a mirror of the metal.
'Call it kharsini,' Khalid said. He sighed. 'Who knows
what it is? We don't know anything.'
But he continued to try various demonstrations, writing
voluminous commentaries on each test, through the nights and on to
many a sleepless dawn. He and Iwang pursued their studies. Khalid
directed Bahram and Paxtakor and jalil and the rest of his old
artisans in the shops to build new telescopes, and microscopes, and
pressure gauges, and pumps. The compound had become a place where
their skills in metallurgy and mechanical artisanry combined to
give them great power to make new things; if they could imagine
something, they could make some rude first approximation of it.
Every time the old artisans were able to make their moulds and
tools more exactly, it allowed them to set their tolerances finer
still, and thus as they progressed, anything from the intricacies
of clockwork to the massive strength of waterwheels or cannon
barrels could be improved. Khalid took apart a Persian carpetmaking
device to study all its little metal pieces, and remarked to Iwang
that combined with a rack and pinion, the device might be
fitted with stamps shaped like letters, instead of threaders, in
arrays that could be inked and then pressed against paper, and a
whole page thus written all at once, and repeated as many times as
one liked, so that books became as common as cannonballs. And Iwang
had laughed, and said that in Tibet the monks had carved just such
inkblocks, but that Khalid's idea was better.
Meanwhile Iwang worked on his mathematical concerns. Once
he said to Bahram, 'Only a god could have thought these things in
the first place. And then to have used them to embody a world! if
we trace even a millionth part of it, we may find out more than any
sentient beings have ever known through all the ages, and see
plainly the divine mind.'
Bahram nodded uncertainly. By now he knew that he did not
want Iwang to convert to Islam. It seemed false to God and to
Iwang. He knew it was selfishness to feel so, and that God would
take care of it. As indeed it seemed He already had, as Iwang no
longer was coming to the mosque on Fridays, or to the religious
studies at the ribat. God or Iwang, or both, had taken Bahram's
point. Religion could not be faked or used for worldly
purposes.
Dragon Bites World
Now when Bahram visited the caravanserai, he heard many
disquieting stories from the east. Things were in turmoil, China's
new Manchu dynasty was in an expansive temper; the new Manchu
Emperor, usurper that he was, was not content with the old and
fading empire he had conquered, but was determined to reinvigorate
it by war, extending his conquests into the rich rice kingdoms to
the south, Annam and Siam and Burma, as well as the parched
wastelands in the middle of the world, the deserts and mountains
separating China from the Dar, crossed by the threads of the Silk
Road. After crossing that waste they would run into India, the
Islamic khanates, and the Savafid empire. In the caravanserai it
was said that Yarkand and Kashgar were already taken -- perfectly
believable, as they had been defended for decades by the merest
remnants of the Ming garrisons, and by bandit warlords. Nothing lay
between the khanate of Bokhara and these wastelands but the Tarim
Basin and the Ferghana Mountains, and the Silk Road crossed those
in two or three places. Where caravans went, banners could
certainly follow.
And soon after that, they did. News came that Manchu
banners had taken Torugart Pass, which was the high point of one of
the silk routes, between Tashkent and the Takla Makan. Caravan
travel from the east would be disrupted for a little while at
least, which meant that Samarqand and Bokhara would go from being
the centrepoint of the great world exchange, to a largely useless
endpoint. It was a catastrophe for trade.
A final group of caravan people, Armenian, Zott, Jewish
and Hindu, turned up with this news. They had been forced to run
for their lives and leave their goods behind. Apparently the
Dzungarian Gate, between Sinkiang and the Khazakh steppe, was also
about to be taken. As the news raced through the caravanserai
ringing Samarqand, most of the caravans resting in them changed
their plans. Many decided to return to Frengistan, which though
full of petty taifa conflict, was at least Muslim entire, its
little khanates and emirates and sultanates trading between
themselves most of the time, even when fighting.
Such decisions as these would soon cripple Samarqand. As
an endpoint in itself it was nothing, the mere edge of Dar
al Islam. Nadir was worried, and the Khan in a rage. Sayyed
Abdul Aziz ordered the Dzungarian Gate retaken, and an expedition
sent to help defend the Khyber Pass, so that trade relations with
India at the least would remain secure.
Nadir, accompanied by a heavy guard, described these
orders very briefly to Khalid and Iwang. He presented the problem
as if it were somehow Khalid's fault. At the end of his visit, he
informed them that Bahram and his wife and children were to return
with Nadir to the Khanaka in Bokhara. They would be allowed to
return to Samarqand only when Khalid and Iwang devised a weapon
capable of defeating the Chinese.
'They will be allowed to receive guests at the palace.
You are welcome to visit them, or indeed join them there, though I
believe your work is best pursued here with all your men and
machines. If I thought you would work faster in the palace, I would
move you there too, believe me.'
Khalid glared at him, too angry to speak without
endangering them all.
'Iwang will move out here with you, as I judge him most
useful here. He will be given an extension on his aman in advance,
in recognition of his importance to matters of state. Indeed he is
forbidden to leave. Not that he could. The wakened dragon to the
east has already eaten Tibet. So you are taking on a godly task,
one that you can be proud to have been yoked to.'
He spared one glance for Bahram. 'We will take good care
of your family, and you will take good care of things here. You can
live in the palace with them, or here helping the work, whichever
you please.'
Bahram nodded, speechless with dismay and fear. 'I will
do both,' he managed to say, looking at Esmerine and the
children.
Nothing was ever normal again.
Many lives change like that -- all of a sudden, and for
ever.
A Weapon from God
In deference to Bahram's feelings, Khalid and Iwang
organized the whole compound as an armoury, and all their tests and
demonstrations were devoted to increasing the powers of the Khan's
army. Stronger cannon, more explosive gunpowder, spinning shot,
killer of myriads; also firing tables, logistical
protocols, mirror alphabets to talk over great distances; all this
and more they produced, while Bahram lived half in the Khanaka with
Esmerine and the children, and half out at the compound, until the
Bokhara Road became like the courtyard path to him, traversed at
all hours of the day and night, sometimes asleep on horses that
knew the way blind.
The increases they made in the Khan's war making
powers were prodigious; or would have been, if the commanders of
Sayyed Abdul's army could have been made to submit to Khalid's
instruction, and if Khalid had had the patience to teach them. But
both sides were too proud for accommodation, and though it seemed
to Bahram a critical failure on Nadir's part not to force the issue
and command the generals to obey Khalid, also not to spend more of
the Khan's treasury on hiring more soldiers with more experience,
nothing was done. Even the great Nadir Devanbegi had limits to his
power, which came down in the end to the sway of his advice over
the Khan. Other advisers had different advice, and it was possible
Nadir's power was in fact waning just at the moment it was most
needed, and despite Khalid and Iwang's innovations -- or, who knew,
perhaps even because of them. It was not as if the Khan had
distinguished himself for good judgment. And possibly his pocket
was not as bottomless as it had seemed back in the days when the
bazaars and caravanserai and building sites were all bustling like
beehives, and paying taxes.
So Esmerine seemed to suggest, though Bahram had mostly
to deduce this from ber looks and silences. She seemed to believe
they were spied upon at all times, even during their
sleepless hours in the dead of night, which was a rather terrible
thought. The children had taken to life in the palace as if falling
into some dream out of the Arabian Nights, and Esmerine did nothing
to disabuse them of this notion, although she of course knew
that they were prisoners, and their lives forfeit if the Khan
should happen to experience a fit of bad temper at the way things
were going at Khalid's, or to the cast, or anywhere else. So
naturally she avoided saying anything objectionable, and mentioned
only how well fed and kindly treated they were, how much the
children and she were thriving. Only the look in her eye when they
were alone told Bahram how afraid she was, and how much she wished
to encourage him to fulfil the Khan's desires.
Khalid of course knew all this without his daughter's
glances to tell him. Bahram could see him putting more and more
effort into improving the military capacity of the Khan, not only
by exerting himself in the armoury, but by trying to ingratiate
himself with the most amenable of the generals, and by making
suggestions discreet or direct on all manner of subjects, from the
renovation of the walls of the city, in keeping with his
demonstrations of the strength of raw earthworks, to plans for
welldigging and drainage of stale water in Bokhara and Samarqand.
All purely theoretical demonstrations went by the board in this
effort, with no time spent grumbling about it either. But progress
was uneven.
Rumours began to fly about the city like bats, sucking
the light out of the day. The Manchurian barbarians had conquered
Yunnan, Mongolia, Cham, Tibet, Annam and the eastern extensions of
the Mughal empire; every day it was somewhere different, somewhere
closer. There was no way to confirm any of these assertions, and
indeed they were often denied, either by direct contradiction, or
simply by the fact that caravans kept coming from some of those
regions, and the traders had seen nothing unusual, though they too
had heard rumours. Nothing was certain but that there was turmoil
to the east. The caravans certainly came less often, and included
not only traders but whole families, Muslim or Jewish or Hindu,
driven out by fear of the new dynasty, called the Qing.
Centuries old foreign settlements dissipated like frost in the
sun, and the exiles streamed west with the idea things would be
better in Dar al Islam, under the Mughals or the Ottomans or
in the taifa sultanates of Frengistan. No doubt true, as Islam was
lawful; but Bahram saw the misery on their faces, the destitution
and fear, the need for their men to angle and beg for provisions,
their goods for trade already depleted, and all the wide western
half of the world still before them to be traversed.
At least it would be the Muslim half of the world. But visits to
the caravanserai, once one of Bahram's favourite parts of the day,
now left him anxious and fearful, as intent as Nadir to see Khalid
and Iwang come up with ways to defend the khanate from
invasion.
' It's not us slowing things down,' Khalid said bitterly,
late one night in his study. 'Nadir himself is no great general,
and his influence over the Khan is shaky, and getting shakier. And
the Khan himself ' He blew through his lips.
Bahram sighed. No one could contradict it. Sayyed Abdul
Aziz was not a wise man.
'We need something both deadly and spectacular,' Khalid
said. 'Something both for the Khan and for the Manchu.' Bahram left
him looking at various recipes for explosives, and made the long
cold ride back to the palace in Bokhara.
Khalid arranged a meeting with Nadir, and came back
muttering that if all went well with the demonstration he had
proposed, Nadir would release Esmerine and the children back to the
compound. Bahram was elated, but Khalid warned him: 'It depends on
the Khan being pleased, and who knows what will impress such a
man.'
'What demonstration do you have in mind?'
'We must manufacture shells containing the Chinese
wai jen ti formula, shells that won't break on firing,
but will when they hit the ground.'
They tried out several different designs, and even the
demonstrations proved quite dangerous; more than once people had to
run for their lives. It would be a terrible weapon if it could be
made to work. Bahram hurried around all day every day, imagining
his family returned, Samarqand saved from infidels; surely if Allah
meant these things to be, then the weapon was a gift from Him. It
was not hard to overlook the terror of it.
Eventually they manufactured hollow flat backed
shells, pumped full of the liquid constituents of the ki I
ler of myriads, in two chambers separated by a tin wall.
A packet of flashpowder in the nose of the shell exploded on
contact, blowing the interior wall apart and mixing the
constituents of the gas.
They got them to work about eight times out of ten.
Another kind of shell, entirely filled with gunpowder and an
igniter, exploded on impact most deafeningly, scattering the shell
like fragmented bullets.
They made fifty of each, and arranged a demonstration out
on their test grounds by the river. Khalid bought a small herd of
broken nags from the gluemaker, with the promise of selling them
back ready for rendering. The ostlers staked these poor beasts out
at the extreme range of the test cannon, and when the Khan and his
courtiers arrived in their finery, looking somewhat bored by now
with this routine, Khalid kept his face turned away in as close to
a gesture of contempt as he could risk, pretending to attend busily
to the gun. Bahram saw that this would not do, and went to Nadir
and Sayyed Abdul Aziz and made obeisances and pleasantries,
explaining the mechanism of the weapon, and introducing Khalid with
a little flourish as the old man approached, sweating and puffing.
'
Khalid declared the demonstration ready. The Khan flicked
a hand casually, his characteristic gesture, and Khalid gave the
sign to the men at the gun, who applied the match. The cannon
boomed and expelled white smoke, rolled back. Its barrel had been
set at a fairly high angle, so that the shell would come down hard
on its tip. The smoke swirled, all stared down the plain at the
staked horses; nothing happened; Bahram held his breath A puff of
yellow smoke exploded among the horses, and they leapt away from
it, two pulling out their stakes and galloping off, a few falling
over when the ropes pulled them back. All the while the smoke
spread outwards as from an invisible brushfire, a thick
mustard yellow smoke, obscuring the horses as it passed over
them. It covered one that had burst its tether but charged by
accident back into a tendril of the cloud; this was the one they
could see rear up in the mist, fall and struggle wildly to get back
on its feet, then collapse, twitching.
The yellow cloud cleared slowly, drifting away downvalley
on the prevailing wind, seeming heavy and clinging long in the
hollows of the ground. There lay two dozen dead horses, scattered
in a circle that encompassed two hundred paces at least.
'If there was an army in that circle,' Khalid said,
'then, most excellent servant of the one true God, Supreme Khan,
they would be just as dead as those horses. And you could have a
score of cannon loaded with such shells, or a hundred. And no army
ever born could conquer Samarqand.'
Nadir, looking faintly shocked, said, 'What if the wind
changed its course and blew our way?'
Khalid shrugged. 'Then we too would die. It is important
to make small shells, that can be fired a long distance, and always
downwind, if possible. The gas does disperse, so if the wind was
mildly towards you, it might not matter much.'
The Khan himself looked startled at the demonstration,
but more and more pleased, as at a new form of fireworks; it was
hard to be sure with him. Bahram suspected that he sometimes
pretended to be oblivious to things, in order to make a veil
between himself and his advisers.
Now he nodded to Nadir, and led his court off on the road
to Bokhara.
'You have to understand,' Khalid reminded Bahram on the
way back to the compound, 'there are men in that very group around
the Khan who want to bring Nadir down. For them it doesn't matter
how good our weapon is. The better the worse, in fact. So it's not
just a matter of them being utter simpletons.'
These Things Happened
The next day Nadir was out with his full guard, and they
had with them Esmerine and the children. Nadir nodded brusquely at
Bahram's fulsome thanks and then said to Khalid, 'The poison air
shells may become necessary, and I want you to compile as many as
you can, five hundred at least, and the Khan will reward you
accordingly on his return, and he makes promise of that reward in
advance, by the return of your family.'
'He's going away?'
'The plague has appeared in Bokhara. The caravanserai and
the bazaars, the mosques and madressas and the Khanaka are all
closed. The crucial members of the court will accompany the Khan to
his summer residence. I will be making all his arrangements for him
from there.
Look to yourselves. If you can leave the city and still
do your work, the Khan does not forbid it, but he hopes you can
close yourself up here in your compound, and carry on. When the
plague passes we can reconvene.'
'And the Manchu?' Khalid asked.
'We have word that they too have been struck. As you
might expect. It may be they have brought it with them. They may
even have sent their sick among us to pass along the infection. It
would be little different than casting poisoned air on an
enemy.'
Khalid coloured at that but said nothing. Nadir left,
clearly on his way to other tasks necessary before his flight from
Samarqand. Khalid slammed the gate shut after him, cursed him under
his breath. Bahram, ecstatic at the unexpected return of Esmerine
and the children, hugged them until Esmerine cried out that he
would crush them. They wept with joy, and only later, in the midst
of shutting the compound off from the city, something they had done
successfully ten years before when a plague of distemper had passed
through the city, losing only one servant who had slipped into town
to see his girlfriend and never come back -- only later did Bahram
see that his daughter Laila was red cheeked, with a hectic
flush, and lying listlessly on a chest of drawers.
They put her in a room with a bed. Esmerine's face was
pinched with fear. Khalid decreed that Laila be sequestered there,
and fed and kept in drink from the door, by poles and net bags and
plates and gourds that were not to be returned to the rest of them.
But Esmerine hugged the little girl, of course, before all this
regime was introduced, and the next day in their bedroom Bahram saw
her red cheeks, and how she groaned awake and lifted her arms, and
there were the tokens in her armpits, hard yellow protuberances
emerging from the skin, even (he seemed to see as she put down her
arm) faceted as if they were carbuncles, or as if she was turning
to jewels from the inside.
After that they were a sickhouse, and Bahram spent his
days nursing the others, running about all hours of the day and
night, in a fever of a different kind to that of the sick ones,
urged by Khalid never to touch or come within the breath of his
stricken family. Sometimes Bahram tried, sometimes he didn't,
holding them as if he could clasp them to this world. Or drag them
back into it, when the children died.
Then the adults started dying too, and they were locked
out of the town as a sickhouse rather than a safe house. Fedwa died
but Esmerine held on; Khalid and Bahram took turns caring for her,
and Iwang joined them in the compound.
One night Iwang and Khalid had Esmerine breathe on a
glass, and they looked at the moisture through their
small lens, and said little. Bahram looked briefly and
glimpsed the host of little dragons, gargoyles, bats and other
creatures. He could not look again, but knew they were doomed.
Esmerine died and Khalid showed the tokens that same
hour. Iwang could not rise from his couch in Khalid's workshop, but
studied his own breath and blood and bile through the smallscope,
trying to make a clear record of the disease's progress through
him. One night as he lay there gasping he said in his low voice,
'I'm glad I did not convert. I know you did not want it. And now I
would be a blasphemer, for if there is a God I would want to rebuke
Him for this.'
Bahram said nothing. It was a judgment, but of what? What
had they done? Were the gas shells an affront to God?
'Old men live to be seventy,' Iwang said. 'I'm just over
thirty. What will I do with those years?'
Bahram couldn't think. 'You said we return,' he said
dully.
'Yes. But I liked this life. I had plans for this
life.'
He lingered on his couch but could take no food, and his
skin was very hot. Bahram did not tell him that Khalid had died
already, very swiftly, felled by grief or anger at the loss of
Fedwa and Esmerine and the children -- as if by apoplexy rather
than plague. Bahram only sat with the Tibetan in the silent
compound.
At one point Iwang croaked, 'I wonder if Nadir knew they
were infected, and gave them back to kill us.'
'But why?'
'Perhaps he feared the killer of myriads. Or
some faction of the court. He had other considerations than us. Or
it might have been someone else. Or no one.'
'We'll never know.'
'No. The court itself might be gone by now. Nadir, the
Khan, all of them.'
'I hope so,' Bahram's mouth said.
Iwang nodded. He died at dawn, wordless and
struggling.
Bahram got all the compound's survivors to put cloths
over their faces and move the bodies into a closed workshop beyond
the chemical pits. He was so far outside himself that the movements
of his numb limbs surprised him, and he spoke as if he were someone
else. Do this do that. Let's eat. Then, carrying a big pot
to the kitchen, he felt the lump in his armpit, and sat down as if
the tendons in the back of his knees had been cut, thinking: I
guess it's my turn now.
Back in the Bardo
Well, it was, as might be imagined after an end like
that, a very discour aged and dispirited little jati that
huddled together on the black floor of the bardo this time around.
Who could blame them? Why should they have had any will to
continue? It was hard to discern any reward for virtue, any forward
progress -- any dharmic justice of any kind. Even Bahram could not
find the good in it, and no one else even tried. Looking back down
the vale of the ages at the endless recurrence of their reincarnations,
before they were forced to drink their vials of
forgetting and all became obscure to them again, they could see no
pattern at all to their efforts; if the gods had a plan, or even a
set of procedures, if the long train of transmigrations was
supposed to add up to anything, if it was not just mindless
repetition, time itself nothing but a succession of chaoses, no one
could discern it; and the story of their transmigrations, rather
than being a narrative without death, as the first experiences of
reincarnation perhaps seemed to suggest, had become instead a
veritable charnel house. Why read on? Why pick up their book from
the far wall where it has been thrown away in disgust and pain, and
read on? Why submit to such cruelty, such bad karma, such bad
plotting?
The reason is simple: these things happened. They
happened countless times, just like this. The oceans are salt with
our tears. No one can deny that these things happened.
And so there is no choice in the matter. They cannot
escape the wheel of birth and death, not in the experience of it,
or in the contemplation of it afterwards; and their anthologist,
Old Red Ink himself, must tell their stories honestly, must deal in
reality, or else the stories m can nothing. And it is crucial that
the stories mean something.
So. No escape from reality: they sat there, a dozen sad
souls, huddled together at a far corner of the great stage of the
hall of judgment. It was dim, and cold. The perfect white light had
lasted this time for only the briefest of moments, a flash like the
eyeball exploding; after that, here they were again. Up on the dais
the dogs and demons and black gods capered, in a hazy mist that
shrouded all, that damped all sound.
Bahram tried, but could think of nothing to say. He was
still stunned by the events of their last days in the world; he was
still ready to get up and go out and start another day, on another
morning just like all the rest. Deal with the crisis of an invasion
from the east, the taking of his family, if that was what it meant
-- whatever problems the day happened to bring, trouble, crisis,
sure, that was life. But not this. Not this already. Salt tears of
timely death, alum tears of untimely death: bitterness filled the
air like smoke. I liked that life! I had plans for that life!
Khalid sat there just as Khalid always had, as if
ensconced in his study thinking over some problem. The sight gave
Bahram a deep pang of regret and sorrow. All that life, gone. Gone,
gone, gone altogether beyond . . . The past is gone. Even if you
can remember it, it's gone. And even at the time it was happening
Bahram had known how he had loved it, he had lived in a state of
nostalgia for the present, every day of it.
Now gone.
The rest of the jati sat or sprawled on the cheap wooden
floor around Khalid. Even Sayyid Abdul looked distraught, not just
sorry for himself, but distraught for them all, sad to have left
that turbulent but oh so interesting world.
An interval passed; a moment, a year, an age, the kalpa
itself, who could tell in such a terrible place?
Bahram took a deep breath, exerted himself, sat up.
'We're making progress,' he announced firmly.
Khalid snorted. 'We are like mice to the cats.' He
gestured up at the stage, where the grotesqueries continued to
unfold. 'They are petty arseholes, I say. They kill us for sport.
They don't die and they don't understand.'
'Forget them,' Iwang advised. 'We're going to have to do
this on our own.
'God judges, and sends us out again,' Bahram said. 'Man
proposes, God disposes.'
Khalid shook his head. 'Look at them. They're a bunch of
vicious children playing. No one leads them, there is no god of
gods.'
Bahram looked at him, surprised. 'Do you not see the one
enfolding all the rest, the one we rest within? Allah, or Brahman,
or what have you, the one only true God of Gods?'
'No. I see no sign of him at all.'
'You aren't looking! You've never looked yet! When you
look, you will see it. When you see it, everything will change for
you. Then it will be all right.'
Khalid scowled. 'Don't insult us with that fatuous
nonsense. Good Lord, Allah, if you are there, why have you
inflicted me with this fool of a boy!' He kicked at Bahram. 'It's
easier without you around! You and your damned all right! It's not
all right! It's a fucking mess! You only make it worse with that
nonsense of yours! Did you not see what just happened to us, to
your wife and children, to my daughter and grandchildren? It's not
all right! Start from that, if you will! We may be in a
hallucination here, but that's no excuse for being delusional!'
Bahram was hurt by this. 'It's you who give up on
things,' he protested. 'Every time. That's what your cynicism is --
you don't even try. You don't have the courage to carry on.'
' The hell I don't. I've never given up yet. I'm just not
willing to go at it babbling lies. No, it's you who are the one who
never tries. Always waiting for me and Iwang to do the hard things.
You do it for once! Quit babbling about love and try it yourself
one time, damn it! Try it yourself, and see how hard it is to keep
a sunny face when you're looking at the truth of the situation eye
to eye.'
'Ho!' said Bahram, stung. 'I do my part. I have always
done my part. Without me none of you would be able to carry on. It
takes courage to keep love at the centre when you know just as well
as anyone else the real state of things! It's easy to get angry,
anyone can do that. It's making good that's the hard part, it's
staying hopeful that's the hard part! it's staying in love that's
the hard part.'
Khalid waggled his left hand. 'All very well, but it only
matters if the truth is faced and fought. I'm sick of love and
happiness I want justice.'
'So do W 'All right, then show me. Show me what
you can do this next time out in the miserable world, something
more than happy happy.'
'I will then!'
'Good.'
Heavily Khalid pulled himself up, and limped over to
Sayyid Abdul Aziz, and without any warning kicked him sprawling
across the stage. 'And you!' he roared. 'What is your EXCUSE! Why
are you always so bad? Consistency is no excuse, your CHARACTER is
NO EXCUSE!'
Sayyid glared up at him from the floor, sucking on a torn
knuckle. Daggers in his stare: 'Leave me alone.'
Khalid made as if to kick him again, then gave up on it.
'You'll get yours,' he promised. 'One of these days, you'll get
yours.'
'Forget about him,' Iwang advised. 'He's not the real
problem, and he'll always be part of us. Forget about him, forget
about the gods. Let's concentrate on doing it ourselves. We can
make our own world.'
One night can change the world.
The Doorkeepers sent runners out with strings of wampum,
announcing a council meeting at Floating Bridge. They wanted to
raise to chiefdom the foreigner they called Fromwest. The fifty
sachems had agreed to the meeting, as there was nothing unusual
about it. There were many more chiefs than sachems, and the title
died with the man, and each nation was free to choose its own,
depending on what happened on the warpath and in the villages. The
only unusual feature of this raising up was the foreign birth
of the candidate, but he had been living with the Doorkeepers for
some time, and word had spread through the nine nations and the
eight tribes that he was interesting.
He had been rescued by a war party of Doorkeepers who had
run far to the west to inflict another shock on the Sioux, the
western people bordering the Hodenosaunee. The warriors had come on
a Sioux torture, the victim hung by his chest from hooks, and a
fire building under him. While waiting for their ambush to set, the
warriors had been impressed by the victim's speech, which was in a
comprehensible version of the Doorkeeper dialect, as if he had seen
them out there.
The usual behaviour while being tortured was a passionate
laughter in the faces of one's enemies, to show that no pain
inflicted by man can triumph over the spirit. This foreigner hadn't
been like that. Calmly he remarked to his captors, in Doorkeeper
rather than Sioux: 'You are very incompetent torturers. What wounds
the spirit is not passion, for all passion is encouragement. As you
hate me you help me. What really hurts is to be ground like acorns
in a grinding hole. Where I come from they have a thousand devices
to tear the flesh, but what hurts is their indifference. Here you
remind me I am human and full of passion, a target of passion. I am
happy to be here. And I am about to be rescued by warriors much
greater than you.'
The Senecans lying in ambush had taken this as an
undeniable sign to attack, and with warwhoops they had descended on
the Sioux and scalped as many as they could catch, while taking
particular care to rescue the captive who had spoken so eloquently,
and in their own tongue.
How did you know we were there? they asked him.
Suspended as high as he was, he said, he had seen their
eyes out in the trees.
And how do you know our language?
There is a tribe of your kinsmen on the west coast of
this island, who moved there long ago. I learned your language from
them.
And so they had nursed him and brought him home, and he
lived with the Doorkeepers and the Great Hill People, near Niagara,
for several moons. He went on the hunt and the warpath, and word of
his accomplishments had spread through the nine nations, and many
people had met him and been impressed. No one was surprised at his
nomination to chief.
The council was set for the hill at the head of
Canandaigua Lake, where the Hodenosaunee had first appeared in the
world, out of the ground like moles.
Hill People, Granite People, Flint Owners and Shirt
Weavers, who came up out of the south two generations before,
having had bad dealings with the people who had come over the sea
from the east, all walked west on the Long House Trail, which
extends across the league's land from east to west. They encamped
at some distance from the Doorkeepers' council house, sending
runners to announce their arrival, according to the old ways. The
Senecan sachems confirmed the day of the council, and repeated
their invitation.
On the appointed morning before dawn, people rose and
gathered their rolls, and hunched around fires and a quick meal of
burnt corn cakes and maple water. It was a clear sky at dawn, with
only a trace of receding grey cloud to the east, like the finely
embroidered hems of the coats the women were donning. The
mist on the lake swirled as if twisted by sprites skating over the
lake, to join a sprite council matching the human one, as often
occurred. The air was cool and damp, with no hint of the oppressive
heat that was likely to arrive in the afternoon.
The visiting nations trooped onto the water meadows at
the lakeshore and gathered in their accustomed places. By the time
the sky lightened from grey to blue there were already a few
hundred people there to listen to the Salute to the Sun, sung by
one of the old Senecan sachems.
The Onondagas nations keep the council brand, and also
the wampum into which the laws of the league have been talked, and
now their powerful old sachem, Keeper of the Wampum, rose and
displayed in his outstretched hands the belts of wampum, heavy and
white. The Onondagas are the central nation, their council fire the
seat of the league's councils. Keeper of the Wampum trod a
pedestrian dance around the meadow, chanting something most of them
heard only as a faint cry.
A fire was kindled at the centrepoint, and pipes passed
around. The Mohawks, Onondagas and Senecans, brother to each other
and father to the other six, settled west of the fire; the Oncidas,
Cayugas and Tuscaroras sat to the east; the new nations, Cherokee,
Shawnee and Choctaw, sat to the south. The sun cracked the horizon;
its light flooded the valley like maple water, pouring over
everything and making it summer yellow. Smoke curled, grey and
brown turned to one. A morning without wind, and the wisps on the
lake burned away. Birds sang from the forest canopy to the east of
the meadow.
Out of the arrows of shadow and light walked a short,
broad shouldered man, barefoot and dressed only in a runner's
waist belt. He had a round face, very flat. A foreigner. He walked
with his hands together, looking down humbly, and came through the
junior nations to the central fire, there offering his open palms
to Honowenato, Keeper of the Wampum.
Keeper said to him, 'Today you become a chief of the
Hodenosaunee. At these occasions it is customary for me to read the
history of the league as recalled by the wampum here, and to
reiterate the laws of the league that have given us peace for many
generations, and new nations joining us from the sea to the
Mississippi, from the Great Lakes to the Tennessee.'
Fromwest nodded. His chest was marked deeply by the puckered
scars of the Sioux hooking ceremony. He was as solemn as an owl. 'I
am more than honoured. You are the most generous of nations.'
'We are the greatest league of nations under heaven,'
Keeper said. 'We live here on the highest land of Longer House,
with good routes down in all directions.
'In each nation there are the eight tribes, divided in
two groups. Wolf, Bear, Beaver and Turtle; then Deer, Snipe, Heron
and Hawk. Each member of the Wolf tribe is brother and sister to
all other Wolves, no matter what nation they come from. The
relationship with other Wolves is almost stronger than the relation
with those of one's nation. It is a cross relation, like warp
and weft in basket weaving and cloth making. And so we are one
garment. We cannot disagree as nations, or it would tear the fabric
of the tribes. Brother cannot fight brother, sister cannot fight
sister.
'Now, Wolf, Bear, Beaver and Turtle, being brother and
sister, cannot intermarry. They must marry out of Hawk, Heron, Deer
or Snipe.'
Fromwest nodded at each pronouncement of Keeper, made in
the heavy, ponderous tones of a man who had laboured all his life
to make this system work, and to extend it far and wide. Fromwest
had been declared a member of the Hawk tribe, and would play with
the Hawks in the morning's lacrosse match. Now he watched Keeper
with a hawk's intensity, taking in the irascible old man's every
word, oblivious to the growing crowd at the lakeside. The crowd in
turn went about its own affairs, the women at their fires preparing
the feast, some of the men setting out the lacrosse pitch on the
biggest water meadow.
Finally Keeper was done with his recital, and Fromwest
addressed all in earshot.
'This is the great honour of my life,' he said loudly and
slowly, his accent strange but comprehensible. 'To be taken in by
the finest people of the Earth is more than any poor wanderer could
hope for. Although I did hope for it. I spent many years crossing
this great island, hoping for it.'
He bowed his head, hands together.
'A very unassuming man,' remarked Iagogeh, the One Who
Hears, wife of Keeper of the Wampum. 'And not so young either. It
will be interesting to bear what he says tonight.'
'And to see how he does in the games,' said Tecarnos, or
Dropping Oil, one of Iagogeh's nieces.
'Tend the soup,' said Iagogeh.
'Yes, Mother.'
The lacrosse field was being inspected by the field
judges for rocks and rabbit holes, and the tall poles of the gates
were set up at either end of the field. As always, the games set
the Wolf, Bear, Beaver and Turtle tribes against Deer, Snipe, Hawk
and Heron. The betting was active, and wagered goods were laid out
by the managers in neat rows, mostly personal items of
ornamentation, but also flints, flutes, drums, bags of tobacco and
pipes, needles and arrows, two flintlock pistols and four
muskets.
The two teams and the referees gathered at midfield, and
the crowd bordered the green field and stood on the hill
overlooking it. The day's match was to be a ten on--ten, so
five passes through the gate would win. The head referee listed the
main rules, as always: no touching the ball with hand, foot, limb,
body or head; no deliberate hitting of opponents with the ball
bats. He held up the round ball, made of deerskin filled with sand,
about the size of his fist. The twenty players stood ten to a side,
defending their goals, and one from each side came forward to
contest the dropped ball that would start the match. To a great
roar from the crowd the referee dropped the ball and retreated to
the side of the field, where he and the others would watch for any
infraction of the rules.
The two team leaders fenced madly for the ball, the
hooped nets at the end of their bats scraping the ground and
knocking together. Though hitting another person was forbidden,
striking another player's bat with yours was allowed; it was a
chancy play, however, as a mistaken strike on flesh would give the
hit player a free shot at the gate. So the two players whacked away
until the Heron scooped the ball up and flicked it back to one of
his team mates, and the running began.
Opponents ran at the ball carrier, who twisted
through them as long as he could, then passed the ball with a flick
of his bat into the net of one of his team mates. If the ball
fell to the ground then most of the players nearby converged on it,
bats clattering violently as they struggled for possession. Two
players from each team stood back from this scrum, on defence in
case an opponent caught up the ball and made a dash for the
gate.
Soon enough it became clear that Fromwest had played lacrosse
before, presumably among the Doorkeepers. He was not as young as
most of the other players, nor as fleet as the fastest runners on
each side, but the fastest were set guarding each other, and
Fromwest had only to face the biggest of the Bear Wolf Beaver
Turtle team, who could counter his low and solid mass with body
checks, but did not have Fromwest's quickness. The foreigner held
his bat in both hands like a scythe, out low to the side or before
him, as if inviting a slash that would knock the ball free. But his
opponents soon learned that such a slash would never land, and if
they tried it, Fromwest would spin awkwardly and be gone, stumbling
forwards quite quickly for a big short man. When other opponents
blocked him, his passes to open teammates were like shots from a
bow; they were if anything perhaps too hard, as his team mates
had some trouble catching his throws. But if they did, off to the
gate they scampered, waving their bats to confuse the final gate
guard, and screaming along with the excited crowd. Fromwest never
shouted or said a word, but played in an uncanny silence, never
taunting the other team or even meeting their eyes, but watching
either the ball or, it seemed, the sky. He played as if in a
trance, as if confused; and yet when his team mates were
tracked down and blocked, he was always somehow open for a pass, no
matter how hard his guard, or soon guards, ran to cover him.
Surrounded teammates, desperately keeping their bat free to throw
the ball out, would find Fromwest there in the only direction the
ball could be thrown, stumbling but miraculously open, and they
would flip it out to him and he would snare the ball dextrously and
be off on one of his uncertain runs, cutting behind people and
across the field at odd angles, wrong headed angles, until he
was blocked and an opportunity to pass opened, and one of his hard
throws would flick over the grass as if on a string. It was a
pleasure to watch, comical in its awkward look, and the crowd
roared as the Deer Snipe Hawk Heron team threw the ball past the
diving guardian and through the gate. Seldom had a first score
happened faster.
After that the Bear Wolf Beaver Turtle team did what it
could to stop Fromwest, but they were puzzled by his strange
responses, and could not defend well against him. If they ganged up
on him, he passed out to his fast young team--mates, who were
growing bolder with their success. If they tried to cover
him singly, he weaved and bobbed and stumbled in seeming confusion
past his guard, until he was within striking distance of the gate,
when he would spin, suddenly balanced, his bat at knee height, and
with a turn of the wrist launch the ball through the gate like an
arrow. No one there had ever seen such hard throws.
Between scores they gathered on the sidelines to drink
water and maple water. The Bear Wolf Beaver Turtle team conferred
grimly, made substitutions. After that an 'accidental' bat blow to
Fromwest's head gashed his scalp and left him covered with his own
red blood, but the foul gave him a free shot, which he converted
from near midfield, to a great roar. And it did not stop his weird
but effective play, nor gain his opponents even a glance from him.
Iagogeh said to her niece, 'He plays as if the other team were
ghosts. He plays as if he were out there by himself, trying to
learn how to run more gracefully.' She was a connoisseur of the
game, and it made her happy to see it.
Much more quickly than was normal, the match was four to
one in favour of the junior side, and the senior tribes gathered to
discuss strategy. The women gave out gourds of water and maple
water, and Iagogeh, a Hawk herself, sidled next to Fromwest and
offered him a water gourd, as she had seen earlier that that was
all he was taking.
'You need a good partner now,' she murmured as she
crouched beside him. 'No one can finish alone.'
He looked at her, surprised. She pointed with a gesture
of her head at her nephew Doshoweh, Split the Fork. 'He's your
man,' she said, and was off.
The players regathered at midfield for the drop, and the
Bear Wolf Beaver Turtle team left behind only a single man to
defend. They got the ball, and pressed west with a fury born of
desperation. Play went on for a long time, with neither side
gaining advantage, both running madly up and down the field. Then
one of the Deer Snipe Hawk Herons hurt his ankle, and Fromwest
called on Doshoweh to come out.
The Bear Wolf Beaver Turtle team pressed forward again,
pushing at the new player. But one of their passes came too near
Fromwest, who snagged it out of the air while leaping over a fallen
man. He flipped it to Doshoweh and all converged on the youngster,
who looked frightened and vulnerable; but he had the presence of
mind to make a long toss downfield, back to Fromwest, already
running at full speed. Fromwest caught the toss and everyone took
off in pursuit of him. But it seemed he had an extra turn of speed
he had never yet revealed, for no one could catch up to him before
he reached the eastern gate, and after a feint with body and bat he
spun and fired the ball past the guardian and far into the woods,
to end the match.
The crowd erupted with cheers. Hats and bags of tobacco
filled the air and rained down on the field. The contestants lay
flat on their backs, then rose and gathered in a great hug,
overseen by the referees.
Afterwards Fromwest sat on the lakeshore with the others.
'What a relief,' he said. 'I was getting tired.' He allowed some of
the women to wrap his head wound in an embroidered cloth, and
thanked them, face lowered.
In the afternoon the younger ones played the game of
throwing javelins through a rolling hoop. Fromwest was invited to
try it, and he agreed to make one attempt. He stood very still, and
threw with a gentle motion, and the javelin flew through the hoop,
leaving it rolling on. Fromwest bowed and gave up his place. 'I
played that game when I was a boy,' he said. 'It was part of the
training to become a warrior, what we called a samurai. What the
body learns it never forgets.'
Iagogeh witnessed this exhibit, and went to her husband
Keeper of the Wampum. 'We should invite Fromwest to tell us more
about his country,' she said to him. He nodded, frowning a little
at her interference as he always did, even though they had
discussed every aspect of the league's affairs, every day for forty
years. That was the way Keeper was, irritable and glowering; but
all because the league meant so much to him, so that Iagogeh
ignored his demeanour. Usually.
The feast was readied and they set to. As the sun dropped
into the forest the fires roared bright in the shadows, and the
ceremonial ground between the four cardinal fires became the scene
of hundreds of people filing past the food, filling their bowls
with spiced hominy and corncakes, bean soup, cooked squash, and
roasted meat of deer, elk, duck and quail. Things grew quiet as
people ate. After the main course came popcorn and strawberry jelly
sprinkled with maple sugar, usually taken more slowly, and a great
favourite with the children.
During this sunset feast Fromwest wandered the grounds, a
goose drumstick in hand, introducing himself to strangers and
listening to their stories, or answering their questions. He
sat with his team mates' families and recalled the triumphs of
the day on the lacrosse field. 'That game is like my old job,' he
said. 'In my country warriors fight with weapons like giant
needles. I see you have needles, and some guns. These must have
come from one of my old brothers, or the people who come here from
over your eastern sea.'
They nodded. Foreigners from across the sea had
established a forti fied village down on the coast, near the
entrance of the big bay at the mouth of the East River. The needles
had come from them, as well as tomahawk blades of the same
substance, and guns.
'Needles are very valuable,' Iagogeh said. 'just ask
Needle breaker.'
People laughed at Needle breaker, who grinned with
embarrassment.
Fromwest said, 'The metal is melted out of certain rocks,
red rocks that have the metal mixed in them. If you make a fire hot
enough, in a big clay oven, you could make your own metal. The
right kind of rocks are just south of your league's land, down in
the narrow curved valleys.' He drew a rough map on the ground with
a stick.
Two or three of the sachems were listening along with
Iagogeh. Fromwest bowed to them. 'I mean to speak to the council of
sachems about these matters.'
'Can a clay oven hold fires hot enough?' Iagogeh asked,
inspecting the big leatherpunch needle she kept on one of her
necklaces.
'Yes. And the black rock that burns, burns as hot as
charcoal. I used to make swords myself. They're like scythes, but
longer. Like blades of grass, or lacrosse bats. As long as the
bats, but edged like a tomahawk or a blade of grass, and heavy,
sturdy. You learn to swing them right' he swished a hand backhanded
before them -- 'and off with your head. No one can stop you.'
Everyone in earshot was interested in this. They could
still see him whipping his bat around him, like an elm seed
spinning down on the wind.
'Except a man with a gun,' the Mohawk sachem Sadagawadeh,
Even Tempered, pointed out.
'True. But the important part of the guns are tubes of
the same metal.'
Sadagawadeh nodded, very interested now. Fromwest
bowed.
Keeper of the Wampum had some Neutral youths round up the
other sachems, and they wandered around the grounds until they
found all fifty. When they returned Fromwest was sitting in a
group, holding out a lacrosse ball between thumb and forefinger. He
had big square hands, very scarred.
I Here, let me mark the world on this. The world is
covered by water, mostly. There are two big islands in the world
lake. Biggest island is on opposite side of world from here. This
island we are on is big, but not as big as big island. Half as big,
or less. How big the world lakes, not so sure.'
He marked the ball with charcoal to indicate the islands
in the great world sea. He gave Keeper the lacrosse ball. 'A kind
of wampum.'
Keeper nodded. 'Like a picture.'
'Yes, a picture. Of the whole world, on a ball, because
the world is a big ball. And you can mark it with the names of the
islands and lakes.'
Keeper didn't look convinced, but what he was put off by,
Iagogeh couldn't tell. He instructed the sachems to get ready for
the council.
Iagogeh went off to help with the clean up. Fromwest
brought bowls over to the lakeside to be washed.
'Please,' Iagogeh said, embarrassed. 'We do that.'
'I am no one's servant,' Fromwest said, and continued to
bring bowls to the girls for a while, asking them about their
embroidery. When he saw Iagogeh had drawn back to sit down on a bit
of raised bank, he sat on the bank beside her.
As they watched the girls, he said, 'I know that
Hodenosaunee wisdom is such that the women decide who marries
whom.'
Iagogeh considered this. 'I suppose you could say
that.'
'I am a Doorkeeper now, and a Hawk. I will live the rest
of my days here among you. I too hope to marry some day.'
'I see.' She regarded him, looked at the girls. 'Do you
have someone in mind?'
'Oh no!' he said. 'I would not be so bold. That is for
you to decide. After your advice concerning lacrosse players, I am
sure you will know best.'
She smiled. She looked at the festive dress of the girls,
aware or unaware of their elders' presence. She said, 'How many
summers have you seen?'
'Thirty five or so, in this life.'
'You have had other lives?'
'We all have. Don't you remember?'
She regarded him, unsure if he was serious. 'No.'
'The memories come in dreams, mostly, but sometimes when
something happens that you recognize.'
' I've had that feeling.'
'That's what it is.'
She shivered. It was cooling down. Time to get to the
fire. Through the net of leafy branches overhead a star or two
winked. 'Are you sure you don't have a preference?'
' None. Hodenosaunee women are the most powerful women in
this world. Not just the inheritance and the family lines, but
choosing the marriage partnerships. That means you are deciding who
comes back into the world.'
She scoffed at that: 'If children were like their
parents.' The offspring she and Keeper had had were all very
alarming people.
'The one that comes into the world was there waiting. But
many were waiting. Which one comes depends on which parents.'
'Do you think so? Sometimes, when I watched mine -- they
were only strangers, invited into the Long House.'
'Like me.'
'Yes. Like you.'
Then the sachems found them, and took Fromwest to his
raising up.
Iagogeh made sure the cleaning was near its finish, then
went after the sachems, and joined them to help prepare the new
chief. She combed his straight black hair, much the same as hers,
and helped him tie it up the way he wanted, in a topknot. She
watched his cheery face. An unusual man.
He was given appropriate waist and shoulder belts, each a
winter's work for some skilful woman, and in these he suddenly
looked very fine, a warrior and a chief, despite his flat round
face and hooded eyes. He did not look like anyone she had ever met,
certainly not like the one glimpse she had had of the foreigners
who had come over the eastern sea to their shores. But she was
beginning to feel he was familiar anyhow, in a way that made her
feel peculiar.
He looked up at her, thanking her for her help. When she
met his gaze she felt some odd sense of recognition.
Some branches and several great logs were thrown on the
central fire, and the drums and turtleshell rattles grew loud as
the fifty sachems of the Hodenosaunee gathered in their great
circle for the raising up. The crowd drew in behind them,
manoeuvring and then sitting down so all could see, forming a kind
of broad valley of faces.
The raising up ceremony for a chief was not long
compared to that of the fifty sachems. The sponsoring sachem
stepped forward and announced the nomination of the chief. In this
case it was Big Forehead, of the Hawk tribe, who stood forth and
told them all again the story of Fromwest, how they had come across
him being tortured by the Sioux, how he had been instructing the
Sioux in the superior methods of torture found in his own country;
how he already spoke an unfamiliar version of the Doorkeeper
dialect, and how it had been his hope to come visit the people of
the Long House before his capture by the Sioux. How he had lived
among the Doorkeepers and learned their ways, and led a band of
warriors far down the Ohio River to rescue many Senecan people
enslaved by the Lakotas, guiding them so that they were able to
effect the rescue and bring them home. How this and other actions
had made him a candidate for chiefdom, with the support of all who
knew him.
Big Forehead went on to say that the sachems had
conferred that morning, and approved the choice of the Doorkeepers,
even before Fromwest's display of skill in lacrosse. Then with a
roar of acclamation Fromwest was led into the circle of sachems,
his flat face shiny in the firelight, his grin so broad that his
eyes disappeared in their folds of flesh.
He held out a hand, indicating he was ready to make his
speech. The sachems sat on the beaten ground so that the whole
congregation could see him. He said, 'This is the greatest day of
my life. Never as long as I live will I forget any moment of this
beautiful day. Let me tell you now how I came to this day. You have
beard only part of the story. I was born on the island Hokkaido, in
the island nation Nippon, and grew up there as a young monk and
then a samurai, a warrior. My name was Busho.
'In Nippon people arranged their affairs differently. We
had a group of sachems with a single ruler, called the Emperor, and
a tribe of warriors were trained to fight for the rulers, and make
the farmers give part of their crops to them. I left the service of
my first ruler because of his cruelty to his farmers, and
became a ronin, a warrior without tribe.
' I lived like that for years, wandering the mountains of
Hokkaido and Honshu as beggar, monk, singer, warrior. Then all
Nippon was invaded by people from farther west, on the great island
of the world. These people, the Chinese, rule half the other side
of the world, or more. When they invaded Nippon no great kamikaze
storm wind came to sink their canoes, as always had happened
before. The old gods abandoned Nippon, perhaps because of the Allah
worshippers who had taken over its southernmost islands. In any
case, with the water passable at last, they were unstoppable. We
used banks of guns, chains in the water, fire, ambush in the night,
swimming attacks over the inner sea, and we killed a great many of
them, fleet after fleet, but they kept coming. They established a
fort on the coast we could not eject them from, a fort protecting a
long peninsula, and in a month they had filled that peninsula. Then
they attacked the whole island at once, landing on every west beach
with thousands of men. All the people of the Hodenosaunee league
would have been but a handful in that host. And though we fought
and fought, back up into the hills and mountains where only we knew
the caves and ravines, they conquered the flatlands, and Nippon, my
nation and my tribe, was no more.
'By then I should have died a hundred times over, but in
every battle some fluke or other would save me, and I would prevail
over the enemy at hand, or slip away and live to fight another
time. Finally there were only scores of us left in all Honshu, and
we made a plan, and joined together one night and stole three of
the Chinese transport canoes, huge vessels like many floating long
houses tied together. We sailed them cast under the command of
those among us who had been to Gold Mountain before.
'These ships had cloth wings held up on poles to catch
the wind, like you may have seen the foreigners from the east use,
and most winds come from the west, there as here. So we sailed east
for a few moons, and when the winds were bad drifted on a great
current in the sea.
'When we reached Gold Mountain we found other Nipponese
had arrived there before us, either by months, or years, or scores
of years. There were great--grandchildren of settlers there,
speaking an older form of Nipponese. They were happy to see a band
of samurai land, they said we were like the legendary fifty--three
ronin, because Chinese ships had already arrived, and sailed into
the harbour and shelled the villages with their great guns, before
leaving to return to China to tell their emperor that we were there
to be put to the needle,' poking to show how death from a giant
needle would take place, his mimicry horribly suggestive.
'We resolved to help our tribes there defend the place
and make it a new Nippon, with the idea of eventually returning to
our true home. But a few years later the Chinese appeared again,
not on ships coming in through the Gold Gate, but on foot from the
north, with a great army, building roads and bridges as they went,
and speaking of gold in the hills. Once again the Nipponese were
exterminated like rats in a granary, sent reeling south or east,
into a waste of steep mountains where only one in ten survived.
, When the remnants were safely hidden away in caves and
ravines, I resolved that I would not see the Chinese overrun Turtle
Island as they are overrunning the great world island to the west,
if I could help it. I lived with tribes and learned some language,
and over the years I made my way east, over deserts and great
mountains, a bare waste of rock and sand held so high up to the sun
that it is cooked everywhere and the ground is like burned corn, it
crunches underfoot. The mountains are enormous rock peaks with
narrow canyons leading through them. On the broad eastern slope of
these mountains are the grasslands beyond your rivers, covered with
great herds of buffalo, and tribes of people who live off them in
encampments. They move north or south with the buffalo, wherever
they go. These are dangerous people, always fighting each other
despite their plenty, and I took care to hide myself when I
travelled among them. I walked cast until I came on some slave
farmers who were from the Hodenosaunee, and from what they told me,
in a language that to my surprise I could already understand, the
Hodenosaunee were the first people I had heard of who might be able
to defeat the invasion of the Chinese.
'So I sought the Hodenosaunee, and came here, sleeping
inside logs, and creeping about like a snake to see what I could of
you. I came up the Ohio and explored all around this land, and
rescued a Senecan slave girl and learned more words from her, and
then one day we were captured by a Sioux war party. It was the
girl's mistake, and she fought so hard they killed her. And they
were killing me too, when you arrived and saved me. As they
were testing me, I thought, a Senecan war party will rescue you --
there is one out there even now. There are their eyes, reflecting
the firelight. And then you were there.'
He threw out his arms, and cried, 'Thank you, people of
the Long House!' He took tobacco leaves from his waist belt and
tossed them gracefully into the fire. 'Thank you Great Spirit, One
Mind holding us all.'
'Great Spirit,' murmured all the people together in
response, feeling their concourse.
Fromwest took a long ceremonial pipe from Big Forehead,
and filled it with tobacco very carefully. As he crumbled the
leaves into the bowl he continued his speech.
'What I saw of your people astonished me. Everywhere else
in the world, guns rule. Emperors put the gun to the heads of
sachems, who put it to warriors, who put it to farmers, and they
all together Put it to the women, and only the Emperor and some
sachems have any say in their affairs. They own the land like you
own your clothes, and the rest of the people are slaves of one kind
or another. In all the world there are perhaps five or ten of these
empires, but fewer and fewer as they run into each other, and fight
until one wins. They rule the world, but no one likes them, and
when the guns aren't pointed at them, people go away or rebel, and
all is violence of one against another, of man against man, and men
against women. And despite all that, their numbers grow, for they
herd cattle, like elk, who provide meat and milk and leather. They
herd pigs, like boars, and sheep and goats, and horses that they
ride on, like little buffalo. And so their numbers are grown huge,
more than the stars in the sky. Between their tame animals and
their vegetables, like your three sisters, squash and beans and
corn, and a corn they call rice, that grows in water, they can feed
so many that in each of your valleys, they might have living as
many people as all the Hodenosaunee together. This is true, I have
seen it with my own eyes. On your own island it is already
beginning, on the far western coast, and perhaps on the eastern
coast as well.'
He nodded at them all, paused to pluck a brand from the
fire and light the filled pipe. He handed the smoking instrument to
Keeper of the Wampum, and continued as the sachems each took one
great puff from the pipe.
'Now, I have watched the Hodenosaunee as closely as a child
watches its mother. I see how sons are brought up through their
motherline, and cannot inherit anything from their fathers, so that
there can be no accumulation of power in any one man. There can be
no emperors here. I have seen how the women choose the marriages
and advise all aspects of life, how the elderly and orphans are
cared for. How the nations are divided into the tribes, woven so
that you are all brothers and sisters through the league, warp and
weft. How the sachems are chosen by the people, including the
women. How if a sachem were to do something bad they would be cast
out. How their sons are nothing special, but men like any other
men, soon to marry out and have sons of their own who will leave,
and daughters who will stay, until all have their say. I have seen
how this system of affairs brings peace to your league. It is, in
all this world, the best system of rule ever invented by human
beings.'
He raised his hands in thanksgiving. He refilled the pipe
and got it burning again, and shot a plume of smoke into the
greater smoke rising from the fire. He cast more leaves on the
fire, and gave the pipe to another sachem in the circle, Man
Frightened, who indeed at this moment appeared a little awed. But
the Hodenosaunee reward skills in oratory as well as skills in war,
and now all listened happily as Fromwest continued.
'The best government, yes. But look you -- your island is
so bountiful in food that you do not have to make tools to feed
yourselves. You live in peace and plenty, but you have few tools,
and your numbers have not grown. Nor have you metals, or weapons
made of metal. This is how it has happened; you can dig deep in the
earth and find water, but why should you when there are streams and
lakes everywhere? This is the way you live.
'But the big island's people have fought each other for
many generations, and made many tools and weapons, and now they can
sail across the great seas on all sides of this island, and land
here. And so they are coming, driven as the deer by crowds of
wolves behind. You see it on your cast coast, beyond Beyond the
Opening. These are people from the other side of the same great
island I escaped, stretching halfway around the world.
'They will keep coming! And I will tell you what will
happen, if you do not defend yourselves in this island of yours.
They will come, and they will build more forts on the coast,
as they have begun to do already. They will trade with you, cloth
for furs -- cloth! cloth for the right to own this land as
if it were their clothing. When your warriors object, they will
shoot you with guns, and bring more and more warriors with guns,
and you will not be able to oppose them for long, no matter how
many of them you kill, for they have as many people as grains of
sand on the long beaches. They will pour over you like
Niagara.'
He paused to let that potent image sink in.
He raised his hands. 'It does not have to happen that
way. A people as great as the Hodenosaunee, with its wise women and
its wily warriors, a nation that every single person would gladly
die for, as if for family -- a people like this can learn to
prevail over empires, empires in which only the emperors truly
believe.
'How can we? you ask. How can we stop Niagara's water
from falling?'
He made another pause, refilling the pipe and casting
more tobacco on the fire. He passed the pipe out beyond the ring of
sachems.
'Here is how. Your league is expandable, as you have
shown already by the inclusion of the Shirt Weavers, the Shawnee,
the Choctaw and the Lakota. You should invite all the neighbouring
nations to join you, then teach them your ways, and tell them of
the danger from the big island. Each nation can bring its own skill
and devotion to the defence of this island. If you work together,
the invaders will never be able to make headway into the depths of
the great forest, which is nearly impenetrable even without
opposition.
'Also, and most importantly, you need to be able to make
your own guns.'
Now the attention of the crowd was fixed very closely.
One of the sachems held up for all to regard the musket he had
obtained from the coast. Wooden stock, metal barrel, metal trigger
and sparking apparatus, holding a flint. It looked sleek and
unearthly in the orange firelight, gleaming like their faces,
something born not made.
But Fromwest pointed at it. 'Yes. Like that. Fewer parts
than any basket. The metal comes from crushed rocks put in a fire.
The pots and moulds to hold the melted metal are made of yet harder
metal, that doesn't melt any more. Or in clay. Same with the rod
you wrap a sheet of hot metal around, to make the barrel of the
gun. The fire is made hot enough by using charcoal and coal for
fuel, and blowing on the fire with bellows. Also, you can stick a
wheel spinning in the river's flow, that will squeeze a bellows
open and closed with the force of a thousand men.'
He went into a description of this process that appeared
to be mostly in his own language. The something did something to
the something. He illustrated by blowing on a glowing branch end
held before his mouth, till it burst back into yellow flame.
'Bellows are like deerskin bags, squeezed over and over
in wooden hands, wooden walls on a hinge,' flapping his hands
vigorously. 'The devices can be pushed by the river. All work can
be linked to the power of the rivers flowing by, and greatly
increased. Thus the river's power becomes yours. Niagara's power
becomes yours to command. You can make metal discs with toothed
edges, connect them to the river, and cut through trees like
sticks, cut trees longways into planks for houses and boats.' He
gestured around them. 'A forest covers the whole eastern half of
Turtle Island. Numberless trees. You could make anything. Great
ships to cross the great seas, to bring the fight to their shores.
Anything. You could sail there and ask their people if they want to
be slaves of an empire, or a tribe woven into the league.
Anything!'
Fromwest paused for another toke on the pipe. Keeper of
the Wampum took the opportunity to say, 'You speak always of
struggle and fighting. But the foreigners on the coast have been
most friendly and solicitous. They trade, they give us guns for
furs, they do not shoot us, or fear us. They speak of their god as
if it is none of our concern.'
Fromwest nodded. 'So it will be, until you look around
you, and find there are foreigners all around you, in your valleys,
in forts on your hilltops, and insisting that they own the land of
their farm as if it were their tobacco pouch, and willing to shoot
anyone who kills an animal there, or cuts a tree. And at that point
they will say their law rules your law, because there are more of
them and they have more guns. And they will have permanently armed
warriors, ready to go on the warpath for them anywhere in the whole
world. And then you will be running north to try to escape them,
leaving this land here, the highest land on Earth.'
He wiggled upwards to show how high. Many laughed despite
their consternation. They had watched him take three or four giant
pulls on the pipe, and they had all taken a puff themselves by now,
so they knew how high he must be feeling. He was leaving
them now, they could see it. He began to speak as from a great
distance away, from inside his spirit, or out among the stars.
'They will bring disease. Many of you will die of fevers,
and infections coming as if from nowhere, spreading from person to
person. The diseases eat you from within, like mistletoe, growing
everywhere inside you. Tiny parasites inside you, big parasites
outside you, people living from your work even though they stay on
the other side of the world, making you do it by the force of laws
and guns. Laws like mistletoe! There to support the luxuries of an
emperor around the world. So many of them that they will be able to
cut down all the trees in the forest.'
He took a deep breath, and shook his head like a dog to
get out of that dark place.
'Well!' he cried. 'So! You must live as if you are
already dead! Live as if you are warriors already captured, do you
understand? The foreigners on the coast must be resisted, and
confined to a harbour town, if you can do it. War will come
eventually, no matter what you do. But the later it comes the more
you can prepare for it, and hope to win it. Defending a home is
easier than conquering the other side of the world, after all. So
we might succeed! Certainly we must try, for all the generations
that come after us!'
Another long inhalation on the pipe.
'Therefore, guns! Guns big and small! Gunpowder.
Sawmills. Horses. With these things alone, we could do it. And
messages on birchbark. A particular mark for each sound in the
languages. Make the mark, make the sound. Easy. So talk like this
can go on all the time, at great distances in space and time,
between speakers and listeners. These things are being done all
over the other side of the world. Listen, your island is isolated
from the other by such great seas, that you have been as on another
world, all the ages since the Great Spirit made people. But now the
others are coming here! To resist them you have only your
understanding, your spirit, your courage, and the arrangement of
your nation, like the warp and weft of your baskets, so much
stronger than any mere gathering of reeds. Stronger than guns!'
Suddenly he looked up and shouted it to the eastern
stars. 'Stronger than guns!' To the western stars: 'Stronger than
guns!' To the northern stars: 'Stronger than guns!' To the southern
stars: 'Stronger than guns!'
Many cried out with him.
He waited for silence again.
'Each new chief is allowed to ask the council of sachems,
gathered to honour his raising up, consideration of some point of
policy. I now ask the sachems to look at the matter of the
foreigners on the cast coast, and at opposing them, by harnessing
river power, and making guns, and pursuing a general campaign
against them. I ask the sachems to pursue our own power over our
affairs.'
He put his hands together and bowed.
The sachems stood.
Keeper said, 'That is more than one proposal. But we will
take the first one into consideration, and that will cover the
rest.'
The sachems gathered in small bunches and began to
confer, Pounds the Rock talking fast as always, making a case for
Fromwest, Iagogeh could tell.
All of them are required to be of one mind in decisions
like this. The sachems of each nation divide into classes of two or
three men each, and these talk in low voices to each other, very
concentrated on each other. When they decide the view their class
will take, one of them joins representatives from the other classes
in their nation four for the Doorkeepers and the Swampers.
These also confer for a while, while the sachems finished with
their work consult with the pipe. Soon one sachem from each nation
expresses that view to the other eight, and they see where they
stand.
On this night, the conference of the eight
representatives went on for a long time, so long that people began
to look at them curiously. A few years before, when conferring over
how to deal with the foreigners on the east coast, they had not
been able to come to a unanimous view, and nothing then had been
done. By accident or design, Fromwest had brought up again one of
the most important and unresolved problems of their time.
Now it was somewhat similar. Keeper called a halt to the
conference, and announced to the people, 'The sachems will meet
again in the morning. The matter before them is too large to
conclude tonight, and we don't want to delay the dancing any
longer.'
This met with general approval. Fromwest bowed deeply to
the sachems, and joined the first knot of dancers, who led with the
turtleshell rattles. He took a rattle and shook it
vigorously side to side, as oddly as he had swung his lacrosse bat.
There was a fluid quality to his moves, very unlike the
Hodenosaunee warriors' dancing, which looked something like attacks
with tomahawks, extremely agile and energetic, leaping up into the
air over and over, singing all the while. A sheen of sweat quickly
covered their bodies, and their singing was punctuated by hard
sucks for air. Fromwest regarded these gyrations with an admiring
grin, shaking his head to indicate how beyond his abilities these
dancers were; and the crowd, pleased that there was something he
was not good at, laughed and joined in the dance. Fromwest shuffled
to the back, dancing with the women, like the women, and the string
of dancers went around the fire, around the lacrosse field, and
back to the fire. Fromwest stepped out of the snake, and took
ground tobacco leaves from his pouch and placed a small amount on
the tongue of each passer by, including Iagogeh and all the
dancing women, whose graceful shuffling would long outlast the
leaping warriors. 'Shaman's tobacco,' he explained to each person.
'Shaman gift, for dancing.' It had a bitter taste, and many drank
some maple water afterwards to dispel it. The young men and women
continued dancing, their limbs blurring in the bonfire's light,
more robust and burnished than before. The rest of the crowd,
younger or older, danced slightly in place as they wandered,
talking over the events of the day. Many gathered around those who
were inspecting Fromwest's lacrosse ball map of the world,
which seemed to glow in the firelit night as if burning a little at
its heart.
'Fromwest,' Iagogeh said after a while, 'what was in that
shaman tobacco?'
Fromwest said, 'I lived with a nation to the west who
gave it to me. Tonight of all nights the Hodenosaunee need to take
a vision quest together. A spirit voyage, as it always is. This
time all out of the long house together.'
He took up a flute given to him, and put his fingers
carefully on the stops, then played a sequence of notes, then a
scale. 'Ha!' he said, and looked closely at it. 'Our holes are set
in different places! I'll try anyway.'
He played a song so piercing they were all dancing on the
sound of it together, like birds. Fromwest winced as he played,
until at last his face grew peaceful, and he played reconciled to
the new scale.
When he was done he looked again at the flute. 'That was
"Sakura",' he said. 'The holes for "Sakura", but it came out something
else. No doubt everything I say to you comes out changed in a
similar fashion. And your children will take what you do and change
it yet again. So it will not matter much what I say tonight, or you
do tomorrow.'
One of the girls danced by holding an egg painted red,
one of their toys, and Fromwest stared after her, startled by
something. He looked around, and they saw that the cut on his head
had started to bleed again. His eyes rolled, and he slumped as if
struck, and dropped the flute. He shouted something in another
language. The crowd grew quiet, and those nearest him sat on the
ground.
'This has happened before,' he declared in a stranger's
voice, slow and grinding. 'Oh yes -- now it all comes back!' A
faint cry, or moan. 'Not this night, repeated exactly, but a
previous visit. Listen we live many lives. We die and then
come back in another life, until we have lived well enough to be
done. Once before I was a warrior from Nippon -- no -- from China!
' He paused, thinking that over. 'Yes. Chinese. And it was my
brother, Peng. He crossed Turtle Island, rock by rock, sleeping in
logs, fighting a bear in her den, all the way here to the top, to
this very encampment, this council house, this lake. He told me
about it after we died.' He howled briefly, looked around as if
searching for something, then ran off to the bone house.
Here the bones of the ancestors are stored after the
individual burials have exposed them long enough to the birds and
gods to have cleansed them white. They are stacked neatly in the
bone house under the hill, and it is not a place people visit
during dances, and rarely ever.
But shamans are notoriously bold in these matters, and
the crowd watched the bone house needling light through the chinks
in its bark walls, sparking as Fromwest moved his torch here and
there. A huge groaning shout from him, rising to a scream,
'Ahhhhhhhhhhhh!' and he emerged holding his torch up to illuminate
a white skull, which he was jabbering at in his language.
He stopped by the fire and held up the skull to them.
'You see it's my brother! It's me!' He moved the broken
skull beside his face, and it looked out at them from its empty eye
sockets, and indeed it seemed a good match for his head. This
caused everyone to stop still and listen to him again.
'I left our ship on the west coast, and wandered inland
with a girl.
East always, to the rising sun. I arrived here just as
you were meeting in council like this, to decide on the laws you
live by now. The five nations had quarrelled, and then been called
together by Daganoweda for a council to decide how to end the
fighting in these fair valleys.'
This was true; this was the story of how the Hodenosaunee
had begun.
I Daganoweda, I saw him do it! He called them together
and proposed a league of nations, ruled by sachems, and by the
tribes cutting across the nations, and by the old women. And all
the nations agreed to it, and your league of peace was born in that
meeting, in the first year, and has stayed as designed by the first
council. No doubt many of you were there too, in your previous
lives, or perhaps you were on the other side of the world,
witnessing the monastery that I grew up in being built. Strange the
ways of rebirth. Strange the ways. I was here to protect your
nations from the diseases we were certain to bring. I did not bring
you your marvellous government, Daganoweda did that with all the
rest of you together, I knew nothing of that. But I taught you
about scabbing. He brought the scabs, and taught you to make a
shallow scratch and put some scab in the cut, and save some of the
scab that formed, and to go through the smallpox rituals, the diet
and the prayers to the smallpox god. Oh that we can heal ourselves
on this Earth! And thus in the sky.'
He turned the skull to him and looked inside it. 'He did
this and no one knew,' he said. 'No one knew who he was, no one
remembers this act of mine, no record of it exists, except in my
mind, intermittently, and in the existence of all the people here
who would have died if I had not done it. This is what the human
story is, not the emperors and the generals and their wars, but the
nameless actions of people who are never written down, the good
they do for others passed on like a blessing, just doing for
strangers what your mother did for you, or not doing what she
always spoke against. And all that carries forward and makes us
what we are.'
The next part of his address was in his own language, and
went on for some time. Everyone watched attentively as he spoke to
the skull in his hand, and caressed it. The sight held all in its
spell, and when he stopped to listen so raptly to the skull
speaking back to him, they seemed to hear it too, more words in his
own birdlike speech. Back and forth they spoke, and briefly
Fromwest wept. It was a shock when he turned to speak to them
again, in his weird Senecan: 'The past reproaches us! So
many lives. Slowly we change, oh so slowly. You think it doesn't
happen, but it does. You ' using the skull to point at Keeper
of the Wampum -- 'you could never have become sachem when I knew
you last, 0 my brother. You were too angry, but now you are not.
And you '
Pointing the skull at Iagogeh, who felt her heart skip
within her 'You would never have known before what to do with your
great power, 0 my sister. You would never have been able to teach
Keeper so much.
'We grow together, as the Buddha told us would happen.
Only now can we understand and take on our burden. You have the
finest government on this Earth, no one else has understood that
all are noble, all are part of the One Mind. But this is a burden
too, do you see? You have to carry it -- all the unborn lives to
come depend on you! Without you the world would become a nightmare.
The judgment of the ancestors' swinging the skull around like a
pipe to be smoked, gesturing wildly at the bone house. His head
wound was bleeding freely now and he was weeping, sobbing, the
crowd watching him open mouthed, travelling out now with him
into the sacred space of the shaman.
'All the nations on this island are your will be
brothers, your will be sisters. This is how you should greet
them. Hello, will be brother! How fare you? They will
recognize your soul as theirs. They will join you as their elder
brother, showing them the way forward. Struggle between brothers
and sisters will cease, and the league of the Hodenosaunee will be
joined by nation after nation, tribe after tribe. When the
foreigners arrive in their canoes to take your land, you can face
them as one, resist their attacks, take from them what is useful
and reject what is harmful, and stand up to them as equals on this
Earth. I see now what will happen in the time to come, I see it! I
see it! I see it! I see it! The people I will become dream now and
speak back to me, through me, they tell me all the world's people
will stand before the Hodenosaunee in wonder at the justice of its
government. The story will move from long house to long house, to
everywhere people are enslaved by their rulers, they will speak to
each other of the Hodenosaunee, and of a way things could be, all
things shared, all people given the right to be a part of
the running of things, no slaves and no emperors, no conquest and
no submission, people like birds in the sky. Like eagles in the
sky! Oh bring it, oh come the day, oh oooooooooooohhhhhhh . .
.'
Fromwest paused then, sucking in air. Iagogeh approached
him and tied a cloth around his head, to staunch the bleeding from
his wound. He reeked of sweat and blood. He stared right through
her, then looked up at the night sky and said 'Ah,' as if the stars
were birds, or the twinkling of unborn souls. He stared at the
skull as if wondering how it got there in his hand. He gave it to
Iagogeh, and she took it. He stepped towards the young warriors,
sang feebly the first part of one of the dance songs. This released
the men from the spell cast over them, and they leapt to their
feet, and the drumming and rattling picked up again. Quickly the
dancers surrounded the fire.
Fromwest took the skull back from Iagogeh. She felt as if
she was giving him his head. He walked slowly back to the bone
house, weaving like a drunk, looking smaller with every weary step.
He went inside without a torch. When he came out his hands were
free, and he took a flute given him, and returned to the edge of
the dance. There he swayed feebly in place and played with the
other musicians, tootling rhythmically with no particular melody.
Iagogeh shuffled in the dance, and when she passed him she pulled
him back into the line, and he followed her.
'That was good,' she said. 'That was a good story you
told.'
'Was it?' he said. 'I don't remember.'
She was not surprised. 'You were gone. Another Fromwest
spoke through you. It was a good story.'
'Did the sachems think so?'
'We'll tell them to think so.'
She led him through the crowd, testing the look of him
against one maid or another who had occurred to her as
possibilities. He did not react to any of these pairings, but only
danced and breathed through his flute, looking down or into the
fire. He appeared drained and small, and after more dancing Iagogeh
led him away from the fire. He sat down crosslegged, playing the
flute with his eyes closed, adding wild trills to the music.
In the time before dawn the fire crumbled to a great
mound of grey coals, glowing orangely here and there. Many people
had gone into the Onondagas long house to sleep, and many others
were curled like dogs in their blankets on the grass under the
trees. Those still awake sat in circles by the fire, singing songs
or telling stories while they waited for dawn, tossing a branch on
the fire to watch it catch and blaze.
Iagogeh wandered the lacrosse field, tired but buzzing in
her limbs from the dance and the tobacco. She looked for Fro mwest,
but he was not to be found, in long house, on meadow, in the
forest, in the bone house. She found herself wondering if the whole
marvellous visitation had been only a dream they had shared.
The sky to the east was turning grey. Iagogeh went down
to the lakeshore, to the women's area, beyond a small forested spit
of land, thinking to wash before anyone else was around. She took
off her clothes, all but her shift, and walked out into the lake
until she was thigh deep, then washed herself.
Across the lake she saw a disturbance. A black head in
the water, like a beaver. It was Fromwest, she decided, swimming
like a beaver or an otter in the lake. Perhaps he had become an
animal again. His head was preceded by a series of ripples in the
water. He breathed like a bear.
She had been still for some time, and when he put his
feet on the bottom, down by the spit where it was muddy, she turned
and stood facing him. He saw her and froze. He was wearing only his
waist belt, as in the game. He put his hands together, bowed
deeply. She sloshed slowly towards him, off the sand bottom and
onto soft mud.
'Come,' she said quietly. 'I have chosen for you.'
He regarded her calmly. He looked much older than he had
the day before. 'Thank you,' he said, and added something from his
tongue. A name, she thought. Her name.
They walked onshore. Her foot hit a snag and she put a
hand on his offered forearm, decorously, to balance herself. On the
bank she dried herself with her fingers and dressed, while he
retrieved his clothes and did likewise. Side by side they walked
back to the fire, past the humming dawn watchers, through the knots
of sleeping bodies. Iagogeh stopped before one. Tecarnos, a young
woman, not a girl, but unmarried. Sharptongued and funny,
intelligent and full of spirit. In sleep she did not reveal much of
this, but one leg was stretched out gracefully, and under her
blanket she looked strong.
'Tecarnos,' Iagogeh said softly. 'My daughter. Daughter
of my eldest sister. Wolf tribe. A good woman. People rely on
her.'
Fromwest nodded, hands again pressed together before him,
watching her. 'I thank you.'
'I'll talk to the other women about it. We'll tell
Tecarnos, and the men.'
He smiled, looked around him as if seeing through
everything. The wound on his forehead looked raw and was still
seeping watery blood. The sun blinked through the trees to the
cast, and the singing back by the fires was louder.
She said, 'You two will bring more good souls into the
world.'
'We can hope.'
She put her hand on his arm, as she had when they emerged
from the lake. 'Anything can happen. But we ' meaning the two
of them, or the women, or the Hodenosaunee -- 'we will make the
best chance we can. That's all you can do.'
'I know.' He looked at her hand on his arm, at the sun in
the trees. 'Maybe it will be all right.'
Iagogeh, the teller of this tale, saw all these things
herself.
Thus it was that many years later, when the jati had again
convened in the bardo, after years of work fighting off the
foreigners living at the mouth of the East River, fighting to hold
together their peoples in the face of all the devastating new
diseases that struck them, making alliances with Fromwest's people
embattled in like fashion on the west coast of their island, doing
all they could to knit together the nations and to enjoy life in
the forest with their kin and their tribes, Fromwest approached
Keeper of the Wampum and said to him proudly, 'You have to admit
it, I did what you demanded of me, I went out in the world and
fought for what was right! And we did some good again!'
Keeper put a hand to the shoulder of his young brother as
he approached the great edifice of the bardo's dais of judgment,
and said, 'Yes, you performed well, youth. We did what we
could.'
But already he was looking ahead at the bardo's enormous
towers and battlements, wary and unsatisfied, focused on the tasks
ahead. Things in the bardo seemed to have become even more Chinese
since their last time there, like all the rest of the realms,
perhaps, or perhaps it was just a coincidence having to do with
their angle of approach, but the great wall of the dai's was broken
up into scores of levels, leading into hundreds of chambers, so
that it looked somewhat like the side of a beehive.
The bureaucrat god at the entryway to this warren, one
Biancheng by name, handed out guidebooks to the process facing them
above, thick tomes all entitled 'The Jade Record', each hundreds of
pages long, filled with detailed instructions, and with descriptions,
illustrated copiously, of the various punishments they could expect
to suffer for the crimes and effronteries they had committed in
their most recent lives.
Keeper took one of these thick books and without
hesitation swung it like a tomahawk, knocking Biancheng over his
paper laden desk. Keeper looked around at the long lines of
souls waiting their turn to be judged, and saw them staring at him
amazed, and he shouted at them, 'Riot! Revolt! Rebel! Revolution!'
and without waiting to see what they did, led his little jati into
a chamber of mirrors, the first room on their passage through the
process of judgment, where souls were to look at themselves and see
what they really were.
'A good idea,' Keeper admitted, after stopping in the
middle and staring at himself, seeing what no one else could see.
'I am a monster,' he announced. 'My apologies to you all. And
especially to you, Iagogeh, for putting up with me this last time,
and all the previous times. And to you, youth,' nodding at Busho.
'But nevertheless, we have work to do. I intend to tear this whole
place down.' And he began looking around the room for something to
throw at the mirrors.
'Wait,' Iagogeh said. She was reading her copy of 'The
Jade Record', skimming pages rapidly. 'Frontal assaults are
ineffective, as I recall. I'm remembering things. We have to go at
the system itself. We need a technical solution ... Here. Here's
just the thing: just before we're sent back into the world, the
Goddess Meng administers to us a vial of forgetting.'
'I don't remember that,' Keeper said.
'That's the point. We go into each life ignorant of our
pasts, and so we struggle on each time without learning anything
from the times before. We have to avoid that if we can. So listen,
and remember: when you are in the hundred and eight rooms of this
Meng, don't drink anything! If they force you to, then only pretend
to drink it, and spit it out when you are released.' She read on.
'We emerge in the Final River, a river of blood, between this realm
and the world. If we can get there with our minds intact, then we
might be able to act more effectively.'
'Fine,' Keeper said. 'But I intend to destroy this place
itself.'
'Remember what happened last time you tried that,' Busho
warned him, getting into the corner of the chamber so he could see
the reflection of the reflections. Some things were coming back to
him as Iagogeh had spoken. 'When you took a sword to the goddess of
death, and she redoubled on you with each stroke.'
Keeper frowned, trying to recall. Outside there was a
roaring, shouts, sounds of gunfire, boots running. Irritated,
distracted, he said, 'You can't be cautious at times like this, you
have to fight evil whenever the chance comes.'
'True, but cleverly. Little steps.'
Keeper regarded him sceptically. He held his thumb and
forefinger together in the air. 'That small?' He grabbed up
Iagogeh's book and threw it at one wall of the mirrors. One of them
cracked, and a shriek came from behind the wall.
'Stop arguing,' Iagogeh said. 'Pay attention now.'
Keeper picked the book back up and they hurried through
close little rooms, moving higher and higher, then lower again,
then higher, always up or down stairs in multiples of seven or
nine. Keeper abused several more functionaries with the big book.
Pounds the Rocks kept slipping into side rooms and getting
lost.
Finally they reached the hundred and eight chambers of
Meng, the Goddess of Forgetting. Everyone had to pass through a
different one of the chambers, and drink the cup of the
wine that was not wine set out for them. Guards
who did not look as if they would notice the slap of a book, be it
ever so thick, stood at every exit to enforce this requirement;
souls were not to return to life too burdened or advantaged by
their pasts.
'I refuse,' Keeper shouted; they could all hear it from
the nearby rooms. 'I don't remember this ever being required
before!'
'That's because we're making progress,' Busho tried to
call to him. 'Remember the plan, remember the plan.'
He himself took up his vial, happily fairly small, and
faked swallowing its sweet contents with an exaggerated gulp,
tucking the liquid under his tongue. It tasted so good he was
sorely tempted to swallow it down, but resisted and only let a
little seep to the back of his tongue.
Thus when his guard tossed him out into the Final River
with the rest, he spat out what he could of the not wine, but
he was disoriented nevertheless. The other members of the jati
thrashed likewise in the shallows, choking and spitting, Straight
Arrow giggling drunkenly, totally oblivious. Iagogeh rounded them
up, and Keeper, no matter what he had forgotten, had not
lost his main purpose, which was to wreak havoc however he could.
They half swum, half floated across the red stream to the
far shore.
There, at the foot of a tall red wall, they were hauled
out of the river by two demon gods of the bardo,
Life is short and Death by gradations. Overhead
a banner hanging down the side of the wall displayed the message,
'To be a human is easy, to live a human life is hard; to desire to
be human a second time is even harder. If you want release from the
wheel, persevere.'
Keeper read the message and snorted. 'A second time --
what about the tenth? What about the fiftieth?' And with a roar he
shoved Deathby gradations into the river of blood. They had
spat enough of Meng's not wine of forgetting in the stream
that the god guard quickly forgot who had shoved him, and what his
job was, and how to swim.
But the others of the jati saw what Keeper had done, and
their purpose came back ever more clearly to their consciousness.
Busho shoved the other guard into the stream: 'Justice!' he shouted
after the suddenly absent minded swimmer. 'Life is short
indeed!'
Other guards appeared upstream on the bank of the Final
River, hurrying towards them. The members of the jati acted
quickly, and for once like a team; by twisting and tangling the
banner hanging down the wall, they made it into a kind of rope they
could use to pull themselves up the Red Wall. Busho and Keeper and
Iagogeh and Pounds the Rock and Straight Arrow and Zig zag and
all the rest hauled themselves up to the top of the wall, which was
broad enough to sprawl onto. There they could catch their breath,
and have a look around: back down into the dark and smoky bardo,
where a struggle even more chaotic than usual had broken out; it
looked like they had started a general revolt; and then forward,
down onto the world, swathed in clouds.
'It looks like that time when they took Butterfly up that
mountain to sacrifice her,' Keeper said. 'I remember that now.'
'Down there we can make something new,' Iagogeh said.
'It's up to us. Remember!'
And they dived off the wall like drops of rain.
One. A Case of Soul theft
The widow Kang was extremely punctilious about the
ceremonial aspects of her widowhood. She referred to herself
always as wei wang ren, 'the person who has not yet died'. When her
sons wanted to celebrate her fortieth birthday she demurred, saying
'This is not appropriate for one who has not yet died.' Widowed at
the age of thirty five, just after the birth of her third son,
she had been cast into the depths of despair; she had loved her
husband Kung Xin very much. She had dismissed the idea of suicide,
however, as a Ming affectation. A truer interpretation of
Confucian duty made it clear that to commit suicide was to abandon
one's responsibilities to one's children and
parents in law, which was obviously out of the question.
Widow Kang Tongbi was instead determined to remain celibate past
the age of fifty, writing poetry and studying the classics and
running the family compound. At fifty she would be eligible
for certification as a chaste widow, and would receive a
commendation in the Qianlong Emperor's elegant calligraphy, which
she planned to frame and place in the entrance to her home. Her
three sons might even build a stone arch in her honour.
Her two older sons moved around the country in the
service of the imperial bureaucracy, and she raised the
youngest while continuing to run the family household left in
Hangzhou, now reduced in number to her son Shih, and the servants
left behind by her older sons. She oversaw the sericulture that was
the principal support for the household, as her older sons
were not yet in a position to send much money home, and the whole
process of silk production, filature and embroidery was under her
command. No house under a district magistrate was ruled with any
more iron hand. This too honoured Han learning, as women's work in
the better households, usually hemp and silk manufacture, was
considered a virtue long before Qing policies revived official
support for it.
Widow Kang lived in the women's quarters of the small
compound, which was located near the banks of the Chu River. The
outer walls were stuccoed, the inner walls wood shingle, and the
women's quarters, in the innermost reach of the property, were
contained in a beautiful white square building with a tile roof,
filled with light and flowers. In that building, and the workshops
adjacent to it, Widow Kang and her women would weave and embroider
for at least a few hours every day, and often several more, if the
light was good. Here too Widow Kang had her youngest son recite the
parts of the classics he had memorized at her command. She would
work at the loom, flicking the shuttle back and forth, or in the
evening simply spin thread, or work at the larger patterns of
embroidery, all the while running Shih through the Analects, or
Mencius, insisting on perfect memorization, just as the examiners
would when the time came. Little Shih was not very good at it, even
compared to his older brothers, who had been only minimally
acceptable, and often he was reduced to tears by the end of the
evening; but Kang Tongbi was relentless, and when he was done
crying, they would get back to it. Over time he improved. But he
was a nervous and unhappy boy.
So no one was happier than Shih when the ordinary routine
of the household was interrupted by festivals. All three of the
Bodhisattva Guanyin's birthdays were important holidays for his
mother, especially the main one, on the nineteenth day of the sixth
month. As this great festival approached, the widow would relent in
ber strict lessons, and make her preparations: proper reading,
writing of poetry, collection of incense and food for the indigent
women of the neighbourhood; these activities were added, to ber
already busy days. As the festival approached she fasted, and
abstained from any polluting actions ' including becoming angry, so
that she stopped Shih's lessons for the time, and offered
sacrifices in the compound's little shrine.
The old man in the moon tied red threads Around our legs
when we were babies.
We met and married; now you are gone. Ephemeral life is
like water flowing; Suddenly we have been separated by death all
these years. Tears well up as an early autumn begins. The one who
has not yet died is dreamed of By a distant ghost. A crane flies, a
flower falls; Lonely and desolate, I set aside my needlework And
stand in the courtyard to count the geese Who have lost their
flocks. May Bodhisattva Guanyin Help me get through these chill
final years.
When the day itself came they all fasted, and in the
evening joined a big procession up the local hill, carrying
sandalwood in a cloth sack, and twirling banners, umbrellas and
paper lanterns, following their temple group's flag, and the big
pitchy torch leading the way and warding off demons. For Shih the
excitement of the night march, added to the cessation of his
studies, made for a grand holiday, and he walked behind his mother
swinging a paper lantern, singing songs and feeling happy in a way
usually impossible for him.
'Miao Shan was a young girl who refused her father's
order to marry,' his mother told the young women walking ahead of
them, although they had all heard the story before. 'In a rage he
committed her to a monastery, then he burned the monastery down. A
bodhisattva, Dizang Wang, took her spirit to the Forest of Corpses,
where she helped the unsettled ghosts. After that she went down
through the levels of hell, teaching the spirits there to rise
above their suffering, and she was so successful that Lord Yama
returned her as the Bodhisattva Guanyin, to help the living learn
these good things while they are still alive, before it's too late
for them.'
Shih did not listen to this oft heard tale, which he
could not make sense of. It did not seem like anything in his
mother's life, and he didn't understand her attraction to it.
Singing, firelight and the strong smoky smells of incense all
converged at the shrine on the top of the hill. Up there the
Buddhist abbot led prayers, and people sang and ate small
sweets.
Long after moonset they trooped back down the hill and
along the river path home, still singing songs in the windy
darkness. Everyone from the household moved slowly along, not only
because they were tired, but to accommodate Widow Kang's mincing
stride. She had very small beautiful feet, but got around almost as
well as the big flat footed servant girls, by using a quick
step and a characteristic swivel of the hips, a gait that no one
ever commented on.
Shih wandered ahead, still nursing his last candle's
guttering, and by its light he glimpsed movement against their
compound wall: a big dark figure, stepping awkwardly in just the
way his mother did, so that he thought for a moment it was her
shadow on the wall.
But then it made a sound like a dog whimpering, and Shih
jumped back and shouted a warning. The others rushed forward, Kang
Tongbi at their fore, and by torchlight they saw a man in ragged
robes, dirty, hunched over, staring up at them, his frightened eyes
big in the torchlight.
'Thief!' someone shouted.
'No,' he said in a hoarse voice. 'I am Bao Ssu. I'm a
Buddhist monk from Soochow. I'm just trying to get water from the
river. I can hear it.' He gestured, then tried to limp away towards
the river sound.
'A beggar,' someone else said.
But sorcerers had been reported west of Hangzhou, and now
Widow Kang held her lantern so close to his face that he had to
squint.
'Are you a real monk, or just one of the hairy ones that
hide in their temples!'
'A true monk, I swear. I had a certificate, but it was
taken from me by the magistrate. I studied with Master Yu of the
Purple Bamboo Temple.' And he began to recite the Diamond Sutra, a
favourite of women past a certain age.
Kang inspected his face carefully in the lamplight. She
shuddered palpably, stepped back. 'Do I know you?' she said to
herself. Then to him: 'I know you!'
The monk bowed his head. 'I don't know how, lady. I come
from Soochow. Perhaps you've visited there?'
She shook her head, still disturbed, peering intently
into his eyes. 'I know you,' she whispered.
Then to the servants she said, 'Let him sleep by the back
gate. Guard him, and we'll find out more in the morning. It's too
dark now to see a man's nature.'
In the morning the man had been joined by a boy just a
few years younger than Shih. Both were filthy, and were busy
sifting the compost for the freshest scraps of food, which they
wolfed down. They regarded the members of the household at the gate
as warily as foxes. But they could not run away; the man's ankles
were both swollen and bruised.
'What were you questioned for?' Kang asked sharply.
The man hesitated, looking down at the boy. 'My son and I
were travelling through on our way back to the Temple of the Purple
Bamboo Grove, and apparently some young boy had his queue clipped
about that time.'
Kang hissed, and the man looked her in the eye, one hand
up. 'We're no sorcerers. That's why they let us go. But my name is
Bao Ssu, fourth son of Bao Ju, and a beggar they had in hand for
cursing a village headmaster was questioned, and he named a
sorcerer he said he had met, called Bao Ssu ju. They thought I
might be that man. But I'm no soulstealer. Just a poor monk and his
son. In the end they brought the beggar back in, and he confessed
he had made it all up, to stop his questioning. So they let us
go.
Kang regarded them with undiminished suspicion. It was a
cardinal rule to stay out of trouble with the magistrates; so they
were guilty of that, at the least.
'Did they torture you too?' Shih asked the boy.
'They were going to,' the boy replied, 'but they gave me
a pear instead, and I told them Father's name was Bao Ssu ju.
I thought it was right.'
Bao kept watching the widow. 'You don't mind if we get
water from the river?'
'No. Of course not. Go.' And she watched him while the
man limped down the path to the river.
'We can't let them inside, she decided. 'And Shih, don't
you go near them. But they can keep the gate shrine. Until winter
comes that will be better than the road for them, I suppose.'
This did not surprise Shih. His mother was always
adopting stray cats and castaway concubines; she helped to maintain
the town orphanage, and stretched their finances by supporting the
Buddhist nuns. She often spoke of becoming one herself. She wrote
poetry: 'These flowers I walk on hurt my heart,' she would recite
from one of her day poems. 'When my days of rice and salt are
over,' she would say, 'I'll copy out the sutras and pray all day.
But until then we had all better get to the day's work!'
So, after that the monk Bao and his boy became fixtures
at the gate, and around that part of the river, in the bamboo
groves and the shrine hidden in the thinning forest there. Bao
never regained a normal walk, but he was not quite as hobbled as on
the night of Guanyin's enlightenment day, and what he could not do
his son Xinwu, who was strong for his size, did for both of them.
On the next New Year's Day they joined the festivities, and Bao had
managed to obtain a few eggs and colour them red, so that he
could give them out to Kang and Shih and other members of the
household.
Bao presented the eggs with great seriousness: 'Ge Hong
related that the Buddha said the cosmos is egg shaped, and the
Earth like Giving red eggs: this was a south China custom,
called 'sending happiness for the new year'.
Possibly the author
means to suggest the monk Bao had lied about his place of
origin.
As he gave one to Shih he said,
'Here, put it longways in your hand, and try to crush it.'
Shih looked startled, and Kang objected: 'It's too
pretty.'
'Don't worry, it's strong. Go ahead, try to crush it.
I'll clean it up if you can.'
Shih squeezed gingerly, turning his head aside, then
harder. He squeezed until his forearm was taut. The egg held. Widow
Kang took it from him and tried it herself. Her arms were very
strong from embroidery, but the egg stood fast.
'You see,' Bao said. 'Eggshell is weak stuff, but the
curve is strong. People are like that too. Each person weak, but
together strong.'
After that, on religious festival days Kang would often
join Bao outside the gate, and discuss the Buddhist scriptures with
him. The rest of the time she ignored the two, concentrating on the
world inside the walls.
Shih's studies continued to go badly. He did not seem to
be able to understand arithmetic beyond addition, and could not
memorize the classics beyond a few words at the start of each
passage. His mother found his study sessions intensely frustrating.
'Shih, I know you are not a stupid boy. Your father was a brilliant
man, your brothers are solid thinkers, and you have always been
quick to find reasons why nothing is ever your fault, and
why everything has to be your way. Think of equations as excuses,
and you'll be fine! But all you do is think of ways not to think of
things!'
Before this kind of scorn, poured on in sharp tones, no
one could stand. It was not just Kang's words, but the way she said
them, with a cutting edge and a crow's voice; and the curl of her
lip, and the blazing, self righteous glare -- the way she
looked right into you as she flailed you with her words -- no one
could face it. Wailing miserably as always, Shih retreated from
this latest withering blast.
Not long after that scolding, he came running back from
the market, wailing in earnest. Shrieking, in fact, in a full fit
of hysterics. 'My queue, my queue, my queue!'
It had been cut off. The servants shouted in
consternation, all was an uproar for a moment, but it was cut as
short as Shih's little pigtail stub by his mother's grating voice:
'Shut up all of you!'
She seized Shih by the arms and put him down on the
window seat where she had so often examined him. Roughly she
brushed away his tears and petted him. 'Calm yourself, calm down.
Calm down! Tell me what happened.'
Through convulsive sobs and hiccoughs he got the story
out. He had stopped on the way home from the market to watch a
juggler, when hands had seized him across the eyes, and a cloth had
been put across his face, covering both mouth and eyes. He had felt
dizzy then and had collapsed, and when he picked himself off the
ground, there was no one there, and his queue was gone.
Kang watched him intently through the course of his tale,
and when he had finished and was staring at the floor, she pursed
her lips and went to the window. She looked out at the
chrysanthemums under the old gnarled juniper for a long time.
Finally her head servant, Pao, approached her. Shih was led off to
have his face washed and get some food.
'What shall we do?' Pao asked in a low voice.
Kang heaved a heavy sigh. 'We'll have to report it,' she
said darkly. 'If we didn't, it would surely become known anyway,
from the servants talking at the market. And then it would look as
if we were encouraging rebellion.'
'Of course,' Pao said, relieved. 'Shall I go and inform the
magistrate now?'
For the longest time there was no reply. Pao stared at
Widow Kang, more and more frightened. Kang seemed under a malignant
enchant ment, as if she were even at that moment fighting
soul stealers for the soul of her son.
'Yes. Go with Zunli. We will follow with Shih.'
Pao left. Kang wandered the household, looking at one
object after another, as if inspecting the rooms. Finally she went
out of the compound front gate, slowly down the river
path.
The Qing dynasty forced all Ilan Chinese men to shave
their foreheads and wear a queue, in the Manchurian manner, to show
submission of the Hans to their Manchu emperors. In the years
before the White Lotus conspiracy, Han bandits began to cut their
queues off as a mark of rebellion.
On the bank under the great oak tree she found Bao and
his boy Xinwu, just where they always were.
She said, 'Shih has had his queue cut.'
Bao's face went grey. Sweat sprang on his brow.
Kang said, 'We take him to the magistrate presently.'
Bao nodded, swallowing. He glanced at Xinwu.
'If you want to go on a pilgrimage to some far shrine,'
Kang said harshly, 'we could watch your son.'
Bao nodded again, face stricken. Kang looked at the river
flowing by in the afternoon light. The band of sun on water made
her squint.
'If you go,' she added, they will be sure you did
it.'
The river flowed by. Down the bank Xinwu threw stones in
the water and yelled at the splashes.
'Same if I stay,' Bao said finally.
Kang did not reply.
After a time Bao called Xinwu over, and told him that
because he had to go on a long pilgrimage, Xinwu was to stay with
Kang and Shih and their household.
'When will you be back?' Xinwu asked.
'Soon.'
Xinwu was satisfied, or unwilling to think about it.
Bao reached out and touched Kang's sleeve. 'Thank
you.'
'Go. Be careful not to get caught.'
'I will. If I can I'll send word to the Temple of the
Purple Bamboo Grove.'
'No. If we don't hear from you, we will know you are
well.'
He nodded. As he was about to take his leave, he
hesitated. 'You know, lady, all beings have lived many lives. You
say we have met before, but before the festival of Guanyin, I never
came near here.'
'I know.'
'So it must be that we knew each other in some other
life.'
'I know.' She glanced at him briefly. 'Go.'
He limped off upstream on the bank path, glancing around
to see if there were any witnesses. Indeed there were fisherfolk on
the other bank, their straw hats bright in the sun.
Kang took Xinwu back to the house, then got in a sedan
chair to take the snivelling Shih to town and the magistrate's
offices.
The magistrate looked as displeased as Widow Kang had
been to have this kind of matter thrown in his lap. But like her,
he could not afford to ignore it, and so he interviewed Shih,
angrily, and had him lead them all to the spot in town where it had
happened. Shih indicated a place on the path next to a copse of
bamboo, and just out of sight of the first stalls of the market in
that district. No one habitually there had seen Shih or any unusual
strangers that morning. It was a complete dead end.
So Kang and Shih went home, and Shih cried and complained
that he felt sick and could not study. Kang stared at him and gave
him the day off, plus a healthy dose of powdered gypsum mixed with
the gallstones of a cow. They heard nothing from Bao or the
magistrate, and Xinwu fitted in well with the household's servants.
Kang let Shih be for a time, until one day she got angry at him and
seized what was left of his queue and yanked him into his
examination seat, saying 'Stolen soul or not, you are going to pass
your exams!' and stared down at his catlike face, until he muttered
the lesson for the day before his queue had been cut, looking sorry
for himself, and implacable before his mother's disdain. But she
was more implacable still. If he wanted dinner he had to learn.
Then news came that Bao had been apprehended in the
mountains to the west, and brought back to be interrogated by the
magistrate and the district prefect. The soldiers who brought the
news wanted Kang and Shih down at the prefecture immediately; they
had brought a palanquin to carry them in.
Kang hissed at this news, and returned to her rooms to dress
properly for the trip. The servants saw that her hands were
shaking, indeed her whole body trembled, and her lips were white
beyond the power of gloss to colour them. Before she left her room
she sat down before the loom and wept bitterly. Then she stood and
redid her eyes, and went out to join the guards.
At the prefecture Kang descended from the chair and
dragged Shih with her into the prefect's examination chamber. There
the guards would have stopped her, but the magistrate called her
in, adding ominously, 'This is the woman who was giving him
shelter.'
Shih cringed at this, and looked at the officials from
behind Kang's embroidered silk gown. Along with the magistrate and
prefect were several other officials, wearing robes striped with
arm bands and decorated with the insignia squares of very
high ranking officials: bear, deer, even an eagle.
They did not speak, however, but only sat in chairs
watching the magistrate and prefect, who stood by the unfortunate
Bao. Bao was clamped in a wooden device that held his arms up by
his head. His legs were tied into an ankle press.
The ankle press was a simple thing. Three posts rose from
a wooden base; the central one, between Bao's ankles, was fixed to
the base. The other two were linked to the middle one at about
waist height by an iron dowel rod that ran through all three,
leaving the outer two loose, though big bolts meant they could only
move outwards so far. Bao's ankles were secured to either side of
the middle post; the lower ends of the outer posts were pressing
against the outsides of Bao's ankles. The upper ends had been
pressed apart from the middle post by wooden wedges. All was
already as tight as could be; any further taps on top of the wedges
by the magistrate with his big mallet would press on Bao's ankles
with enormous leverage.
'Answer the question!' the magistrate roared, leaning
down to shout in Bao's face. He straightened up, walked back slowly
and gave the nearest wedge a sharp tap with his mallet.
Bao howled. Then: 'I'm a monk! I've been living with my
boy by the river! I can't walk any farther! I don't go
anywhere!'
'Why are there scissors in your bag?' the prefect
demanded quietly. 'Scissors, powders, books. And a bit of a
queue.'
'That's not hair! That's my talisman from the temple, see
how it's braided! Those are scriptures from the temple -- ah!'
'It is hair,' the prefect said, looking at it in the
light.
The magistrate tapped again with his mallet.
'It isn't my son's hair,' the widow Kang interjected,
surprising everyone. 'This monk lives near our house. He doesn't go
anywhere but to the river for water.'
'How do you know?' the prefect asked, boring into Kang
with his gaze. 'How could you know?'
'I see him there at all hours. He brings our water, and
some wood. He has a boy. He watches our shrine. He's just a poor
monk, a beggar. Crippled by this thing of yours,' she said,
gesturing at the ankle press.
'What is this woman doing here?' the prefect asked the
magistrate.
The magistrate shrugged, looking angry. 'She's a witness
like any other.'
' I didn't call for witnesses.'
'We did,' said one of the officials from the governor.
'Ask her more.'
The magistrate turned to her. 'Can you vouch for the
presence of this man on the nineteenth day of last month?'
'He was at my property, as I said.'
'On that day in particular? How can you know that?'
'Guanyin's annunciation festival was the next day, and
Bao Ssu here helped us in our preparations for it. We worked all
day at preparing for the sacrifices.'
Silence in the room. Then the visiting dignitary said
sharply, 'So you are a Buddhist?'
Widow Kang regarded him calmly. 'I am the widow of Kung
Xin, who was a local yamen before his death. My sons Kung Yen and
Kung Yi have both passed their examinations, and are serving the
Emperor at Nanjing and '
'Yes yes. But are you Buddhist, I asked.'
'I follow the Han ways,' Kang said coldly.
The official questioning her was a Manchu, one of the
Qianlong Emperor's high officers. He reddened slightly now. 'What
does this have to do with your religion?'
'Everything. Of course. I follow the old ways, to honour
my husband and parents and ancestors. What I do to occupy the hours
before I rejoin my husband is of no importance to anyone else, of
course. It is only the spiritual work of an old woman, one who has
not yet died. But I saw what I saw.' 'How old are you?'
'Forty one sui.'
'And you spent all day on the nineteenth day of the ninth
month with this beggar here.'
Age in Chinese reckoning was calculated by taking the
lunar year of one's birth as year one, and adding a year at each
lunar New Year's Day.
'Enough of it to know he could not have gone to
the town market and back. Naturally I worked at the loom in the
afternoon.'
Another silence in the chamber. Then the Manchu official
gestured to the magistrate irritably.
'Question the man further.'
With a vicious glance at Kang, the magistrate leaned over
to shout down at Bao, 'Why do you have scissors in your bag!'
'For making talismans.'
The magistrate tapped the wedge harder than before, and
Bao howled again.
'Tell me what they were really for! Why was there a queue
in your bag?' With hard taps at each question.
Then the prefect asked the questions, each accompanied by
a tap of the mallet from the angry magistrate, and continuous
gasping groans from Bao.
Finally, scarlet and sweating, Bao cried, 'Stop! Please
stop. I confess. I'll tell you what happened.'
The magistrate rested his mallet on the top of one wedge.
'Tell us.'
'I was tricked by a sorcerer into helping them. I didn't
know at first what they were. They said if I didn't help them then
they would steal my boy's soul.'
'What was his name, this sorcerer?'
'Bao Ssu nen, almost like mine. He came from
Soochow, and he had lots of confederates working for him. He would
fly all over China in a night. He gave me some of the stupefying
powder and told me what to do. Please, release the press, please.
I'm telling you everything now. I couldn't help doing it. I had to
do it for the soul of my boy.'
'So you did cut queues on the nineteenth day of last
month.'
'Only one! Only one, please. When they made me. Please,
release the press a little.'
The Manchu official lifted his eyebrows at Widow Kang.
'So you were not with him as much as you claimed. Perhaps it's
better for you that way.'
Someone tittered.
Kang said in her sharp hoarse bray, 'Obviously this is
one of those confessions we have heard about, coerced by the ankle
press. The whole soul stealing scare is based on such forced
confessions, and all it does is cause panic among the servants and
the workers. Nothing could be worse service of the Emperor
'Silence!'
'You send up these reports and cause the Emperor endless
worry and then when a more competent investigation is made the
string of forced lies is revealed 'Silence!'
'You are transparent from above and below! The Emperor
will see it!'
The Manchu official stood and pointed at Kang. 'Perhaps
you would like to take this sorcerer's place in the press.'
Kang was silent. Shih trembled beside her. She leaned on
him and pushed forward one foot until it stood outside her gown,
shod in a little silk slipper. She stared the Manchu in the
eye.
'I have already withstood it.'
'Remove this demented creature from the examination,' the
Manchu said tightly, his face a dark red. A woman's foot, exposed
during the examination of a crime as serious as soul
stealing: it was beyond all regulation.
No woman of breeding ever referred to her feet or
revealed them in public. This was a bold person!
'I am a witness,' Kang said, not moving.
'Please,'Bao called out to her. 'Leave, lady.
Do what the magistrate says.' He could barely twist far
enough to look at her. 'It will be all right.'
So they left. On the way home in the guard's palanquin
Kang wept, knocking aside Shih's comforting hands.
'What's wrong, Mother? What's wrong?,
'I have shamed your family. I have destroyed my husband's
fondest hopes.'
Shih looked frightened. 'He's just a beggar.'
'Be quiet!' she hissed. Then she cursed like one of the
servants. 'That Manchu! Miserable foreigners! They're not even
Chinese. Not true Chinese. Every dynasty begins well, cleansing the
decay of the fallen one before it. But then their turn for
corruption comes. And the Qing are there. That's why they're so
concerned with queue clipping. That's their mark on us, their
mark on every Chinese man.'
'But that's the way it is, Mother. You can't change
dynasties!'
'No. Oh, I am ashamed! I have lost my temper. I never
should have gone there. I only added to the blows against poor
Bao's ankles.'
At home she went to the women's quarters. She fasted,
worked at her weaving all the hours she was awake, and would not
talk with anyone.
Then news came that Bao had died in prison, of a fever
that had nothing to do with his interrogation, or so said the
jailers. Kang threw herself into her room, weeping, and would not
come out. When she did, days later, she spent all her waking hours
weaving or writing poems, and she ate at the loom and her writing
desk. She refused to teach Shih, or even to speak to him, which
upset him, indeed frightened him more than anything she might have
said. But he enjoyed playing down by the river. Xinwu was required
to stay away from him, and was cared for by the servants.
My poor monkey dropped its peach The new moon forgot to
shine. No more climbing in the pine tree No little monkey on its
back. Come back as a butterfly And I will be your dream.
One day not long after that, Pao brought Kang a small
black queue, found buried in the mulberry compost by a servant who
had been turning the muck. It was cut at an angle that matched the
remnant at the back of Shih's head.
Kang hissed at the sight, and went into Shih's room and
slapped him hard on the car. He howled, crying 'What? What?'
Ignoring him, Kang went back to the women's quarters, groaning, and
took up a pair of scissors and slashed through all the silk
cloth stretched over the frames for embroidering. The servant girls
cried out in alarm, no one could believe their eyes. The mistress
of the house had gone mad at last. Never had they seen her weep so
hard, not even when her husband died.
Later she ordered Pao to say nothing about what had been
found. Eventually all the servants found out about the discovery
anyway, and Shih lived shunned in his own house. He did not seem to
care.
But from that time, Widow Kang stopped sleeping at night.
Often she called to Pao for wine. 'I've seen him again,' she would
say. 'He was a young monk this time, in different robes. A huihui.
And I was a young queen. He saved me, then we ran off together. Now
his ghost is hungry, and he wanders between the worlds.'
They put offerings for him outside the gate, and at the
windows. Still Kang woke the house with her sleeping cries, like a
peacock's, and sometimes they would find her sleepwalking in
between the buildings of the compound, speaking in strange tongues
and even in voices not her own. It was established practice never
to wake someone walking in their sleep, to avoid startling the
spirit and causing it to become confused and not find its way back
to its body. So they went in front of her, moving furniture so she
would not hurt herself, and they pinched the rooster to make it
crow early. Pao tried to get Shih to write to his older brothers
and tell them what was happening, or at least to write down what
his mother was saying at night, but Shih wouldn't do it.
Eventually Pao told Shih's eldest brother's head
servant's sister about it, at the market when she was visiting
Hangzhou, and after that word eventually got to the eldest
brother, in Nanjing. He did not come; he could not get away from
his duties.
Note that if it had been his father sick at home, or
beset by ghosts, he would certainly have been given leave to
go.
He did, however, have a Muslim scholar visiting him, a
doctor from the frontier, and as this man had a professional
interest in possessions such as Widow Kang's, he came a few months
later to visit her.
Two. The Remembering
Kang Tongbi received the visitor in the rooms
off the front courtyard devoted to entertaining guests, and sat
watching him closely as he explained who he was, in a clear if
strangely accented Chinese. His name was Ibrahim ibn Hasam. He was
a small, slight man, about Kang's height and build,
white haired. He wore reading glasses all the time, and his
eyes swam behind the lenses like pond fish. He was a true hui,
originally from Iran, though he had lived in China for most of the
Qianlong Emperor's reign, and like most long term foreigners
in China, had made a lifelong commitment to stay there.
'China is my home,' he said, which sounded odd with his
accent. He nodded observantly at her expression. 'Not a pure Han,
obviously, but I like it here. Actually I am soon moving back to
Langzhou, to live among people of my faith. I think I have learned
enough studying with Liu Zhi to be of service to those wishing for
a better understanding between Muslim Chinese and Han Chinese. That
is my hope, anyway.'
Kang nodded politely at this unlikely quest. 'And you
have come here to ... ?'
He bowed. 'I have been assisting the governor of the
province in these reported cases of . . .'
'Soul stealing?' Kang said sharply.
'Well. Yes. Queue cuttings, in any case. Whether
they are a matter of sorcery, or merely of rebellion against the
dynasty, is not so very easy to determine. I am a scholar for the
most part, a religious scholar, but I have also been a student of
the medical arts, and so I was summoned to see if I could
bring any light to bear on the matter. I have also studied cases of
possession of the soul. And other things like that.'
Kang regarded him coldly. He hesitated before continuing.
'Your eldest son informs me that you have suffered some incidents
of this kind.'
'I know nothing about them,' she said sharply. 'My
youngest son's queue was cut, that I am aware of. It has been
investigated with no particular result. As for the rest, I am
ignorant. I sleep, and have woken up a few times cold, and not in
my bed. Elsewhere in the household, in fact. My servants tell me
that I have been saying things they don't understand. Speaking
something that is not Chinese.'
His eyes swam. 'Do you speak any other languages,
madam?'
'Of course not.'
'Excuse me. Your son said you were extremely
well educated.'
'My father was pleased to educate me in the classics
along with his sons.'
'You have the reputation of being a fine poet.'
Kang did not reply, but coloured slightly.
'I hope I shall have the privilege of reading some of
your poems. They could help me in my work here.'
'Which is?'
'Well -- to cure you of these visitations, if such is
possible. And to aid the Emperor in his inquiry into the
queue clippings.'
Kang frowned and looked away.
Ibrahim sipped his tea and waited. He seemed to have the
ability to wait more or less indefinitely.
Kang gestured to Pao to refill his tea cup. 'Proceed,
then.'
Ibrahim bowed from his seat. 'Thank you. Perhaps we can
start by discussing this monk who died, Bao Ssu.'
Kang stiffened in her wall seat.
'I know it is difficult,' Ibrahim murmured. 'You care
still for his son.'
'Yes.'
'And I am told that when he arrived you were convinced
that you knew him from somewhere else.'
'Yes, that's right. But he said he came from Soochow, and
had never been here before. And I have never been to Soochow. But I
felt that I knew him.'
'And did you feel the same way about his boy?'
'No. But I feel the same about you.'
She clapped her hand over her mouth.
'You do?' Ibrahim watched her.
Kang shook her head. 'I don't know why I said that! It
just came out.'
'Such things sometimes do.' He waved it off. 'But this
Bao, who did not recognize you. Shortly after he arrived, there
were incidents reported. Queue chopping, people's names
written on pieces of paper and placed under wharf pilings about to
be driven in that sort of thing. Soulstealing
activities.'
Kang shook her head. 'He had nothing to do with that. He
spent every day by the river, fishing with his son. He was a simple
monk, that's all. They tortured him to no purpose.'
'He confessed to queue clipping.'
'On the ankle press he did! He would have said anything,
and so would anyone else! It's a stupid way to investigate such
crimes. It makes them spring up everywhere, like a ring of poison
mushrooms.'
'True,' the man said. He took a sip of tea. 'I have often
said so myself. And in fact it's becoming clear that that is what
has happened here, in the present situation.'
Kang looked at him grimly. 'Tell me.'
'Well.' Ibrahim looked down. 'Monk Bao and his boy were
first brought in for questioning in Anchi, as he may have told you.
They had been begging by singing songs outside the village
headman's house. The headman gave them a single piece of steamed
bread, and Bao and Xinwu were apparently so hungry that Bao cursed
the headman, who decided they were bad characters, and repeated his
order for them to be off. Bao cursed him again before leaving, and
the headman was so angry he had them arrested and their bags
searched. They found some writings and medicines, and scissors
'Same as they found here.'
'Yes. And so the headman had them tied to a tree and
beaten with chains. Nothing more was learned, however, and yet the
two were pretty badly hurt. So the headman took part of a false
queue worn by a bald guard in his employ, and put it in Bao's bag
and sent him along to the prefecture for examination with the ankle
press.'
'Poor man,' Kang exclaimed, biting her lip. 'Poor
soul.'
'Yes.' Ibrahim took another sip. 'So, recently the
governor general began looking into these incidents by
order of the Emperor, who is very concerned. I've helped somewhat
in the investigation -- not with any questionings examining
physical evidence, like the false queue, which I showed was made of
several different kinds of hair. So the headman was questioned, and
told the whole story.'
'So it was all a lie.'
'Indeed. And in fact all the incidents can be traced back
to an origin in a case similar to Bao's, in Soochow
'Monstrous.' except for the case of your son Shih.'
Kang said nothing. She gestured, and Pao refilled the tea
cups.
After a very long silence, Ibrahim said, 'No doubt
hooligans in town took advantage of the scare to frighten your
boy.'
Kang nodded.
'And also,' he went on, 'if you have been experiencing
possessions by spirits possibly he, also .
She said nothing.
'Do you know of any oddities . .
For a long time they sat together in silence, sipping
tea. Finally Kang said, 'Fear itself is a kind of possession.'
'Indeed.'
They sipped tea for a while more.
'I will tell the governor general that there is
nothing to worry about here.'
'Thank you.'
Another silence.
'But I am interested in any subsequent manifestations of
... anything out of the ordinary.'
'Of course.'
'I hope we can discuss them. I know of ways to
investigate such things.'
'Possibly.'
Soon after, the hui doctor ended his visit.
After he was gone, Kang wandered the compound from room
to room, trailed by the worried Pao. She looked into Shih's room,
now empty, his books on their shelves unopened. Shih had gone down
to the riverside, no doubt to be with his friend Xinwu.
Kang looked in the women's quarters, at the loom on which so
much of their fortune resided; and the writing stand, ink block,
brushes, stacks of paper.
Geese fly north against the moon. Sons grow up and leave.
In the garden, my old bench. Some days I'd rather have rice and
salt. Sit like a plant, neck outstretched: Honk, honk! Fly
away!
Then on to the kitchens, and the garden under the old
juniper. Not a word did she say, but retired to her bedroom in
silence.
That night, however, cries again woke the household. Pao
rushed out ahead of the other servants, and found Widow Kang
slumped against the garden bench, under the tree. Pao pulled her
mistress's open night shift over her breast and hauled her up onto
the bench, crying 'Mistress Kang!' because her eyes were open wide;
yet they saw nothing of this world. The whites were visible all the
way around, and she stared through Pao and the others, seeing other
people and muttering in tongues. 'In challa, in challa', a babble
of sounds, cries, squeaks, 'urn mana pada hum'; and all in voices
not hers.
'Ghosts!' squealed Shih, who had been wakened by the
fuss. 'She's possessed!'
' Quiet please,' hissed Pao. 'We must return her to her
bed still asleep.'
She took one arm, Zunli took the other, and as gently as
they could, they lifted her. She was as light as a cat, lighter
than she ought to have been. 'Gently,' Pao said as they bumped her
over the sill and laid her down. Even as she lay there she popped
back up like a puppet, and said, in something like her own voice,
'The little goddess died despite all.'
Pao sent word to the hui doctor of what had occurred, and
a note came back with their servant, requesting another interview.
Kang snorted and dropped the note on the table and said nothing.
But a week later the servants were told to prepare lunch for a
visitor, and it was Ibrahim ibn Hasam who appeared at the gate,
blinking behind his spectacles.
Kang greeted him with the utmost formality, and led him
into the parlour, where the best porcelain was laid out for
a meal.
After they had eaten and were sipping tea, Ibrahim nodded
and said, 'I am told that you suffered another attack of
sleepwalking.'
Kang coloured. 'My servants are indiscreet.'
'I'm sorry. It's just that this may pertain to my
investigation.'
'I recall nothing of the incident, alas. I woke to a very
disturbed household.'
'Yes. Perhaps I could ask your servants what you said
while under the ... under the spell?'
'Certainly.'
'Thank you.' Another seated bow, another sip. 'Also . . .
I was wondering if you might agree to help me attempt to reach this
... this other voice inside you.'
'How do you propose to do this?'
'It is a method developed by the doctors of
al Andalus. It involves a kind of meditation on an object, as
in a Buddhist temple. An examiner helps to put the meditating
subject under a description, as they call it, and then the inner
voices sometimes will speak with the examiner.'
'Like soul stealing, then?'
He smiled. 'No stealing is involved. It is mainly
conversation, you see. Like calling the spirit of someone absent,
even to themselves. Like the soul calling done in your
southern cities. Then when the meditation ends, all returns to
normal.'
'Do you believe in the soul, doctor?'
'Of course.'
'And in soul stealing?'
'Well.' Long pause. 'This concept has to do with a
Chinese understanding of the soul, I think. Perhaps you can clarify
it for me. Do you make a distinction between the hun, the spiritual
soul, and the po, or bodily soul?'
'Yes, of course,' Kang said. 'It is an aspect of
yin yang. The hun soul belongs to the yang, the
po soul to the yin.'
Ibrahim nodded. 'And the hun soul, being light and
active, volatile, is the one that can separate from the living
person. Indeed it does separate, every night in sleep, and returns
on waking. Normally.'
'Yes.'
'And if by chance, or design, it does not return, this is
a cause of illness, especially in children's illnesses, like colic,
and in various forms of sleeplessness, madness and the like.'
'Yes.' Now the widow Kang was not looking at him.
'And the hun is the soul that the soul stealers
supposedly roaming the countryside are after. Chiao hun.'
'Yes. Obviously you don't believe this.'
'No no, not at all. I reserve judgment for what is shown.
I can see the distinction being made, no doubt of that. I myself
travel in dreams -- believe me, I travel. And I have treated
unconscious patients, whose bodies continue to function well, in
the pink of health you might say, while they lie there on their bed
and never move, no, not for years. I cleaned her face -- I was
washing her eyelashes, and all of a sudden she said, "Don't do
that." After sixteen years. No, I have seen the hunsoul go and
return, I think. I think it is like most matters. The Chinese have
certain words, certain concepts and categories, while Islam has
other words, naturally, and slightly different categories, but on
closer inspection these can all be correlated and shown to be one.
Because reality is one.'
Kang frowned, as if perhaps she did not agree.
'Do you know the poem by Rumi Balkhi, "I Died As
Mineral"? No? It is by the voice of the sufis, the most spiritual
of Muslims.' He recited: 'Died as mineral and came back as
plant, Died as plant and came back as animal, Died as animal and
came back a man. Why should I fear? When have I ever lost by dying?
Yet once more I shall die human, To soar with angels blessed above.
And when I sacrifice my angel soul I shall become what no mind ever
conceived.
'That last death I think refers to the hun soul,
moving away from the po soul to some transcendence.'
Kang was thinking it over. 'So, in Islam you believe that
souls come back? That we live many lives, and are
reincarnated?'
Ibrahim sipped his green tea. 'The Quran says, "God
generates beings, and sends them back over and over again, till they return
to Him. -- 'Really!' Now Kang regarded Ibrahim with
interest. 'This is what we Buddhists believe.'
Ibrahim nodded. 'A sufi teacher I have followed, Sharif
Din Maneri, said to us, "Know for certain that this work has been
before thee and me in bygone ages, and that each person has already
reached a certain stage. No one has begun this work for the first
time. -- Kang stared at Ibrahim, leaning from her wall
seat towards him. She cleared her throat delicately. 'I remember
bits of these sleepwalking spells,' she admitted. 'I often seem to
be some other person. Usually a young woman, a -- a queen, of some
far country, in trouble. I have the impression it was long ago, but
it is all confused. Sometimes I wake with the sense of a year or
more having passed. Then I come fully into this world again, and it
all falls apart, and I can recall nothing but an image or two, like
a dream, or an illustration in a book, but less whole, less ... I'm
sorry. I can't make it clear.'
'But you can,' Ibrahim said. 'Very clear.'
'I think I knew you,' she whispered. 'You and Bao, and my
son Shih, and Pao, and certain others. I ... it's like that moment
one sometimes feels, when it seems that whatever is happening has
already happened before, in just the same way.'
Ibrahim nodded. 'I have felt that. Elsewhere in the
Quran, it says, "I tell you of a truth, that the spirits which now
have affinity will be kindred together, although they all meet in
new persons and names. -- 'Truly?' Kang exclaimed.
'Yes. And elsewhere again, it says, "His body falls off
like the shell of a crab, and he forms a new one. The person is
only a mask which the soul puts on for a season, wears for its
proper time, and then casts off, and another is worn in its
stead. -- Kang stared at him, mouth open. 'I can
scarcely believe what I am hearing,' she whispered. 'There has been
no one I can tell these things. They think me mad. I am known now
as a . . .'
Ibrahim nodded and sipped his tea. 'I understand. But I
am interested in these things. I have had certain -- intimations,
myself. Perhaps then we can try the process of putting you under a
description, and see what we can learn?'
Kang nodded decisively. 'Yes.'
Because he wanted darkness, they settled on a window seat in the
reception hall, with its window shuttered and the doors closed. A
single candle burned on a low table. The lenses of his glasses
reflected the flame. The house had been ordered to be silent, and
faintly they could hear dog barks, cart wheels, the general hum of
the city in the distance, all very faint.
Ibrahim took Widow Kang by the wrist, very loosely,
fingers cool and light against her pulse, at which sensation her
pulse quickened; surely he could feel it. But he had her look into
the candle flame, and he spoke in Persian, Arabic and Chinese: low
chanting, with no emphasis of tone, a gentle murmur. She had never
heard such a voice.
'You are walking in the cool dew of the morning, all is
peaceful, all is well. In the heart of the flame the world unfolds
like a flower. You breathe in the flower, slowly in, slowly out.
All the sutras speak through you into this flower of light. All is
centred, flowing up and down your spine like the tide. Sun, moon,
stars in their places, wheeling around us, holding us.'
In like manner he murmured on and on, until Kang's pulse
was steady at all three levels, a floating, hollow pulse, ber
breathing deep and relaxed. She truly appeared to Ibrahim to have
left the room, through the portal of the candle flame. He had never
had anyone leave him so quickly.
'Now,' he suggested, 'you travel in the spirit world, and
see all your lives. Tell me what you see.'
Her voice was high and sweet, unlike her usual voice. 'I
see an old bridge, very ancient, across a dry stream. Bao is young,
and wears a white robe. People follow me over the bridge to a . . .
a place. Old and new.'
'What are you wearing?'
'A long ... shift. Like night garments. It's warm. People
call out as we pass.'
'What are they saying?'
'I don't understand it.'
'Just make the sounds they make.'
'In sha ar am. In sha ar am. There are people on horses.
Oh there you are. You too are young. They want something.
People cry out. Men on horses approach. They're coming fast. Bao
warns me ' She shuddered. 'Ah!' she said, in her usual voice.
Her pulse became leathery, almost a spinning bean pulse. She shook her head hard,
looked up at Ibrahim. 'What was that? What happened?'
'You were gone. Seeing something else. Do you
remember?'
She shook her head.
'Horses?'
She closed her eyes. 'Horses. A rider. Cavalry. I was in
trouble!'
'Hmm.' He released her wrist. 'Possibly so.'
'What was it?'
He shrugged. 'Perhaps some ... Do you speak any -- no.
You said already that you did not. But in this hun travel, you
seemed to be hearing Arabic.'
'Arabic?'
'Yes. A common prayer. Many Muslims would recite it in
Arabic, even if that was not their language. But .
She shuddered. 'I have to rest.'
'Of course.'
She looked at him, her eyes filling with tears. 'I ...
can it be why me, though ' She shook her head and her
tears fell. 'I don't understand why this is happening!'
He nodded. 'We so seldom understand why things
happen.'
She laughed shortly, a single 'Ho!' Then: 'But I like to
understand.'
'So do I. Believe me; it is my chief delight. Rare as it
is.' A small smile, or grimace of chagrin, offered for her to
share. A shared understanding, of their solitary frustration at
understanding so little.
Kang took a deep breath and stood. 'I appreciate your
assistance. You will come again, I trust?'
'Of course.' He stood as well. 'Anything, madam. I feel
that we have just begun.'
She was suddenly startled, looking through him. 'Banners
flew, do you remember?'
'What?'
'You were there.' She smiled apologetically, shrugged.
'You too were there.'
He was frowning, trying to understand her. 'Banners . .
.' He seemed lost himself for a while. 'I . . .' He shook his head.
'Maybe. I recall it used to be, when I saw banners, as a child in
Iran, it would mean so much to me. More than could be explained. As
if I was flying.'
'Come again, please. Perhaps your bun soul too can be
called forth.' He nodded, frowning still, as if still in pursuit of
a receding thought, a banner in memory. Even as he said his
farewells and left, he was still distracted.
He returned within the week, and they had another session
'inside the candle' as Kang called it. From the depths of her
trance she burst into speech that neither of them understood -- not
Ibrahim as it happened, nor Kang when he read back to her what he
had written down.
He shrugged, looking shaken. 'I will ask some colleagues.
Of course it may be some language totally lost to us now. We must
concentrate on what you see.'
'But I remember nothing! Or very little. As you recall
dreams, that slip away on waking.'
'When you are actually inside the candle, then. I must be
clever, ask the right questions.'
'But if I don't understand you? Or if I answer in this
other tongue?'
He nodded. 'But you seem to understand me, at least
partly. There must be translation in more than one realm. Or there
may be more to the hun soul than has been suspected. Or the
tendril that keeps you in contact with the travelling hun--soul
conveys other parts of what you know. Or it is the po soul
that understands.' He threw up his hands: who could say.
Then something struck her, and she put her hand to his
arm. 'There was a landslide!'
They stood together in silence. Faintly the air
quivered.
He went away puzzled, distracted. At every departure he
left bemused, and at every return he was fairly humming with ideas,
with anticipation of their next voyage into the candle.
'A colleague in Beijing thinks it may be a form of Berber
that you are speaking. At other times, Tibetan. Do you know these
places? Morocco is at the other end of the world, the west end of
Africa, in the north. It was Moroccans who repopulated al Andalus
when the Christians died.'
'Ah,' she said, but shook her head. 'I was always
Chinese, I am sure. It must be an old Chinese dialect.'
He smiled, a rare and pleasant sight. 'Chinese in your
heart, perhaps. But I think our souls wander the whole world, life
to life.'
'In groups?'
'People's destinies intertwine, as the Quran says. Like
threads in your embroideries. Moving together like the travelling
races on Earth the Jews, the Christians, the Zotti. Remnants
of older ways, left without a home.'
'Or the new islands across the Eastern Sea, yes? So we
might have lived there too, in the empires of gold?'
'Those may be Egyptians of ancient times, fled west from
Noah's flood. Opinion is divided.'
'Whatever they are, I am certainly Chinese through and
through. And always have been.'
He regarded her with a trace of his smile in his eye. 'It
does not sound like Chinese that you speak when inside the candle.
And if life is inextinguishable, as it seems it might be, you may
be older than China itself.'
She took a deep breath, sighed. 'Easy to believe.'
The next time he came to put her under a description, it
was night, so they could work in silence and darkness; so that the
candle flame, the dim room and the sound of his voice would be all
that seemed to exist. It was the fifth day of the fifth month, an
unlucky day, the day of the festival of hungry ghosts, when those
poor preta who had no living descendants were honoured and given
some peace. Kang had said the Surangama Sutra, which
expounded the rulai zang, a state of empty mind, tranquil
mind, true mind.
She made the purification of the house rituals, and
fasted, and she asked Ibrahim to do the same. So when the
preparations were finally finished, they sat alone in the stuffy
dark chamber, watching a candle burn. Kang entered into the
flame almost the moment Ibrahim touched her wrist, her pulse
flooding, a yin in yang pulse. Ibrahim watched her closely.
She muttered in the language he could not understand, or perhaps
another language yet. There was a sheen on her forehead, and she
seemed distraught.
The Surangama Sutra: spuriously Sanskrit, originally
written in Chinese and titled 'Lengyan jing'. The awareness it
describes, changzhi, is sometimes called Buddha nature, or
tathagatagarbha, or 'mind ground'. The sutra claims that devotees
can be 'suddenly awakened' to this state of high awareness.
The flame of the candle shrank down to the size of a
bean. Ibrahim swallowed hard, holding off fear, squinting with the
effort.
She stirred, her voice grew more agitated.
'Tell me in Chinese,' he said gently. 'Speak
Chinese.'
She groaned, muttered. Then she said, very clearly, 'My
husband died. They wouldn't -- they poisoned him, and they wouldn't
accept a queen among them. They wanted what we had. Ah!' And she
began again to speak in the other language. Ibrahim fixed her
clearest words in mind, then saw that the candle's flame had grown
again, but past its normal height, rising so high that the room
grew hot and stifling, and he feared for the paper ceiling. 'Please
be calm, 0 spirits of the dead,' he said in Arabic, and Kang cried
out in the voice not hers,
'No! No! We're trapped!' and then she was sobbing, crying
her heart out. Ibrahim held her by the arms, gently squeezing her,
and suddenly she looked up at him, seeming awake, and her eyes grew
round. 'You were there! You were with us, we were trapped by an
avalanche, we were stuck there to die!'
He shook his head: 'I don't remember She struggled
free and slapped him hard on the face. His spectacles flew across
the room, she jumped on him and held him by the throat as if to
strangle him, eyes locked on his, suddenly so much smaller. 'You
were there!' she shouted. 'Remember! Remember!'
In her eyes he seemed to see it happen. 'Oh!' he said,
shocked, looking through her now. 'Oh my God. Oh . . .'
She released him, and he sank to the floor. He patted it
as if searching for his glasses. Inshallah, inshallah.' He groped
about, looked up at her. 'You were just a girl . . .'
'Ah,' she said, and collapsed onto the floor beside him.
She was weeping now, eyes running, nose running. 'It's been so
long. I've been so alone.' She sniffed hard, wiped her eyes. 'They
keep killing us. We keep getting killed.'
'That's life,' he said, wiping his own eyes once. He
collected himself. 'That's what happens. Those are the ones you
remember. You were a black boy, once, a beautiful black boy, I can
see you now. And you were my friend once, old men together. We
studied the world, we were friends. Such a spirit.'
The candle flame slowly dropped back to its normal
height. They sat beside each other on the floor, too drained to
move.
Eventually Pao knocked hesitantly on the door, and they
started guiltily, though they had both been lost in their
own thoughts. They got up and sat in the window seats, and Kang
called out to Pao to bring some peach juice. By the time she came
with it they were both composed; Ibrahim had relocated his
spectacles, and Kang had opened the window shutter to the night
air. The light of a clouded half moon added to the glow of the
candle flame.
Hands still shaking, Kang sipped some peach juice,
nibbled on a plum. Her body too was trembling. 'I'm not sure I can
do that any more,' she said, looking away. 'It's too much.'
He nodded. They went into the compound garden, and sat in
the cool of the night under the clouds, eating and drinking. They
were hungry. The scent of jasmine filled the dark air. Though they
did not speak, they seemed companionable.
I am older than China itself I walked in the jungle
hunting for food Sailed the seas across the world Fought in the
long war of the asuras. They cut me and I bled. Of course. Of
course. No wonder my dreams are so wild, No wonder I feel so tired.
No wonder I am always Angry. Clouds mass, concealing a thousand
peaks; Winds sweep, colouring ten thousand trees. Come to me
husband and let us live The next ten lives together.
The next time Ibrahim visited, his face was solemn, and
he was dressed more finely than they had seen before, in the garb
of a Muslim cleric, it seemed.
After the usual greetings when they were alone again in
the garden, he stood and faced her. 'I must return to Gansu,' he
said. 'I have family matters I must attend to. And my sufi master
has need of me in his madressa. I've put it off as long as I could,
but I have to go.'
Kang looked aside. 'I will be sorry.'
'Yes. I also. There is much still to discuss.'
Silence.
Then Ibrahim stirred and spoke again. 'I have thought of a way
to solve this problem, this separation between us, so unwished for,
which is that you should marry me -- accept my proposal of marriage
and marry me, and bring you and your people with you out with me,
to Gansu.'
The widow Kang looked utterly astonished. Her mouth hung
open.
'Why -- I cannot marry. I am a widow.'
Ibrahim said, 'But widows may remarry. I know the Qing
try to discourage it, but Confucius says nothing at all against it.
I have looked, and checked with the best experts. People do
it.'
'Not respectable people!'
He narrowed his eyes, looking suddenly Chinese. 'Respect
from whom?'
She looked away. 'I cannot marry you. You are hui, and I
am one who has not yet died.'
'The Ming emperors ordered all hui to marry good Chinese
women, so that their children would be Chinese. My mother was a
Chinese woman.'
She looked up, surprised again. Her face was flushed.
'Please,' he said, hand out. 'I know it's a new idea. A
shock. I'm sorry. Please think about it, before you make your final
reply. Consider it.'
She straightened up and faced him formally. 'I will
consider it.'
A flick of the hand indicated her desire to be left
alone, and with a truncated farewell, ended by a phrase in another
language, spoken most intently, he made his way out of the
compound.
After that, the widow Kang wandered through her
household. Pao was out in the kitchen, ordering the girls about,
and Kang asked ber to come and speak to her in the garden. Pao
followed her out, and Kang told her what had happened, and Pao
laughed.
'Why do you laugh!,' Kang snapped. 'Do you think I care
so much for a testimonial from a Qing Emperor! That I
should lock myself in this box for the rest of my life, for
the sake of a paper covered with vermilion ink?'
Pao froze, first startled, then frightened. 'But,
Mistress Kang Gansu . . .'
'You know nothing about it. Leave me.'
After that no one dared to speak to ber. She wandered the
house like a hungry ghost, acknowledging no one. She scarcely
spoke. She visited the shrine at the Temple of the Purple
Bamboo Grove, and recited the Diamond Sutra five times, and went
home with her knees hurting. The poem of Li Anzi, 'Sudden View of
Years' came to her mind: Li Anzi: the mother of two
successful officials, who reared them alone as a widow.
Sometimes all the threads on the loom Suggest the carpet
to come. Then we know that our children to be Hope for us
in the bardo. For them we weave until our arms grow tired.
She had the servants carry her to the magistrate's
building, where she had them set down the sedan chair, and did not
move for an hour. The men could just see her face behind the gauze
of the window curtain. They took her home without her ever having
emerged.
The next day she had them carry her to the cemetery,
though it was not a festival day, and under the empty sky she
shuffled about with her peculiar gait, sweeping the graves of all
the family ancestors, then sitting at the foot of her husband's
grave, head in her hands.
The next day she went down to the river on her own,
walking the entire way, crimping along, looking at trees, ducks,
the clouds in the sky. She sat on the riverbank, as still as if she
were in one of the temples.
Xinwu, was down there as he almost always was, trailing
his fishing pole and bamboo basket. He brightened at the sight of
her, showed her the fish he had caught. He sat by her, and they
watched the great brown river flow past, glossy and compact. He
fished, she sat and watched.
'You're good at that,' she said, watching him flick the
line out into the stream.
'My father taught me.' After a time: 'I miss him.'
'I do too.' Then: 'Do you think ... I wonder what he
would think.'
After another pause: 'If we move west, you must come with
us.'
She invited Ibrahim to return, and when he came, Pao led
him into the reception hall, which Kang had ordered filled with
flowers.
He stood before ber, head bowed.
'I am old,' she told him. 'I have passed through all the life
stages. I am one who has not yet died. I cannot go
backwards. I cannot give you any sons.'
The life stages: milk teeth, hair--pinned up,
marriage, children, rice and salt, widowhood.
'I understand,' he murmured. 'I too am old. Still
-- I ask your hand in marriage. Not for sons, but for me.'
She regarded him, her colour rising.
'Then I accept your offer of marriage.'
He smiled.
After that the household was as if caught in a whirlwind.
The servants, though highly critical of the match, nevertheless had
to work all day every day to make the place ready in time for the
fifteenth day of the sixth month, the midsummer time traditionally
favoured for starting travel. Kang's elder sons disapproved of the
match, of course, but made plans to attend the wedding anyway. The
neighbours were scandalized, shocked beyond telling, but as they
were not invited, there was no way for them to express this to the
Kang household. The widow's sisters at the temple congratulated her
and wished her well. 'You can bring the wisdom of the Buddha to the
hui,' they told her. 'It will be very useful for all.'
So they were married in a small ceremony attended by all Kang's
sons, and only Shih was less than congratulatory, pouting most of
the morning in his room, a fact Pao did not even report to Kang.
After the ceremony, held in the garden, the party spread down to
the river, and though small, it was determinedly cheery. After that
the household was packed up, its furniture and goods loaded in
carts either destined for their new home in the west, or else for
the orphanage that Kang had helped establish in town, or for her
elder sons.
When all was ready, Kang took a last walk through the household,
stopping to stare into the bare rooms, oddly small now.
This square fathom has held my life. Now the goose flies away,
Chased by a Phoenix from the west. How could one life encompass
such change. Truly we live more lives than one.
Soon she came out and climbed into the sedan chair. 'It is
already gone,' she said to Ibrahim. He handed her a gift, an egg
painted red: happiness in the new year. She bowed her head. He
nodded, and directed their little train to begin the journey
west.
Three. Waves Slap Together
The trip took over a month. The roads and tracks they
followed were dry, and they made good time. Partly this was because
Kang asked to ride in a cart rather than be carried in a palanquin
or smaller chair. At first the servants were convinced this
decision had caused some discord in the new couple, for Ibrahim
took to riding in the covered cart with Kang, and they heard the
arguing between them go on sometimes for whole days on end. But Pao
walked close enough one afternoon to catch the drift of what they
were saying, and she came back to the others relieved. 'It's only
religion they're debating. A real pair of intel lectuals,
those two.'
So the servants travelled on, reassured. They went up to
Kaifeng, stayed with some of Ibrahim's Muslim colleagues there,
then followed the roads paralleling the Wei River, west to Xian in
Shaanxi, then over hard passes in dry hills, to Lanzhou.
By the time they arrived, Kang was amazed beyond
amazement. 'I can't believe there is so much world,' she would say
to Ibrahim. 'So much China! So many fields of rice and barley, so
many mountains, so empty and wild. Surely we should have crossed
the world by now.'
'Scarcely a hundredth part of it, according to the
sailors.'
'This outlandish country is so cold and dry, so dusty and
barren. How will we keep a house clean here, or warm? It's like
trying to live in hell.'
'Not that bad, surely.'
'Is this really Lanzhou, the renowned city of the west?
This little brown windblown mudbrick village?'
'Yes. It's growing quite rapidly, actually.'
'And we are to live here?'
'Well, I have connections here, and in Xining, a bit
farther to the west. We could settle in either place.'
'Let me see Xining before we decide. It must be better
than this.'
Ibrahim said nothing, but ordered their little caravan
on. More days of travel, as the seventh month passed, and storm
clouds rolled overhead almost every day, never quite breaking on
them. Under these low ceilings the sere broken hills looked even
more inhospitable than before, and except in the irrigated,
terraced central flats of the long narrow valleys, there was no
more agriculture to be seen. 'How do people live here?' Kang asked.
'How do they eat?'
'They herd sheep and goats,' Ibrahim said. 'Sometimes
cattle. It's like this all over, west of here, all the way across
the dry heart of the world.'
'Astonishing. It's like travelling back in time.'
Finally they came to Xining, another little walled
mudbrick town, huddling under shattered mountainsides, in a high
valley. A garrison of imperial solders manned the gates, and some
new wooden barracks had been thrown up under the town walls. A big
caravanserai stood empty, as it was too late in the year to start
travelling. Beyond it several walled ironworks used what little
power the river provided to run their stamps and forges.
'Ugh!' Kang said. 'I did not think Lanzhou could be
beaten for dust, but I was wrong.'
'Wait for your decision,' Ibrahim requested. 'I want you
to see Qinghai Lake. It's just a short journey farther.'
'Surely we will fall off the edge of the world.'
'Come see.'
Kang agreed without argument; indeed, it seemed to Pao
that she was actually enjoying these insanely dry and barbarous
regions, or at least enjoying her complaining about them. The
dustier the better, her face seemed to say, no matter what words
she spoke.
A few more days west on a bad road brought them through a
draw to the shores of Qinghai Lake, the sight of which took speech
away from all of them. By chance they had arrived on a day of wild,
windy weather, with great white clouds floored by blue grey
embroidery charging overhead, and these clouds were reflected in
the lake's water, which in sunlight was just as blue green as
the name of the lake would suggest. To the west the lake extended
right off to the horizon; the curve of its visible shores was a
bank of green hills. Out here in this brown desolation, it was like
a miracle.
Kang got out of the cart and walked slowly down to the
pebbled shore, reciting the Lotus Sutra, and holding up her hands
to feel the hard rush of the wind on her palms. Ibrahim gave her
some time to herself, then joined her.
'Why do you weep?' he inquired.
Sothis is the great lake,"' she
recited,
NowI can at last comprehend The
immensity of the universe; My life has gained new meaning! But
think of all the women Who never leave their own courtyards, Who
must spend their whole lives Without once enjoying a sight like
this. --
Ibrahim bowed. 'Indeed. Whose poem is this?'
She shook her head, dashing the tears away. 'That was
Yuen, the wife of Shen Fu, on seeing the T'ai Hu. The Great
Lake! What would she have thought if she saw this one! It is
part of "Six Chapters from a Floating Life". Do you know it? No.
Well. What can one say?'
'Nothing.'
'Indeed.' She turned to him, put her hands together.
'Thank you, husband, for showing me this great lake. It is truly
magnificent. Now I can settle, let us live wherever you please.
Xining, Lanzhou, the other side of the world, where once we met in
a previous life wherever you like. It is all the same to
me.' And she leaned weeping against his side.
For the time being, Ibrahim decided to settle the
household in Lanzhou. This gave him better access to the Gansu
Corridor, and therefore the routes to the west, as well as the
return routes to the Chinese interior. Also, the madressa he had
had the closest contact with in his youth had moved to Lanzhou,
forced there from Xining by pressure from newly arrived western
Muslims.
They set up their household in a new mudbrick compound by
the banks of the Tao River, close to where it joined the Yellow
River. The Yellow River's water was indeed yellow, a completely
opaque sandy roiling yellow, precisely the colour of the hills to
the west out of which it sprang. The Tao River was a bit clearer
and more brown.
The household was bigger than Kang's old place in
Hangzhou, and she quickly set up the women's quarters in a back
building, staking out a garden in the ground around it, and
demanding potted trees to begin the process of landscaping. She
also wanted a loom, but Ibrahim pointed out that silk thread would
be unavailable here, as there were neither mulberry groves nor
filatures. If she wanted to continue weaving, she would have to
learn to work wool. With a sigh she agreed, and began the process
on hand looms. Embroidering silk cloth that was already made
also occupied them.
Ibrahim meanwhile went to work meeting with his old
associates in the Muslim schools and fellowships, and with the new
Qing officials of the town, thereby beginning the process of
sorting out and assisting the new political and religious
situations in the area, which had changed, apparently, since he had
last been home. In the evenings he would sit with Kang on the
verandah overlooking the muddy yellow river and explain it to her,
answering her endless questions.
'To simplify slightly, ever since Ma Laichi came back
from Yemen, bearing texts of religious renewal and rectification,
there has been conflict within the Muslims of this part of the
world. Understand that Muslims have lived here for centuries,
almost since the beginning of Islam, and at this distance from
Mecca and the other centres of Islamic learning, various
beterodoxies and error were introduced. Ma Laichi wanted to reform
these, but the old umma here brought suit against him in the Qing
civil court, accusing him of huozhong.'
Kang looked severe, no doubt remembering the effects of
such delusion back in the inte rior.
Deluding the people, a serious offence anywhere in
China.
'Eventually the governor general out here, Paohang
Guangsi, dismissed the suit. But that did not end matters. Ma
Laichi proceeded to convert the Salars to Islam they are a
people out here who speak a Turkic language, and live on the roads.
They are the ones you see in the white caps, who do not look
Chinese.'
'Who look like you.'
Ibrahim frowned. 'A little, perhaps. Anyway, this made
people nervous, as the Salars are considered dangerous people.'
'I can see why -- they look like it.'
'These people who look like me. But no matter. Anyway,
there are many other forces in Islam, sometimes in conflict. A new
sect called the Naqshabandis are trying to purify Islam by a return
to more orthodox older ways, and in China they are led by Aziz Ma
Mingxin, who, like Ma Laichi, spent many years in Yemen and Mecca,
studying with Ibrahim ibn Hasa al Kurani, a very great shaikh
whose teachings are spread now all over the Islamic world.
'Now, these two great shaikhs came back here from Arabia
with reforms in mind, after studying with the same people, but
alas, they are different reforms. Ma Laichi believed in the silent
recital of prayer, called dhikri, while Ma Mingxin, being younger,
studied with teachers who believed prayers could be chanted aloud
as well.'
'This seems a minor difference to me.'
'Yes.' When Ibrahim looked Chinese it meant he was amused
by his wife.
'In Buddhism we allow both.'
'True. But they mark deeper divisions, as often happens.
Anyway, Ma Mingxin practises jahr prayer, meaning spoken aloud.
This Ma Laichi and his followers dislike, as it represents a new
and even purer reli gious revival coming to this area. But
they can't stop them coming. Ma Mingxin has the support of the
Black Mountain sufis who control both sides of the Pamirs, so more
of them are coming in here all the time, escaping the battles
between Iran and the Ottomans, and between the Ottomans and the
Fulanis.'
'It sounds like such a trouble.'
'Yes, well, Islam is not so well organized as Buddhism,'
which made Kang laugh. Ibrahim continued: 'But it is a
trouble, you are right. The split between Ma Laichi and Ma Mingxin
could be fatal to any hope of unity in our time. Ma Laichi's
Khafiya cooperate with the Qing, you see, and they call the jahriya
practices superstitious, and even immoral.'
'Immoral?'
'Dancing and suchlike. Rhythmic motion during prayers --
even the praying aloud.'
'It sounds fairly ordinary to me. Celebrations are
celebrations, after all.'
'Yes. So the jahriya counter by accusing the Khafiya of
being a cult of personality around Ma Laichi. And they accuse him
of excessive tithing, implying his whole movement is simply a ploy
for power and wealth. And in collaboration with the Emperor against
other Muslims as well.'
'Trouble.'
'Yes. And everyone out here has weapons, you see, usually
guns, because as you noted on our journey out, hunting is still an
important source of food here. So each little mosque has its
militia ready to join a scrape, and the Qing have bolstered their
garrisons to try to deal with all this. The Qing so far have backed
the Khafiya, which they translate as Old Teaching, and the jahriya
they call the New Teaching, which makes them bad by definition, of
course. But what is bad for the Qing dynasty is precisely what
appeals to the young Muslim men. There is a lot that is new out
there. West of the Black Mountains things are changing fast.'
'As always.'
'Yes, but faster.'
Kang said slowly, 'China is a country of slow
change.'
'Or, depending on the temperament of the Emperor, no
change at all. In any case, neither Khafiya or jahriya can
challenge the strength of the Emperor.'
'Of course.'
'As a result, they fight each other a lot. And because
the Qing armies now control the land all the way to the Pamirs,
land that once was composed of independent Muslim emirates, the
jahriya are convinced that Islam must be returned to its roots, in
order to retake what was once a part of Dar al Islam.'
'Unlikely, if the Emperor wants it.'
'Yes. But most of those who say these things have never
even visited the interior, much less lived there like you and me.
So they cannot know the power of China. They only see these little
garrisons, the soldiers spread out by the tens and scores over this
immense land.'
Kang said, 'That would make a difference. Well. You seem to have
brought me out to a land filled with qi.'
'I hope it will not be too bad. What is needed, if you
ask me, is a comprehensive history and analysis that will
show the basic underlying identity of the teachings of Islam and
Confucius.'
qi: in this case 'malign energy'. Sometimes translated as
'vital essence' or 'psych ophysical stuff', or 'bad
vibrations'.
Kang's eyebrows shot up. 'You think so?'
'I am sure of it. It is my task. It has been for twenty
years now.'
Kang composed her face. 'You will have to show me this
labour.'
'I would like that very much. And perhaps you can help me
with the Chinese version of it. I intend to publish it in Chinese,
Persian, Turkic, Arabic, Hindi, and other languages, if I can find
translators.'
Kang nodded. 'I will help it happily, if my ignorance
does not prevent it.'
The household became settled, with everyone's routine
established much as it had been before. The same celebrations and
festivals were held by the small crowd of Han Chinese exiled to
this remote region, who worked on festival days to build temples on
the bluffs overlooking the river. To these festivals were added the
Muslim holy days, major events for most of the town's
occupants.
Every month more Muslims came in from the west. Muslims;
Confucians; a few Buddhists, these usually Tibetan or Mongolian;
almost no Daoists. Mainly Lanzhou was a town of Muslims and Han
Chinese, co existing uneasily, though they had been doing it
for centuries, only mixing in the occasional cross marriage.
This twofold nature of the region was an immediate
problem for Kang's arrangements concerning Shih. If he was going to
continue his studies for the government examinations, it was time
to start him with a tutor. He did not want to do this. One
alternative was to study in one of the local madressas, thus in
effect converting to Islam. This of course was unthinkable -- to
Widow Kang. Shih and Ibrahim seemed to consider it within the realm
of possibility. Shih tried to extend the time given him to make up
his mind. I'm only seven, he said. Turn east or west, Ibrahim said.
Both said to the boy, You can't just do nothing.
Kang insisted he continue his studies for the imperial
service examinations. 'This is what his father would have
wanted.' Ibrahim agreed with the plan, as he considered it likely
they would return to the interior some day, where passing the exams
was crucial to one's hopes of advancement.
Shih, however, did not want to study anything. He claimed
an interest in Islam, which Ibrahim could not help but approve, if
warily. But Shih's childish interest was in the Jahriya mosques,
filled with chanting, song, dancing, sometimes drinking and
self flagellation. These direct expressions of faith trumped
any possible intellectualism, and not only that, they often led to
exciting fights with Khafiya youth.
'The truth is he likes whatever course allows him the
least work,' Kang said darkly. 'He must study for the examination,
no matter if he turns Muslim or not.'
Ibrahim agreed to this, and Shih was forced by both of
them to attend to his studies. He grew less interested in Islam as
it became clear that if he chose that path, he would merely add
another course of study to his workload.
It should not have been so hard for him to devote himself
to books and scholarship, for certainly it was the dominant
activity in the household. Kang had taken advantage of the move
west to gather all the poems in her possession into a single trunk,
and now she was leaving most of the wool work and embroidery to the
servant girls, and spending her days going through these thick
sheaves of paper, re reading her own voluminous bundles of
poems, and also those of the friends, family and strangers she had
collected over the years. The well off respectable women of
south China had written poems compulsively for the whole of the
Ming and Qing dynasties, and now, going through her small sample of
them, numbering twenty six thousand or so, Kang spoke to
Ibrahim of the patterns she was beginning to see in the choice of
topics: the pain of concubinage, of physical enclosure and
restriction (she was too discreet to mention the actual forms this
sometimes took, and Ibrahim studiously avoided looking at her feet,
staring her hard in the eye); the grinding repetitive work of the
years of rice and salt; the pain and danger and exaltation of
childbirth, the huge primal shock of being brought up as the
precious pet of her family, only to be forced to marry, and in that
very instant become something like a slave to a family of
strangers. Kang spoke feelingly of the permanent sense of rupture
and dislocation caused by this basic event of women's lives: 'It is
like living through a reincarnation with one's mind intact, a death
and rebirth in a lower world, as both hungry ghost and beast of
burden, while still holding full memory of the time when you were
queen of the world! And for the concubines it's even worse, descent
down through the realms of beast and preta, into hell itself. And
there are more concubines than wives.'
Ibrahim would nod, and encourage her to write on these
matters, and also to collect the best of the poems she had in her
possession, into an anthology like Yun Zhu's 'Correct Beginnings',
recently published in Nanjing. 'As she says herself in her
introduction,' Ibrahim pointed out, Foreach one I
have recorded, there must be ten thousand I have omitted." And how
many of those ten thousand were more revealing than hers, more
dangerous than hers?'
'Nine thousand and nine hundred,' Kang replied, though
she loved Yun Zhu's anthology very much.
So she began to organize an anthology, and Ibrahim helped
by asking his colleagues back in the interior, and to the west and
south, to send any women's poems they could obtain. Over time this
process grew, like rice in the pot, until whole rooms of their new
compound were filled with stacks of paper, carefully marked by Kang
as to author, province, dynasty and the like. She spent most of her
time on this work, and appeared completely absorbed in it.
Once she came to Ibrahim with a sheet of paper. 'Listen,'
she said, voice low and serious. 'It's by a Dai Lanying, and
called, "On the Night Before Giving Birth to My First Child".' She
read: Onthe night before I first
gave birth
The ghost of the old monk Bai Appeared before me. He said,
With your permission, Lady, I will come back As your child. In
that moment I knew reincarnation was real. I said,
What have you been, what kind of person are you Thus to replace
the soul already in me?
He said, I have been yours before I've followed you through all
the ages Trying to make you happy. Let me in And I will try
again. -- Kang looked at Ibrahim, who nodded. 'It must
have happened to her as it happened to us,' he said. 'Those are the
moments that teach us something greater is going on.'
When she took breaks from her labours as an anthologist,
Kang Tongbi also spent a fair number of her afternoons out in the
streets of Lanzhou. This was something new. She took a servant
girl, and two of the biggest servant men in their employ,
heavy bearded Muslim men who wore short curved swords in their
belts, and she walked the streets, the riverbank strand, the
pathetic city square and the dusty markets around it, and the
promenade on top of the city wall that surrounded the old part of
town, giving a good view over the south shore of the river. She
bought several different kinds of 'butterfly shoes' as they were
called, which fitted her delicate little feet and yet extended out
beyond them, to make the appearance of normal feet, and --
depending on their design and materials -- provide her with some
extra support and balance. She would buy any butterfly shoes she
found in the market that had a different design to those she
already owned. None of them seemed to Pao to help her walking very
much -- she was still slow, with her usual short and crimping gait.
But she preferred walking to being carried, even though the town
was bare and dusty, and either too hot or too cold, and always
windy. She walked observing everything very closely as she made her
slow way along.
'Why have you given up sedan chairs?' Pao complained one
day as they trudged home.
Kang only said, 'I read this morning, "Great principles
are as weighty as a thousand years. This floating life is as light
as a grain of rice. -- 'Not to me.'
'At least you have good feet.'
'It's not true. They're big but they hurt anyway. I can't
believe you won't take the chair.'
'You have to have dreams, Pao.'
'Well, I don't know. As my mother used to say, "A painted
rice cake doesn't satisfy hunger. -- 'The monk Dogen heard
that expression, and replied by saying, "Without painted hunger you
never become a true person. -- Every year for the
spring equinoctial festivals of Buddhism and Islam, they made a
trip out to Qinghai Lake, and stood on the shore of the great
bluegreen sea to renew their commitment to life, burning incense
and paper money, and praying each in their own way. Exhilarated by
the sights of the journey, Kang would return to Lanzhou and throw
herself into her various projects with tremendous intensity.
Before, in Hangzhou, her ceaseless activity had been a wonder to
the servants; now it was a terror. Every day she filled with what
normal people would do in a week.
Ibrahim meanwhile continued to work away at his great
reconciliation of the two religions, colliding now in Gansu right
before their eyes. The Gansu Corridor was the great pass between
the east and west halves of the world, and the long caravans of
camels that had headed cast to Shaanxi or west to the Pamirs since
time immemorial were now joined by immense trains of
oxen hauled wagons, coming mostly from the west, but also from
the east. Muslim and Chinese alike settled in the region, and
Ibrahim talked to the leaders of the various factions, and
collected texts and read them, and sent letters to scholars all
over the world, and wrote his books for many hours every day. Kang
helped him in this work, as he helped her in hers, but as the
months passed, and they saw the increasing conflict in the region,
her help more and more took the form of criticism, of pressure on
his ideas -- as he sometimes pointed out, when he felt a little
tired or defensive.
Kang was remorseless, in her usual way. 'Look,' she would
say, 'you can't just talk your way out of these problems.
Differences are differences! Look here, your Wang Daiyu, a most
inventive thinker, takes great trouble to equate the Five Pillars
of the Islamic Faith with the Five Virtues of Confucianism.'
'That's right,' Ibrahim said. 'They combine to make the
Five Constants, as he calls them, true everywhere and for everyone,
unchanging. Creed in Islam is Confucius's benevolence, or ren.
Charity is yi, or righteousness. Prayer is li, propriety, fasting
is shi, knowledge. And pilgrimage is xin, faith in humankind.'
Kang threw her hands up. 'Listen to what you are saying!
These concepts have almost nothing to do with each other!
Charity is not righteousness, not at all! Fasting is not knowledge!
And so it is no surprise to find that your teacher from the
interior, Liu Zhi, identifies the same Five Pillars of Islam not
with the Five Virtues, but with the Five Relationships, the Wugang
not the Wuchang! And he too has to twist the words, the concepts,
beyond all recognition to make the correspondences between the two
groups fit. Two different sets of bad results! If you pursue the
same course they did, then anything can be matched to
anything.'
Ibrahim pursed his lips, looking displeased, but he did
not contradict her. Instead he said, 'Liu Zhi made a distinction
between the two ways, as well as finding their similarities. For
him, the Way of heaven, tiando, is best expressed by Islam, the Way
of Humanity, rendao, by Confucianism. Thus the Quran is the sacred
book, but the Analects express the principles fundamental to all
humans.'
Kang shook her head again. 'Maybe so, but the mandarins
of the interior will never believe that the sacred Book of Heaven
came from Tiangfang. How could they, when only China matters to
them? The Middle Kingdom, halfway between heaven and earth; the
Dragon Throne, home of the Jade Emperor -- the rest of the world is
simply the place of barbarians, and could not possibly be the
origin of something as important as the sacred book of Heaven.
Meanwhile, turning to your shaikhs and caliphs in the west, how can
they ever accept the Chinese, who do not believe at all in their
one god? This is the most important aspect of their faith!' And she
muttered, 'As if there could ever only be one god.'
Again Ibrahim looked troubled. But he insisted: 'The
fundamental way is the same. And with the empire extending
westwards, and more Muslims coming east, there simply must be some
kind of synthesis. We will not be able to get along without
it.'
Kang shrugged. 'Maybe so. But you cannot mix oil and
vinegar.'
'Ideas are not chemicals. Or, they are like the Daoists'
mercury and sulphur, combining to make every kind of thing.'
'Please don't tell me you plan to become an
alchemist.'
'No. Only in the realm of ideas, where the great
transmutation remains to be made. After all, look at what the
alchemists have accomplished in the world of matter. All the new
machines, the new things . . .'
'Rock is much more malleable than ideas.'
'I hope not. You must admit, there have been other great
collisions of civilizations before, making a synthetic culture. In
India, for instance, Islam invaders conquered a very ancient Hindu
civilization, and the two have often been at war since, but the
prophet Nanak brought the values of the two together, and that is
the Sikhs, who believe in Allah and karma, in reincarnation and in
divine judgment. He found the harmony beneath the discord, and now
the Sikhs are among the most powerful groups in India. Indeed,
India's best hope, given all its wars and troubles. We need
something like that here.'
Kang nodded. 'But maybe we have it already. Maybe it has
been here all along, before Mohammed or Confucius, in the form of
Buddhism.'
Ibrahim frowned, and Kang laughed her short unhumorous
laugh. She was teasing him while at the same time she was serious,
a combination very common in her dealings with her new husband.
'You must admit, the material is at hand. There are more
Buddhists out here in these wastelands than anywhere else.'
He muttered something about Lanka and Burma.
'Yes yes,' she said. 'Also Tibet, Mongolia, the Annamese,
the Thais and Malays. Always they are there, you notice, in the
border zone between China and Islam. Already there. And the
teachings are very fundamental. The most fundamental of all.'
Ibrahim sighed. 'You will have to teach me.'
She nodded, pleased.
In that year, the forty third year of the reign of
the Qianlong Emperor, an influx of Muslim families greater than
ever before came in from the west on the old Silk Road, speaking
all manner of languages and including women and children, and even
animals. Whole villages and towns had emptied and their occupants
headed east, apparently, driven by intensifying wars between the
Iranians, Afghans and Kazakhs, and the civil wars of Fulan. Most of
the new arrivals were Shiites, Ibrahim said, but there were many
other kinds of Muslims as well, Naqshabandis, Wahhabis, different
kinds of sufis ... As Ibrahim tried to explain it to Kang, she
pursed her lips in disapproval. 'Islam is as broken as a vase
dropped on the floor.'
Later, seeing the violent reaction to the newcomers from
the Muslims already ensconced in Gansu, she said, 'It's like
throwing oil on a fire. They will end up all killing each
other.'
She did not sound particularly distressed. Shih was again
asking to study in a jahriya qong, claiming that his desire to
convert to Islam had returned, which she was sure represented only
laziness at his studies, and an urge to rebellion that was
troubling in one so young. Meanwhile she had had ample opportunity
to observe Muslim women in Lanzhou, and while before she had often
complained that Chinese women were oppressed by men, she now
declared that Muslim women had it far worse. 'Look at that,' she
said to Ibrahim one day on their riverside verandah. 'They are
hidden like goddesses behind their veils, but treated like cows.
You can marry as many as you like of them, and so none of them have
any family protection. And there's not a single one of them who can
read. It's disgraceful.'
'Chinese men take concubines,' Ibrahim pointed out.
'Nowhere is it a good thing to be a woman,' Kang replied
irritably. 'But concubines are not wives, they don't have the same
family rights.'
'So things are only better in China if you are
married.'
'This is true everywhere. But not to be able to read,
even the daughters of the rich and educated men! To be cut off from
literature, to be unable to write letters to your birth family . .
.'
This was something Kang never did, but Ibrahim did not
mention that. He only shook his head.
'It was far worse for women before Mohammed brought Islam
to the world.'
'That says very little. How bad it must have been before,
and that was over a thousand years ago, correct? What barbarians
they must have been. By then Chinese women had enjoyed two thousand
years of secure privileges.'
Ibrahim was frowning at this, looking down. He did not
reply.
All over Lanzhou they saw signs of change. The iron mines
of Xinjiang fuelled the foundries being built upstream and down
from the town, and the new influx of potential foundry workers made
possible many more expansions, in ironworks and construction more
generally. One of the main products of these foundries was cannon,
and so the town garrison was beefed up, the Green Standard Chinese
guards supplemented by Manchu horsemen. The foundries were under
permanent order to sell all their guns to the Qianlong, so that the
weaponry flowed only east towards the interior. As most of the
workers were Muslim -- and dirty work it was -- quite a few guns
made their way west in defiance of the imperial edict. This caused
more military surveillance, larger garrisons of Chinese, more
Manchu banners, and increased friction between local workers and
the Qing garrison. It was not a situation that could last.
The longer term residents could only watch things
degenerate. There was nothing any one individual could do. Ibrahim
continued to work for a good relationship between the hui and the
Emperor, but this made him enemies among the new arrivals, intent
on revival and jihad.
In the midst of all this trouble, Kang told Pao one day
that she found herself to be pregnant. Pao was shocked, and Kang
herself appeared to be stunned.
'An abortion might be arranged,' Pao whispered, looking
the other way.
Kang politely declined. 'I will have to be an old mother.
You must help me.'
'Oh we will, I will.'
Ibrahim too was surprised by the news, but he adjusted
quickly. 'It will be good to see a child come of our union. Like
our books, but alive.'
'It might be a daughter.'
'If Allah wills it, who am I to object?'
Kang studied his face closely, then nodded and went
away.
Now she seldom went out into the streets, and then only
by day, and in a chair. After dark it would be too dangerous in any
case. No respectable people remained out after dark now, only gangs
of young men, often drunk, jahriya or Khafiya or neither, though
usually it was the jahriyas spoiling for a fight. The babblers
versus the deafmutes, as Kang said contemptuously.
Indeed, it was intra Muslim battling that caused the
first great disaster of the troubles, or so Ibrahim judged. Hearing
of the fighting between jahriya and Khafiya, a banner
arrived with a high Qing official,
A banner: a horse detachment of up to a thousand men.
Xirizhu, who joined Yang Shiji, the town's prefect.
Ibrahim came back from a meeting with these men deeply
troubled.
'They, don't understand,' he said. 'They talk about
insurrection, but no one out here is thinking of the great
enterprise, how could they be?
We are so far from the interior that people out here
barely know what China is. It is only local quarrelling, but they
come out here thinking they are bound for real war.'
The great enterprise: dynastic replacement.
Despite Ibrahim's reassurances, the new officials had Ma
Mingxin arrested. Ibrahim shook his head gloomily. Then the new
banners marched out into the countryside to the west. They met with
the Salar jahriya chief, Su Forty three, at Baizhuangzi. The
Salars had concealed their weapons, and they claimed to be
adherents of the Old Teaching. Hearing this, Xinzhu announced to
them he intended to eliminate the New Teaching, and Su's men
promptly attacked the company and stabbed both Xinzhu and Yang
Shiji to death.
When the news of this violence got back to Lanzhou with
the Manchu horsemen who had managed to escape the assault, Ibrahim
groaned with frustration and anger. 'Now it really is
insurrection,' he said. 'Under Qing law, it will go very bad for
all concerned. How could they be so stupid?'
A large force arrived soon thereafter, and was attacked
by Su Forty three's band; and after that, more imperial troops
arrived. In response Su Forty three and an army of two
thousand men attacked Hezhou, then crossed the river on pifaci and
camped right outside Lanzhou itself. All of a sudden they were
indeed in a war.
Pilaci: hide rafts that for centuries had allowed people
to cross the Yellow, Wei and Tao Rivers.
The Qing authorities who had survived the jahriya ambush
had Ma Mingxin shown on the town walls, and his followers cried out
to see his chains, and prostrated themselves, crying 'Shaikh!
Shaikh!' audibly from across the river and from the hilltops
overlooking the town. Having thus identified the rebels' leader
definitively, the authorities had him hauled down off the wall and
beheaded.
When the jahriya learned what had happened they were
frantic for revenge. They had no equipment for a proper siege of
Lanzhou, so they built a fort on a nearby hill, and began
systematically to attack any movement into or out of the city
walls. The Qing officials in Beijing were informed of the
harassment, and they reacted angrily to this assault on a
provincial capital, and sent out imperial Commissioner Agui, one of
the Qianlong's senior military governors, to pacify the region.
This he failed to do, and life in Lanzhou grew lean and
cold. Finally Agui sent Hushen, his chief military officer, back to
Beijing, and when he came back out with new imperial orders, he
called up a very large armed militia of Gansu Tibetans, also
Alashan Mongols, and all the men from the other Green Standard
garrisons in the region. Such ferocious huge men now walked the
streets of the town that it seemed it was only a big barracks.
'It's an old Han technique,' Ibrahim said with some bitterness.
'Pit the non Hans against each other out on the frontier, and
let them kill each other.'
Thus reinforced, Agui was able to cut off the water
supply from the jahriyas' hilltop fort across the river, and the
tables were turned; besieger became besieged, as in a game of go.
At the end of three months, word came into town that the final
battle had occurred, and Su Forty three and every single one
of his thousands of men had been killed.
Ibrahim was gloomy at this news. 'That won't be the end
of it. They'll want revenge for Ma Mingxin, and for those men. The
more the jahriya are put down, the more young Muslim men will turn
to them. The oppression itself makes the rebellion!'
'It's like the soul stealing craze,' Kang noted.
Ibrahim nodded, and redoubled his efforts on his books.
It was as though if he could only reconcile the two civilizations
on paper, the bloody battles happening all around them would come
to an end. So he wrote many hours each day, ignoring the meals set
on his table by the servants. His conversations with Kang were
extensions of his day's thought; and conversely, what his wife said
to him in these conversa tions was often quickly incorporated
into his books. No one else's opin ions were so important to
him. Kang would curse the young Muslim fighters, and say, 'You
Muslims are too religious, to kill and die as you are doing, and
all for such puny differences in dogma, it's crazy!'
'Mohammed Meets Confucius': presumably the work in five
volumes published in the sixtieth year of the Qianlong as
'Reconciliation of the Philosophies of Liu Zhi and Ma Mingxin'.
And soon thereafter Ibrahim's writing in the
immensely long study that Kang had nicknamed 'Mohammed Meets
Confucius' included the following passage: When observing
the tendency towards physical extremism in Islam, ranging from
fasting, whirling and self flagellation, all the way up
to jihad itself, one wonders at its causes, which may be several,
including the words of Mohammed sanctioning jihad, the early
history of Islamic expansion, the harsh and otherworldly desert
landscapes that have been the home of so many Muslim societies,
and, perhaps most importantly, the fact that for Islamic peoples
the religious language is by definition Arabic, and therefore a
second language to the great majority of them. This has fateful
consequences, because one's native tongue is always grounded in a
physical reality by vocabulary, grammar, logic, and metaphors,
images and symbols of all kinds, many of them buried and forgotten
in names themselves; but in the case of Islam, instead of having a
physical reality attached to it linguistically, its sacred language
is detached from all that, for most believers, by its secondary and
translated quality, its only partly learned nature, so
that it conveys only abstract concepts, removed from the world,
conveying the devout into a world of ideas abstracted and detached
from the life of the senses and the physical realities of life,
creating the possibility and even the likelihood of extremism
resulting from a lack of perspective, a lack of grounding. To give
a good example of the kind of linguistic process I mean: Muslims
who have Arabic as a second language do not 'have their feet on the
ground'; their behaviour is all too often directed by abstract
thought, floating alone in the empty space of language. We need the
world. Each situation must be placed in its setting to be
understood. Possibly, therefore, our religion should be taught
mostly in the vernacular tongues, the Quran translated into all the
languages of Earth; or else better instruction in Arabic be given
to all; although taking this road might entail requiring Arabic to
become the first language of all the world, not a practical project
and likely to be regarded as another aspect of jihad . . .
Another time, when Ibrahim was writing about the theory
of dynastic cycles, which was held in common by both Chinese and
Islamic historians and philosophers, his wife had brushed it all
aside like a piece of botched embroidery: 'That's just thinking of
history as if it were the seasons of a year. It's a most
simple--minded metaphor. What if they are nothing at all alike,
what if history meanders like a river for ever, what then?'
And soon afterwards Ibrahim wrote
in his 'Commentary on the Doctrine of the Great Cycle in History':
Ibn Khaldun, the most influential of Muslim historians,
speaks of the great cycle of dynasties in his 'Muqaddimah', and
most of the Chinese historians identify a cyclic pattern in history
as well, beginning with the Han historian Dong Zhongshw in his
'Luxuriant Dew of the Spring and Autumn Annals', a system which
indeed was an elaboration of Confucius himself, and which was
elaborated in its turn by Kang Yuwei, who in his 'Commentary on the
Evolution of Rites' speaks of the Three Ages, each of which,
Disorder, Small Peace and Great Peace, go through internal
rotations of disorder, small peace and great peace, so that the
three become nine, and then eighty one when these are
recombined, and so on. And Hindu religious cosmology, which so far
is that civilization's only statement on history as such, speaks
also of great cycles, first the kalpa which is a day of Brahma,
said to be 4,320,000,000 years long, divided into fourteen
manvantaras, each of which is divided into seventy one
maha yugas, length 3,320,000 years. Each maha yuga or
Great Age is divided into four ages, Sarya yuga, the age of
peace, Treta yuga, Dvaparayuga and Kali yuga, said to be
our current age, an age of decline and despair, awaiting renewal.
These spans of time, so vastly greater than those of the other
civilizations, seemed to many earlier commentators excessive, but
it must be said that, the more we learn of the antiquity of the
Earth, with stone seashells found on mountaintops, and layers of
rock deposits enjambed perpendicularly to each other, and so on,
the more the introspections of India seem to have pierced through
the veil of the past most accurately to the true scale of
things.
But in all of them, in any case, the cycles are only
observed by ignoring most of what has been recorded as actually
happening in the past, and are very probably theories based on the
turning of the year and the return of the seasons, with
civilizations seen as leaves on a tree, going through a cycle of
growth and decay and new growth. It may be that history itself has
no such pattern to it, and that civilizations each create a unique
fate that cannot be read into a cyclic pattern without doing damage
to what really happened in the world.
Thus the extremely rapid spread of Islam seems to support
no particular cyclic pattern, while its success perhaps resulted
from it proposing not a cycle but a progress towards God, a
very simple message resisting the great urge to elaboration
that fills most of the world's philosophies in favour of
comprehensibility by the masses.
Kang Tongbi was also writing a great deal at this time,
compiling her anthologies of women's poetry, arranging them into
groups and writing commentaries on what they meant in the
aggregate. She also began, with her husband's help, a 'Treatise on
the History of the Women of Hunan', in which her thoughts very
often reflected, or commented on, those of her husband, just as his
did hers; so that later scholars were able to collate the writings
of the two during their Lanzhou years, and construct of them a kind
of ongoing dialogue or duct.
Kang's opinions were her own, however, and often would
not have been agreed with by Ibrahim. Later that year, for
instance, frustrated by the irrational nature of the conflict now
tearing the region apart, and fearful of greater conflict to come,
feeling as if they were living under a great storm cloud about to
burst on them, Kang wrote in her 'Treatise':
So you see systems of thought and religion coming out of
the kinds of societies that invented them. The means by which
people feed themselves determine how they think and what they
believe. Agricultural societies believe in rain gods and seed gods
and gods for every manner of thing that might affect the harvest
(China). People who herd animals believe in a single shepherd god
(Islam). In both these kinds of cultures you see a primitive notion
of gods as helpers, as big people watching from above, like parents
who nevertheless act like bad children, deciding capriciously whom
to reward and whom not to, on the basis of craven sacrifices made
to them by the humans dependent on their whim. The religions that
say you should sacrifice or even pray to a god like that, to ask
them to do something material for you, are the religions of
desperate and ignorant people. It is only when you get to the more
advanced and secure societies that you get a religion ready to face
the universe honestly, to announce there is no clear sign of
divinity, except for the existence of the cosmos in and of itself,
which means that everything is holy, whether or not there be a god
looking down on it.
Ibrahim read this in manuscript and shook his head, sighing. 'I
have married one wiser than myself,' he said to his empty room. 'I
am a lucky man. But sometimes I wish that I had chosen to study not
ideas, but things. Somehow I have drifted outside the range of my
talent.'
Every day news of more Qing suppression of Muslims came
to them. Supposedly the Old Teaching was favoured over the New
Teaching, but ignorant and ambitious officials arrived from the
interior, and mistakes were made more than once. Ma Wuyi, for
instance, the successor to Ma Laichi, not to Ma Mingxin, was
ordered to move with his adherents west to Tibet. Old Teaching to
new territory, people said, shaking their heads at the bureaucratic
mistake, which was sure to get people killed . It became the third
of the Five Great Errors of the suppression campaign. And the
disorder grew.
Eventually a Chinese Muslim named Tian Wu rallied the
jahriyas openly, to revolt and free themselves from Beijing. This
happened just north of Gansu, and so everyone in Lanzhou stockpiled
again for war.
Soon the banners came, and like everything else the war
had to move through the Gansu Corridor to get from east to west. So
though much of the fighting took place far away in eastern Gansu,
the news of it in Lanzhou was constant, as was the movement of
troops through town.
Kang Tongbi found it unnerving to have the major battles
of this revolt happening east of them, between them and the
interior. It was several weeks before the Qing army managed to put
down Tian Wu's force, even though Tian Wu had been killed almost
immediately. Soon after that, news came that Qing general Li Shiyao
had ordered the slaughter of over a thousand jahriya women and
children in east Gansu.
Ibrahim was in despair. 'Now all the Muslims in China are
jahriya in their hearts.'
'Maybe so,' Kang said cynically, 'but I see it doesn't
keep them from accepting jahriya lands confiscated by the
government.'
But it was also true that jahriya orders were springing
up everywhere now, in Xizang, Turkestan, Mongolia, Manchuria, and
all the way south to distant Yunnan. No other Muslim sect had ever
attracted so many adherents, and many of the refugees streaming in
from the wars to the far west became jahriya the moment they
arrived, happy after the confusions of Muslim civil war to join a
straightforward jihad against infidels.
Even during all this trouble, in the evenings Ibrahim and
the heavily pregnant Kang would retire to their verandah and watch
the Tao River flow into the Yellow River. They talked over the news
and their day's work, comparing poems or religious texts, as if
these were the only things that really mattered. Kang tried to
learn the Arabic alphabet, which she found difficult, but
instructive.
'Look,' she would say, 'there is no way to mark the
sounds of Chinese in this alphabet, not really. And no doubt the
same is true the other way around!' She gestured at the rivers'
confluence. 'You have said the two peoples can mix like the waters
of these two rivers. Maybe so. But see the ripple line where
the two meets. See the clear water, still there in the yellow.'
'But a hundred li downstream . Ibrahim suggested.
'Maybe. But I wonder. Truly, you must become like these
Sikhs you talk about, who combine what is best from the old
religions, and make something new.'
'What about Buddhism?' Ibrahim asked. 'You say it has
already changed Chinese religion completely. How can we apply it to
Islam as well?'
She thought about it. 'I'm not sure it's possible. The
Buddha said there are no gods, rather that there are sentient
beings in everything, even clouds and rocks. Everything holy.'
Ibrahim sighed. 'There has to be a god. The universe
could not arise from nothing.'
'We don't know that.'
'I believe Allah made it. But now, it may be that it is
up to us. He gave us free will to see what we would do. Again,
Islam and China may have two parts of the whole truth. Perhaps
Buddhism has another part. And we must find whole sight. Or all
will be desolation.'
Darkness fell on the river.
'You must raise Islam to the next level,' Kang said.
Ibrahim shuddered. 'Sufism has been trying to do that for
centuries. The sufis try to rise up, the Wahhabis drag them back
down, claiming there can be no improvement, no progress. And here
the Emperor crushes both!'
'Not so. The Old Teaching has standing in imperial law,
the books by your Liu Zhu are in the imperial collection of sacred
texts. It's not like with the Daoists. Even Buddhism finds no
favour with the Emperor, compared to Islam.'
'So it used to be,' Ibrahim said. 'As long as it stayed
quiet, out here in the west. Now these young hotheads are inflaming
the situation, wrecking all chance of co--existence.'
There was nothing Kang could say to that. It was what she
had been saying all along.
Now it was fully dark. No prudent citizen would be out in
the streets of the rude little town, walled through it was. It was
too dangerous.
News arrived with a new influx of refugees from the west.
The Ottoman sultan had apparently made alliances with the steppes
emirates north of the Black Sea, descendant states of the Golden
Horde that had only recently come out of anarchic conditions, and
together they had defeated the armies of the Safavid empire,
shattering the Shlite stronghold in Iran and continuing east into
the disorganized emirates of central Asia and the silk roads. The
result was chaos all the across the middle of the world, more war
in Iraq and Syria, widespread famine and destruction; although it
was said that with the Ottoman victory, peace might come to the
western half of the world. Meanwhile, thousands of Shiites Muslims
were headed cast over the Pamirs, where they thought sympathetic
reformist states were in power. They did not seem to know that
China was there.
'Tell me more about what the Buddha said,' Ibrahim would
say in the evenings on the verandah. 'I have the impression it is
all very primitive and self concerned. You know: things are
the way they are, one adapts to that, focuses on oneself. All is
well. But obviously things in this world are not well. Can Buddhism
speak to that? Is there an "ought to" in it, as well as an
"is"?'
Ifyou want to help others,
practise compassion. If you want to help yourself, practise
compassion." This the Tibetans' Dalai Lama said. And Buddha himself
said to Sigala, who worshipped the six directions, that the noble
discipline would interpret the six directions as parents, teachers,
spouse and children, friends, servants and employees, and religious
people. All these should be worshipped, he said. Worshipped, do you
understand? As holy things. The people in your life! Thus daily
life becomes a form of worship, do you see? It's not a matter of
praying on Friday and then the rest of the week terrorizing the
world.'
'This is not what Allah calls for, I assure you.'
'No. But you have your jihads, yes? And now it seems the
whole of Dar al Islam is at war, conquering each other or
strangers. Buddhists never conquer anything. In the Buddha's ten
directives to the Good King, non violence, compassion and
kindness are the matter of more than half of them. Asoka was laying
waste to India when he was young, and then he became Buddhist, and
never killed another man. He was the good king personified.'
'But not often imitated.'
'No. But we live in barbarous times. Buddhism spreads by
people converting out of their own wish for peace and right action.
But power condenses around those willing to use force. Islam will
use force, the Emperor will use force. They will rule the world. Or
fight over it, until it is all destroyed.'
Another time she said, 'What I find interesting is that
of all these religious figures of ancient times, only the Buddha
did not claim to be a god, or to be talking to God. The others all
claim to be God, or God's son, or to be taking dictation from God.
Whereas the Buddha simply said, there is no God. The universe
itself is holy, human beings are sacred, all the sentient beings
are sacred and can work to be enlightened, and one must only pay
attention to daily life, the middle way, and give thanks and
worship in daily action. It is the most unassuming of religions.
Not even a religion, but more a way to live.'
'What about these statues of Buddha I see everywhere, and
the worship in the Buddhist temples? You yourself spend a great
deal of time at prayer.'
'Partly the Buddha is revered as the exemplary man.
Simple minds might have it otherwise, no doubt. But these are
mostly people who worship everything that moves, and Buddha is just
one god among many others. They miss the point. In India they made
him an avatar of Vishnu, an avatar who is deliberately trying to
mislead people away from the proper worship of Brahman, isn't that
right? No, many people miss the point. But it is there for all to
see, if they would.'
'And your prayers?'
'I pray to see things better.'
Quickly enough the jahriya insurrection was crushed, and the
western part of the empire apparently at peace. But now there were
deep seated forces, driven underground, that were working all
the while for a Muslim rebellion. Ibrahim feared that even the
Great Enterprise was no longer out of the question. People spoke of
trouble in the interior, of Han secret societies and brotherhoods,
dedicated to the eventual overthrow of the Manchu rulers and a
return to the Ming dynasty. So even Han Chinese could not be
trusted by the imperial government; the dynasty was Manchu after
all, outsiders, and even the extremely punctilious Confucianism of
the Qianlong Emperor could not obscure this basic fact of the
situation. If the Muslims in the western part of the empire
revolted, there would be Chinese in the interior and the south
coast who would regard it as an opportunity to pursue their own
rebellion; and the empire might be shattered. Certainly it seemed
that the sheng shi, the peak of this particular dynastic cycle (if
there were any such thing) had passed.
This danger Ibrahim memorialized to the Emperor
repeatedly, urging him to infold the Old Teaching even more firmly
into imperial favour, making Islam one of the imperial religions in
law as well as fact, as China in the past had infolded Buddhism and
Daoism.
No reply ever came to these memoranda, and judging by the
contents of the beautiful vermilion calligraphy brushed at the
bottom of other petitions returned from the Emperor to Lanzhou, it
seemed unlikely that Ibrahim's would be received any more
favourably. 'Why am I surrounded by knaves and fools?' one imperial
commentary read. 'The coffers have been filling with gold and
silver from Yingzhou for every year of our rule, and we have never
been more prosperous.'
He had a point, no doubt; and knew more about the empire
than anyone else. Still, Ibrahim persevered. Meanwhile more
refugees came pouring east, until the Gansu Corridor, Shaarixi, and
Xining were all crowded with new arrivals -- all Muslim, but not
necessarily friendly towards each other, and oblivious of their
Chinese hosts. Lanzhou appeared to be prospering, the markets were
jammed, the mines and foundries and smithies and factories were all
pouring out armaments, and new machinery of all kinds, threshers,
power looms, carts; but the ramshackle west end of town now
extended along the bank of the Yellow River for many li, and both
banks of the Tao River were slums, where people lived in tents, or
in the open air. No one in town recognized the place any
more, and everyone stayed behind locked doors at night, if they
were prudent.
Child of mine coming into this world Be careful where you
take yourself. So many ways for things to go wrong; Sometimes I
grow afraid. If only we lived in the Age of Great Peace I could be
happy to see your innocent face Watching the geese fly south in the
fall.
Once Kang was helping Ibrahim clean up the clutter of
books and paper, inkstones and brushes in his study, and she
stopped to read one of his pages.
'History can be seen as a series of collisions of
civilizations, and it is these collisions that create progress and
new things. It may not happen at the actual point of contact, which
is often racked by disruption and war, but behind the lines of
conflict, where the two cultures are most trying to define
themselves and prevail, great progress is often made very swiftly,
with works of permanent distinction in arts and technique. Ideas
flourish as people try to cope, and over time the competition
yields to the stronger ideas, the more flexible, more generous
ideas. Thus Fulan, India and Yingzhou are prospering in their
disarray, while China grows weak from its monolithic nature,
despite the enormous infusion of gold from across the Dahai. No
single civilization could ever progress; it is always a matter of
two or more colliding. Thus the waves on the shore never rise
higher than when the backwash of some earlier wave falls back into
the next one incoming, and a white line of water jets up to a
startling height. History may not resemble so much the seasons of a
year, as waves in the sea, running this way and that, crossing,
making patterns, sometimes a triple peak, a very Diamond Mountain
of cultural energy, for a time.'
Kang put the sheet down, looked at her husband fondly.
'If only it were true,' she said to herself.
'What?' He looked up.
'You are a good man, husband. But it may be you have
taken on an impossible task, out of your goodness.'
Then, in the forty sixth year of the Qianlong Emperor's
reign, rain fell for all of the third month. Everywhere the land
was flooded, just at the time when Kang Tongbi was nearing her
confinement. Whether general rebellion across the west broke out
because of the misery caused by the floods, or was calculatedly
initiated to take advantage of the disaster's confusion, no one
could say. But Muslim insurgents attacked town after town, and
while Shiite and Wahhabi and Jahriya and Khafiya factions murdered
each other in mosque and alleyway, Qing banners too went down
before the furious attacks of the rebels. It became so serious that
the bulk of the imperial army was rumoured to be heading west; but
meanwhile the devastation was widespread, and in Gansu the food
began to run out.
Lanzhou was again besieged, this time by a coalition of
immigrant Muslim rebels of all sects and national origins.
Ibrahim's household did everything it could to protect the mistress
of the house in her late pregnancy. But even this high in its
watershed, the Yellow River had risen dangerously with the rains,
and being located at the confluence of the Yellow and the Tao made
things worse for their compound. The town's high bluff began to
look not so high. It was a frightening sight to see the rivers
risen so startlingly, brown and foaming at the very tops of their
banks. Finally, on the fifteenth day of the tenth month, when an
imperial army was a day's march downstream, and relief of the siege
therefore almost in sight, the rain fell harder than ever, and the
rivers rose and spilled over their banks.
Someone, rebels everyone assumed, chose this worst of all
moments to break the dam upstream on the Tao River, sending an
immense muddy flow of water ripping down the watershed, over the
Tao's already overtopped banks, rushing into the Yellow River and
even backing up the larger stream, so that all was brown water,
spreading up into the hills on each side of the narrow river
valley. By the time the imperial army arrived the whole of Lanzhou
was covered with a sheet of dirty brown water, to knee height, and
rising still.
Ibrahim had already gone out to meet the imperial army,
taken there by the governor of Lanzhou to consult with the new
command, and to help them find rebel authorities to negotiate with.
So as the water rose inexorably around the walls of Ibrahim's
compound, there were only the women of the household and a few
servants to deal with the flood.
The compound wall and sandbags at the gates appeared to
be adequate to protect them, but then word of the broken dam and
its surge of water was shouted into the compound by people
departing for higher ground.
'Come quickly,' Zunli cried. 'We must get to higher
ground too. We must leave now!'
Kang Tongbi ignored him. She was busy stuffing trunks
with her papers and with Ibrahim's. There were rooms and rooms full
of books and papers, as Zunli exclaimed when he saw what she was
doing. There wasn't time to save them all.
'Then help me,' Kang grated, working at a furious
clip.
'How will we move it all?'
'Put the boxes in the sedan chair, quickly.'
'But how will you go?'
'I will walk! Go! Go! Go!'
They stuffed boxes. 'This isn't right,' Zunli protested,
looking at Kang's rounded form. 'Ibrahim would want you to leave.
He wouldn't worry about these books!'
'Yes he would!' she shouted. 'Pack! Get the rest in here
and pack!'
Zunli did what he could. A wild hour of racing around in
a pure panic had him and the other servants exhausted, but Kang
Tongbi was just getting started.
Finally she relented, and they hurried out the front gate
of the compound, sloshing immediately into knee high brown
water that poured into the compound until they closed the gate
against it. It was a strange sight indeed to see the whole town
become a shallow foamy brown lake. The sedan chair was piled so
full with books and papers that it took all the servants jammed
together under the hoist bars to lift and move it. A low,
hair raising boom of moving water shook the air. The foaming
brown lake that covered both rivers and the town extended into the
hills on all sides, and Lanzhou itself was completely awash. The
servant girls were crying, filling the air with shrieks, shouts,
screams. Pao was nowhere to be seen. Thus it was that only a
mother's ears heard a single boy crying out.
Kang realized: she had forgotten her own son. She turned
and hopped back inside the gate that had been pushed open by water,
unnoticed by the servants staggering under the loaded sedan
chair.
She splashed through rushing water to Shih's room: the compound
itself was already floored by the opaque brown flood.
Shih had apparently been hiding under his bed, and the
water had flushed him out and onto it, where he curled tip
terrified. 'Help! Mother, help me!'
'Come quickly then!'
'I can't! I can't!'
'I can't carry you, Shih. Come on! The servants are all
gone, it's just you and me now!'
'I can't!' And he began to wail, balled up on his bed
like a threeyear old.
Kang stared at him. Her right hand even jerked towards
the gate, as if leaving ahead of the rest of her. She snarled then,
grabbed the boy by the ear and jerked him howling to his feet.
'Walk or I'll tear your ear off, you hui!'
'I'm not the hui! Ibrahim is the hui! Everyone out here
is hui! Ow!' And he howled as she twisted his ear almost off his
head. She dragged him like that through the flooding household to
the gate.
As they passed out the gate a surge of water, a low wave,
washed into them waist high on her, chest high on him. When
it passed the level of the flood stayed higher. They were now
thigh deep in water. The roar was much greater than before.
They couldn't hear each other. No servants were in sight.
Higher ground stood at the end of the lane leading south,
and the city wall was there as well, so Kang sloshed that way,
looking for ber servants. She stumbled and cursed; one of her
butterfly shoes had been sucked away in the tow of water. She
kicked the other one off, proceeded barefoot. Shih seemed to have
fainted, or gone catatonic, and she had to put an arm under his
knees, and lift him up and carry him, resting him on the top shelf
of her pregnant belly. She shouted angrily for her servants, but
could not even hear herself. She slipped once and cried out to
Guanyin, She Who Hears Cries.
Then she saw Xinwu, swimming towards her like an otter
with arms, serious and determined. Behind him Pao was wading
towards her, and Zunli. Xinwu pulled Shih away from Kang and
whacked him on his reddened car. 'That way!' Xinwu shouted loudly
at Shih, pointing out the city wall. Kang was surprised to see Shih
almost run towards it, leaping out of the water time after time. Xinwu stood at
her side and helped her slosh up the lane. She was like a canal
barge being towed upstream, bow waves lapping at her distended
waist. Pao and Zunli joined them and helped her, Pao crying and
shouting 'I went ahead to check the depth, I came back and thought
you were in the chair!' while Zunli was saying something to the
effect that they thought she had gone ahead with Pao. The usual
confusion.
On the city wall the other servants were urging them on,
staring upstream white--eyed with fright. Hurry! their mouths
mouthed. Hurry!
At the foot of the wall the brown water was streaming
hard by. Kang struggled against the flow awkwardly, slipping on her
little feet. People lowered a wooden ladder from the top of the
city wall, and Shih scampered up it. Kang started to climb. She had
never climbed a ladder before, and Xinwu and Pao and Zunli pushing
her from below did not really help. It was hard getting her feet to
curl over the submerged rungs; indeed her feet were not as long as
the rungs were wide. She could get no purchase. Now she could see
out of the corner of her eye a big brown wave, filled with things,
smashing along the wall, sweeping it clean of ladders and
everything else that had been leaned against it. She pulled herself
up by the arms and pegged her foot down onto a dry rung.
Pao and Zunli shoved her up from below, and she was
lifted bodily onto the top of the city wall. Pao and Zunli and
Xinwu shot up beside her. The ladder was pulled up after them just
as the big wave swept by.
Many people had taken refuge up on the wall, as it now
formed a sort of long island in the flood. People on a pagoda
rooftop nearby waved to them. Everyone on the wall was staring at
Kang, who rearranged her gown and pulled her hair out of her face
with her fingers, checking to see that everyone from her compound
was there. Briefly she smiled. It was the first time any of them
had ever seen her smile.
By the time they were reunited with Ibrahim, late that
same day, having been rowed to a hill to the south and above the
flooded town, Kang was done with smiling. She pulled Ibrahim down
next to her, and they sat there in the chaos of people. 'Listen to
me,' she said, hand on her belly, 'if this is a daughter we have
here 'I know,' Ibrahim said.
' If this is a daughter we have been given -- there
will be no more footbinding.'
Four. The Afterlife
Many years later, an age later, two
old people sat on their verandah watching the river flow. In their
time together they had discussed all things, they had even written
a history of the world together, but now they seldom spoke, except
to note some feature of the waning day. Very rarely did they talk
about the past, and they never spoke at all of that time they had
sat together in a dark room, diving into the light of the candle,
and seeing there strange glimpses of former lives. It was too
disturbing to recall the awe and terror of those hours. And besides
the point had been made, the knowledge gained. That they had known
each other ten thousand years: of course. They were an old married
couple. They knew, and that was enough. There was no need to delve
deeper into it.
This too is the bardo; or nirvana itself. This is the
touch of the eternal.
One day, then, before going out to the verandah to enjoy
the sunset hour with his partner, the old man sat before his blank
page all the long afternoon, thinking, looking at the stacks of
books and manuscripts that walled his study. Finally he took
up his brush and wrote, performing the strokes very slowly.
This is what his wife had taught him to see.
'Wealth and the Four Great Inequalities'
The scattered records and broken ruins of the Old World
tell us that the earliest civilizations arose in China, India,
Persia, Egypt, the Middle West, and Anatolia. The first farmers in these fertile regions
taught themselves farming and storage methods that created harvests
beyond the needs of the day. Very quickly soldiers, supported by
priests, took power in each region, and their own numbers grew,
gathering these new abundant harvests largely into their own hands,
by means of taxes and direct seizures. Labour divided into the
groups described by Confucius and the Hindu caste system, the
warriors, priests, artisans and farmers. With this division of
labour the subjugation of farmers by warriors and priests was
institutionalized, a subjugation that has never ended. This was the
first inequality.
In this division of civilized labor, if it had not
happened earlier, men established a general domination over women.
It may have happened during the earlier ages of bare subsistence,
but there is no way to tell; what we can see with our own eyes, is
that in farming cultures women labour both at home and in the
fields. In truth the farming life requires work from all. But from
early on, women did as men required. And in each family, the
control of legal power resembled the situation at large: the king
and his heir dominated the rest. These were the second and the
third inequalities, of men over women and children.
The next small age saw the beginning of trade between the
first civilizations, and the silk roads connecting China, Bactria,
India, Persia, the Middle West, Rome and Africa moved the surplus
harvests around the Old World. Agriculture responded to the new
chances to trade, and there was a great rise in the production of
bulk cereals and meats, and specialized crops like olives, wine and
mulberry trees. The artisans also made new tools, and with them
more powerful farming implements, and ships. Trading groups and
peoples began to undermine the monopoly on power of the first
military priest empires, and money began to replace land as
the source of ultimate power. All this happened much earlier than
Ibn Khaldun and the Maghribi historians recognized. By the time of
the classical period, around 1200 bH, the changes brought by trade
had unsettled the old ways and spread and deepened the first three
inequalities, raising many questions about human nature. The great
classical religions came into being precisely to attempt to answer
these questions Zoroastrianism in Persia, Buddhism in India,
and the rationalist philosophers in Greece. But no matter their
metaphysical details, each civilization was part of a world
transferring wealth back and forth,
back and forth, eventually to the elite groups; these movements
of wealth became the driving force of change in human affairs -- in
other words, of history. Gathered wealth gathered more wealth.
From the classical period to the discovery of the New
World (say 1200 bH to 1000 aH), trade therefore made the Middle
West the focal point of the Old World, and much wealth ended up
there. At about the midpoint of this period, as the dates indicate,
Islam appeared, and very quickly it came to dominate the world.
Very likely there were some underlying economic reasons for this
phenomenon; Islam, perhaps by chance but perhaps not, appeared in
the 'centre of the world', the area sometimes called the Isthmus
Region, bounded by the Persian Gulf, the Red Sea, the
Mediterranean, the Black Sea and the Caspian Sea. All the trade
routes necessarily knotted here, like dragon arteries in a feng
shui analysis. So it is not particularly surprising that for a time
Islam provided the world with a general currency, the dinar, and a
generally used language, Arabic. But it was also a religion, indeed
it became almost the universal religion, and we must understand
that its appeal as a religion arose partly from the fact that in a
world of growing inequalities, Islam spoke of a realm in which all
were equal -- all equal before God no matter their age, gender,
occupation, race or nationality. Islam's appeal lay in this, that
inequality could be neutralized and done away with in the most
important realm, the eternal realm of the spirit.
Meanwhile, however, trade in food and in luxury goods
continued all across the Old World, from al Andalus to China,
in animals, timber and metals, cloth, glass, writing materials,
opium, medicines and, more and more as the centuries passed, in
slaves. The slaves came chiefly from Africa; and they became more
important because there was more labour to be done, while at the
same time the mechanical improvements allowing for more powerful
tools had not yet been made, so that all this new work had to be
accomplished by animal and human effort alone. So, added to the
subjugation of farmers, women, and the family, was this fourth
inequality, of race or group, leading to the subjugation of the
most powerless peoples to slavery. And the unequal accumulation of
wealth by the elites continued.
The discovery of the New World has only accelerated these
processes, providing both more wealth and more slaves. The trade
routes themselves have moved substantially from land to sea, and
Islam no longer controls the crossroads as it did for a
thousand years. The main centre of accumulation has shifted to
China; indeed, China may have been the centre all along. It has
always had the most people; and from ancient times people
everywhere else have traded for Chinese goods. Rome's trade balance
with China was so poor that it lost a million ounces of silver a
year to China. Silk, porcelain, sandalwood, pepper -- Rome and all
the rest of the world sent their gold to China for these products,
and China grew rich. And now that China has taken control of the
west coasts of the New World, it has also begun to enjoy a direct
infusion of huge amounts of gold and silver, and slaves. This
doubled gathering of wealth, both by trade of manufactured goods
and by direct extraction, is something new, a kind of cumulation of
accumulations.
So it seems apparent that the Chinese are the rising
dominant power in the world, in competition with the previous
dominant power, Dar al Islam, which still exerts a powerful
attraction to people hoping for justice before God, if no longer
much expecting it on Earth. India then exists as a third culture
between the other two, a go between and influence on both,
while also of course influenced by both. Meanwhile the primitive
New World cultures, newly connected to the bulk of humanity,
immediately subjugated by them, struggle to survive.
So. To a very great extent human history has been the
story of the unequal accumulation of harvested wealth, shifting
from one centre of power to another, while always expanding the
four great inequalities. This is history. Nowhere, as far as I
know, has there ever been a civilization or moment when the wealth
of the harvests, created by all, has been equitably distributed.
Power has been exerted wherever it can be, and each successful
coercion has done its part to add to the general inequality, which
has risen in direct proportion to the wealth gathered; for wealth
and power are much the same. The possessors of the wealth in effect
buy the armed power they need to enforce the growing inequality.
And so the cycle continues.
The result has been that while a small percentage of
human beings have lived in a wealth of food, material comfort and
learning, those not so lucky have been the functional equivalent of
domestic beasts, in harness to the powerful and well off,
creating their wealth for them but not benefiting from it
themselves. If you happen to be a young black farm girl, what can
you say to the world, or the world to you? You exist under all four
of the great inequalities, and will live a shortened life of
ignorance, hunger and fear. Indeed it only takes one of the great
inequalities to create such conditions.
So it must be said that the majority of humans ever to
have lived, have existed in conditions of immiseration and
servitude to a small minority of wealthy and powerful people. For
every emperor and bureaucrat, for every caliph and qadi, for every
full rich life, there have been ten thousand of these stunted,
wasted lives. Even if you grant a minimal definition of a full
life, and say that the strength of spirit in people, and the
solidarity among people, have given many and many of the world's
poor and powerless a measure of happiness and achievement amidst
their struggle, still, there are so many who have lived lives
destroyed by immiseration that it seems impossible to avoid
concluding that there have been more lives wasted than fully
lived.
All the world's various religions have attempted to
explain or mitigate these inequalities, including Islam, which
originated in the effort to create a realm in which all are equal;
they have tried to justify the inequalities in this world. They all
have failed; even Islam has failed; the Dar al Islam is as
damaged by inequality as anywhere else. Indeed I now think that the
Indian and Chinese description of the afterlife, the system of the
six lokas or realms of reality -- the devas, asuras, humans,
beasts, pretas, and inhabitants of hell -- is in fact a
metaphorical but precise description of this world and the
inequalities that exist in it, with the devas sitting in luxury and
judgment on the rest, the asuras fighting to keep the devas in
their high position, the humans getting by as humans do, the beasts
labouring as beasts do, the homeless preta suffering in fear at the
edge of bell, and the inhabitants of hell enslaved to pure
immiseration.
My feeling is that until the number of whole lives is
greater than the number of shattered lives, we remain stuck in some
kind of prehistory, unworthy of humanity's great spirit. History as
a story worth telling will only begin when the whole lives
outnumber the wasted ones. That means we have many generation s to
go before history begins. All the inequalities must end; all the
surplus wealth must be equitably distributed. Until then we are
still only some kind of gibbering monkey, and humanity, as we
usually like to think of it, does not yet exist.
To put it in religious terms, we are still indeed in the
bardo, waiting to be born.
The old woman read the pages her husband had given her,
walking up and down their long verandah, full of agitation. When
she had finished, she put her hand on his shoulder. The day was
coming to its end; the sky in the west was indigo, a new moon
resting in it like a scythe. The black river flowed below them. She
went to her own writing stand, at the far end of the verandah, and
took up her brush, and in quick blind strokes filled a page.
Two wild geese fly north in the twilight. One bent lotus
droops in the shallows. Near the end of this existence Something
like anger fills my breast; A tiger: next time I will hitch it To
my chariot. Then watch me fly. No more hobbling on these bad feet.
Now there is nothing left to do But scribble in the dusk and watch
with the beloved Peach blossoms float downstream. Looking back at
all the long years All that happened this way and that I think I
liked most the rice and the salt.
Chapter One. The Fall of Konstantiniyye
The Ottoman Sultan Caliph Selim the Third's doctor,
Ismail ibn Mani al Dir, began as an Armenian qadi who studied
law and medicine in Konstantiniyye. He rose quickly through the
ranks of the Ottoman bureaucracy by the efficacy of his
ministrations, until eventually the Sultan required him to tend one
of the women of his seraglio. The harem girl recovered under
Ismail's care, and shortly thereafter Sultan Selim too was cured by
Ismail, of a complaint of the skin. After that the Sultan made
Ismail the chief doctor of the Sublime Porte and its seraglio.
Ismail then spent his time slipping about unobtrusively
from patient to patient, continuing his medical education as
doctors do, by practising. He did not attend court functions. He
filled thick books with case studies, recording symptoms,
medicines, treatments and results. He attended the janissaries'
inquisitions as required, and kept notes there as well.
The Sultan, impressed by his doctor's dedication and
skill, took an interest in his case studies. The bodies of all the
janissaries he had executed in the counter--coup of the year 1202
were put at Ismail's disposal, and the religious ban on autopsy and
dissection declared invalid for this case of executed criminals. A
lot of work had to be completed quickly, even with the bodies on
ice, and indeed the Sultan participated in several of the
dissections himself, asking questions at every cut. He was quick to
see and suggest the advantages of vivisection.
One night in the year 1207, the Sultan called his doctor
to the palace in the Sublime Porte. One of his old stablehands was
dying, and Selim had had him made comfortable on a bed placed on
one balance of a large scale, with weights of gold piled on the
other balance, so that the two big pans hung level in the middle of
the room.
As the old man lay on his bed wheezing, the Sultan ate a
midnight meal and watched. He told the doctor that he was sure this
method would allow them to determine the presence of the soul, if
one existed, and its weight.
Ismail stood at the side of the stablehand's elevated
bed, fingering the old man's wrist gently. The old man's breaths
weakened, became gasps. The Sultan stood and pulled Ismail back,
pointing to the scale's extremely fine fulcrum. Nothing was to be
disturbed.
The old man stopped breathing. 'Wait,' the Sultan
whispered. 'Watch.'
They watched. There were perhaps ten people in the room.
It was perfectly silent and still, as if all the world had stopped
to witness the test.
Slowly, very slowly, the balance tray holding the dead
man and his bed began to rise. Somebody gasped. The bed rose and
hung in the air overhead. The old man had lightened.
'Take away the very smallest weight from the other tray,'
the Sultan whispered. One of his bodyguards did so, removing a few
flakes of gold leaf. Then some more. Finally the tray holding the
dead man in the air began to descend, until it drifted below the
height of the other one. The bodyguard put the smallest flake back
on. Skilfully he rebalanced the scale. The man at dying had lost a
quarter grain of weight.
'Interesting!' the Sultan declared in his normal voice.
He returned to his repast, gesturing to Ismail. 'Come, cat. Then
tell me what you think of these rabble from the cast, whom we hear
are attacking us.'
The doctor indicated that he did not have an opinion.
'Surely you have heard things,' the Sultan encouraged
him. 'Tell me what you have heard.'
'Like everyone else, I have heard they come from the
south of India,' Ismail said obediently. 'The Mughals have been
defeated by them. They have an effective army, and a navy that
moves them around and shells coastal cities. Their leader styles
himself the Kerala of Travancore. They have conquered the Safavids,
and attacked Syria and Yemen '
'This is all old news,' the Sultan interrupted. 'What I
require of you,
Ismail, is explanation. How have they managed to
accomplish these things?'
Ismail said, 'I do not know, Excellency. The few letters
I have received from medical colleagues to the east do not discuss
military matters. I gather their army moves quickly, I have heard a
hundred leagues a day.'
'A hundred leagues! How is that possible?'
'I do not know. One of my colleagues wrote of treating
burn wounds. I hear their armies spare those they capture, and set
them to farm in areas they have conquered.'
'Curious. They are Hindu?'
'Hindu, Buddhist, Sikh -- I get the impression they
practise some mix of these three faiths, or some kind of new
religion, made up by this sultan of Travancore. Indian gurus often
do this, and he is apparently that kind of leader.'
Sultan Selim shook his head. 'Eat,' he commanded, and
Ismail took up a cup of sherbet. 'Do they attack with Greek fire,
or the black alchemy of Samarqand?'
'I don't know. Samarqand itself has been abandoned, I
understand, after years of plague, and then earthquakes. But its
alchemy may have been developed further in India.'
'So we are being attacked by black magic,' reflected the
Sultan, looking intrigued.
'I cannot say.'
'What about this navy of theirs?'
'You know more than I, Excellency. I have heard they sail
into the eye of the wind.'
'More black magic!'
'Machine power, Excellency. I have a Sikh correspondent
who told me that they boil water in scaled pots, and force the
steam through tubes, like bullets out of guns, and the steam pushes
against paddles like a river pushing a waterwheel, and thus the
ships are rowed forwards.'
'Surely that would only move them backwards in the
water.'
'They could call that forwards, Excellency.'
The Sultan stared suspiciously at his doctor. 'Do any of
these ships blow up?'
'It seems as if they might, if something goes wrong
Selim considered it. 'Well, this should be most interesting!
If a cannonball hits one of their boiler pots, it should blow up
the whole ship!'
'Very possibly.'
The Sultan was pleased. 'It will make for good target
practice. Come with me.'
He led his usual train of retainers out of the room:
bodyguard of six, cook and waiters, astronomer, valet and the Chief
Black Eunuch of the Seraglio, all trailing him and the doctor, whom
the Sultan held by the shoulder. He brought Ismail through the Gate
of Felicity into his harem without a word to its guards, leaving
his retainers behind to figure out yet again who was intended to
follow him into the seraglio. In the end only a waiter and the
Chief Black Eunuch entered.
In the seraglio all was gold and marble, silk and velvet,
the walls of the outer rooms covered with religious paintings and
icons from the age of Byzantium. The Sultan gestured to the Black
Eunuch, who nodded to a guard at the far door.
One of the harem concubines emerged, trailed by four
maids: a whiteskinned red--headed young woman, her naked body
glowing in the gaslight jets. She was not an albino, but rather a
naturally pale skinned person, one of the famous white slaves
of the seraglio, among the only known survivors of the vanished
Firanjis. They had been bred for several generations by the Ottoman
sultans, who kept the line pure. No one outside the seraglio ever
saw the women, and no one outside the Sultan's palace ever saw the
men used for breeding.
This young woman's hair was a gold burnished red,
her nipples pink, ber skin a translucent white that revealed blue
veins under it, especially in her breasts, which were slightly
engorged. The doctor reckoned her three months pregnant. The Sultan
did not appear to notice; she was his favourite, and he still had
her every day.
The familiar routine unfolded. The odalisque walked to
the draped area of her bed, and the Sultan followed, not bothering
to pull the curtains. The ladies in waiting helped the
woman to cushion herself properly, held her arms out, her legs
spread and pulled up. Selim said 'Ah yes,' and went to the bed. He
pulled his erect member from his pantaloons and covered her. They
rocked together in the usual fashion, until with a shudder and a
grunt the Sultan finished and sat beside her, stroking her belly
and legs.
He looked over at Ismail as a thought occurred to him.
'What is it like now where she came from?' he asked.
The doctor cleared his throat. 'I don't know,
Excellency.'
'Tell me what you have heard.'
'I have heard that Firanja west of Vienna is mainly
divided between Andalusis and the Golden Horde. The Andalusis
occupy the old Frankish lands and the islands north of it. They are
Sunni, with the usual sufi and Wahhabi elements fighting for the
patronage of the emirs. The east is a mix of Golden Horde and
Safavid client princes, many of them Shiites Many sufi orders. They
also have occupied the offshore islands, and the Roman peninsula,
though it is mostly Berber and Maltese.'
The Sultan nodded. 'So they prosper.'
'I don't know. It rains there more than on the steppes,
but there are mountains everywhere, or hills. There is a plain on
the north coast where they grow grapes and the like.
Al Andalus and the Roman peninsula do well, I gather. North of
the mountains it is harder. It's said the lowlands are still
pestilential.'
'Why is that? What happened there?'
'It's damp and cold all the time. So it is said.' The
doctor shrugged. 'No one knows. It could be that the pale skin of
the people there made them more susceptible to plague. That's what
Al Ferghana said.'
'But now good Muslims live there, with no ill
effects.'
'Yes. Balkan Ottomans, Andalusis, Safavids, the Golden
Horde. All Muslim, except perhaps for some Jews and Zotts.'
'But Islam is fractured.' The Sultan thought it over,
brushing the odalisque's red pubic hair with his palm. 'Tell me
again, where did this girl's ancestors come from?'
'The islands off the north coast of Frankland,' the
doctor ventured. 'England. They were very pale there, and some of
the outermost islands escaped the plague, and their people were
discovered and enslaved a century or two later. It is said they
didn't even know anything had changed.'
'Good land?'
'Not at all. Forest or rock. They lived on sheep or fish.
Very primitive, almost like the New World.'
'Where they have found much gold.'
'England was known more for tin than gold, as I
understand it.'
'How many of these survivors were taken?'
'I have read a few thousand. Most died, or were bred into
the general populace. You may have the only purebreds left.'
'Yes. And this one is pregnant by one of their men, I'll
have you know. We care for the men as carefully as we do the women,
to keep the line going.'
'Very wise.'
The Sultan looked at his Black Eunuch. 'I'm ready for
Jasmina now.'
In came another girl, very black, her body almost twin to
that of the white girl, though this one was not pregnant. Together
they looked like chess pieces. The black girl replaced the white
one on the bed. The Sultan stood and went to her.
'Well, the Balkans are a sorry place,' he mused, 'but
farther west may be better. We could move the capital of the empire
to Rome, just as they moved theirs here.'
'Yes. But the Roman peninsula is fully repopulated.'
'Venice too?'
'No. Still abandoned, Excellency. It is often flooded,
and the plague was particularly bad there.'
Sultan Selim pursed his lips. 'I don't -- ah -- I don't
like the damp.'
'No, Excellency.'
'well, we will have to fight them here. I will tell the
troops that their souls, the most precious quarter grain of them,
will rise up to the Paradise of Ten Thousand Years if they die in
defence of the Sublime Porte. There they will live like I do here.
We will meet these invaders down at the straits.'
'Yes, Excellency.'
'Leave me now.'
But when the Indian navy appeared it was not in the
Aegean, but in the Black Sea, the Ottoman Sea. Little black ships
crowding the Black Sea, ships with waterwheels on their sides, and
no sails, only white plumes of smoke pouring out of chimneys
topping black deckhouses. They looked like the furnaces of an
ironworks, and it seemed they should sink like stones. But they
didn't. They puffed down the relatively unguarded Bosporus,
blasting shore batteries to pieces, and anchored offshore the
Sublime Porte. From there they fired explosive shells into
Topkapi Palace, also into the mostly ceremonial batteries defending
that side of the city, long neglected as there had been no one
to attack Konstantiniyye for centuries. To have appeared in the
Black Sea -- no one could explain it.
In any case there they were, shelling the defences until
they were pounded into silence, then firing shot after shot into
the walls of the palace, and the remaining batteries across the
Golden Horn, in Pera. The populace of the city huddled indoors, or
took refuge in the mosques, or left the city for the countryside
outside the Theodosian walls; soon the city seemed deserted, except
for some young men out to watch the assault. More of these appeared
in the streets as it began to seem that the iron ships were not
going to bombard the city, but only Topkapi, which was taking a
terrific beating despite its enormous impregnable walls.
Ismail was called into this great artillery target by the
Sultan. He boxed up the mass of papers that had accumulated in the
last few years, all the notes and records, sketches and samples and
specimens. He wished he could make arrangements to send it all out
to the medical madressa in Nsara, where many of his most faithful
correspondents lived and worked; or even to the hospital in
Travancore, home of their assailants, but also of his other most
faithful group of medical correspondents.
There was no way now to arrange such a transfer, so he
left them in his rooms with a note on top describing the contents,
and walked through the deserted streets to the Sublime Porte. It
was a sunny day; voices came from the big blue mosque, but other
than that only dogs were to be seen, as if Judgment Day had come
and Ismail been left behind.
Judgment Day had certainly come for the palace; shells
struck it every few minutes. Ismail ducked inside the outer gate
and was taken to the Sultan, whom he found seemingly exhilarated by
events, as if at a fair: Selim the Third stood on Topkapi's highest
bartizan, in full view of the fleet bombarding them, watching the
action through a long silver telescope.
'Why doesn't the iron sink the ships?' he asked Ismail.
'They must be as heavy as treasure chests.'
'There must be enough air in the hulls to make them
float,' the doctor said, apologetic at the inadequacy of this
explanation. 'If their hulls were punctured, they would surely sink
faster than wooden ships.'
One of the ships fired, erupting smoke and seemingly sliding
backwards in the water. Their guns shot forwards, one per ship.
Fairly little things, like big bay dhows, or giant water bugs.
The shot exploded down the palace wall to their left.
Ismail felt the jolt in his feet. He sighed.
The Sultan glanced at him. 'Frightened?'
'Somewhat, Excellency.'
The Sultan grinned. 'Come, I want you to help me decide
what to take. I need the most valuable of the jewels.' But then he
spotted something in the sky. 'What's that?' He clapped the
telescope to his eye. Ismail looked up; there was a dot of red in
the sky. It drifted on the breeze over the city, looking like a red
egg. 'There's a basket hanging under it!' the Sultan exclaimed,
'and people in the basket!' He laughed. 'They know how to make
things fly in the sky!'
Ismail shaded his eyes. 'May I use the spyglass,
Excellency?'
Under white, puffy clouds, the red dot floated towards
them. 'Hot air rises,' Ismail said, shocked as it became clear to
him. 'They must have a brazier in the basket with them, and the hot
air from its fire rises up into the bag and is caught there, and so
the whole thing rises up and flies.'
The Sultan laughed again. 'Wonderful!' He took the glass
back from Ismail. 'I don't see any flames, though.'
'It must be a small fire, or they would burn the bag. A
brazier using charcoal, you wouldn't see that. Then when they want
to come down, they damp the fire.'
'I want to do that,' the Sultan declared. 'Why didn't you
make one of these for me?'
'I didn't think of it.'
Now the Sultan was in especially high spirits. The red
floating bag was floating their way.
'We can hope the winds carry it elsewhere,' Ismail
remarked as he watched it.
'No!' the Sultan cried. 'I want to see what it can
do.'
He got his wish. The floating bag drifted over the
palace, just under the clouds, or between them, or even
disappearing inside one, which gave Ismail the strongest sense yet
that it was flying in the air like a bird. People in the air like
birds!
'Shoot them down!' the Sultan was shouting
enthusiastically. 'Shoot the bag!'
The palace guards tried, but the cannon that were left
standing on the broken walls could not be elevated high enough to
fire at it. The musketeers shot at it, the flat cracks of their
muskets followed by shouts from the Sultan. The acrid smoke of
gunpowder filled the grounds, mixing with the smells of citrus and
jasmine and pulverized dust. But as far as any of them could tell,
no one hit bag or basket. Judging by the minute faces looking down
from the basket's edge, wrapped in heavy woollen scarves it
appeared, Ismail thought they were perhaps out of range, too high
to be hit. 'The bullets probably won't go that far up,' he
said.
And yet they would never be too high to drop things on
whatever lay below. The people in the basket appeared to wave at
them, and then a black dot dropped like a stooping hawk, a hawk of
incredible compaction and speed, crashing right into the roof of
one of the inner buildings, exploding and sending shards of tile
clattering all over the courtyard and garden.
The Sultan was shouting ecstatically. Three more
gunpowder bombs dropped onto the palace, one on a wall where
soldiers surrounded one of the big guns, killing them with much
damage.
Ismail's ears hurt more from the Sultan's roars than from
the explo sions. He pointed to the iron ships. 'They're
coming in.'
The ships were close onshore, launching boats filled with
men. The bombardment from other ships continued during the
disembarking, more intense than ever; their boats were going to
land uncontested at a section of the city walls they had blasted
down. 'They'll be here soon,' Ismail ventured. Meanwhile the
floating bag and basket had drifted west, past the palace and over
the open fields beyond the city wall.
'Come on,' Selim said suddenly, grabbing Ismail by the
arm. 'I need to hurry.'
Down broken marble stairs they ran, followed by the
Sultan's immediate retinue. The Sultan led the way into the warren
of rooms and passageways deep beneath the palace.
Down here oil lamps barely illuminated chambers filled
with the loot of four Ottoman centuries, and perhaps Byzantine
treasure as well, if not Roman or Greek, or Hittite or Sumerian;
all the riches of the world, stacked in room after room. One was
filled entirely with gold, mostly in the form of coins and bars;
another with Byzantine devotional art; another with old weapons;
another with furniture of rare woods and furs, another with chunks
of coloured rock, worthless as far as Ismail could tell. 'There
won't be time to go through all this,' he pointed out, trotting
behind the Sultan.
Selim just laughed. He swept through a long gallery or
warehouse of paintings and statues to a small side room, empty
except for a line of bags on a bench. 'Bring these,' he ordered his
servants as they caught up; then he was off again, sure of his
course.
They came to staircases descending through the rock
underlying the palace: a strange sight, smooth marble stairs
dropping through a craggy rock hole into the bowels of the Earth.
The city's great cisterncavern lay some way to the south and east,
as far as Ismail knew; but when they came down into a low natural
cave, floored by water, they found a stone dock, and moored to it,
a long narrow barge manned by imperial guards. Torches on the dock
and lanterns on the barge illuminated the scene. Apparently they
were in a side passage of the cistern cavern, and could row
into it.
Selim indicated to Ismail the roof around the stairwell,
and Ismail saw that explosives were packed into crevices and
drilled holes; when they were off and some distance away, this
entrance would presumably be demolished, and some part of the
palace grounds might fall onto it; in any case their escape route
would be obscured, and pursuit made impossible.
Men busied themselves with loading the barge, while the
Sultan inspected the charges. When they were ready to leave he
himself lit their fuses, grinning happily. Ismail stared at the
sight, which had the lamplit quality of some of the Byzantine icons
they had passed in the treasure hoards. 'We'll join the Balkan
army, and cross the Adriatic into Rome,' the Sultan announced.
'We'll conquer the West, then come back to smite these infidels for
their impudence!'
The bargemen cheered on cue from their officers, sounding
like thousands in the echoing confinement of the underground lake
and its sky of rock. The Sultan took the acclaim with open arms,
then stepped onto the barge, balanced by three or four of his men.
No one saw Ismail turn and dash up the doomed stairs to a different
destiny.
Chapter Two. Travancore
More bombs had been rigged by the Sultan's bodyguards to
blow up the cages in the palace zoo, and when Ismail climbed back
up the stairs and re emerged into the air, he found the
grounds in chaos, invaders and defenders alike running around
chasing or fleeing from elephants, lions, cameleopards and
giraffes. A pair of black rhinoceroses, looking like boars out of a
nightmare, charged about bleeding through crowds of shouting,
shooting men. Ismail raised his hands, fully expecting to be shot,
and thinking escape with Selim might have been all right after
all.
But no one was being shot except the animals. Some of the
palace guard lay dead on the ground, or wounded, and the rest had
surrendered and were under guard, and much less trouble than the
animals. For now it looked as if massacre of the defeated was not
part of the invaders' routine, just as rumour had had it. In fact
they were hustling their captives out of the palace, as booms were
shaking the ground, and plumes of smoke shooting out of windows and
stairwells, walls and roofs collapsing: the rigged explosions and
the maddened beasts made it prudent to vacate Topkapi for a
while.
They were regathered to the west of the Sublime Porte,
just inside the Theodosian Wall, on a parade ground where the
Sultan had surveyed his troops and done some riding. The women of
the seraglio, in full chador, were surrounded by their eunuchs and
a wall of guards. Ismail sat with the household retinue that
remained: the astronomer, the ministers of various administrative
departments, cooks, servants and so on.
The day passed and they got hungry. Late in the afternoon
a group of the Indian army came among them with bags of flatbread.
They were small dark--skinned men.
'Your name, please?' one of them asked Ismail.
'Ismail ibn Mani al Dir.'
The man drew his finger down a sheet of paper, stopped,
showed another of them what he had found.
The other one, now looking like an officer, inspected
Ismail. 'Are you the doctor, Ismail of Konstantiniyye, who has
written letters to Bhakta, the abbess of the hospital of
Travancore?'
'Yes,' Ismail said.
'Come with me, please.'
Ismail stood and followed, devouring the bread he had
been given as he went. Doomed or not, he was famished; and there
was no sign that he was being taken out to be shot. Indeed the
mention of Bhakta's name seemed to indicate otherwise.
In a plain but capacious tent a man at a desk was
interviewing pris oners, none of whom Ismail recognized. He
was led to the front, and the interviewing officer looked at him
curiously, and said in Persian, 'You are high on the list of people
required to report to the Kerala of Travancore.'
'I am surprised to hear it.'
'You are to be congratulated. This appears to be at the
request of Bhakta, abbess of the Travancori hospital.'
'A correspondent of many years' standing, yes.'
'All is explained. Please allow the captain here to lead
you to the ship departing for Travancore. But first, one question;
you are reported to be an intimate of the Sultan's. Is this
true?'
'It was true.'
'Can you tell us where the Sultan has gone?'
'He and his bodyguard have absconded,' Ismail said. 'I
believe they are headed for the Balkans, with the intention of
re establishing the Sultanate in the West.'
'Do you know how they escaped the palace?'
'No. I was left behind, as you see.'
Their machine ships ran by the heat of fires, as Ismail
had heard, burning in furnaces that boiled water, the steam then
forced by pipes to push paddlewheels, encased by big wooden
housings on each side of the bull. Valves controlled the
amount of steam going to each wheel, and the ship could turn on a
single spot. Into the wind it thumped along, bouncing awkwardly
over and through waves, throwing spray high over the ship. When the
winds came from behind, the crew raised small sails, and the ship
was pushed forwards in the usual way, but with an extra impulse
provided by the two wheels. They burned coal in the furnaces, and
spoke of coal deposits in the mountains of Iran that would supply
their ships till the end of time.
'Who made the ships?' Ismail asked.
'The Kerala of Travancore ordered them built. Ironmongers
in Anatolia were taught to make the furnaces, boilers and
paddlewheels. Shipbuilders in the ports at the east end of the
Black Sea did the rest.'
They landed at a tiny harbour near old Trebizond, and
Ismail was included in a group that rode south and east through
Iran, over range after range of dry hills and snowy mountains, into
India. Everywhere there were short dark skinned troops wearing
white, on horseback, with many wheeled cannon prominently placed in
every town and at every crossroads. All the towns looked undamaged,
busy, prosperous. They changed horses at big fortified changing
stations run by the army, and slept at these places as well. Many
stations were placed under hills where bonfires burned through the
night; blocking the light from these fires transmitted messages
over great distances, all over the new empire. The Kerala was in
Delhi, he would be back in Travancore in a few weeks; the abbess
Bhakta was in Benares, but due back in Travancore in days. It was
conveyed to Ismail that she was looking forward to meeting him.
Ismail, meanwhile, was finding out just how big the world
was. And yet it was not infinite. Ten days of steady riding brought
them across the Indus. On the green west coast of India, another
surprise: they boarded iron carts like their iron ships, with iron
wheels, and rode them on causeways that held two parallel iron
rails, over which the carts rolled as smoothly as if they were
flying, right through the old cities so long ruled by the Mughals.
The causeway of the iron rails crossed the broken edge of the
Deccan, south into a region of endless groves of coconut palms, and
they rolled by the power of steam as fast as the wind, to
Travancore, on the southwesternmost shore of India.
Many people had moved to this city following the recent imperial
successes. After rolling slowly through a zone of orchards and
fields filled with crops Ismail did not recognize, they came to the
edges of the city. The outskirts were crowded with new buildings,
encampments, lumber yards, holding facilities: indeed for many
leagues in all directions it seemed nothing but construction
sites.
Meanwhile the inner core of the city was also being
transformed. Their train of linked iron carts stopped in a big yard
of paired rails, and they walked out of a gate into the city
centre. A white marble palace, very small by the standards of the
Sublime Porte, had been erected there in the middle of a park which
must have replaced much of the old city centre. The harbour this
park overlooked was filled with all manner of ships. To the south
could be seen a shipyard building new vessels; a mole was being
extended out into the shallow green seas, and the enclosed water,
in the shelter of a long low island, was as crowded with ships as
the inner harbour, with many small boats sailing or being rowed
between them. Compared to the dusty torpor of Konstantiniyye's
harbours, it was a tumultuous scene.
Ismail was taken on horseback through the bustling city
and down the coast farther, to a grove of palm trees behind a broad
yellow beach. Here walls surrounded an extensive Buddhist
monastery, and new buildings could be seen a long way through the
grove. A pier extended out from the seaside buildings, and several
fire powered ships were docked there. This was apparently the
home of the famous hospital of Travancore.
Inside the monastery grounds it was windless and calm.
Ismail was led to a dining room and given a meal, then invited to
wash off the grime of his travel. The baths were tiled, the water
either warm or cool, depending on which pool he preferred, and the
last ones were under the sky.
Beyond the baths stood a small pavilion on a green lawn,
surrounded by flowers. Ismail donned a clean brown robe he was
offered, and padded barefoot across the cut grass to the pavilion,
where an old woman was in conversation with a number of others.
She stopped when she saw them, and Ismail's guide
introduced him.
'Ah. A great pleasure,' the woman said in Persian. 'I am
Bhakta, the abbess here, and your humble correspondent.' She stood
and bowed to Ismail, hands together. Her fingers were twisted, her
walk stiff; it looked to Ismail like arthritis. 'Welcome to
our home. Let me pour you some tea, or coffee if you prefer.'
'Tea will be fine,' Ismail said.
'Bodhisattva,' a messenger said to the abbess, 'we will
be visited by the Kerala on the next new moon.'
'A great honour,' the abbess said. 'The moon will be in
close conjunction with the morning star. Will we have time to
complete the mandalas?'
'They think so.'
'Very good.'
The abbess continued to sip her tea.
'He called you bodhisattva?' Ismail ventured.
The abbess grinned like a girl. 'A sign of affection,
with no basis in reality. I am simply a poor nun, given the honour
of guiding this hospital for a time, by our Kerala.'
Ismail said, 'When we corresponded, you did not mention
this. I thought you were simply a nun, in something like a madressa
and hospital.'
'For a long time that was the case.'
'When did you become the abbess?'
'In your year, what would it be, 1194. The previous abbot
was a Japanese lama. He practised a Japanese form of Buddhism,
which was brought here by his predecessor, with many more monks and
nuns, after the Chinese conquered Japan. The Chinese persecute even
the Buddhists of their own country, and in Japan it was worse. So
they came here, or first to Lanka, then here.'
'And they made studies in medicine, I take it.'
'Yes. My predecessor in particular had very clear sight,
and a great curiosity. Generally we see as if it were night, but he
stood in the light of morning, because he tested the truth of what
we say we know, in regularized trials. He could sense the strengths
of things, the force of movement, and devise tests of them in
trials of various kinds. We are still walking through the doors he
opened for us.'
'Yet I think you have been following him into new
places.'
'Yes, more is always revealed, and we have been working
hard since he left that body. The great increase in shipping has
brought us many useful and remarkable documents, including some
from Firanja. It's becoming clear to me that the island England was
a sort of Japan about to happen, on the other side of the
world. Now they have a forest uncut for centuries, regrown over the
ruins, and so they have wood to trade, and they build ships
themselves. They bring us books and manuscripts found in the ruins,
and scholars here and all around Travancore have learned the
languages and translated the books, and they are very interesting.
People like the Master of Henley were more advanced than you might
think. They advocated efficient organization, good accounting,
auditing, the use of trial and record to determine yields -- in
general, to run their farms on a rational basis, as we do here.
They had waterpowered bellows, and could get their furnaces white
hot, or high yellow at least. They were even concerned with the
loss of forest in their time. Henley calculated that one furnace
could burn all the tress within a yoganda's radius, in only forty
days.'
'Presumably that will be happening again,' Ismail
said.
'No doubt even faster. But meanwhile, it's making them
rich.'
'And here?'
'Here we are rich in a different fashion. We help the
Kerala, and he extends the reach of the kingdom every month, and
within its bounds, all tends to improvement. More food is grown,
more cloth made. Less war and brigandage.'
After tea Bhakta showed him around the grounds. A lively
river ran through the centre of the monastery, and its water ran
through four big wooden mills and their wheels, and a big sluice
gate at the bottom end of a catchment pond. All around this rushing
stream was green lawn and palm trees, but the big wooden halls
built next to the mills on both banks hummed and clanked and
roared, and smoke billowed out of tall brick chimneys rising out of
them.
'The foundry, ironworks, sawmill and manufactory.'
'You wrote of an armoury,' Ismail said, 'and a gunpowder
facility.'
'Yes. But the Kerala did not want to impose that burden
on us, as Buddhism is generally against violence. We taught his
army some things about guns, because they protect Travancore. We
asked the Kerala about this -- we told him it was important to
Buddhists to work for good, and he promised that in all the lands
that came under his control, he would impose a rule of laws that
would keep the people from violence or evil dealing. In effect, we
help him to protect people. Of course one is,
suspicious of that, seeing what rulers do, but this one
is very interested in law. In the end he does what he likes, of
course. But he likes laws.'
Ismail thought of the nearly bloodless aftermath of the
conquest of Konstantiniyye. 'There must be some truth in it, or I
would not be alive.'
'Yes, tell me about that. It sounded as if the Ottoman
capital was not so vigorously defended.'
'No. But that is partly because of the vigour of the
assault. People were unnerved by the fireships, and the flying bags
overhead.'
Bhakta looked interested. 'Those were our doing, I must
admit. And yet the ships do not seem that formidable.'
'Consider each ship to be a mobile artillery
battery.'
The abbess nodded. 'Mobility is one of the Kerala's
watchwords.'
'As well it might be. In the end mobility prevails, and
all within shot of the sea can be destroyed. And Konstantiniyye is
all within shot of the sea.'
' I see what you mean.'
After tea the abbess took Ismail through the monastery
and workshops, down to the docks and shipworks, which were loud.
Late in the day they walked over to the hospital, and Bhakta led
Ismail to the rooms used for teaching monks to become doctors. The
teachers gathered to greet him, and they showed him the shelf on
one wall of books and papers that they had devoted to the letters
and drawings he had sent to Bhakta over the years, all catalogued
according to a system he did not understand. 'Every page has been
copied many times,' one of the men said.
'Your work seems very different to Chinese medicine,' one
of the others said. 'We were hoping you might speak to us about the
differences between their theory and yours.'
Ismail shook his head, fingering through these vestiges
of his former existence. He would not have said he had written so
much. Perhaps there were multiple copies even on this shelf.
'I have no theories,' he said. 'I have only noted what I
have seen.' His face tightened. 'I will be happy to speak with you
about whatever you like, of course.'
The abbess said, 'It would be very good if you would
speak to a gathering about these things, there are many who would
like to hear you, and to ask questions.'
'My pleasure, of course.'
'Thank you. We will convene tomorrow for that, then.'
A clock somewhere struck the bells that marked every hour
and watch.
'What kind of clock do you employ?'
'A version of Bhaskara's mercury wheel,' Bhakta said, and
led Ismail by the tall building that housed it. 'It does very well
for the astronomical calculations, and the Kerala has decreed a new
year using it, more accurate than any before. But to tell the
truth, we are now trying horologues with weight driven
mechanical escapements. We are also trying clocks with spring
drives, which would be useful at sea, where accurate timekeeping is
essential for determining longitude.'
'I know nothing of that.'
'No. You have been attending to medicine.'
'Yes.'
The next day they returned to the hospital, and in a
large room where surgeries were performed, a great number of monks
and nuns in brown and maroon and yellow robes sat on the floor to
hear him. Bhakta had assistants bring several thick wide books to
the table where Ismail was to speak, all of them filled with
anatomical drawings, most Chinese.
They seemed to be waiting for him to speak, so he said,
'I am pleased to tell you what I have observed. Perhaps it will
help you, I don't know. I know little of any formal medical system.
I studied some of the ancient Greek knowledge as it was translated
by Ibn Sina and others, but I never could profit much from it. Very
little from Aristotle, somewhat more from Galen. Ottoman medicine
itself was no very impressive thing. In truth, nowhere have I found
a general explanation that fits what I have seen with my own eyes,
and so long ago I gave up on all hypoth--esis, and decided to try
to draw and to write down only what I saw. So you must tell me
about these Chinese ideas, if you can express them in Persian, and
I will see if I can tell you how my observations match with them.'
He shrugged. 'That's all I can do.'
They stared at him, and he continued nervously: 'So
useful, Persian. The language that bridges Islam and India.' He
waggled a hand. 'Any questions?'
Bhakta herself broke the silence. 'What about the
meridian lines that the Chinese speak of, running through the body
from the skin inward and back again?'
Ismail looked at the drawings of the body she turned to
in one of the books. 'Could they be nerves?' he said. 'Some of
these lines follow the paths of major nerves. But then they
diverge. I have not seen nerves crisscrossing like this, cheek to
neck, down spine to thigh, up into back. Nerves generally branch
like an almond tree's branches, while the blood vessels branch like
a birch tree. Neither tangle like these are shown to.'
'We don't think meridian lines refer to the nerves.'
'To what, then? Do you see anything there when you do
autopsies?'
'We do not do autopsies. When opportunity has allowed us
to inspect torn bodies, their parts look as you have described them
in your letters to us. But the Chinese understanding is of great
antiquity and elaboration, and they get good results by sticking
pins in the right meridian points, among other methods. They very
often get good results.'
'How do you know?'
'Well -- some of us have seen it. Mostly we understand it
from what they have said. We wonder if they are finding systems too
small to be seen. Can we be sure that the nerves are the only
messengers of motion to the musculature?'
'I think so , ' Ismail said. 'Cut the right nerve and the
muscles beyond it will not move. Prick a nerve and the appropriate
muscle will jump.'
His audience stared at him. One of the older men said,
'Perhaps some other kind of energy transference is happening, not
necessarily through the nerves, but through the lines, and this is
needed as much as the nerves.'
'Perhaps. But look here,' pointing at one diagram, 'they
show no pancreas. No adrenal glands either. These both perform
necessary functions.'
Bhakta said, 'For them there are eleven crucial organs --
five yin and six yang. Heart, lungs, spleen, liver and kidneys,
they are yin.'
'A spleen is not essential.'
'Then the six yang organs are gall bladder, stomach,
small intestine, large intestine, bladder and triple burner.'
'Triple burner? What is that?'
She read from the Chinese notations by the drawing: 'They
say, "It has a name but no shape. It combines the effects of the
organs that regulate water, as a fire must control water. The upper
burner is a mist, the middle burner a foam, the lower burner a
swamp. Thus top to bottom,
corresponding to head and upper body, middle from nipples to
navel, lower the abdomen below the navel. -- Ismail
shook his head. 'Do they find it in dissections?'
'Like us, they rarely do dissections. There are similar
religious barriers. Once in their Sung dynasty, about year 390 in
Islam, they dissected forty six rebels.'
'I doubt that would have helped. You have to see a lot of
dissections, and vivisections, with no preconceptions in mind,
before it begins to come clear.'
Now the monks and nuns were staring at him with an odd
expression, but he forged on as he examined the drawings. 'This
flow through the body and all its parts, do they not mean
blood?'
'A harmonious balance of fluids, some material, like
blood, some spiritual, like jing and shen and qi, the
so called three treasures 'What are they, please?'
'ling is the source of change,' one nun said hesitantly,
'supportive and nutritive, like a fluid. Essence is another Persian
word we could use to translate it. In Sanskrit, semen, or the
generative possibility.'
'And shen?'
'Shen is awareness, consciousness. Like our spirit, but a
part of the body, too.'
Ismail was interested in this. 'Have they weighed
it?'
Bhakta led the laughter. 'Their doctors do not weigh
things. With them it is not things, but forces and
relationships.'
'Well, I am just an anatomist. What animates the parts is
beyond me. Three treasures, one, a myriad -- I cannot tell. It does
seem there is some animating vitality, that comes and goes, waxes
and wanes. Dissection cannot find it. Our souls, perhaps. You
believe that the soul returns, do you not?'
'We do.'
'The Chinese also?'
'Yes, for the most part. For their Daoists there is
no'pure spirit, it is always mixed with material things. So their
immortality requires movement from one body to another. And all
Chinese medicine is strongly influenced by Daoism. Their Buddhism
is mostly like ours, although again, more materialist. It is
chiefly what the women do in their older years, to help the
community, and prepare for their next life. The official
Confucian culture does not speak much of the soul, even though they
acknowledge its existence. In most Chinese writing the line drawn
between spirit and matter is vague, sometimes nonexistent.'
'Evidently,' Ismail said, looking at the meridian line
drawing again. He sighed. 'Well. They have studied long, and helped
living people, while I have only drawn dissections.'
They continued. The questions came from more
and more of them, with comments and observations. Ismail answered
every question as best he could. The movement of the blood in the
chambers of the heart; the function of the spleen, if there was
one; location of the ovaries; shock reactions to amputation of the
legs; flooding of punctured lungs; movement of the various limbs
when parts of the exposed brain were prodded with needles: he
described what he had seen in each case, and as the day wore on,
the crowd sitting on the floor looked up at him with expressions
more and more guarded, or odd. A pair of nuns left quietly. As
Ismail was describing the coagulation of the blood after extraction
of teeth, the room went completely silent. Few of them met his eye,
and noticing that, he faltered. 'As I said, I am a mere anatomist
... We will have to see if we can reconcile what I have seen with
your theoretical texts . . .' He looked hot, as if he had a fever,
but only in his face.
Finally the Abbess Bhakta rose to her feet, stepped
stiffly to him, and held his shaking hands in hers. 'No more,' she
said gently. All the monks and nuns rose to their feet, their hands
placed together before them, as in prayer, and bowed towards him.
'You have made good from bad,' Bhakta said. 'Rest now, and let us
take care of you.'
So Ismail settled into a small room in the monastery
provided for him, and studied Chinese texts freshly translated into
the Persian by the monks and nuns, and taught anatomy.
One afternoon he and Bhakta walked from the hospital to
the dining hall, through hot and muggy air, the pre monsoon
air, like a warm wet blanket. The abbess pointed to a little girl
running through the rows of melons in the big garden. 'There is the
new incarnation of the previous lama. She just came to us last
year, but she was born the very hour the old lama died, which is
very unusual. It took a while for us to find her, of course. We did
not start the search until last year, and immediately she turned
up.'
'His soul moved from man to woman?'
'Apparently. The search certainly looked among the little
boys, as is traditional. That was one of the things that made
identifying her so easy. She insisted on being tested, despite her
sex. At four years of age. And she identified all of Peng Roshi's
things, many more than the new incarnation usually can do, and told
me the contents of my final conversation with Peng, almost word for
word.'
'Really!' Ismail stared at Bhakta.
Bhakta met his gaze. 'It was like looking into his eyes
again. So, we say that Peng has come back to us as a Tara
bodhisattva, and we started paying more attention to the girls and
the nuns, something of course that I have always encouraged. We
have emulated the Chinese habit of inviting the old women of
Travancore to come to the monastery and give their lives over to
studying the sutras, but also to studying medicine, and going back
out to care for those in their villages, and to teach their
grandchildren and great grandchildren.'
The little girl disappeared into the palm trees at the
end of the garden. The new moon sickled the sky, pendant under a
bright evening star. The sound of drumming came on a breeze. 'He
has been delayed,' Bhakta said as she listened to the drums. 'He
will be here tomorrow.'
The drumming became audible again at dawn, just after the
clock bells had clonged the coming of day. Distant drums, like
thunder or gunfire, but more rhythmic than either, announced his
arrival. As the sun rose it seemed the ground shook. Monks and nuns
and their families living in the monastery poured out of the
dormitories to witness the arrival, and the great yard inside the
gate was hastily cleared.
The first soldiers danced in a rapid walk, all stepping
together, taking a skip forwards at every fifth step, and shouting
as they reversed their rifles from one shoulder to the other. The
drummers followed, skipping in step as their hands beat their
tablas. A few snapped hand cymbals. They wore uniform shirts,
with red patches sewn to the shoulders, and came circling in a
column around the great yard, until perhaps five hundred men stood
in curved ranks facing the gate. When the Kerala and his officers
rode in on horseback, the soldiers presented their arms and shouted
three times. The Kerala raised a hand, and his detachment commander
shouted orders: the tabla players rolled out the surging beat, and
the soldiers danced into the dining hall.
'They are fast, just as everyone said,' Ismail said to
Bhakta. 'And everything is so together.'
'Yes, they live in unison. In battle they are the same.
The reloading of their rifles has been broken down into ten
movements, and there are ten command drumbeats, and different
groups of them are coordinated to different points of the cycle, so
they fire in rotating mass, to very devastating effect I am told.
No army can stand up to them. Or at least, that was true for many
years. Now it seems the Golden Horde are beginning to train their
armies in similar ways. But even with that, and with modern
weapons, they won't be able to withstand the Kerala.'
Now the man himself dismounted, and Bhakta approached
him, bringing Ismail along. The Kerala waved aside their bows, and
Bhakta said without preamble, 'This is Ismail of Konstantiniyye,
the famous Ottoman doctor.'
The Kerala stared at him intently, and Ismail gulped,
feeling the heat of that impatient eye. The Kerala was short and
compact, black haired, narrow faced, quick of movement.
His torso seemed just a touch too long for his legs. His face was
very handsome, chiselled like a Greek statue.
'I hope you are impressed by the hospital here,' he said
in clear Persian.
'It is the best I have ever seen.'
'What was the state of Ottoman medicine when you left
it?'
Ismail said, 'We were making progress in understanding a
little of the parts of the body. But much remained mysterious.'
Bhakta added, 'Ismail has examined the medical theories
of the ancient Egyptians and Greeks, and brought what was useful in
them to us, as well as making very many new discoveries of his own,
correcting the ancients or adding to their knowledge. His letters
to us have formed one of the main bases of our work in the
hospital.'
'Indeed.' Now the Kerala's gaze was even more piercing.
His eyes were protuberant, their irises a jumble of colours, like
circles of jasper. 'Interesting! We must speak more of these
things. But first I want to discuss recent developments with you
alone, Mother Bodhisattva.'
The abbess nodded, and walked hand in hand with
the Kerala to a pavilion overlooking the dwarf orchard. No
bodyguard accompanied them, but only settled back and watched from
the yard, rifles at the ready, with guards posted on the monastery
wall.
Ismail went with some monks to the streamside, where they were
arranging a ceremony of sand mandalas. Monks and nuns in maroon and
saffron robes flowed everywhere about the bankside, setting out
rugs and flower baskets, happily chattering and in no great hurry,
as the Kerala often conferred with their abbess for half the day,
or longer. They were famous friends.
Today, however, they finished earlier, and the pace
quickened considerably as word came back that the two were leaving
the pavilion. Flower baskets were cast on the stream, and the
soldiers reappeared to the sound of the pulse quickening
tablas. They skipped to the banksides without their rifles and sat,
cleaving an aisle for their leader's approach. He came among them,
stopping to put a hand to one shoulder or another, greeting men by
name, asking after their wounds, and so on. The monks who had led
the mandala effort came out of their studio, chanting to a gong and
the blast of bass trumpets, carrying two mandalas -- wooden discs
as big as millstones, each held level by two men, with the
vibrantly coloured mandalas laid in unfixed sand on their tops. One
was a complex geometrical figure in bold red, green, yellow, blue,
white and black. The other was a map of the world, with Travancore
a red dot like a bindi, and India occupying the centre of the
circle, and the rest of the mandala depicting almost the whole
width of the world, from Firanja to Korea and Japan, with Africa
and the Indies curved around the bottom. All was coloured
naturally, the oceans dark blue, inland seas lighter blue, land
green or brown, as the case might be, with the mountain ranges
marked by dark green and snowy white. Rivers ran in blue threads,
and a vivid red line enclosed what Ismail took to be the border of
the Kerala's conquests, now including the Ottoman empire up through
Anatolia and Konstantiniyye, though not the Balkans or the Crimea.
A most beautiful object, like looking down on the world from the
vantage of the sun.
The Kerala of Travancore walked with the abbess, helping
her with her footing down the path. At the riverside they stopped,
and the Kerala inspected the mandalas closely, slowly, pointing and
asking the abbess and ber monks questions about one feature or
another. Other monks chanted in low voices, and the soldiers helped
to sing a song. Bhakta faced them and sang over their sound in a
high thin voice. The Kerala took the mandala in his hands and
lifted it up carefully; it was almost too large for one man
to hold. He stepped down into the river with it, and bouquets of
hydrangea and azalea floated into his legs. He held the geometrical
mandala over his head, offering it to the sky, and then, at a shift
in the song, and the growling entry of trumpets, he lowered the
disc in front of him, and very slowly tilted it up on its side. The
sand slid off all at once, the colours pouring into the water and
blurring together, staining the Kerala's silken leggings. He dipped
the disc into the water and washed the rest of the sand away in a
multi coloured cloud that dissipated in the flow. He cleared
the surface with his bare hand, then strode out of the water. His
shoes were muddy, his wet leggings stained green and red and blue
and yellow. He took the other mandala from its makers, bowed over
it to them, turned and took it into the river. This time the
soldiers shifted and bowed forehead to ground, chanting a prayer
together. The Kerala lowered the disc slowly, and like a god
offering a world to a higher god, rested it on the water and let it
float, spinning slowly round and round under his fingers, a
floating world that at the height of the song he plunged down into
the stream as far as it would go, releasing all the sand into the
water to float up over his arms and legs. As he walked to shore,
spangled with colour, his soldiers stood and shouted three times,
then three again.
Later, over tea scented with delicate perfumes, the
Kerala sat in repose and spoke with Ismail. He heard all Ismail
could tell him of Sultan Selim the Third, and then he told Ismail
the history of Travancore, his eyes never leaving Ismail's
face.
'Our struggle to throw off the yoke of the Mughals began
long ago with Shivaji, who called himself Lord of the Universe, and
invented modern warfare. Shivaji used every method possible to free
India. Once he called the aid of a giant Deccan lizard to help him
climb the cliffs guarding the Fortress of the Lion. Another time he
was surrounded by the Bijapuri army, commanded by the great Mughal
general Afzal Khan, and after a siege Shivaji offered to surrender
to Afzal Khan in person, and appeared before that man clad only in
a cloth shirt, that nevertheless concealed a scorpion tail dagger;
and the fingers of his hidden left hand were sheathed in
razor edged tiger claws. When he embraced Afzal Khan he
slashed him to death before all, and on that signal his army set on
the Mughals and defeated them.
'After that Alamgir attacked in earnest, and spent the last
quarter century of his life reconquering the Deccan, at a cost of a
hundred thousand lives per year. By the time he subdued the Deccan
his empire was hollowed. Meanwhile there were other revolts against
the Mughals to the northwest, among Sikhs, Afghans and the Safavid
empire's eastern subjects, as well as Rajputs, Bengalis, Tamils and
so forth, all over India. They all had some success, and the
Mughals, who had overtaxed for years, suffered a revolt of their
own zamindars, and a general breakdown of their finances. Once
Marathas and Rajputs and Sikhs were successfully established, they
all instituted tax systems of their own, you see, and the Mughals
got no more money from them, even if they still swore allegiance to
Delhi.
'So things went poorly for the Mughals, especially here
in the south. But even though the Marathas and Rajputs were both
Hindu, they spoke different languages, and hardly knew each other,
so they developed as rivals, and this lengthened the Mughals' hold
on mother India. In these end days the Nazim became premier to a
khan completely lost to his harem and hookah, and this Nazim went
south to form the principality that inspired our development of
Travancore on a similar system.
'Then Nadir Shah crossed the Indus at the same ford used
by Alexander the Great, and sacked Delhi, slaughtering thirty
thousand and taking home a billion rupees of gold and jewels, and
the Peacock Throne. With that the Mughals were finished.
'Marathas have been expanding their territory ever since,
all the way into Bengal. But the Afghans freed themselves from the
Safavids, and surged east all the way to Delhi, which they sacked
also. When they withdrew the Sikhs were given control of the
Punjab, for a tax of onefifth of the harvests. After that the
Pathans sacked Delhi yet once more, rampaging for an entire month
in a city become nightmare. The last emperor with a Mughal title
was blinded by a minor Afghan chieftain.
'After that a Marathan cavalry of thirty thousand marched
on Delhi, picking up two hundred thousand Rajput volunteers as they
moved north, and on the fateful field of Panipat, where India's
fate has so often been decided, they met an army of Afghan and
ex Mughal troops, in full jihad against the Hindus. The
Muslims had the support of the local populace, and the great
general Shah Abdali at their head, and in the battle a hundred
thousand Marathas died, and thirty thousand were captured
for ransom. But afterwards the Afghan soldiers tired of Delhi, and
forced their khan to return to Kabul.
'The Marathas, however, were likewise broken. The Nazim's
succes sors secured the south, and the Sikhs took the Punjab,
and the Bengalese Bengal and Assam. Down here we found the Sikhs to
be our best allies. Their final guru declared their sacred writings
to be the embodiment of the guru from that point on, and after that
they prospered greatly, creating in effect a mighty wall between us
and Islam. And the Sikhs taught us as well. They are a kind of mix
of Hindu and Muslim, unusual in Indian history, and instructive. So
they prospered, and learning from them, coordinating our efforts
with them, we have prospered too.
'Then in my grandfather's time a number of refugees from
the Chinese conquest of Japan arrived in this region, Buddhists
drawn to Lanka, the heart of Buddhism. Samurai, monks and sailors,
very good sailors they had sailed the great eastern ocean
that they call the Dahai, in fact they sailed to us both by heading
cast and by heading west.'
'Around the world?'
'Around. And they taught our shipbuilders much, and the
Buddhist monasteries here were already centres of metalworking and
mechanics, and ceramics. The local mathematicians brought
calculation to full flower for use in navigation, gunnery and
mechanics. All came together here in the great shipyards, and in
our merchant and naval fleets were soon greater even than China's.
Which is a good thing, as the Chinese empire subdues more and more
of the world -- Korea, Japan, Mongolia, Turkestan, Annam and Siam,
the islands in the Malay chain -- the region we used to called
Greater India, in fact. So we need our ships to protect us from
that power. By sea we are safe, and down here, below the gnarled
wildlands of the Deccan, we are not easily conquered by land. And
Islam seems to have had its day in India, if not the whole of the
west.'
'You have conquered its most powerful city,' Ismail
observed.
'Yes. I will always smite Muslims, so that they will
never be able to attack India again. There have been enough rapes
of Delhi. So I had a small navy built on the Black Sea to attack
Konstantiniyye, breaking the Ottomans like the Nazim broke the
Mughals. We will establish small states across Anatolia, taking
their land under our influence, as we have done in Iran and
Afghanistan. Meanwhile we continue to work with the Sikhs, treating
them as chief allies and partners in what is becoming a larger
Indian confederation of principalities and states. The unification
of India on that basis is not something many people resist, because
when it succeeds, it means peace. Peace for the first time since
the Mughals invaded more than four centuries ago. So India has
emerged from its long night. And now 'we will spread the day
everywhere.'
The following day Bhakta took Ismail to a garden party at
the Kerala's palace in Travancore. The big park containing the
little marble building overlooked the northern end of the harbour,
away from the great noise and smoke of the shipworks, visible at
the south side of the shallow bay, but innocuous at that distance.
Outside the park more elaborate white palaces belonged not to the
Kerala, but to the local merchant leaders, who had become rich in
ship building, trade expeditions and most of all, the financing of
other such expeditions. Among the Kerala's guests were many men of
this sort, all richly dressed in silks and jewellery. Especially
prized in this society, it seemed to Ismail, were
semi precious stones -- turquoise, jade, lapis, malachite,
onyx, jasper and the like -- polished into big round buttons and
necklace beads. The wives and daughters of the men wore brilliant
saris, and some walked with tamed cheetahs on leashes.
People circulated in the shade of the garden's arbours
and palm trees, eating at long tables of delicacies, or sipping
from glass goblets. Buddhist monks stood out in their maroon or
saffron, and Bhakta was approached by quite a few of these. The
abbess introduced some of them to Ismail. She pointed out to him
the Sikhs in attendance, men who wore turbans and were bearded; and
Marathas; and Bengalis; also Africans, Malaysians, Burmese,
Sumatrans, Japanese or Hodenosaunee from the New World. The abbess
either knew all these people personally, or could identify them by
some characteristic of dress or figure.
'So very many different peoples here,' Ismail
observed.
'Shipping brings them.'
Many of them seemed to crave a word with Bhakta, and she
introduced Ismail to one of the Nazim's 'most trusted assistants',
in the person of one Pyidaungsu, a short dark man who, he said, had
grown up in Burma and on the eastern side of India's tip.
His Persian was excellent, which was no doubt why the abbess had
introduced Ismail to him, as she dealt with her own press of
conversants.
'The Kerala was most pleased to meet you,' Pyidaungsu
said immediately, drawing Ismail off to one side. 'He is very
desirous of making progre ss in certain medical matters, especially
infectious diseases. We lose more soldiers to disease or infection
than to our enemies in battle, and this grieves him.'
'I know only a little of that,' Ismail said. 'I am an
anatomist, attempting to learn the structures of the body.'
'But all advances in understanding of the body help us in
what the Kerala wants to know.'
'In theory, anyway. Over time.'
'But could you not examine the army's procedures, in
search of some aspects of them that contribute perhaps to diseases
spreading?'
'Perhaps,' Ismail said. 'Although some aspects cannot be
changed, like travelling together, sleeping together.'
'Yes, but the way those things are done .
'Possibly. There seems to be a likelihood that some
diseases are transmitted by creatures smaller than the eye can see
'The creatures in microscopes?'
'Yes, or smaller. Exposure to a very small amount of
these, or to some that are killed beforehand, seems to give people
a resistance to later exposures, as happens with survivors of
pox.'
'Yes, variolation. The troops are already scabbed for
pox.'
Ismail was surprised to hear this, and the officer saw
it.
'We are trying everything,' he said with a laugh. 'The
Kerala believes all habits must be re examined with an eye to
changing them, improving them as much as possible. Eating habits,
bathing, evacuation -- he began as an artillery officer when he was
very young, and he learned the value of regular procedure. He
proposed that the barrels of cannons be bored out rather than cast,
as the casting could never be done with any true smoothness. With
uniform bores cannons become more powerful and lighter at once, and
ever so much more accurate. He tested all these things, and reduced
gunnery to a set of settled motions, like a dance, much the same
for cannon of all sizes, making them capable of deployment as
quickly as infantry, almost as quick as cavalry. And easily carried
on ships. Results have been prodigious, as you see.' Waving around
complacently at the party.
'You have been an artillery officer, I suppose.'
The man laughed. 'Yes, I was.'
'So now you enjoy a celebration here.'
'Yes, and there are other reasons for this gathering. The
bankers, the shippers. But they all ride on the back of the
artillery, if you will.'
'And not the doctors.'
'No. But I wish it were so! Tell me again if you see any
part of military life that might be made more healthy.'
'No contact with prostitutes?'
The man laughed again. 'Well, it is a religious duty for
many of them, you must understand. The temple dancers are important
for many ceremonies.'
'Ah. Well. Cleanliness, then. The animalcules move from
body to body in dirt, by touch, in food or water, and breath.
Boiled surgical instruments reduce infections. Masks on doctors and
nurses and patients, to reduce spread of infection.'
The officer looked pleased. 'Cleanliness is a virtue of
caste purity. The Kerala does not approve of caste, but it should
be possible to make cleanliness more of a priority.'
'Boiling kills the animalcules, it seems. Cooking
implements, pots and pans, drinking water -- all might be boiled to
advantage. Not very practical, I suppose.'
'No, but possible. What other methods could be
applied?'
'Certain herbs, perhaps, and things poisonous to the
animalcules but not to people. But no one knows whether such things
exist.'
'But trials could be made.'
'Possibly.'
'On poisoners, for instance.'
'It's been done.'
'Oh, the Kerala will be pleased. How he loves trials,
records, numbers laid out by his mathematicians to show whether the
impressions of one doctor are true when applied to the army as a
whole body. He will want to speak to you again.'
'I will tell him all I can,' Ismail said.
The officer shook his hand, holding it in both of his. 'I
will bring you back to the Kerala presently. For now, the musicians
are here, I see. I like to listen to them from up on the
terraces.'
Ismail followed him for a while, as if in an eddy, and
then one of the abbess's assistants snagged him and brought him
back to the party gathered by the Kerala to watch the concert.
The singers were dressed in beautiful saris, the
musicians in silk jackets cut from bolts of different colour and
weave, mostly of brilliant sky blue and blood orange red. The
musicians began to play; the drummers set a pattern on tablas, and
others played tall stringed instruments, like long necked
ouds, making Ismail recall Konstantiniyye, the whole city called up
by these twangy things so like an oud.
A singer stepped forward and sang in some foreign tongue,
the notes gliding through tones without a stop anywhere, always
curving through tonalities unfamiliar to Ismail, no tones or
quartertones that did not bend up or down rapidly, like certain
bird calls. The singer's companions danced slowly behind her,
coming as close to still positions as she came close to steady
tones, but always moving, hands extended palm outwards, speaking in
dance languages.
Now the two drummers shifted into a complex but steady
rhythm, woven together in a braid with the singing. Ismail closed
his eyes; he had never heard such music. Melodies overlapped and
went on without end. The audience swayed in time with them, the
soldiers dancing in place, all moving around the still centre of
the Kerala, and even he shimmied in place, moved by sound. When the
drummers went into a final mad flurry to mark the end of the piece,
the soldiers cheered and shouted and leapt in the air. The singers
and musicians bowed deeply, smiling, and came forward to receive
the Kerala's congratulations. He conferred for a time with the lead
singer, talking to her as to an old friend. Ismail found himself in
something like a reception line gathered by the abbess, and he
nodded to the sweaty performers one by one as they passed. They
were young. Many different perfumes filled Ismail's nostrils,
jasmine, orange, sea spray, and his breathing swelled his chest.
The sea smell came in stronger on a breeze, from the sea itself
this time, though there had been a perfume like it. The sea lay
green and blue out there, like the road to everywhere.
The party began to swirl about the garden again, in
patterns determined by the Kerala's slow progress. Ismail was
introduced to a quartet of bankers, two Sikh and two Travancori,
and he listened to them discuss, in Persian to be polite to him,
the complicated situation in India and around the Indian Ocean and
the world more generally. Towns and harbours fought over, new towns
built in hitherto empty river mouths, loyalties of local
populations shifting, Muslim slavers in west Africa, gold in south
Africa, gold in Inka, the island west of Africa all these
things had been going on for years, but somehow it was different
now. Collapse of the old Muslim empires, the mushrooming of new
machines, new states, new religions, new continents, and all
emanating from here, as if the violent struggle within India was
vibrating change outwards in waves all the way around the world,
meeting again coming the other way.
Bhakta introduced another man to Ismail, and the two men
nodded to each other, bowing slightly. The man's name was Wasco,
and he was from the new world, the big island west of Firanja,
which the Chinese called Yingzhou. Wasco identified it as
Hodenosauneega, 'Meaning territories of the peoples of the Long
House,' he said in passable Persian. He represented the
Hodenosaunee League, Bhakta explained. He looked like a Siberian or
Mongolian, or a Manchu who did not shave his forehead. Tall,
hawk nosed, striking to the eye, even there in the intense
sunlight of the Kerala himself; he looked as if those isolated
islands on the other side of the world might have produced a more
healthy and vigorous race. No doubt sent by his people for that
very reason.
Bhakta left them, and Ismail said politely, 'I come from
Konstantiniyye. Do your people have music like what we heard?'
Wasco thought about it. 'We do sing and dance, but they
are done by all together, informally and by chance, if you see what
I am driving at. The drumming here was much more fluid and
complicated. Thick sound. I found it fascinating. I would like to
hear more of it, to see if I heard what I heard.' He waggled a
hand in a way Ismail didn't understand -- amazement, perhaps, at
the drummers' virtuosity.
'They play beautifully,' Ismail said. 'We have drummers
too, but these have taken drumming to a higher level.'
'Truly.'
'What about cities, ships, all that? Does your land have
a harbour like this one?' Ismail asked.
Wasco's expression of surprise looked just like anyone
else's, which, Ismail thought, made perfect sense, as one saw the
same look on the faces of babies just birthed. In fact, with his
fluent Persian, it was impressive to Ismail how immediately
comprehensible he was, despite his exotic home.
'No. Where I come from we do not gather in such numbers.
More people live around this bay than in all my country, I
think.'
Now Ismail was the surprised one. 'So few as that?'
'Yes. Although there are a lot of people here, I think.
But we live in a great forest, extremely thick and dense. The
rivers make the best ways. Until you people arrived, we hunted and
grew some crops, we made only what we needed, with no metal or
ships. The Muslims brought those to our cast coast, and set up
forts in a few harbours, in particular at the mouth of the East
River, and on Long Island. There were not so many of them, at
first, and we learned a lot from them that we put to use for
ourselves. But we have been stricken by sicknesses we never knew
before, and many have died, at the same time that many more Muslims
have come, bringing slaves from Africa to help them. But our land
is very big, and the coast itself, where the Muslims cluster, is
not very good land. So we trade with them, and even better, with
ships from here, when the Travancoris arrived. We were very happy
to see these ships, truly, because we were worried about the
Firanjis. We still are. They have lots of cannons, and they go
where they want, and tell us we do not know Allah, and that we
should pray to him, and so on. So we liked to see the coming of
other people, in good ships. People who were not Muslim.'
'Did the Travancoris attack the Muslims already
there?'
'Not yet. They landed at the mouth of the Mississippi, a
big river. It may be they will come to blows eventually. They both
are very well armed, and we are not, not yet.' He looked Ismail in
the eye and smiled cheerfully. 'I must remember you are Muslim
yourself, no doubt.'
Ismail said, 'I do not insist on it for others. Islam
allows you to choose.'
'Yes, they said that. But here in Travancore you see it
really happening. Sikh, Hindu, Africans, Japanese, you see them all
here. The Kerala does not seem to care. Or he likes it.'
'Hindus absorb all that touch them, they say.'
'That sounds all right to me,' said Wasco. 'Or in any case,
preferable to Allah at gunpoint. We're making our own ships now in
our great lakes, and soon we can come around Africa to you. Or, now
the Kerala is proposing to dig a canal through the desert of Sinai,
connecting the Mediterranean to the Red Sea, and giving us more
direct access to you. He proposes to conquer all Egypt to make this
possible. No, there is much talk to be made, many decisions to be
made. My league is very fond of leagues.'
Then Bhakta came by and took Ismail off again. 'You have
been honoured with an invitation to join the Kerala in one of the
sky chariots.'
'The floating bags?'
Bhakta smiled. 'Yes.'
'Oh joy.'
Following the hobbling abbess Ismail passed through
terraces each with its own perfume scenting it, through nutmeg,
lime, cinnamon, mint, rose, rising level by level in short stone
staircases, feeling as he went something like a step into some
higher realm, where both senses and emotions were keener: a faint
terror of the body, as the odours cast him farther and farther into
a higher state. His head whirled. He did not fear death, but his
body did not like the idea of what would happen to take him to that
final moment. He caught up to the abbess and walked by her, to
stabilize himself by her calm. By the way she went up the stairs he
saw that she was always in pain. And yet she never spoke of it. Now
she looked back down at the ocean, catching her breath, and put one
gnarled hand to Ismail's arm, and told him how glad she was that he
was there among then. How much they might accomplish together
working under the guidance of the Kerala, who was creating the
space for greatness to occur. They were going to change the world.
As she spoke Ismail reeled again on the scents in the air, he
seemed to catch sight of things to come, of the Kerala sending back
people and things from all over the world as he conquered one place
after another, sending back to the monastery books, maps,
instruments, medicines, tools, people with unusual diseases or new
skills, from west of the Urals and east of the Pamirs, from Burma
and Siam and the Malay Peninsula and Sumatra and Java, from the
east coast of Africa, Ismail saw a witch docter from
Madagascar showing him the nearly transparent wings of a kind of
bat, which allowed for a full examination of living veins and
arteries, at which point he would give the Kerala a complete
description of the circulation of the blood, and the Kerala would
be very pleased at this, and then Ismail saw a Chinese Sumatran
doctor showing him what the Chinese meant by qi and shen, which
turned out to be what Ismail had always called lymph, produced by
small glands under the arms, which might be affected by poultices
of steamed herbs and drugs, as the Chinese had always claimed, and
then he saw a group of Buddhist monks arranging charts of different
elements in different families, depending on chemical and physical
properties, all laid out in a very beautiful mandala, the subject
of endless discussions in reading rooms, workshops, foundries and
hospitals, everyone exploring even if they did not sail around the
world, even if they never left Travancore, all of them anxious to
have something interesting to tell the Kerala the next time he came
by -- not so the Kerala would reward them, though he would, but
because he would be so happy at the new information. There was a
look on his face everyone craved to see, and that was the whole
story of Travancore, right there.
They came to a broad terrace where the flying basket was
tethered. Already its huge silken bag was full of heated air, and
straining up in jerks against its anchor ropes. The bamboo wicker
basket was as big as a large carriage or a small pavilion; the
rigging connecting it to the bottom of the silk bag was a network
of lines, each slender, but clearly strong in the aggregate. The
silk of the bag was diaphanous. A coalfired enclosed brazier, with
a hand bellows affixed to its side, was bolted to a bamboo frame
affixed beneath the bag, just over head level when they stepped
through a carriage door up into the basket.
The Kerala, the singer, Bhakta and Ismail crowded in and
stood at the corners. Pyidaungsu looked in and said, 'Alas, it does
not look as if there is room for me, I will crowd you
uncomfortably; I will go up next time, regretful though I am to
have lost the opportunity.'
The ropes were cast off by the pilot and his passengers,
except for a single line, it was a nearly windless day, and this,
Ismail was told, was to be a controlled flight. They were to ascend
like a kite, the pilot explained, and then when they were near the
full extension of the line, they would shut the stove down, and
stabilize in that one spot like any other kite, hanging some
thousand hands over the landscape. The usual slight onshore
afternoon breeze would ensure that they would float inland, if the
line happened to part.
Up they rose. 'It is like Arjuna's chariot,' the Kerala
said to them, and they all nodded, eyes shining with excitement.
The singer was beautiful, the memory of her singing like a song in
the air around them; and the Kerala more beautiful still; and
Bhakta the most beautiful of all. The pilot pumped the bellows once
or twice. The wind whistled in the rigging.
From the air the world proved to be flat looking. It
extended a tremendous distance to the horizon -- green hills to the
northeast and south, and to the west the flat blue plate of the
sea, the sunlight on it gleaming like gold on blue ceramic. Things
down there were small but distinct. The trees were like green tufts
of wool. It looked like the landscapes painted in Persian
miniatures, spread out and laid in space below them, gorgeously
articulated. Fields of rice were banked and bordered by sinuous
lines of palm trees, and beyond them were orchards of small trees,
planted in rows and lines, looking like a tight weave of cloth, all
the way out to the dark green hills in the east. 'What kind of
trees are those?' Ismail asked.
The Kerala answered, for as became clear, he had directed
the establishment of most of the orchards they could see. 'They are
part of the city lands, and used to grow the sources of essential
oils that we trade for the goods that come in. You smelled some of
them on our walk to the basket. Root trees like vetiver, costus,
valerian and angelica, shrubs like keruda, lotes, kadam, parijat
and night queen. Grasses like cintronella, lemon grass and ginger
grass and palmarosa. Flowers, as you see, including tuberose,
champaca, roses, jasmine, frangipani. Herbs including peppermint,
spearmint, patchouli, artemesia. Then there, back in the woods
there, those are orchards of sandalwood and agarwood. All these are
bred, planted, grown, harvested, processed and bottled or bagged
for trade with Africa and Firanja and China and the new world,
where formerly they had no scents and no healing substances
anything like as powerful, and so are much amazed, and desire them
very much. And now I have people out scouring the world to find
more stock of various kind, to see what will grow here. Those that
prosper are cultivated, and their oils sold round the world. Demand
for them is so high it is hard to match it, and gold comes
flowing into Travancore as its wondrous scents perfume the whole
Earth.'
The basket turned as it came to the top of its anchor
rope, and below them the heart of the kingdom was revealed, the
city of Travancore as seen by the birds, or God. The land beside
the bay was covered with roofs, trees, roads, docks, all as small
as the toys of a princess, extending not as far as Konstantiniyye
would have, but big enough, and sprinkled by a veritable arboretum
of green trees, hardly displaced by the buildings and roads. Only
the docks area was more roof than tree.
Just above them floated a tapestry of crosshatched cloud,
moving inland on the wind. Off to sea a great line of tall white
marbled clouds sailed towards them. 'We'll have to get down before
too long,' the Kerala said to the pilot, who nodded and checked his
stove.
A flock of vultures pinioned about them curiously, and
the pilot shouted once at them, pulling a fowling gun out of a bag
on the inside of the basket. He had never seen it happen, he said,
but he had heard of a flock of birds pecking a bag right out of the
sky. Hawks, jealous of their territory, apparently; probably
vultures would not be so bold; but it would be a bad thing by which
to be surprised.
The Kerala laughed, looked at Ismail and gestured at the
colourful and fragrant fields. 'This is the world we want you to
help us make,' he said. 'We will go out into the world and plant
gardens and orchards to the horizons, we will build roads through
the mountains and across the deserts, and terrace the mountains and
irrigate the deserts until there will be garden everywhere, and
plenty for all, and there will be no more empires or kingdoms, no
more caliphs, sultans, emirs, khans or zamin dars, no more
kings or queens or princes, no more qadis or mullas or ulema, no
more slavery and no more usury, no more property and no more taxes,
no more rich and no more poor, no killing or maiming or torture or
execution, no more jailers and no more prisoners, no more generals,
soldiers, armies or navies, no more patriarchy, no more clans, no
more caste, no more hunger, no more suffering than what life brings
us for being born and having to die, and then we will see for the
first time what kind of creatures we really are.'
Chapter Three. Gold Mountain
In the twelfth year of the Xianfeng Emperor, rain
inundated Gold Mountain. It started raining in the third month of
the autumn, the usual start of the rainy season on this part of the
coast of Yingzhou, but then it never stopped raining until the
second month of the following spring. It rained every day for half
a year, and often a pounding, drenching rain, as if it were the
tropics. Before that winter was halfway over the great central
valley of Gold Mountain had flooded up and down its entire length,
forming a shallow lake fifteen hundred li long and three hundred li
wide. The water poured brownly between the green hills flanking the
delta, into the great bay and out of the Gold Gate, staining the
ocean the colour of mud all the way out to the Peng lai
Islands. The outflow ran hard both ebb and flood, but still this
was not enough to empty the great valley. The Chinese towns and
villages and farms on the flat valley floor were drowned to the
rooftops, and the entire population of the valley had to leave for
higher ground, in the coastal range or the foothills of the Gold
Mountains, or, for the most part, down to the city, fabled
Fangzhang. Those who lived on the eastern side of the central
valley tended to move up into the foothills, ascending the rail and
stage roads that ran up through apple orchards and vineyards,
overlooking the deep canyons that cut between the tablelands. Here
they ran into the large foothill population of Japanese.
Many of these Japanese had come in the diaspora, after
the Chinese armies had conquered Japan, in the Yung Cheng dynasty,
a hundred and twenty years before. They were the ones who had first
begun to grow rice in the central valley; but after only a
generation or two, Chinese immigration filled the valley as the
rains were now filling it, and most of the Japanese nisei and
sansei moved up into the foothills, looking for gold, or growing
grapes and apples. There they encountered a fair number of the old
ones, hidden in the foothills and struggling to survive a malaria
epidemic that recently had killed most of them off. The Japanese
got along with the survivors, and the other old ones that came from
the east, and together they resisted Chinese incursions into the
foothills in every way they could, short of insurrection; for over
the Gold Mountains lay high desolate akaline deserts, where nothing
could live. Their backs were to the wall.
So the arrival of so many Chinese refugee farming
families was no very happy event for those already there. The
foothills were composed of plateaux tilted up towards the high
mountains, and cut by very deep, rugged, heavily forested river
canyons. These manzanita choked canyons were impenetrable to
the Chinese authorities, and hidden in them were many Japanese
families, most of them panning for gold or working small diggings.
Chinese road building campaigns stuck to the plateaux for the
most part, and the canyons had remained substantially Japanese,
despite the presence of Chinese prospectors: a
Hokkaido--in exile, tucked between the Chinese valley and the
great desert of the natives. Now this world was filling with soaked
Chinese rice farmers.
Neither side liked it. By now bad relations between
Chinese and Japanese were as natural as between dog and cat. The
foothill Japanese tried to ignore the Chinese setting up refugee
camps by the all the stage and railway stations; the Chinese tried
to ignore the Japanese homesteads they were intruding on. Rice ran
low, tempers got short, and the Chinese authorities sent troops
into the area to keep order. The rain kept falling.
One group of Chinese walked out of the flooding on the
stage road that followed the course of Rainbow Trout River.
Overlooking the river's north bank were apple orchards and cattle
pasturage, mostly owned by Chinese in Fangzhang, but worked by
Japanese. This group of Chinese camped in one of the orchards, and
did what they could to construct shelter from the rain, which
continued to fall, day after day after day. They built a
pole framed barnlike building with a shingle roof, an open
fire at one end and mere sheets for walls; meagre protection, but
better than none. By day the men scrambled down the canyon walls to
fish in the roaring river, and others went into the forest to hunt
deer, shooting great numbers of them and drying their meat.
The matriarch of one of these families, Yao Je by name,
was frantic that her silkworms had been left behind on their farm,
in boxes tucked in the rafters of her filature. Her husband did not
think there was anything that could be done about it, but the
family employed a Japanese servant boy named Kiyoaki, who
volunteered to go back down to the valley and take their rowing
boat out on the first calm day, and recover the silkworms. His
master did not like the proposal, but his mistress approved of it,
as she wanted the silkworms. So one rainy morning Kiyoaki left to
try to return to their flooded farm, if he could.
He found the Yao family's rowing boat still tied to the
valley oak where they had left it. He untied it and rowed out over
what had been the eastern rice paddies of their farm, towards their
compound. A west wind churned up high waves, and both pushed him
back east. His palms were blistered by the time he coasted up to
the Yaos' inundated compound, scraped the flat bottom of the boat
over the outer wall, and tied it to the roof of the filature, the
tallest building on the farm. He climbed through a side window into
the rafters, and found the sheets of damp paper covered with
silkworm eggs, in their boxes filled with rocks and mulberry mulch.
He gathered all the sheets into an oilcloth bag and lowered them
out of the window into the rowing boat, feeling pleased.
Now rain was violently thrashing the surface of the
flood, and Kiyoaki considered spending the night in the attic of
the Yaos' house. But the emptiness of it frightened him, and for no
better reason than that, he decided to row back. The oilcloth would
protect the eggs, and he had been wet for so long that he was used
to it. He was like a frog hopping in and out of its pond, it was
all the same to him. So he got in the boat and began to row.
But now, perversely, the wind was from the east, blowing
up waves of surprising weight and power. His hands hurt, and the
boat occasionally brushed over drowned things: treetops, wiregraph
poles, perhaps other things, he was too jumpy to look. Dead men's
fingers! He could not see far in the growing gloom, and as night
fell he lost his feeling for what direction he was headed. The
rowing boat had a oiled canvas decking bunched in its bow,
and he pulled it back over the gunwales, tied it in place, got
under it and floated over the flood, lying in the bottom of the
boat and occasionally bailing with a can. It was wet, but it would
not founder. He let it bounce over the waves, and eventually fell
asleep.
He woke several times in the night, but after bailing he
always forced himself to sleep again. The rowing boat swirled and
rocked, but the waves never broke over it. If they did the boat
would founder and he would drown, but he avoided thinking about
that.
Dawn made it clear he had drifted west rather than east.
He was far out on the inland sea that the central valley had
become. A knot of valley oaks marked a small island of higher
ground that still stood above the flood, and he rowed towards
it.
As he was facing away from the new little island, he did
not see it well until he had thumped the bow onto it. Immediately
he discovered it was coated with a host of spiders, bugs, snakes,
squirrels, moles, rats, mice, raccoons and foxes, all leaping onto
the rowing boat at once, as representing the new highest ground. He
himself was the highest ground of all, and he was shouting in
dismay and slapping desperate snakes and squirrels and spiders off
him, when a young woman and baby leapt onto the boat like the rest
of the crowd of animals, except the girl pushed off from the tree
Kiyoaki had rowed against, weeping and crying loudly, 'They're
trying to cat her, they're trying to eat my baby!'
Kiyoaki was preoccupied by the scores of creatures still
crawling on him, to the point of nearly losing an oar over the
side. Eventually he had squished or brushed or thrown overboard all
the interlopers, and he replaced the oars in the rowlocks and rowed
swiftly away. The girl and ber baby sat on the boat deck, the girl
still whacking insects and spiders and shouting 'Ugh! Ugh! Ugh!'
She was Chinese.
The lowering grey clouds began to leak rain yet again.
They could see nothing but water in all directions, except for the
trees of the little island they had so hastily vacated.
Kiyoaki rowed east. 'You're going the wrong way,' the
girl complained.
'This is the way I came,' Kiyoaki said. 'The family that
employs me is there.'
The girl did not reply.
'How did you get on that island?'
Again she said nothing.
Having passengers made rowing harder, and the waves came
closer to breaking over the boat. Crickets and spiders continued to
leap around underfoot, and an opossum had wedged itself in the bow
under the decking. Kiyoaki rowed until his hands were bleeding, but
they never caught sight of land; it was raining so hard now that it
formed a kind of thick falling fog.
The girl complained, nursed her baby, killed insects.
'Row west,' she kept saying. 'The current will help you.'
Kiyoaki rowed cast. The boat jounced over the waves, and
from time to time they bailed it out. The whole world seemed to
have become a sea. Once Kiyoaki glimpsed a sight of the coastal
range through a rent in the low clouds to the west, much closer
than he would have expected or hoped. A current in the floodwaters
must have been carrying them west.
Near dark they came on another tiny tree island.
'It's the same one!' the young woman said.
'It just looks that way.'
The wind was rising again, like the evening delta breeze
they enjoyed so much during the hot dry summers. The waves were
getting higher and higher, slapping hard into the bow and splashing
over the canvas and in on their feet. Now they had to land, or they
would sink and drown.
So Kiyoaki landed the boat. Again a tide of animal and
insect life overran them. The Chinese girl cursed with surprising
fluency, beating the larger creatures away from her baby. The
smaller ones you just had to get used to. Up in the vast branches
of the valley oaks sat a miserable troop of snow monkeys, staring
down on them. Kiyoaki tied the boat to a branch and got off,
arranged a wet blanket on the squirming mud between two roots,
pulled the rowing boat's decking off, and draped it over the girl
and her baby, weighing it down as best he could with broken
branches. He crawled underneath the canvas with her, and they and
an entire menagerie of bugs and snakes and rodents settled in for
the long night. It was hard to sleep.
The next morning was as rainy as ever. The young woman
had put her baby between the two of them to protect her from the
rats. Now she nursed her. Under the canvas it was warmer than
outside. Kiyoaki wished he could start a fire to cook some
snakes or squirrels, but nothing was dry. 'We might as well get
going,' he said.
They went out into the chill drizzle and got back in the
boat. As Kiyoaki cast off about ten of the snow monkeys leaped down
through the branches and climbed into the boat with them. The girl
shrieked and pulled her shirt over ber baby, huddling over it and
staring at the monkeys. They sat there like passengers, looking
down or off into the rain, pretending to be thinking about
something else. She threatened one and it shrank back.
'Leave them alone,' Kiyoaki said. The monkeys were
Japanese; the Chinese didn't like them, and complained about their
presence on Yingzhou.
They spun over the great inland sea. The young woman and
her baby were dotted with spiders and fleas, as if they were dead
bodies. The monkeys began to groom them, eating some insects and
throwing others overboard.
'My name is Kiyoaki.'
'I am Peng ti,' the young Chinese woman said,
brushing things off the babe and ignoring the monkeys.
Rowing hurt the blisters on Kiyoaki's hands, but after a
while the pain would subside. He headed west, giving in to the
current that had already taken them so far that way.
Out of the drizzle appeared a small sailing boat. Kiyoaki
shouted, waking the girl and baby, but the men on the sailing boat
had already spotted them, and they sailed over.
There were two sailors on board, two Japanese men.
Peng ti watched them with narrowed eyes.
One told the castaways to climb into their boat. 'But
tell the monkeys to stay there,' he said with a laugh.
Peng ti passed her baby up to them, then hauled
herself over the gunwale.
'You're lucky they're just monkeys,' the other one said.
'Up north valley, Black Fort is high ground for a lot of country
that hadn't been cleared, and the animals that swam onto it were
more than you see here in your rice paddies. They had closed the
gates but walls were nothing much to the bears, brown bears and
gold bears, and they were shooting them when the magistrate ordered
them to stop, because it was just going to use up all their
ammunition and then they'd still have a whole town of bears. And
the giant gold bears opened the gates and in come wolves, elk, the
whole damn Hsu Fu walking the streets of Black Fort, and the people
all locked up in their attics waiting it out.' The men laughed with
pleasure at the thought.
'We're hungry,' Peng ti said.
'You look it,' they said.
'We were going east,' Kiyoaki mentioned.
'We're going west.'
'Good,' Peng ti said.
It continued to rain. They passed another knot of trees
on an embankment just covered by water, and sitting in the branches
like the monkeys were a dozen soaked and miserable Chinese men,
very happy to leap on the sailboat. They had been there six days,
they said. The fact that Japanese had rescued them did not seem to
register with them one way or the other.
Now the sailing boat and rowing boat were carried on a
current of brown water, between misted green hills.
'We're going over to the city,' their tillerman said.
'It's the only place where the docks are still secure. Besides we
want to get dry and have a big dinner in Japantown.'
Across the rain spattered brown water they sailed.
The delta and its diked islands were all under the flood, it was
all a big brown lake with occasional lines of treetops sticking out
of it, giving the sailors a fix on their position, apparently. They
pointed at certain lines and discussed them with great animation,
their fluid Japanese a great contrast to their rough Chinese.
Eventually they came into 'a narrow strait between tall
hillsides, and as the wind was shooting up this strait -- the Inner
Gate, Kiyoaki presumed -- they let down the sail and rode the
current, shifting their rudder to keep in the fast part of it,
which curved with the bend around the tall hills to the south,
beyond which they were through the narrows and thrust out onto the
broad expanse of Golden Bay, now a rocking foam streaked brown bay,
ringed by green hills that disappeared into a ceiling of low grey
cloud. As they tacked across to the city the clouds thinned in a
few bands over the tall ridge of the northern peninsula, and weak
light fell onto the hive of buildings and streets covering the
peninsula, all the way up to the peak of Mount Tamalpi,
turning certain neighbourhoods white or silver or pewter, amidst
the general grey. It was an awesome sight.
The western side of the bay just north of the Gold Gate
is broken by several peninsulas extending into the bay, and these
peninsulas were covered with buildings too, indeed among the city's
busiest districts, as they formed the capes of three little harbour
bays. The middle of these three was the largest, the commercial
harbour, and the peninsula on its south side also served the
Japantown, tucked among the warehouses and a working neighbourhood
behind them. Here, as their sailors had said, the floating docks
and the wharves were intact and functioning normally, as if the
central valley were not completely flooded. Only the
dirt brown water of the bay revealed that anything was
different.
As they approached the docks, the monkeys on the rowing
boat began to look agitated. It was a case of from flood to frying
pan for them, and eventually one slipped overboard and struck out
swimming for an island to the south, and all the others immediately
followed with a splash, picking up their conversation among
themselves where they had left off.
'That's why they call it Monkey Island,' their pilot
said.
He brought them into the middle harbour. The men on the
dock included a Chinese magistrate, who looked down and said,
'Still flooded out there I see.'
'Still flooded and still raining.'
'People must be getting hungry.'
'Yes.'
The Chinese men climbed onto the dock, and thanked the
sailors, who got out with Kiyoaki and Peng ti and the baby.
The tillerman joined them as they followed the magistrate to the
Great Valley Refugee Office, set up in the customs building at the
back of the dock. There they were registered -- their names, place
of residence before the flood, and the whereabouts of their
families and neighbours, if known, all recorded. The clerks gave
them chits that would allow them to claim beds in the immigration
control buildings, located on the steep sided big island out
in the bay.
The tillerman shook his head. These big buildings had
been built to quarantine non Chinese immigrants to Gold
Mountain, about fifty years before. They were surrounded by fences
tipped with barbed wire, and contained big dormitories with men's
and women's sides. Now they housed some of the stream of refugees
flowing down into the bay on the flood, mostly displaced valley
Chinese, but the keepers of the place had retained the prison
attitude they had had with the immigrants, and the valley refugees
there were complaining bitterly and doing their best to get cleared
to move in with local relatives, or to relocate up or down the
coast, or even to return to the flooded valley and wait around the
edges until the water receded. But there had been outbreaks of
cholera reported, and the governor of the province had declared a
state of emergency that allowed him to act directly in the
Emperor's interests: martial law was in effect, enforced by army
and navy.
The tillerman, having explained this, said to Kiyoaki and
Peng ti, 'You can stay with us if you want. We stay at a
boarding house in Japantown, it's clean and cheap. They'll put you
up on credit if we say you're good for it.'
Kiyoaki regarded Peng ti, who looked down. Snake or
spider: refugee housing or Japantown.
'We'll come with you,' she said. 'Many thanks.'
The street leading inland from the docks to the high
central district of the city was lined on both sides by restaurants
and hotels and small shops, the fluid calligraphy of Japanese as
common as the blockier Chinese ideograms. Side streets were tight
alleyways, the peaked rooftops curving up into the rain until the
buildings almost met overhead. People wore oilcloth ponchos or
jackets, and carried black or colourful print umbrellas, many very
tattered by now. Everyone was wet, heads lowered and shoulders
hunched, and the middle of the street was like an open stream,
bouncing brownly to the bay. The green hills rising to the west of
this quarter of the city were bright with tile roofs, red and green
and a vivid blue: a prosperous quarter, despite the Japantown at
its foot. Or, perhaps, because of it. Kiyoaki had been taught to
call the blue of those tiles Kyoto blue.
They walked through alleys to a big merchant house and
chandlery in the warren of Japantown, and the two Japanese men --
the older named Gen, they learned introduced the young
castaways to the proprietress of a boarding house next door. She
was a toothless old Japanese woman, in a simple brown kimono, with
a shrine in her hallway and reception room. They stepped in ber
door and began to shed their wet raingear, and she regarded
them with a critical eye. 'Everyone so wet these days,' she
complained. 'You look as if they pulled you off the bottom of the
bay. Chewed by crabs.'
She gave them dry clothes, and had theirs sent to a
laundry. There were women's and men's wings to her establishment,
and Kiyoaki and Peng ti were assigned mats, then fed a hot
meal of rice and soup, followed by cups of warm sake. Gen was
paying for them, and he waved off their thanks in the usual brusque
Japanese manner. 'Payment on return home,' Gen said. 'Your families
will be happy to repay me.'
Neither of the castaways had much to say to that. Fed,
dry; there was nothing left but to go to their rooms and sleep as
if felled.
Next day Kiyoaki woke to the sound of the chandler next
door, shouting at an assistant. Kiyoaki looked out of the window of
his room into a window of the chandlery, and saw the angry chandler
hit the unfortunate youth on the side of the head with an abacus,
the beads rattling back and forth.
Gen had come in the room, and he regarded the scene in
the next building impassively. 'Come on,' he said to Kiyoaki. 'I've
got some errands to do, it'll be a way to show you some of the
city.'
Off they went, south on the big coastal street fronting
the bay, connecting all of the smaller harbours facing the big bay
and the islands in it. The southernmost harbour was tighter than
the one fronting Japantown, its bay a forest of masts and
smokestacks, the city behind and above it jammed together in a
great mass of three--and four storey buildings, all wooden
with tile roofs, crammed together in what Gen said was the usual
Chinese city style, and running right down to the high tide
line, in places even built out over the water. This compact mass of
buildings covered the whole end of the peninsula, its streets
running straight east and west from the bay to the ocean, and north
and south until they ended in parks and promenades high over the
Gold Gate. The strait was obscured by a fog that floated in over
the yellow spill of floodwater pouring out to sea; the
yellow brown plume was so extensive that there was no blue
ocean to be seen. On the ocean side of the point lay the long
batteries of the city defences, concrete fortresses which Gen said
commanded the strait and the waters outside it for up to fifty li
offshore.
Gen sat on the low wall of one of the promenades overlooking the
strait. He waved a hand to the north, where streets and rooftops
covered everything they could see.
'The greatest harbour on Earth. The greatest city in the
world, some say.'
'It's big, that's for sure. I didn't know it would be so
. .
'A million people here now, they say. And more coming all
the time. They just keep building north, on up the peninsula.'
Across the strait, on the other hand, the southern
peninsula was a waste of marshes and bare steep hills. It looked
very empty compared to the city, and Kiyoaki remarked on it.
Gen shrugged: 'Too marshy, I guess, and too steep for
streets. I suppose they'll get to it eventually, but it's better
over here.'
The islands dotting the bay were occupied by the
compounds of the imperial bureaucrats. Out on the biggest island
the governor's mansion was roofed with gold. The brown
foam streaked surface of the water was dotted with little bay
boats, mostly sail, some smoking two strokes. Little marinas
of square houseboats were tucked against the islands. Kiyoaki
surveyed the scene happily. 'Maybe I'll move here. There must be
jobs.'
'Oh yeah. Down at the docks, unloading the freighters --
get a room at the boarding house -- there's lots of work. In the
chandlery too.'
Kiyoaki recalled his awakening. 'Why was that man so
angry?'
Gen frowned. 'That was unfortunate. Tagomi san is a
good man, he doesn't usually beat his help, I assure you. But he's
frustrated. We can't get the authorities to release supplies of
rice to feed the people stranded in the valley. The chandler is
very high in the Japanese community here, and he's been trying for
months now. He thinks the Chinese bureaucrats, over on the island
there,' gesturing, 'are hoping that most of the people inland will
starve.'
'But that's crazy! Most of them are Chinese.'
'Yeah sure, a lot are Chinese, but it would mean even
more Japanese.'
'How so?'
Gen regarded him. 'There are more of us in the central
valley than there are Chinese. Think about it. It may not be so
obvious, because the Chinese are the only ones allowed to own land,
and so they run the rice paddies, especially where you came from,
over east side. But up valley, down valley -- it's mostly
Japanese at the ends, and in the foothills, the coastal range, even
more so. We were here first, you understand? Now comes this big
flood, people are driven away, flooded out, starving. The
bureaucrats are thinking, when it's over and the land reemerges,
assuming it will some day, if most of the Japanese and natives have
died of hunger, then new immigrants can be sent in to take over the
valley. And they'll all be Chinese.'
Kiyoaki didn't know what to say to this.
Gen stared at him curiously. He seemed to like what he
saw: 'So, you know, Tagomi has been trying to organize private
relief, and we've been taking it inland on the flood. But it isn't
going well, and it's been expensive, and so the old man is getting
testy. His poor workers are paying for it.' Gen laughed.
'But you rescued those Chinese stuck in the trees.'
'Yeah, yeah. Our job. Our duty. Good must result from
good, eh? That's what the old woman boarding you says. Of course
she's always getting taken.'
They regarded a new tongue of fog licking into the
strait. Rain clouds on the horizon looked like a great treasure
fleet arriving. A black broom of rain already swept the desolate
southern peninsula.
Gen clapped him on the shoulder in a friendly way. 'Come
on, I have to get her some stuff at the store.'
He led Kiyoaki up to a tram station, and they got on the
next tram that ran up the western side of the city, overlooking the
ocean. Up streets and down, past shady residential districts, then
another government district, high on the slopes overlooking the
stained ocean, wide esplanades lined with cherry trees; then
another fortress. The hilly neighbourhoods north of these guns held
many of the city's richest mansions, Gen said. They gazed at some
of them from the tram as it squeaked past. From the tops of the
precipitous streets they could see the temples on the summit of
Mount Tamalpi. Then down into a valley, off that tram, and east on
another one, across the peninsula and back to Japantown, with bags
of food from a market for the proprietress of the boarding
house.
Kiyoaki looked in the women's wing to see how
Peng ti and her baby were doing. She was sitting in a window
embrasure holding the child, looking blank and desolate. She had
not gone to find any Chinese relatives, or to seek help from the
Chinese authorities, not that there appeared to be much help from
that direction; but she seemed not at all interested. Staying with
the Japanese, as if in hiding. But she spoke no Japanese, and that
was all they used here, unless they thought to speak to her
directly in Chinese.
'Come out with me,' he said to her in Chinese. 'I have
some money from Gen for the tram, we can see the Gold Gate.'
She hesitated, then agreed. Kiyoaki led her onto the tram
system he had just learned, and they went down to the park
overlooking the strait. The fog had almost burned off, and the next
line of storm clouds were not yet arrived, and the spectacle of the
city and the bay shone in wet blinking sunlight. The brown flood
continued to pour out to sea, the scraps and lines of foam showing
how fast the current was; it must have been ebb tide. That was
every rice paddy in the central valley, scoured away and flushed
out into the big ocean. Inland everything would have to be built
anew. Kiyoaki said something to this effect, and a flash of anger
crossed Peng ti's face, quickly suppressed.
'Good,' she said. 'I never want to see that place
again.'
Kiyoaki regarded ber, shocked. She could not have been
more than about sixteen. What about her parents, her family? She
wasn't saying, and he was too polite to ask.
Instead they sat in the rare sun, watching the bay. The
babe whimpered, and unobtrusively Peng ti nursed it. Kiyoaki
watched her face and the tidal race in the Gold Gate, thinking
about the Chinese, their implacable bureaucracy, their huge cities,
their rule of Japan, Korea, Mindanao, Aozhou, Yingzhou and
Inka.
'What's your baby's name?' Kiyoaki said.
'Hu Die,' the girl said. 'It means '
'Butterfly,' Kiyoaki said, in Japanese. 'I know.' He
fluttered with a hand, and she smiled and nodded.
Clouds obscured the sun again, and it cooled rapidly in
the onshore breeze. They took the tram back to Japantown.
At the boarding house Peng ti went to the women's
wing, and as the men's wing was empty, Kiyoaki entered the
chandlery next door, thinking to inquire about a job. The shop on
the first floor was deserted, and he heard voices on the second
floor, so he went up the stairs.
Here were the accounting rooms and the offices. The
chandler's big office door was closed, but voices came
through it. Kiyoaki approached, heard men speaking Japanese:
' I don't see how we could coordinate our efforts, how we
could be sure it was all going off at once '
The door flew open and Kiyoaki was seized by the neck and
dragged into the room. Eight or nine Japanese men glared at him,
all seated around one elderly bald foreigner, in the chair of the
honoured guest. The chandler roared, 'Who let him in here!'
'There's no one downstairs,' Kiyoaki said. 'I was just
looking for someone to ask for a '
'How long were you listening?' The old man looked as if
he was ready to hit Kiyoaki with his abacus, or worse. 'How dare
you eavesdrop on us, you could get rocks tied to your ankles and
thrown in the bay for that!'
'He's just one of the folks we plucked out of the
valley,' Gen said from a corner. 'I've been getting to know him.
Might as well enlist him, since he's here. I've already vetted him.
He hasn't got anything better to do. In fact he'll be good.'
While the old man spluttered some objection, Gen got up
and grabbed Kiyoaki by the shirt front.
'Get someone to lock the front door,' he told one of the
younger men there, who left quickly. Gen turned to Kiyoaki:
'Listen, youth. We're trying to help the Japanese here, as I told
you down at the Gate.'
'That's good.'
'We're working to free the Japanese, actually. Not only
here, but in Japan itself.'
Kiyoaki gulped, and Gen shook him. 'That's right, Japan
itself! A war of independence for the old country, and here too.
You can work for us, and join one of the greatest things possible
for a Japanese. Are you in or are you out?'
'In!' Kiyoaki said. 'I'm in, of course! just tell me what
I can do!'
'You can sit down and shut up,' Gen said. 'First of all.
Listen and then you'll be told more.'
The elderly foreigner seated in the chair of the honoured
guest asked a question in his language.
Another of the men waved Kiyoaki aside, answered in the
same language. In Japanese he said to Kiyoaki, 'This is Dr Ismail,
visiting us from Travancore, the capital of the Indian League. He's
here to help us organize our resistance to the Chinese. If you are
to stay in this meeting, you must swear never to tell anyone what
you see and hear. It means you are committed to the cause without a
chance of backing out. If we find out you've ever told anyone about
this, you'll be killed, do you understand?'
' I understand,' Kiyoaki said. 'I'm in, I said. You can
proceed with no fear from me. I've worked like a slave for the
Chinese in the valley, all my life.'
The men in the room stared at him; only Gen grinned at
the spectacle of such a youth using the phrase 'all my life'.
Kiyoaki saw that and blushed hotly. But it was true no matter how
old he was. He set his jaw and sat on the floor in the corner by
the door.
The men resumed their conversation. They were asking
questions of the foreigner, who watched them with a birdlike blank
expression, fingering a white moustache, until the man translating
spoke to him, in a fluid language that did not seem to have enough
sounds to create all the words; but the old foreigner understood
him, and replied to the questions carefully and at length, taking
pauses every few sentences to let the young translator speak in
Japanese. He was obviously very used to working with a
translator.
'He says, his country was under the yoke of the Mughals
for many centuries, and finally they freed themselves in a military
campaign run by their Kerala. The methods used have been
systematized, and can be taught. The Kerala himself was
assassinated, about twenty years ago. Dr Ismail says this was a, a
disaster beyond telling, you can see it still upsets him to talk
about it. But the only cure is to go on and do what the Kerala
would have wanted them to do. And he wanted everyone everywhere
free of all empires. So Travancore itself is now part of an Indian
League, which has its disagreements, even violent disagreements,
but mostly they work out their differences as equals. He says this
kind of league was first developed here in Yingzhou, out in the
east, among the Hodenosaunee natives. The Firanjis have taken most
of the cast coast of Yingzhou, as we have the west, and many of the
old ones out there have died of disease, as here, but the
Hodenosaunee still hold the area around the great lakes, and the
Travancoris have helped them to fight the Muslims. He says
that is the key to success; those fighting the great empires have
to help each other. He says they have helped some Africans as well,
down in the south, a King Moshesh of the Basutho tribe. The doctor
here travelled there himself, and arranged for aid to the Basuthos
that allowed them to defend themselves from Muslim slave traders
and the Zulu tribe as well. Without their help the Basuthos
probably wouldn't have survived.'
'Ask him what he means when he says help.'
The foreign doctor nodded when the question was put to
him. He used fingers to enumerate his answer.
'He says, first, they help by teaching the system their
Kerala worked out, for organizing a fighting force, and fighting
armies when those armies are much bigger. Then second, they can in
some instances help with weapons. They will smuggle them in for us,
if they think we are serious. And third, rare but possible, they
can join the fight, if they think it will turn the tide.'
'They fought Muslims, and so do the Chinese. Why should
they help Us?'
' He says, good question. He says, it's a matter of
keeping a balance, and of setting the two great powers against each
other. The Chinese and the Muslims are fighting each other
everywhere, even in China itself, where there are Muslim
rebellions. But right now the Muslims in Firanja and Asia are
splintered and weak, they are always fighting each other, even here
in Yingzhou. Meanwhile China continues to fatten on its colonies
here and around the Dahai. Even though the Qing bureaucracy is
corrupt and inefficient, their manufacturers are always busy, and
gold keeps coming, from here and from Inka. So no matter how
inefficient they are, they keep getting richer. At this point, he
says, the Travancoris are interested in keeping China from becoming
so strong they take over the whole world.'
One of the Japanese men snorted. 'No one can take over
the world,' he said. 'It's too big.'
The foreigner inquired what had been said, and the
translator translated for him. Dr Ismail raised a finger as he
heard it, and replied.
'He says, that may have been true before, but now, with
steamships, and communication by qi, and trade and travel
everywhere by ocean, and machines exerting several thousandcamels
of power, it could be that some dominant country could get an
advantage and keep growing. There is a kind of, what, multiplying
power to power. So that it's best to try to keep any one country
from getting powerful enough to start that process. It was Islam
that looked to be taking over the world for a while, he says,
before their Kerala went at the heart of the old Muslim empires and
broke them. It could be that China needs a similar treatment, and
then there will be no empires, and people can do as they choose,
and form leagues with whoever helps them.'
'But how can we stay in contact with them, on the other
side of the world?'
'He agrees it is not easy. But steamships are fast. It
can be done. They have done it in Africa, and in Inka. Qi wires can
be strung very quickly between groups.'
They went on, the questions becoming more practical and
detailed, losing Kiyoaki, as he didn't know where many of the
places mentioned were: Basutho, Nsara, Seminole and so on.
Eventually Dr Ismail appeared to tire, and they ended the meeting
with tea. Kiyoaki helped Gen pour cups and pass them around, and
then Gen took him downstairs and reopened the chandlery.
'You almost got me in trouble there,' he told Kiyoaki,
'and yourself too. You'll have to work hard for us to make up for
scaring me that bad.'
'Sorry -- I will. Thanks for helping me.'
'Oh that poisonous feeling. No thanks. You do your job, I
do mine.'
'Right.'
'Now, the old man will take you in at the chandlery here,
and you can live next door. He'll hit you with his abacus, as you
saw. But your main job will be running messages for us and the
like. If the Chinese get wind of what we're doing, it will get
ugly, I warn you. It will be war, do you understand? It may be a
secret war, at night, in the alleyways and out on the bay. Do you
understand?'
'I understand.'
Gen regarded him. 'We'll see. First thing, we'll go back
into the valley and get the word into the foothills, to some
friends of mine. Then back to the city, to work here.'
'Whatever you say.'
An assistant gave Kiyoaki a tour of the chandlery, which
he was soon to know so well. After that he went back to the
boarding house next door. Peng ti was helping the old woman
chop vegetables; Hu Die was sunning in a laundry basket. Kiyoaki
sat next to the baby, entertaining it with a finger and thinking
things over. He watched Peng ti, learning the Japanese words
for the vegetables. She didn't want to go back to the valley
either. The old woman spoke pretty good Chinese, and the two women
were talking, but Peng ti wasn't telling her any more about
her past than she had told Kiyoaki. It was warm in the kitchen.
Rain was coming down again outside. The baby smiled at him, as if
to reassure him. As if telling him that it would be all right.
The next time they were down at Gold Gate Park, looking
at the brown flood still pouring, he sat by Peng ti on a
bench. 'Listen,' he said, 'I'm going to stay here in the city. I'll
go back out to the valley on a trip, and get Madam Yao's silkworms
to her, but I'm going to live here.'
She nodded. 'Me too.' She waved at the bay. 'How could
you not?' She picked up Hu Die and held her up in the air, face out
towards the bay, and turned her around to face the four winds.
'This is your new home, Hu Die! This is where you are going to grow
up!' Hu Die goggled at the view.
Kiyoaki laughed. 'Yes. She will like it here. But listen,
Peng ti, I'm going to be . . .' He considered how to say it.
'I'm going to work for Japan. Do you understand?'
'No.'
'I'm going to work for Japan, against China.'
'I see.'
'I'm going to be working against China.'
Her jaw clenched. She said harshly, 'Do you think I
care?' She looked across the bay to the Inner Gate, where brown
water split the green hills. 'I'm so glad to be out of there.' She
looked him in the eye, and he felt his heart jump. 'I'll help
you.'
Chapter Four. Black Clouds
Because China's emerging empire was now chiefly maritime,
its shipping again became the biggest in the world. The emphasis
was on carrying capacity, and so the typical Chinese fleet of the
early modern period was very big, and slow. Speed was not a
consideration. This made difficulties for them later, in naval
disputes with the Indians and with the Muslims of Africa, the
Mediterranean and Firanja. In the Mediterranean, the Islamic Sea,
Muslims developed ships that were smaller but much faster and
nimbler than their Chinese contemporaries, and in several decisive
naval encounters of the tenth and eleventh centuries, Muslim fleets
defeated larger Chinese fleets, preserving the balance of power and
preventing Qing China from achieving world hegemony. Indeed Muslim
privateering in the Dahai became a major source of revenue to
Islamic governments, and a source of friction between Islamic and
Chinese, one of the many factors leading to war. In fact, with the
sea far surpassing land as a means of commercial and military
travel, the superior speed and manoeuvrability of Muslim ships was
one of the advantages they held which allowed them to challenge
Chinese sea power.
The development of steam power and metal hulls in
Travancore was quickly taken up by both of the other major Old
World hegemons, but its lead in this technology and others allowed
the Indian League also to compete with the larger rivals on both
sides of it.
Thus the twelfth and thirteenth Muslim centuries, or the
Qing dynasty in China, was a period of rising competition
between the three major Old World cultures, to dominate and extract
the wealth of the New World, Aozhou, and the hinterlands of the Old
World, now being fully occupied and exploited.
The problem was that the stakes became too high. The two
biggest empires were both the strongest and the weakest at the same
time. The Qing dynasty continued to grow to the south, north, in
the New World, and inside itself. Meanwhile Islam controlled a huge
part of the Old World, and the eastern coasts of the New as well.
Yingzhou had a Muslim east coast, the League of Tribes in the
middle, Chinese settlements in the west, and new Travancori trading
ports. Inka was a battleground between Chinese, Travancori and the
Muslims of west Africa.
So the world was fractured into the two big old hegemons,
China and Islam, and the two new and smaller leagues, the Indian
and the Yingzhou. Chinese ocean trade and conquest slowly extended
their hegemony over the Dahai, settling Aozhou, the west coasts of
Yingzhou and Inka, and making inroads by sea in many other places;
becoming the Middle Kingdom in fact as well as by name, the centre
of the world by sheer numbers alone, as well as by the new power of
its navies. A danger to all the other peoples on Earth, in fact,
despite the various problems in the Qing bureaucracy.
At the same time the Dar al Islam kept spreading,
through all Africa, the east coasts of the New World, across
central Asia, and even into India, where it had never really left,
and into southeast Asia as well, even onto the isolated west coast
of Aozhou.
And in the middle, caught between these two expansions,
so to speak, was India. Travancore took the lead here, but the
Punjab, Bengal, Rajistan, all the other states of the subcontinent
were active and prospering at home and abroad, in turmoil and
conflict, always at odds, and yet free of emperors and caliphs, and
in their ferment the scientific leaders of the world, with trading
posts on every continent, constantly in opposition against the
hegemons, the ally of anyone against Islam, and often against the
Chinese, with whom they kept a most uneasy relationship, both
fearing them and needing them; but as the decades went by, and the
old Muslim empires showed more and more aggression to the cast,
across Transoxiana and into all north Asia,
More and more inclined to court China, as a counterweight,
trusting the Himalaya and the great jungles of Burma to keep them
out from under the big umbrella of Chinese patronage.
Thus it was that the Indian states were often uneasily
allied with China in hope of aid against their ancient foe Islam.
So that when Islam and the Chinese finally fell into active war,
first in central Asia, then all over the world, Travancore and the
Indian League were pulled into it, and Muslim Hindu violence
began yet another deadly round.
It began in the twenty first year of the Kuang Hsu
Emperor, the last of the Qing dynasty, when south China's Muslim
enclaves all revolted at once. The Manchu banners were sent south
and the rebellion put down, more or less, over the course of the
next several years. But the suppression may have worked too well,
for the Muslims of west China had been chafing under Qing military
rule for many generations, and with their fellow believers to the
east being exterminated, it became a matter of jihad or death. So
they revolted, out in the vast empty deserts and mountains of
central Asia, and the brown towns in their green valleys quickly
turned red.
The Qing government, corrupt but massively entrenched,
massively wealthy, made its move against its Muslim rebellions by
initiating another campaign of conquest, west across Asia. This
succeeded for a time, because there was no strong state in the
abandoned centre of the world to oppose them. But eventually it
triggered a defensive jihad from the Muslims of west Asia, whom
nothing would have united at that point except for the threat of
Chinese conquest.
This unintended consolidation of Islam was quite an
accomplishment. Wars between the remnants of the Safavid and
Ottoman empires, between Shiite and Sunni, Sufi and Wahhabi, the
Firanji states and the Maghrib, had been continuous throughout the
period of consolidation of states and boundaries, and even with
sovereign borders more or les fixed, except for ongoing struggles
here and there, they were not initially in a position to respond as
a civilization to the threat from China.
But when threatened by a Chinese expansion across all
Asia, the fractured Islamic states pulled together, and began to
fight back as a united force. A collision that had been building
for centuries now came to a head: for both of the big old
civilizations, global hegemony or complete annihilation were
thinkable possibilities. The stakes could not be higher.
The Indian League tried at first to remain neutral, as
did the Hodenosaunee. But the war drew them in too, when Islamic
invaders crossed into north India, as they had so many times
before, and conquered it south to the Deccan, across Bengal and
down into Burma. Similarly, Muslim armies began to conquer Yingzhou
east to west, attacking both the Hodenosaunee League and the
Chinese in the west. All the world descended into this realm of
conflict together.
And so the long war came.
'China is indestructible, there are too many of us. Fire, flood,
famine, war -- they're like pruning a tree. Branches cut to
stimulate new life. The tree keeps growing.'
Major Kuo was feeling expansive. It was dawn, the Chinese
hour. Early light illuminated the Muslim outposts and put the sun
in their eyes, so that they were wary of snipers, and bad at it
themselves. Sunset was their hour. Call to prayer, sniper fire,
sometimes a rain of artillery shells. Best stay in the trenches at
sunset, or in the caves below them.
But now they had the sun on their side. Sky frost blue,
standing around rubbing gloved hands together, tea and cigarettes,
the low whump of cannon to the north. Rumbling for two weeks now.
Preparation for another big assault, possibly, perhaps even the
breakout spoken of for so many years -- so many that it had become
a catchword for something that would never happen -- 'when the
breakout comes' as 'when pigs fly' or the like. So perhaps not.
Nothing they could see would tell them one way or
another. Out in the middle of the Gansu Corridor, the vast
mountains to the south and the endless deserts to the north were
not visible. It looked like the steppes, or it had, before the war.
Now the whole width of the corridor, from mountains to desert, and
the whole length, from Ningxia to jiayuguan, was torn to mud. The
trenches had moved back and forth, li by li, for over sixty years.
In that time every blade of grass and clod of dirt had been blasted
into the sky more than once. What remained was a kind of disordered
black ocean, ringed and ridged and cratered. As if someone had
tried to replicate in mud the surface of the moon. Every spring
weeds made brave efforts to return, and failed. The town of Ganzhou
had once been near this very spot, paralleling the jo River; now
there was no sign of either. Land pulverized to bedrock. Ganzhou
had been home to a thriving Sino--Muslim culture, so this wasteland
they observed, stark in dawn light, was a perfect ideograph of the
long war.
The sound of the big guns began behind them. The shells
from the latest guns were cast into space, and fell two hundred li
away. The sun rose higher. They retreated into the subterranean
realm of black mud and wet planks which was their home. Trenches,
tunnels, caves. Many caves held Buddhas, usually in his adamant
posture, hand out like a traffic policeman. Water at the bottom of
the lowest trenches, after the night's heavy rain.
Down in the communications cave the wiregraph operator
had received orders. General attack to commence in two days.
Assault all the way across the corridor. An attempt to end the
stalemate, or so Iwa speculated. Cork bunged out of its hole. Onto
the steppes and westward ho! Of course the lead point of the
breakout was the worst place to be, Iwa noted, but with only his
usual academic interest. Once at the front it could not really get
any worse. It would be parsing degrees of the absolute, for they
were already in hell and dead men, as Major Kuo reminded them with
every toast of their rakshi: 'We are dead men! A toast to Lord
Death by--gradations!'
So now Bai and Kuo merely nodded: worst place, yes, that
was where they were always sent, where they had spent the last five
years, or, seen in a larger temporal perspective, their whole
lives. Finishing his tea, Iwa said, 'It is bound to be very
interesting.'
He liked to read the wiregrams and newspapers and try to
work out what was going on. 'Look at this,' he would say, scanning
papers as they lay in their bunks. 'The Muslims have been kicked
off Yingzhou. Twenty year campaign.' Or: 'Big battle at sea,
two hundred ships sunk! Only twenty of them ours, but ours are
bigger, admittedly. North Dahai, water zero degrees, ouch that's
cold, glad I'm not a sailor!' He kept notes and drew maps; he was a
scholar of the war. The appearance of the wireless had pleased him
greatly, he had spent hours in the comm cave talking with other
enthusiasts around the globe, 'Big bounce in the qisphere
tonight, I heard from a guy in South Africa! Bad news though,'
marking up his maps, 'he said the Muslims have retaken all the
Sahel and have conscripted everyone in west Africa as slave
soldiers.' He considered the voices wafting out of the darklight to
be unreliable informants, but no more so than the official
communiques from headquarters, which were mostly propaganda, or
lies designed to deceive enemy spies. 'Look at this,' he would
scoff as he lay reading in his bunk. 'It says they're rounding up
all the Jews and Zotts and Christians and Armenians and killing
them. Subjected to medical experimentation ... blood replaced by
mules' blood to see how long they will live ... who thinks up these
things?'
'Maybe it's true,' Kuo suggested. 'Kill off the
undesirables, the ones that might betray them on the home front . .
.'
Iwa turned the page. 'Unlikely. Why waste all that
labour?'
Now he was on the wireless trying to find out more about
the upcoming assault. But you did not have to be a scholar of the
war to know about breakouts. They had all been part of past
attempts, and this knowledge tended to put a damper on the rest of
their day. The front had moved ten li in three years, and eastwards
at that. Three consecutive Ramadan campaigns, at tremendous cost to
the Muslims, a million men per campaign, Iwa calculated, so that
they now fought with boys and battalions of women: as did the
Chinese. So many had died that those who had survived the past
three years were like the Eight Immortals, walking under a
description, surviving day after day at a great distance from a
world that they only heard about, only saw the wrong way through
the telescope. Tea in cup was all to them now. Another general
assault, masses of men moving west into mud, barbed wire, machine
guns, artillery shells coming down from space: so be it. They drank
their tea. But it had a bitter taste.
Bai was ready to get it over with. He had lost his heart
for this life. Kuo was irritated at the Fourth Assemblage of
Military Talent, for ordering the assault during the brief rainy
season. 'Of course what can you expect of any body named "The
Fourth Assemblage of Military Talent"!' This wasn't entirely fair,
as Kuo's usual analysis of them made plain: the First Assemblage
had been old men trying to fight the previous war; the Second
Assemblage, over ambitious arrivistes ready to use men like
bullets; the Third Assemblage a bad mix of cautious corporals and
desperate fuckwits; and the Fourth had come only after the coup
that had overthrown the Qing dynasty and replaced it with a
military government, so that in principle it was possible that the
Fourth Assemblage was an improvement and the one that might finally
get things right. Results so far, however, had not supported the
notion.
Iwa felt they had discussed this matter too many times
already, and confined his remarks to the quality of the day's rice.
When it was ready and they had eaten it, they went out to tell
their men to get prepared. Bai's squads were mostly conscripts from
Sichuan, including three women's squads who kept trenches four
through six, considered the lucky ones. When Bai was young and the
only women he knew were those from the brothels of Lanzhou, he had
felt uncomfortable in their presence, as if dealing with members of
another species, worn creatures who regarded him as from across a
gaping abyss, looking, as far as he could determine, guardedly
appalled and accusatory, as if thinking to themselves, You idiots
have destroyed the whole world. But now that they were in the
trenches they were just soldiers like any others, different only in
that they gave Bai an occasional sense of how bad things had got:
there was no one in the world left now to reproach them.
That evening the three officers gathered again for a
brief visit from the general of their part of the line, a new
luminary of the Fourth Assemblage, a man they had never seen
before. They stood at loose attention while he spoke briefly,
emphasizing the importance of their attack on the morrow.
'We're a diversion,' Kuo declared when General Shen had
boarded his personal train and headed back towards the interior.
'There are spies among us, and he wanted to fool them. If this was
the real point of attack there would be a million more soldiers
stacking up behind us, and you can hear the trains, they're on
their usual schedule.'
In fact there had been extra trains, Iwa said. Thousands
of conscripts brought in, and no shelter for them. They wouldn't be
able to stay here long.
That night it rained. Fleets of Muslim flyers buzzed
overhead, dropping bombs that damaged the railroad tracks. Repair
began as soon as the raid was over. Arc lamps turned the night
brilliant silver streaked by white, like a ruined photo negative,
and in that chemical glare men scurried about with picks and
shovels and hammers and wheelbarrows, as after any other disaster,
but speeded up, as film sometimes was. No more trains arrived, and
when dawn came there were not very many reinforcements after all.
Extra ammunition for the attack was missing as well.
'They won't care,' Kuo predicted.
The plan was to release poison gas first, to precede them
downslope on the daily morning east wind. At the first watch a
wiregram came from the general: attack.
Today, however, there was no morning breeze. Kuo
wiregraphed this news to the Fourth Assemblage command post thirty
li down the corridor, asking for further orders. Soon he got them:
proceed with the attack. Gas as ordered.
'We'll all be killed,' Kuo promised.
They put on their masks, turned the valves on the steel
tanks that released the gas. It shot out and spread, heavy, almost
viscous, in colour virulent yellow, seeping forwards and down a
slight slope, where it lay in the death zone, obscuring their way.
Fine in that regard, although its effect on those with defective
gas masks would be disastrous. No doubt it was an awful sight for
the Muslims, to see yellow fog flowing heavily towards them, and
then, emerging out of it, wave after wave of insectfaced monsters
firing guns and launchers. Nevertheless they stuck to their machine
guns and mowed them down.
Bai was quickly absorbed in the task of moving from
crater to crater, using mounds of earth or dead bodies as a shield,
and urging groups of soldiers who had taken refuge in holes to keep
going. 'Safer if you get out of holes now, the gas settles. We need
to overrun their lines and stop the machine guns,' and so on, in
the deafening clatter which meant none of them could hear him. A
gust of the usual steady morning breeze moved the gas cloud over
the devastation onto the Muslim lines, and less machine gun fire
struck at them. Their attack picked up speed, cutters busy
everywhere at the barbed wire, men filing through. Then they were
in the Muslim trenches, and they turned the big Iranian machine
guns on the retreating enemy, until their ammunition was
drained.
After that, if there had been any reinforcements
available, it might have become interesting. But with the trains
stuck fifty li behind the lines, and the breeze now pushing the gas
back to the east, and the Muslim big guns now beginning to
pulverize their own front lines, the breakout's position became
untenable. Bai directed his troops down into the Muslim tunnels for
protection. The day passed in a confusion of shouts and mobile
wiregraph and wireless miscommunication. It was Kuo who shouted
down to him that the order had finally come to retreat, and they
rounded up their survivors and made their way back across the
poisoned, shattered, body strewn mud that had been the day's
gain. An hour after nightfall they were back in their own trenches,
less than half as numerous as they had been in the morning.
Well after midnight the officers convened in their little
cave and got the stove burning and started cooking rice, each
trapped in his own ears' roaring; they could barely hear each other
talk. It would be like that for a day or two. Kuo was still fizzing
with irritation, one did not have to be able to hear what he was
saying to see that. He seemed to be trying to decide whether he
should revise the Five Great Errors of the Gansu campaign by
dropping the least of the previous great errors, or by turning it
into the Six Great Errors. Assemblage of talent indeed, he shouted
as he held their rice pot over the burning coals of their little
stove, his bare blackened hands shaking. A bunch of fucking idiots.
Up the hole the sounds of the hospital trains chugged and clanked.
Their cars rang. Too much had happened for them to be able to speak
anyway. They ate in the silence of a great roaring. Unfortunately
Bai began vomiting, and then could not catch his breath. He had to
submit to being carried up and back to one of the hospital trains.
Put on with the host of wounded, gassed and dying men. It took all
the next day to move twenty li to the east, and then another day
waiting to be processed by the overwhelmed medical crews. Bai
almost died of thirst, but was saved by a girl in a mask, given
sips of water while a doctor diagnosed gasburned lungs, and stuck
him with acupuncture needles in the neck and face, after which he
could breathe much easier. This gave him the strength to drink
more, then eat some rice, then talk his way out of the hospital
before he died there of hunger or someone else's infection. He
walked back to the front, hitching a ride at the end on a
mule drawn cart. It was night when he passed one of the
immense batteries of artillery, and the garish sight of the huge
black mortars and cannons pointed at the night sky, the tiny
figures scurrying about under the arc lamps servicing them,
holding hands to their cars (Bai did too) before they went off,
made it clear to him yet again that they must all have been dragged
into the next realm and got caught in a war of asuras, a titanic
conflict in which humans were as ants, crushed under the wheels of
the asuras' superhuman machines.
Back in their cave Kuo laughed at him for returning so
quickly, You're like a pet monkey, can't get rid of you, but Bai in
his relief only said it's safer here than in the hospital, which
made Kuo laugh again. Iwa came back from the comm cave full of
news: apparently their assault had been a diversion after all, just
as Kuo had said. The Gansu plug had been pushed at in order to tie
up Muslim armies, while a Japanese force had finally honoured their
agreement to help the cause, given in exchange for their liberty
which was already accomplished anyway but which could have been
challenged, and the Japanese, being fresh, had made a hard push in
the far north, and broken through the line there and started a big
breakout, rolling west and south like a bunch of crazed ronin out
on a murderous lark. Hopefully they would fold down the back side
of the Muslim line and force a retreat from Gansu, leaving the
shattered Chinese alone and at peace in the field.
Iwa said, 'I guess the Japanese hatred for us was
superseded by a disinclination to have Islam conquer the
world.'
'They'll pick off Korea and Manchuria,' Kuo predicted.
'They'll never give those back. A few port cities too. Now that
we're bled white they can take whatever they please.'
'Fine,' Bai said. 'Give them Beijing if they want it, if
it only ends this war.'
Kuo glanced at him. 'I'm not sure which would be a worse
master, Muslims or Japanese. Those Japanese are tough, and they
don't like us. And after the earthquake demolished Edo they think
they've got the gods on their side. They already killed every
Chinese in Japan.'
'In the end we won't serve either side,' Bai said. 'The
Chinese are indestructible, remember?'
The previous two days had not proved the proverb very
well. 'Except by the Chinese,' Kuo said. 'By Chinese talent.'
'They may have turned the north flank this time,' Iwa
noted. 'That would be something.'
'It could be the end game,' Bai said, and coughed.
Kuo laughed at him. 'Caught between mortar and pestle,' he said.
He went to their locked cabinet, inserted into the mud wall of the
cave, and unlocked it and brought out a jug of rakshi and took a
drink. He drank a jug of these strong spirits every day, when he
could get a supply, starting with his first waking moment and
ending with his last. 'Here's to the Tenth Great Success! Or is it
the Eleventh? And we've survived all of them.' For the moment he
had passed beyond the ordinary precaution of not speaking of these
matters. 'Survived them, and the Six Great Errors, and the Three
Incredible Fuck ups, and the Nine Greatest incidents of Bad
Luck. A miracle! There must be hungry ghosts holding big umbrellas
over us, brothers.'
Bai nodded uneasily; he did not like to talk of such
things. He tried to hear only the roaring. He tried to forget all
he had seen the last three days.
'How can we have possibly survived for so long?' Kuo
asked recklessly. 'Everyone else we began with is dead. In fact the
three of us have outlasted five or six generations of officers. How
long has it been? Five years? How can it be?'
'I am Peng zu,' Iwa said. 'I am the Unfortunate
Immortal, I can never be killed. I could dive right into the gas
and it still wouldn't work.' He looked up from his rice
mournfully.
Even Kuo was spooked by this. 'Well, you'll get more
chances, don't worry. Don't think it's going to end any time soon.
The Japanese could take the north because no one cares about it.
When they try to come off the taiga onto the steppes, that's when
it'll get interesting. I don't think they'll be able to turn the
hinge very far. It would mean a lot more if the breakout was in the
south. We need to connect up with the Indians.'
Iwa shook his head. 'That won't happen.' This kind of
analysis was more like him, and the other two asked him to explain.
For the Chinese the southern front consisted of the great wall of
the Himalaya and Pamirs, and the jungles of Annam and Burma and
Bengal and Assam. There were only a few passes over the mountains
that were even thinkable, and the defences of these were
impregnable. As for the jungles, the rivers offered the only
passage through them, and they were too exposed. The fortifications
of their south front were therefore geographical and immovable, but
the same could be said for the Muslims on the other side of
them. Meanwhile the Indians were trapped below the Deccan. The
steppes were the only way; but the armies of both sides were
concentrated there. Thus the deadlock.
'It has to end some day,' Bai pointed out. 'Otherwise it
will never end.'
Kuo spat out a mouthful of rakshi in a burst of laughter.
'Very deep logic, friend Bai! But this is not a logical war. This
is the end that will never end. We will live our lives in this war,
and so will the next gener ation, and the next, until
everyone is dead and we can start the world all over, or not, as
the case may be.'
'No,' Iwa disagreed mildly. 'It can't go on that long.
The end will come somewhere else, that's all. The war at sea, or in
Africa or Yingzhou. The break will come somewhere else, and then
this region will just be a, a what, a feature of the long war, an
anomaly or whatnot. The front that could not be moved. The frozen
aspect of the long war at its most frozen. They will tell our story
for ever, because there will never be anything like it again.'
'You're such a comfort,' Kuo said. 'To think we're in the
worst fix any soldiers have ever been in!'
'We might as well be something,' Iwa said.
'Exactly! It's a distinction! An honour, if you think
about it.'
Bai preferred not to. An explosion above shook dirt out
of their ceiling onto them. They bustled about covering cups and
plates.
A few days later and they were back in the usual routine.
If there was still a Japanese breakout to the north there was no
way to tell it here, where the daily barrage and sniping from the
Muslims was the same as always, as if the Sixth Great Error, with
its loss of perhaps fifty thousand men and women, had never
happened.
Soon after that the Muslims too started using poison gas,
spreading over the death zone on the wind just as the Chinese had
done, but also sending it over contained in explosive shells that
came down with a loud whistle, scattering the usual shrapnel
(including anything that would cut, as they too were running low on
metal, so that they found sticks, cat bones, hooves, a set of false
teeth) and now with the shrapnel a thick yellow geyser of the gas,
apparently not just mustard gas but a variety of poisons and
caustics, which forced the Chinese to keep both gas mask and hood
and gloves always by them. Dressed or not, when one of these shells
came down it was hard not to get burned around the wrists and
ankles and neck.
The other new inconvenience was a shell so huge, cast so
high by such big cannons, that when it came down out of the sky it
was falling faster than its sound, so there was no warning. These
shells were bigger around than a man, and taller, designed to
penetrate the mud some distance and then go off, in stupendous
explosions that often would bury many more men in trenches and
tunnels and caves than were killed by the blasts themselves. Duds
of these shells were dug out and removed, very cautiously, each one
occupying an entire train car. The explosive used in them was a new
one that looked like fish paste, and smelled like jasmine.
One evening after dusk they were standing around drinking
rakshi and discussing news that Iwa had got from the comm cave. The
southern army was being punished for some failure on that front,
and each squad commander had to send back one per cent of his
command, to be executed as encouragement to those that
remained.
'What a good idea!' Kuo said. 'I know just who I'd
send.'
Iwa shook his head. 'A lottery would create better
solidarity.'
Kuo scoffed: 'Solidarity. Might as well get rid of the
malingerers while you can, before they shoot you in the back some
night.'
'It's a terrible idea,' Bai said. 'They're all Chinese,
how can we kill Chinese when they haven't done anything wrong? It's
crazy. The Fourth Assemblage of Military Talent has gone
insane.'
'They were never sane to begin with,' Kuo said. 'It's
been forty years since anyone on Earth has been sane.'
Suddenly they were all knocked off their feet by a
violent blast of air. Bai struggled to his feet, banged into Iwa
doing the same. He couldn't hear a thing. There was no sight of
Kuo, he was gone and there was a big hole in the ground where he
had been standing, a hole perfectly round and some twelve feet
wide, thirty feet deep, and floored by the back end of one of the
big Muslim supershells. Another dud.
A right hand lay on the ground beside the hole like a
white cane spider. 'Oh damn,' Iwa said through the roar. 'We've
lost Kuo.'
The Muslim shell had landed directly on him. Possibly,
Iwa said later, his presence had kept it from exploding somehow. It
had squished him into the earth like a worm. Only his poor hand
left.
Bai stared at the hand, too stunned to move. Kuo's laugh
seemed still to ring in his cars. Kuo certainly would have laughed
if he had been able to see this turn of events. His hand was
completely recognizable as his, Bai found that he knew it
intimately without ever being aware of the fact until now, so many
hours sitting together in their little cave, Kuo holding the rice
pot or the tea kettle over the stove, or offering a cup of tea or
rakshi, his hand, like all the rest of him, a part of Bai's life,
callused and scarred, clean palmed and dirty backed,
looking still just like itself, even without the rest of him
around. Bai sat back down on the mud.
Iwa gently picked up the severed hand, and they gave it
the same funeral ceremony given to more complete corpses, before
taking it back to one of the death trains for disposal in the
crematoria. Afterwards they drank Kuo's remaining rakshi. Bai could
not speak, and Iwa didn't try to make him. Bai's own hands
displayed the quivering o or inary trenc fatigue. What had
happened to their magic umbrella? What would he do now, without
Kuo's acid laughter to cut through the deathly miasmas?
Then the Muslims took their turn to attack, and the
Chinese were busy for a week with the defence of their trenches,
living in their gas masks, firing belt after belt at the ghostly
fellahem and assassins emerging from the yellow fog. Bai's lungs
gave out again briefly, he had to be evacuated; but at the end of
the week he and Iwa were back in the same trenches they had started
in, with a new squad composed almost entirely of conscripts from
Aozhou, land of the turtle who held up the world, green southerners
thrown into the conflict like so many rounds of machine--gun
ammunition. They had been so busy that already it seemed a long
time since the incident of the dud shell. 'Once I had a brother
named Kuo,' Bai explained to Iwa.
Iwa nodded, patted Bai on the shoulder. 'Go and see if we
have new orders.' His face was black with cordite, except around
mouth and nose where his mask had been, and under his eyes, white
with deltas of tear streaks. He looked like a puppet in a play, his
face the mask of asura suffering. He had been at his machine gun
for over forty straight hours, and in that time had killed perhaps
three thousand men. His eyes looked sightlessly through Bai,
through the world.
Bai staggered away, down the tunnel to the comm cave. He
ducked in and fell into a chair, trying to catch his breath,
feeling himself continuing to fall, through the floor, through the
earth, on the airy drop to oblivion. A creak pulled him up; he
looked to see who was already in the chair at the wireless
table.
It was Kuo, sitting there grinning at him.
Bai straightened up. 'Kuo!' he said. 'We thought you were
dead!'
Kuo nodded. 'I am dead,' he said. 'And so are you.'
His right hand was there at the end of his wrist.
'The shell went off,' he said, 'and killed us all. Since
then you've been in the bardo. All of us have. You've gone at it by
pretending you weren't there yet. Although why you would want to
hang on to that hell world we were living in, I can't imagine. You
are so damned obstinate, Bai. You need to see you're in the bardo
to be able to understand what's happening to you. It's the war in
the bardo that matters, after all. The battle for our souls.'
Bai tried to say yes; then no; then he found himself on
the floor of the cave, having fallen off the chair, apparently,
which had woken him up. Kuo was gone, his chair empty. Bai groaned.
'Kuo! Come back!' But the room stayed empty.
Later Bai told Iwa what had happened, his voice shaking,
and the Tibetan had given him a sharp glance, then shrugged. 'Maybe
he was right,' he said, gesturing around. 'What is there to prove
him wrong?'
Another assault struck and suddenly they were ordered to
retreat, to get to the back lines and then on the trains. At the
depot yard it was chaotic, of course; but men with guns trained on
them boarded them on the cars like cattle, and off the trains
squealed and clanked.
Iwa and Bai sat at one end of a car as they trained
south. From time to time they used their officers' privilege and
went out onto the car's coupling base to smoke cigarettes and
regard the steel sky lowering overhead. Higher and higher they
rose, colder and colder. Thin air hurt Bai's lungs. 'So,' he said,
gesturing at the rock and ice rolling past. 'Maybe it is the
bardo.'
'It's just Tibet,' Iwa said.
But Bai could see very well that it was more desolate
than that. Cirrus clouds hung like sickles just overhead, as on a
stage set, the sky black and flat. It didn't look the slightest bit
real.
In any case, whatever the realm, Tibet or the bardo, in
life or out of it, the war continued. At night winged roaring
flyers, their blimp components dispensed with, buzzed
overhead dropping bombs on them. Arc lamp searchlights lanced the
darkness, pinning flyers to the stars and sometimes blowing them up
in gouts of falling flame. Images from Bai's dreams fell right out
of the thin air. Black snow glittered in the white light of a low
sun.
They stopped before an impossibly huge mountain range,
another stage set from the dream theatre. A pass so deep that from
their distance it dipped under the sere tabletop of the steppe.
That pass was their goal. Their task now was to blast the defences
away and go south through that pass, down to some level below this
floor of the universe. The pass to India, supposedly. Gate to a
lower realm. Very well defended, of course.
The 'Muslims' defending it remained invisible, always
over the great snowy mass of granite peaks, greater than any
mountains on Earth could be, asura mountains, and the big guns
brought to bear on them, asura guns. Never had it been so clear to
Bai that they had got caught up in some bigger war, dying by the
millions for some cause not their own. Ice and black rock fangs
touched the ceiling of stars, snow banners streamed on the monsoon
wind away from the peaks, merging with the Milky Way, at sunset
becoming asura flames blowing horizontally, as if the realm of the
asuras stood perpendicular to their own, another reason perhaps
that their puny imitation battles were always so hopelessly
askew.
The Muslims' big guns were on the south side of the
range; they never even heard them. Their shells whistled over the
stars, leaving white rainbow frost trails on the black sky. The
majority of these shells landed on the massive white mountain to
the cast of the huge pass, blasting it with one stupendous
explosion after another, as if the Muslims had gone crazy and
declared war on the rocks of the Earth. 'Why do they hate that
mountain so much?' Bai asked.
'That's Chomolungma,' Iwa said. 'That was the tallest
mountain in the world, but the Muslims have knocked the summit
pyramid down until it's lower than the second tallest, which is a
peak in Afghanistan. So now the tallest peak in the world is
Muslim.'
His face was its usual blank, but he sounded sad, as
though the mountain mattered to him. This worried Bai: if Iwa had
gone mad, everyone on Earth had gone mad. Iwa would be the last to
go. But maybe it had happened. A soldier in their squad had begun
to weep helplessly at the sight of dead horses and mules. He was
fine at the sight of dead men scattered about, but the bloated
bodies of their poor beasts broke his heart. It made sense in a
strange way, but for mountains Bai could conjure up no sympathy. At
the most it was one god fewer. Part of the struggle in the
bardo.
At night the cold approached pure stasis. Watching
starlight gleaming on the empty plateau, smoking a cigarette by the
latrines, Bai considered what it might mean that there was war in
the bardo. That was the place souls were sorted out, reconciled to
reality, sent back down into the world. judgment rendered, karma
assessed; souls sent back to try again, or released to nirvana. Bai
had been reading Iwa's copy of the Book of the Dead, looking around
him seeing each sentence shape the plateau. Alive or dead, they
walked in a room of the bardo, working on their fate. It was always
so! This room as bleak as any empty stage. They camped on gravel
and sand at the butt end of a grey glacier. Their big guns
squatted, barrels tilted to the sky. Smaller guns on the valley
walls guarded against air attack; these emplacements looked like
the old dzong style monasteries that still lined some
buttresses in these mountains.
Word came they were going to try to break through Nangpa
La, the deep pass interrupting the range. One of the old salt
trading passes, the best pass for many li in both directions.
Sherpas would guide, Tibetans who had moved south of the pass. On
its other side extended a canyon to their capital, tiny Namche
Bazaar, now in ruins like everything else. From Namche trails ran
directly south to the plains of Bengal. A very good passage across
the Himalaya, in fact. Rail could replace trail in a matter of
days, and then they could ship the massed armies of China, what was
left of them, onto the Gangetic Plain. Rumours swirled, replaced
daily by new rumours. Iwa spent all night at the wireless.
It looked to Bai like a change in the bardo itself. Shift
to the next room, a tropical hellworld clogged with ancient
history. The battle for the pass would therefore be particularly
violent, as is any passage between worlds. The artilleries of the
two civilizations massed on both sides. Triggered avalanches in the
granite escarpments were frequent. Meanwhile explosions on the peak
of Chomolungma continued to lower it. The Tibetans fought like
pretas as they saw this. Iwa seemed to have reconciled himself to
it: 'They have a saying about the mountain coming to
Mohammed. But I don't think it matters to the mother goddess.'
Still, it brought home to them yet again how insane their
opponents were. Ignorant fanatical disciples of a cruel desert
cult, promised eternity in a paradise where sexual orgasm with
beautiful houris lasted ten thousand years, no surprise they were
so often suicidally brave, happy to die, reckless in frenzied
opiated ways that were hard to counter. Indeed they were known to
be prodigious benzedrine eaters and opium smokers, pursuing the
entire war in a jerky drugged dream state that could include
bestial rage. Most of the Chinese would have been happy to join
them there, and opium had made its way into the Chinese army, of
course, but supplies were short. Iwa had local contacts, however,
and as they prepared for the assault on Nangpa La he obtained some
from some military policemen. He and Bai smoked it in cigarettes
and drank it as a tincture of alcohol, along with cloves and a pill
of Travancori medicines said to sharpen sight while dulling the
emotions. It worked pretty well.
Eventually there were so many banners and divisions and
big guns collected on this high plane of the bardo that Bai became
convinced that the rumours were right, and a general assault on
Kali or Shiva or Brahma was about to begin. As confirming evidence
he noted that many divisions were composed of experienced soldiers,
rather than raw boys or peasants or women -- divisions with
extensive battle experience in the islands or the New World, where
the fighting had been particularly intense, and where they claimed
to have won. In other words, they were precisely those soldiers
most likely to have been killed already. And they looked dead. They
smoked cigarettes like dead men. A whole army of the dead, gathered
and poised to invade the rich south of the living.
The moon waxed and waned and the bombardment of the
invisible foe across the range continued. Fleets of flyers shaped
like sickles shot through the pass and never came back. On the
eighth day of the fourth month, the date of the conception of the
Buddha, the assault began.
The pass itself had been rigged, and when its immediate
defenders were all killed or had retreated south, the ridges
guarding the pass erupted in massive explosions and poured down
onto the broad saddle. Cho Oyo itself lost some of its mass to this
explosion. That was the end for several banners securing the pass.
Bai watched from below and wondered, when one died in the bardo
where did one go? it was only a matter of chance that Bai's squad
had not been in the first wave.
The defences as well as the Chinese first wave were
buried. After that the pass was theirs, and they could begin the
descent of the giant glaciercut canyon south to the Gangetic Plain.
They were attacked every step of the way, chiefly by distant
bombardment, and with booby traps and enormous mines buried in
the trails at crucial points. They defused or set these off as
often as they could, suffered the occasional missed ones, rebuilt a
road and rail bed as they descended. It was mostly road work at
great speed, as the Muslims gave ground and retreated to the plain,
and only their most distant aerial bombardment remained, shots
fired from around Delhi, erratic and hilarious unless they happened
to make a lucky strike.
In the deep southern canyon they found themselves in a
different world. Indeed Bai had to reconsider the idea that he was
in the bardo at all. If he was, this was certainly a different
level of it: hot, wet, lush, the green trees and bushes and grasses
exploding out of the black soil and overrunning everything. The
granite itself seemed living down here. Perhaps Kuo had lied to
him, and he and Iwa and the rest here had been alive all the while,
in a real world become deathly with death. What an awful thought!
The real world become the bardo, the two the same ... Bai hustled
through his hectic days feeling appalled. After all that suffering
he had only been reborn into his own life, still ongoing, now
regained as if there had been no break, only a moment of cruel
irony, a few days' derangement, and now moved on into a new karmic
existence while trapped in the same miserable biological cycle that
for some reason had turned into a One simulacrum of hell itself, as
if the karmic wheel had broken and the gears between karmic life
and biological life become detached, gone so that one fluctuated
without warning, lived sometimes in the physical world, other times
in the bardo, sometimes in dream sometimes awake, and very often
all at once, without cause or explanation. Already the years in the
Gansu Corridor, the whole of his life he would have said before,
had become a dream mostly forgotten, and even the mystic high
strangeness of the Tibetan plateau was fast becoming an unreal
memory, hard to recall though it was etched on his eyeballs and he
was still looking right through it.
One evening the wiregraph officer came rushing out and
ordered them all to get uphill fast. A glacial lake upstream
had had its ice dam bombed by the Muslims, and now a huge bolus of
water was headed downstream, filling the canyon to a depth of five
hundred feet or more, depending on the narrowness of the gorge.
The scramble began. How they climbed. Here they were,
dead men already, dead for years, and yet they climbed like
monkeys, frantic to move up the slope of a canyon. They had been
camped in a narrow steep defile, the better to avoid bombs from the
air, and as they hauled themselves up through brush they heard ever
more clearly a distant roar like continuous thunder, possibly a
falls in the ordinarily loud Dudh Kosi, but probably not, probably
the approaching flood, until finally they came to a layback in the
slope, and after an hour they were all a good thousand feet above
the Dudh Kosi, looking down at the white thread of it which seemed
so harmless from the broad nose of a promontory where the officers
had regathered them, looking down into the gorge but also around
them at the stupendous icy walls and peaks of the range, hearing a
roar come out of the higher ones to the north, a healthy booming
roar, like a tiger god roaring. Up here they were in a good
position to witness the flood, which arrived just as night was
falling: the roar grew to something almost as loud as a bombardment
on the front, but all below, almost subterranean, coming through
the soles of their feet as much as their ears, and then a dirty
white wall of water appeared, carrying trees and rocks on its
chaotic tumbling front wall, tearing the walls of the canyon right
down to bedrock and causing slides down into it, some of which were
large enough to dam the whole stream for a few minutes, before
water poured over it and ripped it away, causing a smaller surge in
the general flood. After the front of it had passed out of sight
down canyon, it left behind torn walls white in the dusk, and a
brown foaming river that roared and clunked at just above its usual
level.
'We should build the roads higher,' Iwa noted.
Bai could only laugh at Iwa's cool. The opium was making
everything pulse. A sudden realization: 'Why, it just occurred to
me -- I've been drowned in floods before! I've felt the water come
over me. Water and snow and ice. You were there too! I wonder if
that was meant for us, and we've escaped by accident. I don't
really think we're supposed to be here.'
Iwa regarded him, 'In what sense?'
'In the sense that that flood down there was supposed to
kill us!'
'Well,' Iwa said slowly, looking concerned, 'I guess we
got out of its way.'
Bai could only laugh. Iwa: what a mind. 'Yes. To hell
with the flood. That was a different life.'
The routemakers however had learned a good lesson without
much loss of life (equipment was another matter). Now they built
high on the canyon walls where they sloped back, cutting grades and
traverses, going far up tributary canyons and then building bridges
over their streams, also anti aircraft emplacements, even a
small airstrip on one nearly level bench near Lukla. Becoming a
construction battalion was much better than fighting, which was
what others were doing down in the mouth of the canyon, to keep it
open long enough to get the train down there. They could not
believe their luck, or the warm days, or the reality of life behind
the front, so luxurious, the silence, the lessening of muscle
tension, lots of rice, and strange but fresh vegetables ...
Then in a blur of happy days the roadbeds and tracks were
complete and they took some of the first trains down and encamped
on a great dusty green plain, no monsoon yet, division after
division making their way to the front, some fluctuating distance
to the west of them. That was where it was all happening now.
Then one morning they were on their way too, trained all
day to the west and then off and marching over one pontoon bridge
after another, until they were somewhere near Bihar. Here another
army was already encamped, an army on their side. Allies, what a
concept. The Indians themselves, here in their own country, moving
north after four decades of holding out against the Islamic horde,
down in the south of the continent. Now they too were breaking out,
crossing the Indus, and the Muslims therefore in danger of being
cut off by a pincer attack as large. as Asia, some of them already
trapped in Burma, the bulk of them still together in the west and
beginning a slow, stubborn retreat.
So Iwa gathered in an hour's conversation with some
Travancori officers who spoke Nepali, which he had known as a
child. The Indian officers and their soldiers were
dark skinned and small, both men and women, very fast and
nimble, clean, well dressed, well armed -- proud, even
arrogant, assuming that they had taken the brunt of the war against
Islam, that they had saved China from conquest by holding on
as a second front. Iwa came away unsure whether it was a good idea
to discuss the war with them.
But Bai was impressed. Perhaps the world would be saved
from slavery after all. The breakout across north Asia was
apparently stalled, the Urals being a kind of natural Great Wall of
China for the Golden Horde and the Firanjis. Although maps seemed
to indicate that it was nicely to the west. And to have crossed the
Himalaya in force against such resistance, to have met up with the
Indian armies, to be cutting the world of Islam in two . . .
'Well, sea power could make all the whole land war in
Asia irrelevant,' Iwa said as they sat one evening on the ground
eating rice that had been spiced to newly incendiary heights.
Between choking swallows, sweating profusely, he said, 'In the time
of this war we've seen three or four generations of weaponry, of
technology generally, the big guns, sea power, now air power -- I
don't doubt that a time is coming when fleets of airships and
flyers will be all that matter. The fight will go on up there, to
see who can control the skies and drop bombs bigger than anything
you could ever shoot out of a cannon, right onto the capitals of
the enemy. Their factories, their palaces, their government
buildings.'
'Good,' Bai said. 'Less messy that way. Go for the head
and get it over with. That's what Kuo would say.'
Iwa nodded, grinning at the thought of just how Kuo would
say it. The scorching rice here was nothing compared to their
Kuo.
The generals from the Fourth Assemblage of Military
Talent met with the Indian generals, and as they conferred more
railways were built out to the new front west of them. A combined
offensive was clearly in the works, and everyone was full of
speculation about it. That they would be kept behind to defend
their rear from the Muslims still in the Malay Peninsula; that they
would be boarded on ships in the mouth of the sacred Ganges and
deposited on the Arabian coast to attack Mecca itself; that they
were destined for a beachhead attack on the peninsulas of northwest
Firanja; and so on. Never an end to the stories they told
themselves of how their travail would continue.
In the end, though, they marched forwards in the usual
fashion, westwards, holding the right flank against the foothills
of Nepal, hills that shot abrupt and green out of the Gangetic
Plain -- as though, Iwa remarked idly one day, India were a ramming
ship that had slammed into Asia and ploughed under it, pushing all
the way under Tibet, and doubling the height of that land but
dipping down here almost to sea level.
Bai shook his head at this geomorphic fancy, not wanting
to think of the ground as moving like big ships, wanting to
understand the ground as solid, because he was trying to convince
himself now that Kuo had been wrong and that he was still alive and
not in the bardo, where of course lands could slip about like the
stage sets they were. Kuo had probably been disoriented by his own
abrupt death, and confused as to his own whereabouts; not a good
sign concerning his reappearance in his next incarnation. Or
perhaps he had just been playing a joke on Bai, Kuo would mock you
harder than anyone, though he seldom played jokes. Perhaps he had
even been doing Bai a favour, getting him through the worst part of
the war by convincing him that he was already dead and had nothing
to lose indeed, was fighting the war on a level where it
might actually mean something, might have some use, might be a
matter of changing people's souls in their pure existence outside
the world, where they might be capable of change, where they might
learn what was important and return to life next time with new
capacities in their hearts, with new goals in mind.
What might those be? What were they fighting for? It was
clear what they were fighting against -- against fanatical
slaveholding reactionaries, who wanted the world to stand still in
the equivalent of the Tang or Sung dynasties -- absurdly backward
and bloody religious zealots assassins with no scruples, who
fought crazed on opium and ancient blind beliefs. Against all that,
certainly, but for what? What the Chinese were fighting for, Bai
decided, was ... clarity, or whatever else it was that was the
opposite of religion. For humanity. For compassion. For Buddhism,
Daoism and Confucianism, the triple strand that did so well in
describing a relationship to the world: the religion with no God,
with only this world, also several other potential realms of
reality, mental realms, and the void itself, but no God, no
shepherd ruling with the drooling strictures of a demented old
patriarch, but rather innumerable immortal spirits in a vast
panoply of realms and being, including humans and many other
sentient beings besides, everything living, everything holy,
sacred, part of the Godhead -- for yes, there was a God if by that
you meant only a transcendent universal selfaware entity that was
reality itself, the cosmos, including everything, including human
ideas and mathematical forms and relationships. That idea itself
was God, and evoked a kind of worship that was attention to the
real world, a kind of natural study. Chinese Buddhism was the
natural study of reality, and led to feelings of devotion just from
noting the daily leaves, the colours of the sky, the animals seen
from the corner of the eye. The movements of chopping wood and
carrying water. This initial study of devotion led to deeper
understanding as they pursued the mathematical underpinnings of the
ways of things, just out of curiosity and because it seemed to help
them see even more clearly, and so they made instruments to see
farther in and farther out, higher yang, deeper yin.
What followed was a kind of understanding of human
reality that placed the greatest value on compassion, created by
enlightened understanding, created by study of what was there in
the world. This was what Iwa was always saying, while Bai preferred
to think of the emotions created by all that proper attention and
focused effort: the peace, the sharp curiosity and enraptured
interest, the compassion.
But now: all a nightmare. A nightmare speeding up,
however, breaking apart and full of non sequiturs, as if the
dreamer felt the rapid eyed stirrings of the end of sleep and
the waking of a new day. Every day we wake up into a new world,
each sleep causes yet another reincarnation. Some of the local
gurus spoke of it as happening with every breath.
They took off out of the bardo into the real world, into
battle, with their left wing made up of India's crack regiments,
little bearded black men, taller hooknosed white men, bearded
turbanned Sikhs, deepchested women, Gurkhas come out of the
mountains, a banner of Nepali women each of whom was the beauty of
her district, or so it appeared; all of them together like a circus
crew, but so fast, so well armed, in train and truck
divisions, the Chinese could not keep up with them, but got more
train lines established and tried to catch up, running vast numbers
of men forwards with all their supplies. Beyond the forward ends of
the train lines the Indians continued to race forwards on foot, and
in engined cars on rubber wheels, hundreds of them that ran freely
over the villages paths in this dry season, throwing dust
everywhere, and also over a more limited network of asphalted roads, the
only ones that would still be passable when the monsoon hit.
They advanced towards Delhi all at once, more or less,
and they fell on the Muslim army retreating up the Ganges on both
sides of the river, as soon as the Chinese were in position at the
foot of the Nepali hills.
Of course the right flank extended up into the hills,
each army trying to outflank the other. Bai and Iwa's squad was
counted among the mountain troops now because of their experiences
in the Dudh Kosi, and so orders came to seize and hold the hills up
to the first ridge at least, which entailed taking some higher
points on ridges even farther north. They moved by night, learning
to climb in the dark along trails found and marked by Gurkha
scouts. Bai too became a day scout, and as he crawled up
brush choked ravines he worried not that he would be
discovered by any Muslims, for they stuck to their trails and
encampments without fail, but whether or not a mass of hundreds of
men could follow the tortuous monkey routes he was forced to use in
some places. 'That's why they send you, Bai,' Iwa explained. 'If
you can do it, anyone can.' He smiled and added, 'That's what Kuo
would say.'
Each night Bai went up and down the line guiding and
checking to see if routes went as he had expected, learning and
studying, and only going to sleep after observing the sunrise from
some new hideaway.
They were still doing that when the Indians broke through
on the south flank. They heard the distant artillery and then saw
smoke pluming into the white skies of a hazy morning, the haze a
possible mark of the monsoon's arrival. To make a full breakout
assault with the monsoon coming passed all understanding, it seemed
possible it would go right to the head of the list of the recently
augmented Seven Great Errors, and as the afternoon's clouds
bloomed, and built, and dropped black on them, blasting foothills
and plain with volleys of thick lightning which struck the metal in
several gun emplacements on ridges, it was amazing to hear that the
Indians were pressing on unimpeded. They had, among all their other
accomplishments, perfected war in the rain. These were not Chinese
Daoist Buddhist rationalists, Bai and Iwa agreed, not the Fourth
Assemblage of Military Talent, but wild men of all manner of
religion, even more spiritual than the Muslims, as the Muslims'
religion seemed all bluster and wish fulfilment and support of
tyranny with its Father God. The Indians had a myriad of gods, some
elephant headed or six armed, even death was a
god, both female and male life, nobility, there were gods
for each, each human quality deified. Which made for a motley,
godly people, very ferocious in war, among many other things --
great cooks, very sensual people, scents, tastes, music, colour in
their uniforms, detailed art, it was all right there in their camps
to be seen, men and women standing around a drummer singing, the
women tall and big breasted, big eyed and
thick eyebrowed, awesome women really, arms like a woodsman's
and filling all the sharpshooter regiments of the Indians. 'Yes,'
one Indian adjutant had said in Tibetan, 'women are better shots,
women from Travancore especially. They start when they are five,
that may be all there is to it. Start boys at five and they would
do as well.'
Now the rains were full of black ash, falling in a watery
mud. Black rain. The call came for Bai and Iwa's squad to hurry
down to the plain and join the general assault as soon as they
could. They ran down the trails and assembled some twenty li behind
the front line of the battle, and started marching. They were to
hit at the very end of the flank, on the plain itself but right at
the foot of the foothills, ready to scale the first rise of the
hills if there was any resistance to their charge.
That was the plan, but as they came up to the front word
came that the Muslims had broken and were in full retreat, and they
joined the chase.
But the Muslims were in flight, the Indians close on
their heels, and the Chinese could only follow the two faster
armies across the fields and forests, over canals and through the
breaks in bamboo fences and walls, and groups of houses too small
even to be called villages, all still and silent, usually burned,
and yet slowing them down somehow nevertheless. Dead bodies on the
ground in knots, already bloating. The full meaning of embodiment
made manifest here by its opposite, diesel bodiment, death --
departure of the soul, leaving behind so little: a putrefying mass,
stuff like what one found in a sausage. Nothing human about it.
Except for here or there, a face undestroyed, even sometimes
undisturbed; an Indian man lying there on the ground for instance,
staring sideways but utterly still, not moving, not breathing; the
statue of what must have been a very impressive man, well built,
strong shoulders, capable a commanding, high--foreheaded,
moustached face, eyes like fish in the market, round and surprised,
but still impressive. Bai had to say a charm to be able to
walk by him, and then they were in a zone where the land itself was
smoking like the dead zone of Gansu, pools of silvery gassed water
reeking in water holes and the air full of smoke and dust, cordite,
blood haze. The bardo itself would be looking much like this,
crowded now with new arrivals all angry and confused, in agony, the
worst possible way to enter the bardo. Here the empty mirror of it,
blasted and still. The Chinese army marched through in silence.
Bai found Iwa, and they made their way into the burned
ruins of Bodh Gaya, to a park on the west bank of the Phalgu
River. This was where the Bodhi Tree had stood, they were told, the
old assattha tree, pipal tree, under which the Buddha had received
enlightenment so many centuries before. The area had taken as many
hits as the peak of Chomolungma, and no trace of tree or park or
village or stream remained, only black rendered mud for as far as
the eye could see.
A group of Indian officers discussed root fragments
someone had found in the mud near what some thought had been the
location of the tree. Bai didn't recognize the language. He sat
down with a small fragment of bark in his hands. Iwa went over to
see what the officers were saying.
Then Kuo stood before Bai. 'Cut is the branch,' he said,
offering a small twig from the Bodhi Tree.
Bai took it from him. From his left hand; Kuo's right
hand was still missing. 'Kuo,' Bai said, and swallowed. 'I'm
surprised to see you.'
Kuo gave him a look.
'So we are in the bardo after all,' Bai said.
Kuo nodded. 'You didn't always believe me, did you, but
it's true. Here you see it ' waving his hand at the black
smoking plain. 'The floor of the universe. Again.'
'But why?' Bai said. 'I just don't get it.'
'Get what?'
'Get what I'm supposed to be doing. Life after life -- I
remember them now!' He thought about it, seeing back through the
years. 'I remember them now, and I've tried in every one. I keep
trying!' Out across the black plain it seemed they could see
together the faint afterimages of their previous lives, dancing in
the infinite silk of lightly falling rain. 'It doesn't seem to be
making any difference. What I do makes no difference.'
'Yes, Bai. Perhaps so. But after all you are a fool. A
good natured fucking idiot.'
'Don't, Kuo, I'm not in the mood,' though his face was
attempting painfully to smile, pleased to be ribbed again. Iwa and
he had tried to do this for each other, but no one could bring it
off like Kuo. 'I may not be a great leader like you but I've done
some good things, and they haven't made a bit of difference. There
seem to be no rules of dharma that actually pertain.'
Kuo sat down next to him, crossed his legs and made
himself comfortable. 'Well, who knows? I've been thinking these
things over myself, this time out in the bardo. There's been a lot
of time, believe me -- so many have been tossed out here at once
that there's quite a waiting line, it's just like the rest of the
war, a logistical nightmare, and I've been watching you all
struggle on, bashing against things like moths in a bottle, and I
know I did it too, and I've wondered. I've thought sometimes that
maybe it went wrong back when I was Kheim and you were Butterfly, a
little girl we all loved. Do you remember that one?'
Bai shook his head. 'Tell me.'
'As Kheim I was Annamese, I continued the proud tradition
of the great Chinese admirals being foreigners and disreputable, I
had been a pirate king for years on the long coast of Annam, and
the Chinese made a treaty with me as they would with any great
potentate. Struck a deal in which I agreed to lead an invasion of
Nippon, at least the sea aspect of it and perhaps more.
'Anyway we missed all that for lack of a wind, and went
on and discovered the ocean continents, and found you, and then we
took you, and lost you, and saved you from the executioner god of
the southern people; and that's when I felt it, coming back down
the mountain after we had saved you. I aimed my pistol at people
and pulled the trigger, and felt the power of life and death in my
hands. I could kill them, and they deserved it, bloody cannibals
that they were, killers of children. I could do it merely by
pointing at them. And it seemed to me then that my
so much greater power had a meaning to it. That our
superiority in weapons came out of a general superiority of thought
that included a superiority of morals. That we were better than
they were. I strode back down to the ships and sailed west still
feeling that we were superior beings, like gods to those horrid
savages. And that's why Butterfly died.
You died to teach me that I was wrong -- that though we had
saved her we had killed her too, that that feeling we had had,
striding through them as if through worthless dogs, was a poison
that would never stop spreading in men who had guns. Until all the
people like Butterfly, who lived in peace without guns, were dead,
murdered by us. And then only men with guns would be left, and they
would murder each other too, as fast as they could in the hope that
it wouldn't happen to them, until the human world died, and we all
fell into this preta realm and then to bell.
'So our little jati is stuck here with everyone else, no
matter what you do, not that you have been notably effectual, I
must say again, Bai, speaking of your tendency towards credulous
simplicity, gullibility and general soft hearted
namby pamby ineffectiveness '
'Hey,' Bai said. 'Not fair. I've been helping you. I've
just been going along with you.'
'Well, all right. Granted. In any case we're all in the
bardo together now, and headed for the lower realms again, at best
the realm of the human, but possibly spinning down the death spiral
into the hellworlds always underfoot, we may have done it and are
in the spin you can't pull out of, humanity lost to us for a time
even as a possibility, so much harm have we done. Stupid fucking
bastards! Damn it, do you think I haven't been trying too?' Kuo
popped to his feet, agitated. 'Do you think you're the only one who
has tried to make some good in this world?' He shook his solitary
fist at Bai, and then at the lowering grey clouds. 'But we failed!
We killed reality itself, do you understand me! Do you understand
me?'
'Yes,' Bai said, hugging his knees and shivering
miserably. 'I understand.'
'So. Now we are in this lower realm. We must make do. Our
dharma still commands right action, even here. In the hope of small
advances upwards. Until reality itse If be re established, by
many millions of lives of effort. The whole world will have to be
rebuilt. That's where we are now,' and with a farewell tap to Bai's
arm he walked away, sinking into the black mud deeper with every
step, until he had disappeared.
'Hey,' Bai said. 'Kuo! Don't leave!'
After a while Iwa returned and stood before him, looked
down quizzically at him.
'Well?' Bai said, lifting his head from his knees,
collecting himself. 'What is it? Will they save the Bodhi
Tree?'
'Don't worry about the tree,' Iwa said. 'They'll get a
shoot from a daughter tree in Lanka. It's happened before. Best
worry about the people.'
'More shoots there too. On to the next life. To a better
time.' Bai shouted it after Kuo: 'To a better time!'
Iwa sighed. He sat down where Kuo had been sitting. Rain
fell on them. A long time passed in exhausted silence.
'The thing is,' Iwa said, 'what if there is no next life?
That's what I think. This is it. Fan Chen said the soul and body
are just two aspects of the same thing. He speaks of sharpness and
the knife, soul and body. Without knife, no sharpness.'
'Without sharpness, no knife.'
'Yes . . .'
'And sharpness goes on, sharpness never dies.'
'But look at those dead bodies over there. Who they were
won't come back. When death comes, we don't come back.'
Bai thought of the Indian man, lying so still on the
ground. He said, 'You're just distraught. Of course we come back. I
was talking to Kuo this very minute.'
Iwa gazed at him. 'You shouldn't try to hold on, Bai.
This is what the Buddha learned, right here. Don't try to stop
time. No one can do it.'
'Sharpness remains. I tell you, he was cutting me up same
as always!'
'We have to try to accept change. And change leads to
death.'
'And then through death.' Bai said this as cheerfully as
he could, but his voice was desolate. He missed Kuo.
Iwa considered what Bai had said, with a look that seemed
to say he had been hoping that a Buddhist at the Bodhi Tree would
perhaps have had something more helpful to say. But what could you
say? The Buddha himself had said it: suffering is real. You have to
face it, live with it. There is no escape.
After a while longer Bai got up and went over to see what
the offi cers were doing. They were chanting a sutra, in
Sanskrit perhaps, Bai thought, and he joined in softly with the
'Lengyan jing', in Chinese. And as the day wore on many Buddhists
in both armies gathered around the site, hundreds of them, the mud
was covered with people, and they said prayers in all the languages
of Buddhism, standing there on the burnt land that smoked in the
rain for as far as the eye could see, black, grey and silver.
Finally they fell silent. Peace in the heart, compassion, peace.
Sharpness remained in them.
ONE
On sunny mornings the parks on the lakefront were filled
with families out walking. In the early spring, before the plants
had done more than create the tight green buds soon to blossom in
their profusion of colours, the hungry swans would congregate in
the gleaming black water beside the promenade to fight over the
loaves of stale bread thrown at them by children. This had been one
of Budur's favourite activities as a young girl, it had cast her
into gales of laughter to see the swans flop and tussle for the
scraps; now she watched the new kids convulsed by the same
hilarity, with a stab of grief for her lost childhood, and for the
awareness that the swans, though beautiful and comical, were also
desperate and starving. She wished she had the boldness to join the
children and throw more bread to the poor things. But if she did it
now she would look odd, like one of the mentally deficient ones on
their trip out from their school. And in any case there was not a
great deal of bread left in their house anyway.
Sunlight bounced on the water, and the buildings lining
the back of the lakeshore promenade glowed lemon, peach and
apricot, as if lit from within by some light trapped in their
stone. Budur walked back through the old town towards home, through
the grey granite and black wood of the ancient buildings. Turi had
begun as a Roman town, a way station on their main route through
the Alps; Father had once driven them up to an obscure alpine pass
called the Keyhole, where a stretch of the Roman road was still
there, switchbacking through the grass like a petrified dragon's
back, looking lonely for the feet of soldiers and traders.
Now after centuries of obscurity Turi was a way station again,
this time for trains, and the greatest city in all of central
Firanja, the capital of the united Alpine emirates.
The city centre was bustling and squeaky with trams, but
Budur liked to walk. She ignored Ahab, her chaperon; though she
liked him personally, a simple man with few pretensions, she did
not like his job, which included accompanying her on her
excursions. She shunned him on principle as an affront to her
dignity. She knew also that he would report her behaviour to
Father, and when he reported her refusal to acknowledge his
presence, yet another small protest of harem would reach Father, if
only indirectly.
She led Ahab up through the apartments studding the
hillside overlooking the city, to High Street. The wall around
their house was beautiful, a tall patterned weave of green and grey
dressed stones. The wooden gate was topped by a stone arch
seemingly held in a network of wistaria vines; you could pull out
the keystone and it would still stand. Ahmet, their gatekeeper, was
in his seat in the cosy little wooden closet on the inside of the
gateway, where he held forth to all who wanted to pass, his tea
tray ready to serve those who had time to tarry.
Inside the house Aunt Idelba was talking on the
telephone, which was set on a table in the inner courtyard under
the eaves, where anyone could hear you. This was Father's way of
trying to keep anything untoward from ever being said, but the
truth was that Aunt Idelba was usually talking about microscopic
nature and the mathematics of the interiors of atoms, and so no one
could have any idea what she was talking about. Budur liked to
listen to her anyway, because it reminded her of the fairy tales
Aunt Idelba had told in the past when Budur was younger, or her
cooking talk with Mother in the kitchen cooking was one of
her passions, and she would rattle off spells, recipes, procedures
and tools, all mysterious and suggestive just like this talk on the
tele phone, as if she were cooking up a new world. And
sometimes she would get off the phone looking worried, and
absent--mindedly accept Budur's hugs and admit that this was
precisely the case: the ilmi, the scientists, were indeed cooking
up a new world. Or they could be. Once she rang off flushed pink,
and danced a little minuet around the courtyard, singing nonsense
syllables, and their laundry ditty, 'God is great, great is God,
clean our clothes, clean our souls.'
This time she rang off and did not even see Budur, but
stared up at the bit of sky visible from the courtyard.
'What is it, Idelba? Are you feeling hem?' Hem was the
women's term for a kind of mild depression that had no obvious
cause.
Idelba shook her head. 'No, this is a mushkil,' which was
a specific problem.
'What is it?'
'Well ... Simply put, the investigators at the laboratory
are getting some very strange results. That's what it comes down
to. No one can say what they mean.'
This laboratory Idelba talked to over the phone was
currently her main contact with the world outside their home. She
had been a mat ematics teacher and researcher in Nsara, and, with
her husband, an investigator of microscopic nature. But her
husband's untimely death had revealed some irregularities in his
affairs, and Idelba had been left destitute; and the job they had
shared had turned out to be his in the end, so that she had nowhere
to work, and nowhere to live. Or so Yasmina had said; Idelba
herself never spoke about it. She had shown up one day with a
single suitcase, weeping, to confer with Budur's father, her
half brother. He had agreed to put her up for a time. This,
Father explained later, was one of the things harems were for; they
protected women who had nowhere else to go. 'Your mother and you
girls complain about the system, but really, what is the
alternative? The suffering of women left alone would be
enormous.'
Mother and Budur's older cousin, Yasmina, would snort or
snarl at this, cheeks turning red. Rema and Aisha and Fatima would
look at them curiously, trying to understand what they should feel
about what to them was after all the natural order of things. Aunt
Idelba never said anything about it one way or the other, neither
thanks nor complaint. Old acquaintances still called her on the
phone, especially a nephew of hers, who apparently had a problem he
thought she could help him with; he called regularly. Once Idelba
tried to explain why to Budur and her sisters, with the aid of a
blackboard and chalk.
'Atoms have shells around them, like the spheres in the
heavens in the old drawings, all surrounding the heartknot of the
atom, which is small but heavy. Three kinds of particles clump
together in the heartknot, some with yang, some with yin, some
neuter, in different amounts for each substance, and they're held
bound together there by a strong force, which is very strong, but
also very local, in that you don't have to get far away from the
heartknot for the force to reduce a great deal.'
'Like a harem,' Yasmina said.
'Yes, well. That may be more like gravity, I'm afraid.
But anyway, there is a qi repulsion between all particles, that the
strong force counteracts, and the two compete, more or less, along
with other forces. Now, certain very heavy metals have so many
particles that a certain number leak away from them one by one, and
the single particles that leak leave distinctive traces at distinct
rates of speed. And down in Nsara they've been getting strange
results from a particular heavy metal, an elemental that is heavier
than gold, the heaviest elemental found so far, called alactin.
They're bombarding it with neuter particles, and getting very
strange results, all over the plates, in a way hard to explain. The
heavy heart of this elemental appears to be unstable.'
'Like Yasmina!'
'Yes, well, interesting that you say so, in that it is
not true but it suggests the way we keep trying to think of ways to
visualize these things that are always too small for us to see.'
She paused, looking at the blackboard, then at her uncomprehending
students. A spasm of some emotion marred her features, disappeared.
'Well. It is yet another phenomenon that needs explaining, let's
leave it at that. It will take more investigation in a lab.'
After that she scribbled in silence for a while. Numbers,
letters, Chinese ideograms, equations, dots, diagrams -- like
something out of illustrations for the books about the Alchemist of
Samarqand.
After a time she slowed down, shrugged. 'I'll have to
talk to Piali about it.'
'But isn't he in Nsara?' Budur asked.
'Yes.' This too was part of her mishkul, Budur saw. 'We
will talk by the telephone, of course." 'Tell us about
Nsara,' Budur asked for the thousandth time.
Idelba shrugged; she was not in the mood. She never was,
to begin with; it took a while to break through the barrier of
regrets to get her to that time. Her first husband, divorcing her
near the end of her fertility, with no children; her second
husband, dying young; she had a lot of regrets to get through. But
if Budur was patient and merely followed her around the
terrace, and in and out of rooms, she often would make the passage,
helped perhaps by her shifts from room to room, matching the way
each place on Earth we have lived in is like a room in our mind,
with its sky for a roof, hills for walls, and buildings for
furniture, so that our lives have moved from one room to the next
in some larger structure; and the old rooms still exist and yet at
the same time are gone, or emptied, so that in reality one could
only move on to some new room, or stay locked in the one you were
in, as in a jail; and yet, in the mind ...
First Idelba would speak of the weather there, the
storm tossed Atlantic rolling in with water, wind, cloud,
rain, fog, sleet, mist, sometimes snow, all broken by sunny days
with their low shards of light emblazoning the seafront and the
rivermouth, the docks of the giant city filling the valley on both
banks all the way upstream to Anjou, all the states of Asia and
Firanja come west to this westernmost town, to meet the other great
influx by sea, people from all over the world, including the
handsome Hodenosaunee, and the shivering exiles from Inka, with
their serapes and gold jewellery splashing the dark grey afternoons
of the stormthrashed winters with little bits of metallic colour.
These exotics all together made Nsara fascinating, Idelba said, as
did the unwelcome embassies of the Chinese and Tranvancoris,
enforcing the terms of the postwar settlement, standing there like
monuments to the Islamic defeat in the war, long windowless blocks
at the back of the harbour district. Describing all this, Idelba's
eyes would begin to gleam and her voice grow animated, and she
almost always, if she did not cut herself short, ended by
exclaiming Nsara! Nsara! Ohhh, Nssssarrrrra! And then sometimes sit
down wherever she was and hold her head in her hands, overwhelmed.
It was, Budur was sure, the most exciting and wonderful city on
Earth.
The Travancoris had of course founded a Buddhist
monastery school there, as they had in every city and town on
Earth, it seemed, with all the most modern departments and
laboratories, right next to the old madressa and the mosque, still
operating much as they had been since the 900s. The Buddhist monks
and teachers made the clerics of the madressa look very ignorant
and provincial, Idelba said, but they were always courteous to
Muslim practices, very unobtrusive and respectful, and over time a
number of sufi teachers and reformist clerics had eventually built
laboratories of their own, and had taken classes at the monastery
schools to prepare to work on questions of natural law in their own
establishments. 'They gave us time to swallow and digest the bitter
pill of our defeat,' Idelba said of these Buddhists. 'The Chinese
were smart to stay away and let these people be their emissaries.
That way we never really see how ruthless the Chinese are. We think
the Travancoris are the whole story.'
But it seemed to Budur that the Chinese were not so hard
as they could have been. The reparation payments were within the
realm of the possible, Father admitted, or if they were not, the
debts were always being forgiven, or put off. And in Firanja, at
least, the Buddhist monastery schools and hospitals were the only
signs of the victors of the war imposing their will -- almost; that
dark part, the shadow of the conquerors, opium, was becoming more
and more common in Firanji cities, and Father declared angrily
after reading the newspapers that as it all came from Afghanistan
and Burma, its shipment to Firanja was almost certainly sanctioned
by the Chinese. Even in Turi one saw the poor souls in the working
district cafes downriver, stupefied by the oddsmelling smoke, and
in Nsara Idelba said the drug was widespread, like any other world
city in that regard, even though it was Islam's world city, the
only Islamic capital not destroyed by the war; Konstantiniyye,
Cairo , Moscow, Teheran, Zanzibar, Damascus and Baghdad had been
firebombed, and not yet completely rebuilt.
Nsara had survived, however, and now it was the sufis'
city, the scientists' city, Idelba's city; she had gone to it after
a childhood in Turi and at the family farm in the Alps, she had
gone to school there, and mathematical formulations had spoken to
her as if speaking aloud from the page; she understood them, she
spoke that strange alchemical language. Old men explained its rules
of grammar to her, and she followed them and did the work, learned
more, made her mark in theoretical specu lations about the
nature of microscopic matter when she was only twenty years old.
'Young minds are often the strongest in maths,' she said later
already outside the experience itself. Into the labs of Nsara,
then, helping the famous Lisbi and his team to bolt a cyclic
accelerator together, getting married, then getting divorced, then,
apparently very quickly, rather mysteriously, Budur thought,
getting remarried, which was almost unheard of in Turi; working
again with her second husband, very happily,
then his unexpected death; and her again mysterious
return to Turi, her retreat.
Budur asked once, 'Did you wear the veil there?'
'Sometimes,' Idelba said. 'It depended on the situation.
The veil has a kind of power, in certain situations. All such signs
stand for other things; they are sentences spoken in matter. The
hijab can say to strangers, 'I am Islamic and in solidarity with my
men, against you and all the world.' To Islamic men it can say, 'I
will play this foolish game, this fantasy of yours, but only if in
return you do everything I tell you to. For some men this trade,
this capitulation to love, is a kind of release from the craziness
of being a man. So the veil can be like putting on a magician
queen's cape.' But seeing Budur's hopeful expression she added, 'Or
it can be like putting on a slave's collar, certainly.'
'So sometimes you didn't wear one?'
'Usually I did not. In the lab it would have been silly.
I wore a lab jellabah, like the men. We were there to study atoms,
to study nature. That is the greatest godliness! And without
gender. That simply isn't what it's about. So, the people you are
working with, you see them face to face, soul to soul.' Eyes
shining, she quoted from some old poem: Every
moment an epiphany arrives, and cleaves the mountain
asunder. -- This had been the way of it for Idelba in
her youth; and now she sat in her brother's little
middle class harem, 'protected' by him in a way that gave her
frequent attacks of hem, that in truth made her a fairly volatile
person, like a Yasmina with a bent towards secrecy rather than
garrulousness. Alone with Budur, pinning up laundry on the terrace,
she would look at the treetops sticking over the walls and sigh.
'If only I could walk again at dawn through the empty streets of
the city! Blue, then pink -- to deny one that is absurd. To deny
one the world, on one's own terms -- it's archaic! It's
unacceptable.'
But she did not run away. Budur did not fully understand
why. Surely Aunt Idelba was capable of tramming down the hill to
the railway station, and taking a train to Nsara, and finding
lodgings there somewhere -- and getting a job that would
support her somehow? And if not her, then whom? What woman
could do it? None of good repute; not if Idelba couldn't. The only
time Budur dared to ask her about it, she only shook her head
brusquely and said, 'There are other reasons too. I can't talk
about it.'
So there was something quite frightening to Budur about Idelba's
presence in their home, a daily reminder that a woman's life could
crash like an aeroplane out of the sky. The longer it went on the
more disturbing Budur found it, and she noticed that Idelba too
grew more agitated, wandering from room to room reading and
muttering, or working over her papers with a big mathematical
calculator, a net of strings holding beads of different colours.
She wrote for hours on her blackboard, and the chalk squeaked and
clicked and sometimes snapped off in her fingers. She talked on the
phone down in the courtyard, sounding upset sometimes, pleased at
others; doubting, or excited -- and all about numbers, letters, the
value of this and that, strengths and weaknesses, forces of
microscopic things that no one would ever see. She said to Budur
once, staring at her equations, 'You know Budur, there is a very
great deal of energy locked into things. The Travancori Chandaala
was the deepest thinker we ever have had on this Earth; you could
say the Long War was a catastrophe just because of his death alone.
But he left us a lot, and the energy mass equivalence -- look
-- a mass, that's just a measure for a certain weight, say -- you
multiply it by the speed o ig t, and square the result -- multiply
it by half a million li per second, think of that! then take the
square of that, so -- see enormous numbers result, for even
a little pinch of matter. That's the qi energy locked up in it. A
strand of your hair has more energy in it than a locomotive.'
'No wonder it's so hard to get a brush through it,' Budur
said uneasily, and Idelba laughed.
'But there's something wrong?' Budur asked.
At first Idelba did not answer. She was thinking, and
lost to all around her. Then she stared at Budur.
'Something is wrong if we make it wrong. As always.
Nothing in nature is wrong in itself.'
Budur wasn't so sure of that. Nature made men and women,
nature made flesh and blood, hearts, periods, bitter feelings ...
sometimes it all seemed wrong to Budur, as if happiness were a
stale scrap of bread, and all the swans of her heart were fighting
for it, starving for it.
The roof of the house was forbidden to the women; it was
a place where they might be observed from the roof terraces higher
up Turi's Eastern Hill. And yet the men never used it, and it was
the perfect place to get above the street's treetops, and have a
view of the Alps to the south of Lake Turi. So, when the men
were all gone, and Ahmet asleep in his chair by the gate, Aunt
Idelba and cousin Yasmina would use the laundry drying posts as the
legs of a ladder, placing them in olive jars and lashing them
together, so that they could climb the lashings very gingerly, with
the girls below and Idelba above holding the posts. Up they would
go until they were all on the roof, in the dark, under the stars,
in the wind, whispering so that Ahmet would not hear them,
whispering so that they would not shout at the top of their lungs.
The Alps in full moonlight stood there like white cardboard
cut outs at the back of a puppet stage, perfectly vertical,
the very image of what mountains should look like. Yasmina brought
up her candles and powders to say the magic spells that would drive
her male admirers to distraction -- as if they weren't already --
but Yasmina had an insatiable desire for men's regard, sharpened no
doubt by the lack of access to it in the harem. Her Travancori
incense would swirl up into the night, sandalwood, musk, saffron,
nagi, and with their exotic scents filling her head it would seem
to Budur a different world, vaster, more mysteriously meaningful
things suffused with their meanings as if with a liquid,
right to the limits of surface tension, everything become a symbol
of itself, the moon the symbol of moon, the sky the symbol of sky,
the mountains the symbol of mountains, all bathed in a dark blue
sea of longing. Longing the very essence of longing, painful and
beautiful, bigger than the world itself.
Once, however, the full moon came, and Idelba did not
organize an expedition to the roof terrace. She had spent many
hours that month on the telephone, and after each conversation had
been uncharacteristically subdued. She hadn't described to the
girls the contents of these calls, or said who she had been talking
to, though from her manner of talk Budur assumed it was her nephew,
as usual. But no discussion of them at all.
Perhaps it was this that made Budur sensitive and wary of
some change. On the night of the full moon she scarcely slept,
waking every watch to see the moving shadows on the floor, waking
from dreams of anxious flight through the alleys of the old town,
escaping something behind her she never quite saw. Near dawn she
woke to a noise from the terrace, and looked out of her little
window to see Idelba carrying the laundry poles down from the
terrace into the stairwell. Then the olive jars as well.
Budur slipped out into the hall and down to the window at the
carrel overlooking the yard in front. Idelba was constructing their
ladder against the side of the household wall, just around the
corner of the house from Ahmet's locked gate. She would top the
wall next to a big elm tree that stood in the alley running between
the walls of their house and the al Dins' next door, who were
from Neshapur.
Without a moment's hesitation, without any thought at
all, Budur ran back to her room and dressed quickly, then ran
downstairs and back out into the yard, around the corner of the
house, glancing around the corner to be sure Idelba had gone.
She had. The way was clear; Budur could follow without
impediment.
This time she did hesitate; and it would be difficult to
describe her thoughts in that crucial moment of her life. No
particular train of thought occupied her mind, but rather a kind of
balancing of her whole existence: the harem, her mother's moods,
her father's indifference to her, Ahab's simple face always behind
her like an idiot animus, Yasmina's weeping; all of Turi at once,
balanced on its two hills on each side of the River Limat, and in
her head; beyond all that, huge cloudy masses of feeling, like the
clouds one saw boiling up over the Alps. All inside her chest; and
outside her a sensation as if clusters of eyes were trained on her,
the ghost audience to her life, perhaps, out there always whether
she saw them or not, like the stars. Something like that. It is
always thus at the moment of change, when we rise up out of the
everyday and get clear of the blinkers of habit, and stand naked to
existence, to the moment of choice, vast, dark, windy. The world is
huge in these moments, huge. Too big to bear. Visible to all the
ghosts of the world. The centre of the universe.
She lurched forwards. She ran to the ladder, climbed
swiftly; it was no different to when it was set upstairs between
terrace and roof. The branches of the elm were big and solid, it
was easy to climb down far enough in them to make a final jump to
the ground, jarring her fully awake, after which she rolled to her
feet as smoothly as if she had been in on the plan from the
start.
She tiptoed to the street and looked towards the tram
stop. Her heart was thumping hard now, and she was hot in the chill
air. She could take the tram or walk straight down the narrow
streets, so steep that in several places they were staired. She was
sure Idelba was off to the railway station, and if she was
wrong, she could give up the chase.
Even wearing a veil it was too early for a girl from a
good family to be on the tram alone; indeed, it was always too
early for a respectable girl to be out alone. So she hustled over
to the top of the first stair alley, and began hurrying down the
weaving course, through courtyard, park, alley, the stair of the
roses, the tunnel made by Japanese fire maples, down and down the
familiar way to the old town and the bridge crossing the river to
the railway station. Onto the bridge, where she looked upstream to
the patch of sky between old stone buildings, its blue arched over
the pink hem of the little bit of mountains visible, an embroidery
dropped into the far end of the lake.
She was losing her resolve when she saw Idelba in the
station, reading the schedule for track listings. Budur ducked
behind a streetlight post, ran around the building into the doors
on the other side, and likewise read a schedule. The first train
for Nsara was on Track 16, at the far side of the station, leaving
at five sharp, which had to be close. She checked the clock hanging
over the row of trains, under the roof of the big shed; five
minutes to spare. She slipped onto the last car of the train.
The train jerked slightly and was off. Budur moved
forwards up the train, car to car, holding onto the seat backs, her
heart knocking faster and faster. What was she going to say to
Idelba? And what if Idelba was not on the train, and Budur off to
Nsara on her own, with no money?
But there Idelba sat, hunched over, looking forwards out
of the window. Budur steeled herself and burst through the
compartment door and rushed to her weeping, threw herself on her,
'I'm sorry, Aunt Idelba, I didn't know you were going this far, I
only followed to keep you company, I hope you have money to pay for
my ticket too?'
'Oh name of Allah!' Idelba was shocked; then furious;
mostly at herself, Budur judged through her tears, though she took
it out for a little while on Budur, saying, 'This is important
business I'm on, this is no girl's prank! Oh, what will happen?
What will happen? I should send you right back on the next
train!'
Budur only shook her head and wept some more.
The train clicked quickly over the tracks, through
country that was rather bland; hill and farm, hill and farm, flat
woods and pastures, all clicking by at an enormous speed, it almost
made ber sick to look out of the window, though she had ridden in
trains all her life, and had looked out before at the view without
feeling anything.
At the end of a long day the train entered the bleak
outskirts of a city, like Downbrook only bigger, li after li of
apartment blocks and close set houses behind their walls,
bazaars full of people, neighbourhood mosques and bigger buildings
of various kinds; then really big buildings, a whole knot of them
flanking the many bridged river, just before it opened out
into the estuary, now a giant harbour, protected by a jetty that
was broad enough to hold a street on it, with businesses on both
sides.
The train took them right to the heart of this district
of tall buildings, where a station, glass roofed and grimy,
let them out onto a broad treelined street, a two--parted street
divided by huge oaks planted in a line down a centre island. They
were a few blocks from the docks and the jetty. It smelled
fishy.
A broad esplanade ran along the riverbank, backed by a
row of redleaved trees. Idelba walked quickly down this corniche,
like Turi's lakeside corniche only much grander, until she turned
onto a narrow street lined with three storey apartment blocks,
their first floors occupied by restaurants and shops. Up some
stairs into one of these buildings, then into a doorway with three
doors. Idelba rang the bell for the middle one, and the door opened
and they were welcomed into an apartment like an old palace fallen
apart.
TWO
Not an old palace, it turned out, but an old museum. No
room in it was very big or impressive, but there were a lot of
them. False ceilings, open ceilings and abrupt cuts in wall
paintings and wainscoting patterns made it clear that bigger rooms
had been divided and subdivided. Most of the rooms held more than
one bed or cot, and the huge kitchen was crowded with women making
a meal or waiting to eat it. They were thin women, for the most
part. It was noisy with talk and stove fans. 'What is this?'
Budur asked Idelba under the hubbub.
'This is a zawiyya. A kind of boarding house for women.'
Then with a bleak smile: 'An anti harem.' She explained that
these had been traditional in the Maghrib, and now they were
widespread in Firanja. The war had left many more women alive than
men, despite the indiscrim inate devastation of its last two
decades, when more civilians than soldiers had died, and women's
brigades had been common on both sides. Turi and the other Alpine
emirates had kept more men at home than most countries, putting
them to work in the armouries, so Budur had heard of the
depopulation problem, but had never seen it. As for the zawlyyas,
Idelba said they were still technically illegal, as the laws
against female ownership of property had never been changed; but
male nominal owners and other legal dodges were used to legitimize
scores of them, hundreds of them.
'Why did you not live in one of these after your husband
died?' Budur asked.
Idelba frowned. 'I needed to leave for a while.'
They were assigned a room that had three beds, but no
other occupants. The third bed would serve as desk and table. The
room was dusty, and its little window looked out on other grimy
windows, all facing in on an airshaft, as Idelba called it.
Buildings here were so compressed together that they had to
remember to leave shafts for air.
But no complaints. A bed, a kitchen, women around them:
Budur was content. But Idelba was still very worried, about
something having to do with ber nephew Piali and his work. In their
new room she stared at Budur with a dismay she couldn't conceal.
'You know, I should send you back to your father. I've got enough
trouble as it is.'
'No. I won't go.'
Idelba stared at her. 'How old are you again?'
'I'm twenty three.' She would be in two months.
Idelba was surprised. 'I thought you were younger.'
Budur blushed and looked down.
Idelba grimaced. 'Sorry. That's the effect of the harem.
And no men left to marry. But look, you have to do something.'
'I want to stay here.'
'Well, even so, you have to inform your father where you
are, and tell him that I did not kidnap you.'
'He'll come here and get me.'
'No. I don't think so. In any case you must tell him
something. Phone him, or write him a letter.'
Budur was afraid to talk to her father, even over the
phone. The idea of a letter was intriguing. She could explain
herself without giving away her precise location.
She wrote: Dear Father and Mother,
I followed Aunt Idelba when she left, though she did not
know it. I have come to Nsara to live and to pursue a course of
study. The Quran says all of Allah's creatures are equal in His
eyes. I will write you and the rest of the family a weekly report
on my affairs, and will live an orderly life here in Nsara that
will not shame the family. I am living in a good zawiyya with Aunt
Idelba, and she will look after me. Lots of young women here are
doing this, and they will all help me. I will study at the
madressa. Please convey all my love to Yasmina, Rema, Aisha, Nawah
and Fatima.
Your loving daughter, Budur She posted this off,
and after that stopped thinking of Turi. The letter was helpful in
making her feel less guilty. And after a while she realized, as the
weeks went on, and she did clerical work, and cleaning, and
cooking, and other help of that kind in the zawiyya, and made the
arrangements to start studies at the institute connected to the
madressa, that she was not going to get a letter back from her
father. And Mother was illiterate; and her cousins no doubt
forbidden to write, and perhaps angry at her for abandoning them;
and her brother would not be sent after her, nor would he want to
be; nor would she be arrested by the police and sent off in a
sealed train to Turi. That happened to no one. There were literally
thousands of women both escaping from home, and relieving those
left behind from the burden of caring for them. What in Turi had
looked like an eternal system of law and custom that the whole
world abided by, was in reality nothing more than the antiquated
habits of one moribund segment of a single society,
mountain bound and conservative, furiously inventing
pan Islamic 'traditions' even at the moment they were all
disappearing, like morning mist or (more appropriately)
battlefield smoke. She would never go back, it was that simple! And
no one was going to make her. No one even wanted to make her; that
too was a bit of a shock. Sometimes it did not feel so much that
she had escaped as that she had been abandoned.
There was this fundamental fact, however, which struck
her every day when she left the zawiyya: she was no longer living
in a harem. She could go where she chose, when she chose. This
alone was enough to make her feel giddy and strange -- free,
solitary -- almost too happy, to the point of disorientation, or
even a kind of panic: once right in the midst of this euphoria she
saw from behind a man emerging from the railway station and thought
for a second it was her father, and was glad, relieved; but it
wasn't him; and all the rest of that day her hands shook with
anger, shame, fear, longing.
Later it happened again. It happened several times, and
she came to regard the experience as a kind of ghost glimpsed in
the mirror, her past life haunting her: her father, her uncles, her
brother, her male cousins, always in actuality the faces of various
strangers, just alike enough to give her a start, make her heart
jump with fear, though she loved them all. She would have been so
happy to think they were proud of her, that they cared enough to
come after her. But if it meant returning to the harem, she never
wanted to see them again. She would never again submit to rules
from anyone. Even ordinary sane rules now gave her a quick surge of
anger, an instantaneous and complete NO that would fill her like a
shriek in the nerves. Islam in its literal meaning meant
submission: but NO! She had lost that ability. A traffic
policewoman, warning her not to cross the busy harbour road outside
the crosswalks: Budur cursed her. The house rules in her zawiyya:
her teeth would clench. Don't leave dirty plates in the sink, help
wash the sheets every Thursday; NO.
But all that anger was trivial compared to the fact of
her freedom. She woke in the morning, understood where she was,
leapt out of bed full of amazed energy. An hour's vigorous work in
the zawiyya had her groomed and fed, and some of the communal work
done, bathrooms cleaned, dishes, all the chores that had to be done
over and over again, all the chores that at home had been performed
by the servants but how much finer it was to do such work
for an hour than to have other human beings sacrificing their whole
lives to it! How clear it was that this was a model for all human
labour and relations!
Those things done, she was off into the fresh ocean air,
like a cold salty wet drug, sometimes with a shopping list,
sometimes only with her bag of books and writing materials.
Wherever she was going she would go by the harbour, to see the
ocean outside the jetty, and the wind whipping the flags; and one
fine morning she stood at the end of the jetty with nowhere to go,
and nothing to do; and no one in the world knew where she was at
that moment, except for her. My God, the feel of that! The harbour
crowded with ships, the brown water running out to sea on the ebb
tide, the sky a pale wash of clean azure, and all of a sudden she
bloomed, there were oceans of clouds in ber chest, she wept for
joy. Ah, Nsara! Nsssarrrrra!
But first on her list of things to do, on many mornings,
was to visit the White Crescent Disabled Soldiers' Home, a vast
converted army barracks a long way up the river park. This was one
of those duties Idelba had pointed her towards, and Budur found it
both harrowing and uplifting -- like going to the mosque on Friday
was supposed to be and never really had been. The larger part of
this barracks and hospital was taken up by a few thousand blind
soldiers, rendered sightless by gas on the eastern front. In the
mornings they sat in silence, in beds or chairs or wheelchairs as
the case might be, as someone read to them, usually a woman: daily
newspapers on their thin inky sheets, or various texts, or in some
cases the Quran and the hadith, though these were less popular.
Many of the men had been wounded as well as blinded, and could not
walk or move; they sat there with half a face, or without legs,
aware, it seemed, of how they must appear, and staring in the
direction of the readers with a hungry ashamed look, as if they
would kill and eat her if they could, from unrealizable love or
bitter resentment, or both all mixed together. Such naked
expressions Budur had never seen in her life, and she often kept
her own gaze fixed on whatever text she was reading, as though, if
she were to glance up at them they would know it and recoil, or
hiss with disapprobation. Her periph eral vision revealed to
her an audience out of a nightmare, as if one of the rooms of hell
had extruded from the underworld to reveal its inhabitants, waiting
to be processed, as they had waited and been processed in life.
Despite her attempts not to look, every time she read to them Budur
saw more than one of them weeping, no matter what it was she
read, even the weather reports from Firanja or Africa or the New
World. The weather actually was one of their favourite
readings.
Among the other readers there were very plain women who
nevertheless had beautiful voices, low and clear, musical, women
who sang their whole lives without knowing it (and knowing would
have ruined the effect); when they read many in their audience sat
forward in their beds and wheelchairs, rapt, in love with a woman
to whom they never would have given a second glance could they have
seen her. And Budur saw that some of the men leaned forward in the
same way for her, though in her own ears her voice was unpleasantly
high and scratchy. But it had its fans. Sometimes she read them the
stories of Scheherazade, addressing them as if they were angry King
Shahryar and she the wily storyteller, staying alive one more
night; and one day, emerging from that antechamber of hell into the
soaked sunlight of cloudy noon, she almost staggered at the
realization of how completely the old story had been turned on its
head, Scheherazade free to walk away, while the Shahryars were
imprisoned for ever in their own wrecked bodies.
THREE
That duty accomplished, she walked through the bazaar to
the classes she was taking, in subjects suggested by Aunt Idelba.
The madressa institute's classes were folded in to the Buddhist
monastery and hospital, and Budur paid a fee, with money borrowed
from Idelba, to take three classes: beginning statistics (which
began with simple arithmetic, in fact), accounting and the history
of Islam.
This last course was taught by a woman named Kirana
Fawwaz, a short dark Algerine with an intense voice hoarsened by
cigarettes. She looked about forty or forty five. In the first
meeting she informed them she had served in the war hospitals and
then, near the end of the Nakba (or the Catastrophe, as the war was
often referred to) in the Maghribi women's brigades. She was
nothing like the soldiers in the White Crescent home, however; she
had come out of the Nakba with the air of one victorious, and
declared in the first meeting that they would in fact have won the
war, if they had not been betrayed both at home and abroad.
'Betrayed by what?' she asked in her harsh crow's voice,
seeing the question on all their faces. 'I will tell you: by the
clerics. By our men more generally. And by Islam itself.'
Her audience stared at her. Some lowered their heads
uneasily, as if expecting Kirana to be arrested on the spot, if not
struck down by lightning. Surely at the least she would be run down
later that day by an unexpected tram. And there were several men in
the class as well, one right next to Budur, in fact, wearing a
patch over one eye. But none of them said anything, and the class
went on as if one could say such things and get away with it.
'Islam is the last of the old desert monotheisms,' Kirana
told them. 'It is belated in that sense, an anomaly. It followed
and built on the earlier pastoral monotheisms of the Middle West,
which predated Mohammed by several centuries at least:
Christianity, the Essenes, the Jews, the Zoroastrians, the
Mithraists and so on. They were all strongly patriarchal, replacing
earlier matriarchal polytheisms, created by the first agricultural
civilizations, in which gods resided in every domesticated plant,
and women were acknowledged to be crucial to the production of food
and new life.
'Islam was therefore a latecomer, and as such, a
corrective to the earlier monotheisms. It had the chance to be the
best monotheism, and in many ways it was. But because it began in
an Arabia that had been shattered by the wars of the Roman empire
and the Christian states, it had to deal first with a condition of
almost pure anarchy, a tribal war of all against all, in which
women were at the mercy of any warring party. From those depths no
new religion could leap very high.
'Mohammed thus arrived as a prophet who was both trying
to do good, and trying not to be overwhelmed by war, and by his
experiencing of divine voices babbling some of the time, as
the Quran will attest.'
This remark drew gasps, and several women stood and
walked out. All the men in the room, however, remained as if
transfixed.
'Spoken to by God or speaking whatever came into his
head, it did not matter; the end result was good, at first. A
tremendous increase in law, in justice, in women's rights, and in a
general sense of order and human purpose in history. Indeed, it was
precisely this sense of justice and divine purpose which
gave Islam its unique power in the first few centuries AH, when it
swept the world despite the fact that it gave no new material
advantage -- one of the only clear cut demonstrations of the
power of the idea alone, in all of history.
'But then came the caliphs, the sultans, the divisions,
the wars, the clerics and their hadith. The hadith overgrew the
Quran itself, they seized on every scrap of misogyny scattered in
Mohammed's basically feminist work, and stitched them into the
shroud in which they wrapped the Quran, as being too radical to
enact. Generations of patriarchal clerics built up a mass of hadith
that has no Quranic authority whatsoever, thus rebuilding an unjust
tyranny, using frequently falsified authorities of personal
transmission from male master to male student, as if a lie passed
down through three or ten generations of men somehow metamorphoses
into a truth. But it is not so.
'And so Islam, like Christianity and Judaism before it,
stagnated and degenerated. Because its expansion was so great, it
was harder to see this failure and collapse; indeed, it took up
until the Nakba itself to make it clear. But this perversion of
Islam lost us the war. It was women's rights, and nothing else,
that gave China and Travancore and Yingzhou the victory. It was the
absence of women's rights in Islam that turned half the population
into non productive illiterate cattle, and lost us the war.
The tremendous intellectual and mechanical progress that had been
initiated by Islamic scientists was picked up and carried to much
greater heights by the Buddhist monks of Travancore and the
Japanese diaspora, and this revolution in mechanical capacity was
quickly developed by China and the New World free states; by
everyone, in fact, except for Dar al Islam. Even our reliance
on camels did not come to an end until midway through the Long War.
Without any road wider than two camels, with every city built as a
kasbah or a medina, as tightly packed as a bazaar, nothing could be
done in the way of modernization. Only the war's destruction of the
city cores allowed us to rebuild in a modern way, and only our
desperate attempt to defend ourselves brought any industrial
progress to speak of. But by then it was a case of too little and
too late.'
At this point the room was quite a bit emptier than it
had been when Kirana Fawwaz began; and two girls had exclaimed as
they stormed out that they were going to report these blasphemies
to the clerics and the police. But Kirana Fawwaz only paused to
light a cigarette and wave them out of the room, before
continuing.
'Now,' she went on, calmly, inexorably, remorselessly,
'in the aftermath of the Nakba, everything has to be
reconsidered, everything. Islam has to be examined root and branch
and leaf, in the effort to make it well, if that is possible; in
the effort to make our civilization capable of survival. But
despite this obvious necessity, the regressives prattle their
broken old hadith like magic charms to conjure jinns, and in states
like Afghanistan or Sudan, or even in corners of Firanja itself, in
the Alpine Emirates and Skandistan, for instance, the hezbollah
rule, and women are forced into chador and hijab and harem, and the
men in power in these states try to pretend that it is the year 300
in Baghdad or Damascus, and that Haroun al Rashid will come
walking in the door to make everything right. They might as well
pretend to be Christian and hope the cathedrals will spring back to
life and Jesus come flying down from heaven.'
FOUR
As Kirana spoke, Budur saw in her mind the blind men in
the hospital; the walled residential streets of Turi; her father's
face as he was reading to her mother, the sight of the ocean; a
white tomb in the jungle; indeed everything in her life, and many
things she had never thought of before. Her mouth hung open, she
was stunned, frightened but also elated, by every single
shocking word of it: it confirmed everything she had suspected in
her ignorant balked furious girlhood, trapped in her father's
house. She had spent her whole life thinking that something was
seriously wrong With herself, or with the world, or both. Now
reality seemed to have opened up under ber like a trapdoor, as all
her suspicions were confirmed in glorious style. She held onto her
scat, even, and stared at the woman lecturing them, hypnotized as
if by some great hawk circling overhead, hypnotized not just by her
angry analysis of all that had gone wrong, but by the image she
evoked thereby of History itself, the huge long string of events
that had led to this moment, here and now in this rainlashed
western harbour city; hypnotized by the oracle of time itself,
rasping on in her urgent smoky crow's voice. So much had happened
already, nahdas and nakbas, time after time; what could be said
after all that? One had to have courage even to try to talk about
it.
But very clearly this Kirana Fawwaz did not lack for
courage. Now she stopped, and looked around at the
half emptied room. 'Well,' she said cheerfully, acknowledging
with a brief sardonic smile Budur's round eyed look, somewhat
like that of the astonished fish in the boxes at the market. 'It
seems we have driven out everyone who can be driven out. Left are
the brave of heart to venture into this dark country, our
past.'
The brave of heart or the weak of limb, Budur thought,
glancing around. An old one armed soldier looked on
imperturbably. The oneeyed man still sat next to her. Several
women of various ages sat looking around uneasily, shifting in
their seats. A few looked to Budur like women of the street, and
one of these was grinning. Not what Budur had imagined when Idelba
had talked about the Nsarene Madressa and Institutes of Higher
Learning; the flotsam of Dar al Islam, in fact, the sorry
survivors of the Nakba, the swans in winter; women who had lost
their husbands, fiances, fathers, brothers, women who been orphaned
and never since had the chance to meet a single man; and the
warwounded themselves, including a blinded veteran like the ones
Budur read to, led to the class by his sister, and then the
one armed one, and the eyepatch next to her; also a
Hodenosaunee mother and daughter, supremely confident and
dignified, relaxed, interested, but with nothing at stake; also a
longshoreman with a bad back, who seemed to be there mainly to get
out of the rain for six hours a week. These were the ones that
remained, lost souls of the city, looking for something indoors to
occupy them, they were not sure what. But perhaps, for the moment
at least, it would do to stay here and listen to Kirana Fawwaz's
harsh lecture.
'What I want to do,' she said then, 'is to cut through
all the stories, through the million stories we have constructed to
defend ourselves from the reality of the Nakba, to reach
explanation. To the meaning of what has happened, do you
understand? This is an introduction to history, like Khaldun's,
only spoken among us, in conversation. I will be suggesting various
projects for further research as we go along. Now let's go and get
a drink.'
She led them out into the dusk of the long northern
evening, to a cafe behind the docks, where they found acquaintances
from other parts of her life, already there eating late meals or
smoking cigarettes or puffing on communal narghiles, and drinking
little cups of thick coffee. They sat and talked through the long
twilight, then far into the night, the docks out of the windows
empty and calm, the lights from across the harbour squiggling on
black water. The man with the eyepatch was a friend of Kirana's, it
turned out; his name was Hasan, and he introduced himself to Budur
and invited her to sit on the wall bench next to him and his group
of acquaintances, including singers and actors from the institute,
and the city's theatres. 'My fellow student here, I venture to
say,' he said to the others, 'was quite taken by our professor's
opening remarks.'
Budur nodded shyly and they cackled at her. She inquired
about ordering a cup of coffee.
The talk around the dirty marble tabletops ranged widely,
as was true in all such places, even back in Turi. The news in the
newspapers. Interpretations of the war. Gossip about the city
officials. Talk about plays and the cinema. Kirana sometimes rested
and listened, sometimes talked on as if she were still in her
class.
'Iran is the wine of history, they are always getting
crushed.'
'Some vintages are better than others so for them all
great civilizations must finally be crushed.'
'This is merely al Katalan again. It is too
simple.'
'A world history has to simplify,' the old one armed
soldier said. His name was Naser Shah, Budur learned; his accent
when speaking Firanjic marked him as Iranian. 'The trick of it is
to get at causes of things, to generate some sense of the overall
story.'
'But if there isn't one?' Kirana asked.
'There is,' Naser said calmly. 'All people who have ever
lived on Earth have acted together to make a global history. It is
one story. Certain patterns are evident in it. The collisionary
theories of Ibrahim al Lanzhou, for instance. No doubt
they're just yin and yang again, but they make it seem pretty clear
that much of what we call progress comes from the clash of two
cultures.'
'Progress by collision, what kind of progress is this,
did you see those two trams the other day after the one jumped its
tracks?'
Kirana said, 'Al Lanzhou's core civilizations
represent the three logically possible religions, with Islam
believing in one god, India in many gods, and China in no
gods.'
'That's why China won,' said Hasan, his one eye gleaming
with mischief. 'They turned out to be right. Earth congealed out of
cosmic dust, life appeared and evolved, until a certain ape made
more and more sounds, and off we went. Never any God involved,
nothing supernatural, no eternal souls reincarnated time after
time. Only the Chinese really faced that, leading the way with
their science, honouring nothing but their ancestors, working only
for their descendants. And so they dominate us all!'
'It's just that there's more of them,' one of the
questionable women said.
'But they can support more people on less land. This
proves they are right!'
Naser said, 'Each culture's strength can also be its
weakness. We saw this in the war. China's lack of religion made
them horribly cruel.'
The Hodenosaunee women from the class appeared and joined
them; they too were acquaintances of Kirana's. Kirana welcomed
them, saying, 'Here are our conquerors, a culture in which women
have power! I wonder if we could judge civilizations by how well
women have done in them.'
'They have built them all,' proclaimed the oldest woman
there, who up till now had only sat there knitting. She was at
least eighty, and therefore had lived through most of the war,
start to finish, childhood to old age. 'No civilizations exist
without the homes women build from the inside.'
'Well, how much political power women have taken, then.
How comfortable their men are with the idea of women having this
kind of power.'
'That would be China.'
'No, the Hodenosaunee.'
'Not Travancore?'
No one ventured to say.
'This should be investigated!' Kirana said. 'This will be
one of your projects. A history of women in the other cultures of
the world their actions as political creatures -- their
fates. That this is missing from history as we have been given it
so far, is a sign that we still live in the wreckage of patriarchy.
And nowhere more so than in Islam.'
FIVE
Budur of course told Idelba all about Kirana's lecture
and the after class meeting, describing them excitedly while
they washed dishes together, and then sheets. Idelba nodded and
asked questions, interested; but in the end she said, 'I hope you
will keep working hard on your statistics class. Talk about these
kinds of things can go on for ever, but numbers are the only thing
that will get you beyond talk.'
'What do you mean?'
'Well, the world operates by number, by physical laws,
expressed mathematically. If you know these, you will have a better
grasp of things. And some possible job skills. Speaking of which, I
think I can get you a job washing glassware in the lab. That would
be good, it will give you some more money, and teach you that you
want some job skills. Don't get sucked into the whirlpool of cafe
talk.'
'But talk can be good! It's teaching me so many things,
not just about history, but what it all means. It sorts it out, as
we used to do in the harem.'
'Exactly! You can talk all you want in the harem! But
it's only in institutes that you can do science. Since you've
bothered to come here, you might as well take advantage of what's
offered.'
This gave Budur pause. Idelba saw her thinking about it,
and went on: 'Even if you do want to study history, which is
perfectly sensible, there is a way of doing it that goes beyond
cafe talk, that inspects the actual artefacts and sites left from
the past, and establishes what can be asserted with physical
evidence to back it, as in the other sciences. Firanja is full of
old places that are being investigated for the first time in
a scientific manner like this, and it is very interesting. And it
will take decades to investigate them all, even centuries.'
She straightened up, held her lower back and rubbed it as
she regarded Budur. 'Come with me for a picnic on Friday. I'll take
you up the coast to see the menhirs.'
'The menhirs? What are they?'
'You will see on Friday.'
So on Friday they took the tram as far north up the coast
as it ran, then changed to a bus and rode for half a watch, looking
out at the apple orchards and the occasional glimpses of the dark
blue ocean. Finally Idelba led the way off at one stop, and they
walked west out of a tiny village, immediately into a forest of
immense standing stones, set in long lines over a slightly rolling
grassy plain, interrupted here and there by huge mature oak trees.
It was an uncanny sight.
'Who put these here? The Franks?'
'Before the Franks. Before the Kelts, perhaps. No one is
quite sure. Their living settlements have not been found with
certainty, and it's very difficult to date the time when these
stones were dressed and stood on end.'
'It must have taken, I don't know, centuries to put this
many up!'
'It depends on how many of them there were doing it, I
suppose. Maybe there were as many then as now, who can say? Only I
would expect not, as we find no ruined cities, as they do in Egypt
or the Middle West. No, it must have been a smaller population,
taking a lot of time and effort.'
'But how can a historian work with stuff like this?'
Budur asked at one point, as they walked down one of the long lanes
created by the rows of stones, studying the patterns of black and
yellow lichen that grew on their nobbled surfaces. Most were about
twice Budur's height, really massive things.
'You study things instead of stories. It's something
different from history, more a scientific inquiry of material
conditions that early people lived in, things they made.
Archaeology. Again, it is a science that began during the first
Islamic flowering, in Syria and Iraq, then was not pursued again
until the Nahda,' this being the rebirth of Islamic high culture in
certain cities like Teheran and Cairo, in the half century
before the Long War started and wrecked everything. 'Now our
understanding of physics and geology is such that new methods of
inquiry are being suggested all the time. And construction and
reconstruction projects are digging up all kinds of new finds as
well, and people are going out deliberately looking for more, and
it is all coming together in a very exciting way. It is a science
taking off, if you know what I mean. Most interesting. And Firanja
is turning out to be one of the best places to practise it. This is
an ancient place.'
She gestured at the long rows of stones, like a crop
seeded by great stone gods who had never come back to make a
harvest. Clouds scudded by overhead, and the blue sky seemed flat
and low over them. 'Not just these, or the stone rings in Britain,
but stone tombs, monuments, whole villages. I'll have to take you
up to the Orkneys with me some time. I may be wanting to go up
there soon in any case, I'll take you along. Anyway, you think
about studying this kind of thing too, as a grounding for you while
you listen to Madam Fawwaz and all her scheherazading.'
Budur rubbed her hand over a stone dressed by a thin
lichen coat of many colours. Clouds rushed by. 'I will.'
SIX
Classes, a new job cleaning Idelba's lab, walking the
docks and the jetty, dreaming of a new synthesis, an Islam that
included what was important in the Buddhism so prevalent in the
labs: Budur's days passed in a blur of thought, everything she saw
and did fed into it. Most of the women in Idelba's lab were
Buddhist nuns, and many of the men there were monks. Compassion,
right action, a kind of agape, as the ancient Greeks had called it
-- the Greeks, those ghosts of this place, people who had had every
idea already, in a lost paradise that had included even the story
of paradise lost, in the form of Plato's tales of Atlantis, which
were turning out to be true, according to the latest studies of the
scholars on Kreta, digging in the ruins.
Budur looked into classes in this new field, archaeology.
History that was more than talk, that could be a science . . . The
people working on it were an odd mix, geologists,
architects, physicists, Quranic scholars, historians, all studying
not just the stories, but the things left behind.
Meanwhile the talk went on, in Kirana's class and in the
cafes afterwards. One night in a cafe Budur asked Kirana what she
thought of archaeology, and she replied, 'Yes, archaeology is very
important, sure. Although the standing stones are rather mute when
it comes to telling us things. But they're discovering caves in the
south, filled with wall paintings that appear to be very old, older
even than the Greeks. I can give you the names of the people at
Avignon involved with that.'
' Thanks.'
Kirana sipped her coffee and listened to the others for a
while. Then she said to Budur under the hubbub, 'What's
interesting, I think, beyond all the theories we discuss, is what
never gets written down. This is crucial for women especially,
because so much of what we did never got written down. just the
ordinary, you know, daily existence. The work of raising children
and feeding families and keeping a home together, as an oral
culture passed along generation to generation. Uterine culture,
Kang Tongbi called it. You must read her work. Anyway uterine
culture has no obvious dynasties, or wars, or new continents to
discover, and so historians have never tried to account for it --
for what it is, how it is transmitted, how it changes over time,
according to material and social conditions. Changing with them I
mean, in a weave with them.'
'In the harem it's obvious,' Budur said, feeling nervous
at being jammed knee to knee with this woman. Cousin Yasmina had
conducted enough clandestine 'practice sessions' of kissing and the
like among the girls that Budur knew just what the pressure from
Kirana's leg meant. Resolutely she ignored it and went on: 'It's
like Scheherazade, really. Telling stories to get along. Women's
history would be like that, stories told one after another. And
every day the whole process has to be renewed.'
'Yes, Scheherazade is a good tale about dealing with men.
But there must be better models for how women should pass history
along, to younger women, for instance. The Greeks had a very
interesting mythology, full of goddesses modelling various
woman to woman behaviours. Demeter, Persephone ... they
have a wonderful poet for this stuff too, Sappho. You haven't heard
of her? I'll give you the references.'
SEVEN
This was the start of many more personal conversations
over coffee, late at night in the rain lashed cafes. Kirana
lent Budur books on all kinds of topics, but especially Firanji
history: the Golden Horde's survival of the plague that had killed
the Christians; the continuing influence of the Horde's nomad
structures on the descendant cultures of the Skandistani states;
the infill of al Andalus, Nsara and the Keltic Islands by
Maghribis; the zone of contention between the two infilling
cultures in the Rhine Valley. Other volumes described the movement
of Turks and Arabs through the Balkans, adding to the discord of
the Firanji emirates, the little taifa states that fought for
centuries, according to loyalties Sunni or Shiite, sufi or Wahabbi,
Turkic or Maghribi or Tartar; fought for dominance or survival,
often desperately, creating conditions usually repressive for
women, so that only in the farthest west had there been any
cultural advances before the Long War, a progressiveness that
Kirana associated with the ocean, and contact with other cultures
by sea, and with Nsara's origins as a refuge for the heterodox and
marginal, founded indeed by a woman, the fabled refugee Sultana
Katima.
Budur took these books and tried reading from them aloud
to her blind soldiers in the hospital. She read them the story of
the Glorious Ramadan Revolution, when Turkic and Kirghizi women had
led seizures of the power plants of the big reservoirs above
Samarqand, and moved into the ruins of the fabled city, which had
been abandoned for nearly a century because of a series of violent
earthquakes; how they had formed a new republic in which the holy
laws of Ramadan were extended through the year, and the life of the
people made a communal act of divine worship, all humans completely
equal, men and women, adult and child, so that the place had
reclaimed its glorious heritage of the tenth century, and made
amazing advances in culture and law, and all had been happy there,
until the Shah had sent his armies cast from Iran and crushed them
as heretics.
Her soldiers nodded as they listened. That's the way it
happens, their silent faces said. The good is always crushed. Those
who see the farthest have their eyes put out. Budur, seeing the way
they hung on every word, like starving dogs watching people cat in sidewalk cafes,
brought in more of her borrowed books to read to them. Ferdowsi's
'The Book of Kings', the huge epic poem describing Iran before
Islam, was very popular. So was the sufi lyric poet Hafiz, and of
course Rumi and Khayyarn. Budur herself liked to read from her
heavily annotated copy of Ibn Khaldun's 'Muqaddimah'.
'There is so much in Khaldun,' she said to her listeners.
'Everything I learn at the institute I find already here in
Khaldun. One of my instructors is fond of a theory that has the
world being a matter of three or four major civilizations, each a
core state, surrounded by peripheral states. Listen here to
Khaldun, in the section entitled "Each dynasty has a certain amount
of provinces and lands, and no more".'
She read, Whenthe dynastic groups have
spread over the border regions, their numbers are necessarily
exhausted. This, then, is the time when the territory of the
dynasty has reached its farthest extension, where the border
regions form a belt around the centre of the realm. If the dynasty
then undertakes to expand beyond its holdings, its widening
territory remains without military protection, and is laid open to
any chance attack by enemy or neighbour. This has a detrimental
result for the dynasty. -- Budur looked up. 'A very
succinct description of core periphery theory. Khaldun also
addresses the lack of an Islamic core state that the others can
rally around.'
Her audience nodded; they knew about that; the absence of
alliance coordination at the various fronts of the war had been a
famous problem, with sometimes terrible results.
'Khaldun also addresses a systemic problem in Islamic.
economy, in its origins among Bedouin practice. He says of them,
"Places that succumb to the Bedouins are quickly ruined. The reason
for this is that the Bedouins are a savage nation, fully accustomed
to savagery and the things that cause it. Savagery has become their
character and nature. They enjoy it, because it means freedom from
authority and no subservience to leadership. Such a natural
disposition is the negation and antithesis of civilization." He
goes on to say, "It is their nature to plunder whatever other
people possess. Their sustenance lies wherever the shadow of their
lances falls." And after that he gives us the labour theory of
value, saying "Now, labour is the real basis of profit. When labour
is not appreciated and is done for nothing, the hope for profit
vanishes, and no productive work is done. The sedentary population
disperses, and civilization decays." Really quite amazing, how much
Khaldun saw, and this back in a time when the people living here in
Nsara were dying of their plague, and the rest of the world not
even ,close to thinking historically.'
The time for reading ended. Her audience settled back
into their chairs and beds, hunkering down for the long empty
watches of the afternoon.
Budur left with her usual combination of guilt, relief
and joy, and on this day went directly to Kirana's class.
'How can we ever progress out of our origins,' she asked
their teacher plaintively, 'when our faith orders us not to leave
them?'
Kirana replied, 'Our faith said no such thing. This is
just something the fundamentalists say, to keep their hold on
power.'
Budur felt confused. 'But what about the parts of the
Quran that tell us Mohammed is the last prophet, and the rules in
the Quran should stand for ever?'
Kirana shook her head impatiently. 'This is another case
of taking an exception for the general rule, a very common
fundamentalist tactic. In fact there are some truths in the Quran
that Mohammed declared eternal -- such existential realities as the
fundamental equality of every person how could that ever change?
But the more worldly concerns of the Quran, involved with the
building of an Arabic state, changed with circumstances, even
within the Quran itself, as in its variable statements against
alcohol. Thus the principle of naskh, in which later Quranic
instructions supersede earlier ones. And in Mohammed's last
statements, he made it clear that he wanted us to respond to
changing situations, and to make Islam better -- to come up with
moral solutions that conform to the basic framework, but respond to
new facts.'
Naser asked, 'I wonder if one of Mohammed's seven scribes
could have inserted into the Quran ideas of his own?'
Again Kirana shook her head. 'Recall the way the Quran
was assembled. The mushaf, the final physical document, was the
result of Osman bringing together all the surviving witnesses to
Mohammed's dictation, his scribes, wives and companions, who
together agreed upon a single correct version of the holy book. No
individual interpolations could have survived that process.
No, the Quran is a single voice, Mohammed's voice, Allah's voice.
And it is a message of great freedom and justice on this Earth! it
is the hadith that contain the false messages, the reimposition of
hierarchy and patriarchy, the exceptional cases twisted to general
rules. It's the hadith that abandon the major jihad, the fight
against one's own temptations, for the minor jihad, the defence of
Islam against attack. No -- in so many ways, the rulers and clerics
have distorted the Quran to their own purposes. This has been true
in all religions, of course. It is inevitable. Anything divine must
come to us in worldly clothing, and so it comes to us altered. The
divine is like rain striking the Earth, and all our efforts at
godliness are therefore muddy all but those few seconds of
complete inundation, the moments that the mystics describe, when we
are nothing but rain. But those moments are always brief, as the
sufis themselves admit. So we should let the occasional chalice
break, if needs be, to get at the truth of the water inside
it.'
Encouraged, Budur said, 'So how do we be modern
Muslims?'
'We don't,' the oldest woman rasped, never pausing in her
knitting. 'It's an ancient desert cult that has brought ruin to
countless generations, including mine and yours, I'm afraid. It's
time to admit that and move on.'
'On to what, though?'
'To whatever may come!' the old one cried. 'To your
sciences to reality itself! Why worry about any of these
ancient beliefs! They are all a matter of the strong over the weak,
of men over women. But it's women who bear the children and raise
them and plant the crops and harvest them and cook the meals and
make the homes and care for the elderly! It's women who make the
world! Men fight wars, and lord it over the rest with their laws
and religions and guns. Thugs and gangsters, that's history! I
don't see why we should try to accommodate any of it at all!'
There was silence in the class, and the old woman resumed
her knitting as if she were stabbing every king and cleric who ever
lived. They could suddenly hear the rain pouring down outside,
students' voices in a courtyard, the old woman's knitting needles
murderously clicking.
'But if we take that route,' Naser said, 'then the
Chinese have truly won.'
More drumming silence.
The old woman finally said, 'They won for a reason. They
have no God and they worship their ancestors and their descendants.
Their humanism has allowed them science, progress -- everything we
have been denied.'
Even deeper silence, so that they could hear the foghorn
out on the point, bellowing in the rain.
Naser said, 'You speak only of their upper classes. And
their women had their feet bound into little nubbins, to cripple
them, like clipping the wings of birds. That too is Chinese. They
are hard bastards, you take my word for it. I saw in the war. I do
not want to tell you what I saw, but I know, believe me. They have
no sense of godliness, and so no rules of conduct; nothing to tell
them not to be cruel, and so they are cruel. Horribly cruel. They
don't think the people outside China are really human. Only the Han
are human. The rest, we are hui hui, like dogs. Arrogant, cruel
beyond telling it does not seem a good thing to me that we
should imitate their ways, that they should win the war so
completely as that.'
'But we were just as bad,' Kirana said.
'Not when we behaved as true Muslims. What would be a
good project for a history class, I think, would be to focus on
what has been best in Islam, enduring through history, and see if
that can guide us now. Every sura of the Quran reminds us by its
opening words Bismallah, in the name of God, the
compassionate, the merciful. Compassion, mercy how do we express
that? These are ideas that the Chinese do not have. The Buddhists
tried to introduce them there, and they were treated like beggars
and thieves. But they are crucial ideas, and they are central to
Islam. Ours is a vision of all people as one family, in the rule of
compas sion and mercy. This is what drove Mohammed, driven by
Allah or by his own sense of justice, the Allah inside us. This is
Islam to me! That's what I fought for in the war. These are the
qualities we have to offer the world that the Chinese do not have.
Love, to put it simply. Love.'
'But if we don't live by these things '
'No!' Naser said. 'Don't beat us with that stick. I don't
see any people on Earth living by their best beliefs any more. This
must be what Mohammed saw when he looked around him. Savagery
everywhere, men like beasts. So every sura started with a call to
compassion.'
'You sound like a Buddhist,' someone said.
The old soldier was willing to admit this. 'Compassion,
isn't that their guiding principle of action? I like what the
Buddhists do in this world. They are having a good effect on us.
They had a good effect on the Japanese, and the Hodenosaunee. I've
read books that say all our progress in science comes from the
Japanese diaspora, as the latest and strongest of the Buddhist
diasporas. They took up the ideas from the ancient Greeks and the
Samarqandis.'
Kirana said, 'We must find the most Buddhist parts of
Islam, perhaps. Cultivate those.'
'I say abandon all the past!' Click click click!
Naser shook his head. 'Then there could arise a new,
scientific savagery. As during the war. We have to retain the
values that seem good, that foster compassion. We have to use the
best of the old to make a new way, better than before.'
'That seems good policy to me,' Kirana said. 'And it's
what Mohammed told us to do, after all.'
EIGHT
Thus the bitter scepticism of the old woman, the stubborn
hope of the old soldier, the insistent inquiry of Kirana, an
inquiry which never got to the answers she wanted, but forged on
through idea after idea, testing them against her sense of things,
and against thirty years of insatiable reading, and the seedy life
behind the docks of Nsara. Budur, wrapping herself in her oilcloth
raincoat and hunching through the drizzle home to the zawiyya, felt
the invisibilities welling up all around her -- the hot quick
disapproval of maimed young men who passed on the street the clouds
lowering overhead -- the secret worlds enfolded inside everything
that Aunt Idelba was working on at the lab. Her job sweeping up and
restocking the empty place at night was . . . suggestive. Greater
things lay in the final distillation of all this work, in the
formulas scrawled on the blackboards. There were years of
mathematical work behind the experiments of the physicists,
centuries of work now being realized in material explorations that
might bring new worlds. Budur did not feel she could ever learn the
maths involved, but the labs had to run right for anything to
progress, and she began to get involved in ordering supplies,
keeping the kitchen and dining halls running, paying the bills (the
qi bill was huge).
Meanwhile the talk between the scientists went on,
endless as the chatter in the cafes Idelba and her nephew Piali
spent long sessions at the blackboards running over their ideas and
proposing solutions to their mysterious mysteries, absorbed,
pleased, also often worried, an edge in Idelba's voice, as if the
equations were somehow revealing news she did not like or could not
quite believe. Again she spent lots of time on the telephone, this
time the one in its little closet in the zawiyya, and she was often
gone without saying where she had been. Budur couldn't tell if all
these matters were connected or not. There was a lot about Idelba's
life that she didn't know. Men that she talked to outside the
zawiyya, packages, calls . . . it appeared from the vertical lines
etched between her eyebrows that she had her hands full, that it
was a complicated existence somehow.
'Whatever is the problem with this study you are doing
with Piali and the others?' Budur asked her one night as Idelba
very thoroughly cleaned out her desk. They were the last ones
there, and Budur felt a solid satisfaction at that; that here in
Nsara they were trusted with matters; it was this that made her
bold enough to interrogate her aunt.
Idelba stopped her cleaning to look at her. 'We have some
reason for worry, or so it seems. You must not talk to anyone about
this. But well -- as I you told before, the world is made of
atoms, tiny things with heartknots, and around them lightning motes
travelling in concentric shells. All this at so small a scale it's
hard to imagine. Each speck of dust you sweep up is made of
millions of them. There are billions of them in the tips of your
fingers.' She wiggled her grimy hands in the air. 'And yet each
atom stores a lot of energy. Truly it is like trapped lightning,
this qi energy, you have to imagine that kind of blazing power.
Many trillionqi in every little thing.' She gestured at the big
circular chart painted on one wall, their table of the elementals,
Arabic letters and numerals encrusted with many extra dots. 'Inside
the heartknot there is a force holding all that energy together, as
I told you, a force very strong at very close distances, binding
the lightning power to the heart so tightly it can never be
released. Which is good, because the amounts of energy contained
are really very high. We pulse with it.'
'That's how it feels,' Budur said.
'Indeed. But look, it's many times beyond what we can
feel. The formula proposed, as I told you, is energy equals the
mass times the speed of light squared, and light is very fast
indeed. So that with only a little matter, if any of its energy
were released into the world . . .' She shook her head. 'Of course
the strong force means that would never happen. But we continue to
investigate this element alactin, that the Travancori physicists
call Hand of Tara. I suspect its heartknot is unstable, and Piali
is beginning to agree with me. Clearly it is very full of the
jinni, both yin and yang, in such a fashion that to me it is acting
like a droplet of water held together by surface tension, but so
big that the surface tension is just barely holding it, and it
stretches out like a water drop in the air, deforming this way and
that, but held together, just, except for sometimes, when it
stretches too far for surface tension, the strong force in this
case, and then the natural repulsion between the jinni makes a
heartknot split in two, becoming atoms of lead, but releasing some
of its bound power as well, in the form of rays of invisible
energy. That's what we are seeing on the photographic plates you
help with. It's quite a bit of energy, and that's just one
heartknot breaking. What we have been wondering what we have
been forced to consider, given the nature of the phenomenon -- is,
if we gathered enough of these atoms together, and broke even one
heartknot apart, would the released qi break a lot more of them at
the same time, more and more again all at the speed of light, in a
space this big,' holding her hands apart. 'If that might not set
off a short chain reaction,' she said.
'Meaning . . .'
'Meaning a very big explosion!'
For a long time Idelba stared off into the space of pure
mathematics, it seemed.
'Don't tell anyone about this,' she said again.
'I won't.'
'No one.'
'All right.'
Invisible worlds, full of energy and power:
sub atomic harems, each pulsing on the edge of a great
explosion. Budur sighed as this image came to her. There was no
escaping the latent violence at the heart of things. Even the
stones were mortal.
NINE
Budur got up in the mornings at the zawiyya, helped in
the kitchen and office indeed, there was much that was the
same about her work in the zawiyya and at the lab, and though the
work felt quite different in each setting, it still had a basic
tedium to it; leaving her classes and her walks through the great
city as the place to work on her dreams and ideas.
She walked along the harbour and the river, no longer
expecting anyone from Turi to show up and take her back to her
father's house. Much of the vast city remained unknown to her, but
she had her routes through certain districts, and sometimes rode a
tram out to its end just to see what kind of neighbourhoods it went
through. The ocean and river districts were her particular study,
which of course gave her a lot to work on. Wan sunlight splintered
through clouds galloping on the ocean onshore wind; she sat at
cafes behind the docks, or across the sea road from the strands,
reading and writing, and looked up to see whitecaps dashing
themselves at the foot of the great lighthouse at the end of the
jetty, or up the rocky coast to the north. Pale washed blues in the
sky behind the tumbling clouds, the bruised blues of the ocean, the
whites of cloud and broken wave; she loved the looks of these
things, loved them with all her heart. Here she was free to be her
whole self. It was worth all the rain to have the air washed so
clean.
In one rather shabby and stormbeaten beach district at
the end of tram line number six, there was a little Buddhist
temple, and one day outside it Budur saw the Hodenosaunee mother
and daughter from Kirana's class. They saw her and came over.
'Hello,' the mother said. 'You have come to visit us!'
'Actually I was just wandering around town,' Budur said,
surprised. 'I like this neighbourhood.'
'I see.' Said politely, as if she didn't believe ber. 'I
am sorry to have presumed, but we are acquainted with your
aunt Idelba, and so I thought you may have been coming here on her
behalf. But you don't well -- but would you like to come
in?'
'Thank you.' Mystified, Budur followed them into the
compound, which contained a courtyard garden of shrubs and gravel,
arranged around a bell next to a pond. Nuns in dark red dresses
walked through on their way somewhere inside. One sat to talk with
the Hodenosaunee women, whose names were Hanea and Ganagweh, mother
and daughter. They all spoke in Firanjic, with a strong Nsarene
accent mixed with something else. Budur listened to them talk about
repairs to the roof. Then they invited her to come with them into a
room containing a big wireless; Hanea sat before a microphone, and
had a conversation in her language that crossed the ocean.
After that they joined a number of nuns in a
meditation room, and sat chanting for a time. 'So, you are
Buddhists?' Budur asked the Hodenosaunee women when the session was
over, and they had gone back out into the garden.
'Yes,' Hanea said. 'It's common among our people. We find
it very similar to our old religion. And I think it must also have
been true that we liked the way it put us in league with the
Japanese from the west side of our country, who are like us in so
many other ways. We needed their help against the people from your
side.'
'I see.'
They stopped before a group of women and men who were
sitting in a circle chipping away at sandstone blocks, making large
flat bricks, it seemed, perfectly shaped and polished. Hanea
pointed at them and explained: 'These are devotional stones, for
the top of Chomolungma. Have you heard of this project?'
'No.'
'Well, you know, Chomolungma was the highest mountain in
the world, but the top was destroyed by Muslim artillery during the
Long War. So, now there is a project started, very slow of course,
to replace the top of the mountain. Bricks like these are taken
there, and then climbers who ascend Chomolungma carry one brick
along with their lifegas canisters, and leave it on the summit for
stonemasons to work into the new summit pyramid.'
Budur stared at the dressed blocks of stone, smaller than
several of the boulders decorating the courtyard garden. She was
invited to pick one up, and did so; it was about as heavy as three
or four books in her arms.
'It will take a lot of these?'
'Many thousands. It is a very long term project.'
Hanea smiled. 'A hundred years, a thousand years? It depends on how
many climbers there are who want to carry one up the mountain. A
considerable mass of stone was blasted away. But a good idea, yes?
A symbol of a more general restoration of the world.'
They were preparing a meal in the kitchen, and invited
Budur to join them, but she excused herself, saying she needed to
catch the next tram back.
'Of course,' said Hanea. 'Do give our greetings to your
aunt. We look forward to meeting with her soon.'
She didn't explain what she meant, and Budur was left to
think it over as she walked down to the beach stop and waited for
the tram into town, huddling in its little glass shelter against
the stiff blast of the wind. Half asleep, she saw an image of
a line of people, carrying a whole library of stone books to the
top of the world.
TEN
'Come with me to the Orkneys,' Idelba said to her. 'I
could use your help, and want to show you the ruins there.'
'The Orkneys? Where are they again?'
It turned out they were the northernmost of the Keltic
Isles, above Scotland. Most of Britain was occupied by a population
that had originated in al Andalus, the Maghrib and west
Africa; then during the Long War the Hodenosaunee had built a big
naval base in a bay surrounded by the main Orkney island, and they
were still there, overseeing Firanja in effect, but also protecting
by their presence some remnants of the original population, Kelts
who had survived the influx of both Frank and Firanji, and of
course the plague. Budur had read tales of these tall,
pale--skinned, red haired, blue eyed survivors of the
great plague.
And as she and Idelba sat at a window table in the
gondola of their airship, watching England's green hills pass
slowly underneath them, dappled by cloud shadow and cut into large
squares by crops, hedgerows and grey stone walls, she wondered what
it would be like to stand before a true Kelt -- whether she would
be able to bear their mute accusatory gaze, stand without flinching
before the sight of their albinoesque skin and eyes.
But of course it was not like that at all. They landed to
find the Orkney islands were more rolling grassy hills, with
scarcely a tree to be seen, except clustered around whitewashed
farmhouses with chimneys at both ends, a design ubiquitous and
apparently ancient, as it was replicated in grey ruins in fields
near the current versions. And the Orcadians were not the spavined
freckled inbred halfwits Budur had been expecting from the tales of
the white slaves of the Ottoman sultan, but burly shouting
fishermen in oils, red faced and straw haired in some
cases, black--or brown haired in others, shouting at each
other like fisherfolk in any of the villages of the Nsarene coast.
They were unselfconscious in their dealings with Firanjis, as if
they were the normal ones and the Firanjis the exotics; which of
course was true here. Clearly for them the Orkneys were all the
world.
And when Budur and Idelba drove out into the country in
an motorcart to see the island's ruins, they began to see why; the
world had been coming to the Orkneys for three thousand years or
more. They had reason to feel they were at the centre of things,
the crossroads. Every culture that had ever lived there, and there
must have been ten of them through the centuries, had built using
the island's stratified sandstone, which had been split by the
waves into handy plates and beams and broad flat bricks, perfect
for drywall, and even stronger if set in cement. The oldest
inhabitants had also used the stones to build their bedframes and
kitchen shelves, so that here, in a small patch of grass
overlooking the western sea, it was possible to look down into
stone houses that had had the sand filling them removed, and see
the domestic arrangements of people who had lived over five
thousand years before, it was said, their very tools and furniture
just as they had been left. The sunken rooms looked to Budur just
like her own rooms in the zawiyya. Nothing essential had changed in
all that time.
Idelba shook her head at the great ages claimed for the
settlement, and the dating methods used, and wondered aloud about certain
geochronologies she had in mind that might be pursued. But after a
while she fell as silent as the rest, and stood staring down into
the spare and beautiful interiors of the old ones' homes. These
things of ours that endure.
Back in the island's one town, Kirkwall, they walked
through stonepaved streets to another little Buddhist temple
complex, set behind the locals' ancient cathedral, a tiny thing
compared to the big skeletons left behind on the mainland, but
roofed and complete. The temple behind it was very modest, a matter
of four narrow buildings surrounding a rock garden, in a style
Budur thought of as Chinese.
Here Idelba was greeted by Hanea and Ganagweh. Budur was
shocked to see them, and they laughed at the expression on her
face. 'We told you we would be seeing you again soon, didn't
we?'
'Yes,' Budur said. 'But here?'
'This is the biggest Hodenosaunee community in Firanja,'
Hanea said. 'We came down to Nsara from here, actually. And we
return here quite often.'
After they were shown the complex and sat down in a room
off the courtyard for tea, Idelba and Hanea slipped away, leaving a
nonplussed Budur behind with Ganagweh.
'Mother said they would need to talk for an hour or two,'
Ganagweh told her. 'Do you know what they're talking about?'
'No,' said Budur. 'Do you?'
'No. I mean, I assume it has something to do with your
aunt's efforts to create stronger diplomatic relations between our
countries. But that's just stating the obvious.'
'Yes,' Budur said, extemporizing. 'I know she's been
interested in that. But meeting you in Kirana Fawwaz's class as I
did . . .'
'Yes. And then, the way you showed up at the monastery
there. It seems we are fated to cross paths.' She was smiling in a
way Budur couldn't interpret. 'Lets go for a walk; those two will
talk for a long while. There's a lot to discuss, after all.'
This was news to Budur, but she said nothing, and spent
the day wandering Kirkwall with Ganagweh, a very high spirited
girl, tall, quick, confident; the narrow streets and burly men of
the Orkneys held no fears for her. Indeed at the end of the town
tram line they walked far down a deserted strand overlooking the
big bay that had once been such a busy naval base, and
Ganagweh stopped at some boulders and stripped off her clothes and
ran screaming out into the water, bursting back out in a flurry of
whitewater, shrieking, her lustrous dark skin gleaming in the sun
as she dried off with her fingers, flinging the water at Budur and
daring her to take the plunge. 'It's good for you! It's not that
cold, it will wake you up!'
It was just the kind of thing Yasmina had always insisted
they do, but shyly Budur declined, finding it hard to look at the
big wet beauti ful animal standing next to her in the sun;
and when she walked down to touch the water, she was glad she had;
it was freezing. She did feel as if she had woken up, aware of the
brisk salt wind and Ganagweh's wet black hair swinging side to side
like a dogs, spraying her. Ganagweh laughed at her and dressed
while still damp. As they walked back, they passed a group of
pale skinned children who regarded them curiously. 'Let's get
back and see how the old women are doing,' Ganagweh said. 'Funny to
see such grandmothers taking the fate of the world into their own
hands, isn't it?'
'Yes,' Budur said, wondering what in the world was going
on.
ELEVEN
On the flight back to Nsara, Budur asked Idelba about it,
but Idelba shook her head. She didn't want to talk about it, and
was busy writing in her notebook. 'Later,' she said.
Back in Nsara, Budur worked and studied. At Kirana's
suggestion she read about southeast Asia, and learned how
the Hindu, Buddhist and Islamic cultures had mixed there to make a
vibrant new offspring, which had survived the war and was
now using the great botanical and mineral riches of Burma and the
Malay peninsula, and Sumatra and Java and Borneo and Mindanao, to
create a group of peoples united against China's centripetal power,
freeing itself from Chinese influence. They had spread into
Aozhou, the big burnt island continent south of them, and even
across the oceans to Inka, and in the other direction to Madagascar
and south Africa: it was a kind of emerging southern world culture,
with the huge cities of Pyinkayaing, Jakarta and Kwinana on the
west coast of Aozhou leading the way, trading with Travancore, and
building like maniacs, erecting cities that included many steel
skyscrapers more than a hundred floors tall. The war had damaged
but not destroyed these cities, and now the governments of the
world met in Pyinkayaing whenever they tried to work out some more
durable and just postwar dispensation.
There were more meetings all the time, as the situation
became more and more deranged; anything to keep war from returning,
as so very little had been resolved by it. Or so the members of the
defeated alliance felt. It was unclear at this point if the Chinese
and their allies, or the countries of Yingzhou, who had entered the
conflict so much later than the rest, had any interest in
accommodating Islamic concerns. Kirana remarked casually in class
one day that it was very possible Islam was in the rubbish heap of
history without yet knowing it; and the more Budur read of her
books, the less sure she could be that this was necessarily a bad
thing for the world. Old religions died; and if an empire tried to
conquer the world and failed, it generally then disappeared.
Kirana's own writing made that very clear. Budur took out
her books from the monastery library, some published nearly twenty
years before, during the war itself when Kirana had to have been
quite young, and she read them with close interest, hearing
Kirana's voice in her head for every sentence; it was just like a
transcript of her talking, except even more long winded. She
had written on many subjects, both theoretical and practical. Whole
books of her African writings were concerned with various public
health and women's issues. Budur opened one of these randomly, and
found herself reading a lecture that had been given to midwives in
the Sudan:
If the parents of the girl insist, if they cannot be
talked out of it, it is extremely important that only one third of
the clitoris should be cut off, and two thirds left intact. Someone
who practically attacks a girl with a knife, cutting off
everything, this goes against the words of the Prophet. Men and
women are meant to be equal before God. But if a woman's entire
clitoris is cut off it leaves ber a kind of eunuch, she becomes
cold, lazy, without desire, without interest, humourless, like a
mud wall, a piece of cardboard, without spark, without goals,
without desire, like a puddle of standing water, lifeless,
ber children are unhappy, her husband is unhappy, she makes nothing
of her life. Those of you who must perform circumcisions, therefore
remember: cut off one third, leave two thirds! Cut off one third,
leave two thirds!
Budur flipped the pages of the book, disturbed. After a
while she collected herself, and read the new page that presented
itself:
I was privileged to witness the return of Raiza Tarami
from her trip to the New World, where she had attended the
conference at Yingzhou's Long island on women's issues, just after
the end of the war. Conference members who came from throughout the
world were greatly surprised to see this Nsarene woman exhibiting a
full awareness of all the issues that mattered. They had been
expecting a backward woman living behind the walls of the harem,
ignorant and veiled. But Raiza was not like that, she stood on the
same footing as her sisters from China, Burma, Yingzhou and
Travancore, indeed she had been forced by conditions at home to
explore theoretically far in advance of most.
So she represented us well, and when she returned to
Firanja, she had come to believe that the veil was the biggest
obstacle in theway of the progress of the Muslim woman, as
standing for general complicity in the whole system. The veil had
to fall if the reactionary system were to fall. And so, upon her
arrival on the docks of Nsara, she met her companions from the
women's institute, and she stood before them with her face
unveiled. Her immediate companions had removed their veils as well.
Around us the signs of disapproval became apparent in the crowd,
shouting and jostling and the like. Then women in the crowd began
to support the unveiled, by removing the veils from their own faces
and throwing them to the ground. it was a beautiful moment. After
that the veil started to disappear in Nsara with great speed. In
just a few years unveiling had spread throughout the country, and
that brick in the wall of the reactionaries had been removed. Nsara
became known as the leader of Firanja because of this action. This
I was lucky enough to witness with my own eyes.
Budur took a breath, marking the passage as something she
would read to her blind soldiers. And as the weeks passed she read
on, working her way through several volumes of Kirana's essays and lectures,
an exhausting experience, for Kirana never hesitated to attack
head on and at length everything that she disliked. And yet
how she had lived! Budur found herself ashamed of her cloistered
childhood and youth, the fact that she was twenty three, now
almost twenty four, and had not yet done anything; by the time
Kirana Fawwaz was that age she had already spent years in Africa,
fighting in the war and working in hospitals. There was so much
lost time to be made up!
Budur also read in many books Kirana had not assigned,
concen trating for a while on the Sino Muslim cultures
that had existed in central Asia, how they had attempted for a
number of centuries to reconcile the two cultures: the books' bad
old photographs showed these people, Chinese in appearance, Muslim
in belief, Chinese in language, Muslim in law; it was hard to
imagine such a mongrel people had ever existed. The Chinese had
killed the greater part of them in the war, and dispersed the rest
across the Dahai to the deserts and jungles of Yingzhou and Inka,
where they worked in mines and on plantations, in effect slaves,
though the Chinese claimed no longer to practise slavery, calling
it a Muslim atavism. Whatever they called it, the Muslims in their
northwest provinces were gone. And it could happen everywhere.
It began to seem to Budur there was no part of history
she could read that was not depressing, disgusting, frightening,
horrible; unless it be the New World's, where the Hodenosaunee and
the Dinei had organized a civilization capable, just barely, of
resisting the Chinese to their west and the Firanjis to their east.
Except even there, diseases and plagues had wrought such havoc on
them in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries that they had been
reduced to a rather small populace, hiding in the centre of their
island. Nevertheless, small in number though they were, they had
persevered, and adapted. They had remained somewhat open to foreign
influences, tying everything they could into their leagues,
becoming Buddhists, allying themselves with the Travancori League
on the other side of the world, which indeed they had helped to
form by their example; advancing from strength to strength, in
short, even when hidden deep in their wild fastness, far from both
coasts and from the Old World generally. Maybe that had helped.
Taking what they could use, fighting off the rest. A place where
women had always had power. And now that the Long War had shattered
the Old World, they had become a sudden new giant across the
seas, represented here by tall handsome people like Hanea and
Ganagweh, walking the streets of Nsara in long fur or oilskin
coats, butchering Firanjic with friendly dignity. Kirana had not
written much about them, as far as Budur could find; but Idelba was
dealing with them, in some mysterious fashion that began to involve
packages, now, that Budur helped take on the tram up to Hanea and
Ganagweh's temple on the north coast. Four times she did this for
Idelba without asking what it was for, and Idelba did not offer
much explanation. Again, as in Turi, it seemed to Budur that Idelba
knew things the rest of them did not. It was a very complicated
life Idelba was living. Men at the gate, some of them pining for
her romantically, one pounding on the locked door shouting
'Idelbaaaa, I love you, plceeasse!' and drunkenly singing in a
language Budur didn't recognize while punishing a guitar, Idelba
meanwhile disappearing into their room and an hour later pretending
nothing had occurred; then again, gone days at a time, and back,
brow deeply furrowed, sometimes happy, sometimes agitated ... a
very complicated life. And yet more than half in secrecy.
TWELVE
'Yes,' Kirana said once to Budur in response to a
question about the Hodenosaunee, looking at a group of them passing
the cafe they were sitting in that day, 'they may be the hope of
all humanity. But I don't think we understand them well enough to
say for sure. When they have completed their takeover of the world,
then we will learn more.'
'Studying history has made you cynical,' Budur noted.
Kirana's knee was pressed against hers again. Budur let her do it
without ever responding one way or the other. 'Or, to put it more
accurately, what you have seen in your travels and teaching have
made you a pessimist.' To be fair.
'Not at all,' Kirana said, lighting a cigarette. She
gestured at it and said parenthetically, 'You see how they already
have us enslaved to their weed. Anyway, I am not a pessimist. A
realist only. Full of hope, ha ha. But you can see the odds if you dare to look.' She
grimaced and took a long drag on the cigarette. 'Sorry -- cramps.
Ha. History till now has been like women's periods, a little egg of
possibility, hidden in the ordinary material of life, with tiny
barbarian hordes maybe charging in, trying to find it, failing,
fighting each other finally a bloody mess ends that chance,
and everything has to start all over again.'
Budur laughed, shocked and amused. It was not a thought
that had ever occurred to her.
Kirana smiled slyly, seeing this. 'The red egg,' she
said. 'Blood and life.' Her knee pressed hard against Budur's. 'The
question is, will the hordes of sperm ever find the egg? Will one
slip ahead, fructify the seed within, and the world become
pregnant? Will a true civilization ever be born? Or is history
doomed always to be a sterile spinster!'
They laughed together, Budur uncomfortable in several
different ways. 'It has to pick the right partner,' she
ventured.
'Yes,' Kirana said with her sly emphasis, the corners of
her mouth lifted just the tiniest bit. 'The Martians, perhaps.'
Budur recalled cousin Yasmina's 'practice kissing'. Women
loving women; making love to women; it was common in the zawiyya,
and presumably elsewhere; there were, after all, many more women
than men in Nsara, as in the whole world. One saw hardly any men in
their thirties or forties on the streets or in the cafes of Nsara,
and the few one did see often seemed haunted or furtive, lost in an
opium haze, aware they had somehow escaped a fate. No -- that whole
generation had been wiped out. And so one saw everywhere women in
couples, hand in hand, living together in walk ups or
zawiyyas. More than once Budur had heard them in her own zawiyya,
in the baths or bedrooms, or walking down the halls late at night.
It was simply part of life, no matter what anyone said. And she had
once or twice taken part in Yasmina's games in the harem, Yasmina
would read aloud from her romance novels and listen to her wireless
shows, the plaintive songs flying in from Venizia, and afterwards
she would walk around their courtyard singing at the moon, wishing
to have a man spying on her in these moments, or leaping over the
wall and taking her in his arms, but there were no men around to do
it. Let's practise how it would be, she would mutter huskily in
Budur's car, so we will know what to do she always said the same
thing -- and then she would kiss Budur passionately on the
mouth, and press herself against her, and after Budur got over the
surprise of it she felt the passion passed into her mouth by a kind
of qi transference, and she kissed back thinking, Will the real
thing ever make my pulse beat this hard? Could it?
And cousin Rima was even more skilful, though less
passionate, than Yasmina, as like Idelba she had once been married,
and later lived in a zawiyya in Roma, and she would observe them
and say coolly, no, like this, straddle the leg of the man you are
kissing, press your pubic bone hard against his thigh, it will
drive him completely crazy, it makes a full circuit then, the qi
circles around in the two of you as in a dynamo. And when they
tried it they found it was true. After such a moment Yasmina would
be pink cheeked, would cry unconvincingly Oh we're bad, we're
bad, and Rima would snort and say, it's like this in every harem
there has ever been in the world. That's how stupid men are. That's
how the world has got on.
Now, in the dregs of the night in this Nsarene cafe,
Budur pressed back slightly against Kirana's knee, in a knowing
manner, friendly but neutral. For now, she kept arranging always to
leave with some of the other students, not meeting Kirana's eye
when it counted stringing her along, perhaps, because she
was not sure what it would mean to her studies or to her life more
generally, if she were to respond more positively and fall into it,
whatever it might be, beyond the kissing and fondling. Sex she knew
about, that would be the straightforward part, but what about the
rest of it? She was not sure she wanted to get involved with this
intense older woman, her teacher, still in some senses a stranger.
But until you took the plunge, did not everyone remain a stranger
for ever?
THIRTEEN
They stood together, Budur and Kirana, at a garden party
on a crowded patio overlooking the Liwaya River before it opened
into its estuary, their upper arms just barely touching, as if by
accident, as if the crush around the wealthy patron of the arts and
philosopher, Tahar Labid, was so great that they had to do it to catch the beautiful
pearls dropping from his lips; although in truth he was a
terrible and obvious blowhard, a man who said your name over and
over in conversation, almost every time he addressed you, so that
it became very off putting, as if he were trying to take you
over, or simply to remember in his solipsism who he was talking to,
never noticing that it made people want to escape him at all
costs.
After a bit of this Kirana shuddered, at his
self absorption perhaps, too like hers to make her at all
comfortable, and she led Budur away. She lifted Budur's hand, all
bleached and cracked from her constant cleaning, and said, 'You
should wear rubber gloves. I should think they would make you at
the lab.'
'Wearing gloves make it hard to hold onto things.'
'Nevertheless.'
This gruff concern for the health of her hands, from the
great intellectual, the teacher -- suddenly surrounded by an
audience of her own, asking her what she thought of certain Chinese
feminists . . . Budur watched her reply immediately and at length
about their origins among Muslim Chinese, particularly Kang Tongbi,
who, with the encouragement of her husband the Sino Muslim
scholar Ibrahim al Lanzhou, set out the theoretical groundwork for
a feminism later elaborated in the Chinese heartland by generations
of late Qing women -- much of their progress contested by the
imperial bureaucracy, of course -- until the Long War dissolved all
previous codes of conduct in the pure rationality of total war, and
women's brigades and factory crews established a position in the
world that could never be retracted, no matter how hard the Chinese
bureaucrats tried. Kirana could recite by memory the wartime list
of demands made by the Chinese Women's Industrial Workers' Council,
and now she did just that: 'Equal rights for men and women, spread
of women's education and facilities for it, improvement in position
of women in the home, monogamy, freedom of marriage, encouragement
of careers, a ban on concubines and the buying and selling of
women, and on physical mutilation, improved political position,
reform of prostitution.' It was a most strange sounding song,
or chant, or prayer.
'But you see, the Chinese feminists claimed women had it
better in Yingzhou and Travancore, and in Travancore the feminists
claimed to have learned it from the Sikhs, who learned it
from the Quran. And here we focus on the Chinese. So that you see
it has been a matter of pulling ourselves up by our bootstraps,
each imagining that it is better in a different country, and that
we should fight to equal the others . . .' On she talked, weaving
the last three centuries together most brilliantly, and all the
while Budur clenched her cracked white hands, thinking, She wants
you, she wants your hands healthy because if she has her way, they
will be touching her.
Budur wandered away on her own, disturbed, saw Hasan on
another terrace and went up to join the group around him, which
included Naser Shah and the ancient grandmother from Kirana's
class, looking at a loose end without her knitting kit in hand. It
turned out they were brother and sister, and she the hostess of
this party: Zainab Shah, very curt when Budur was finally
introduced; and Hasan a long time family friend of theirs.
They had. all known Kirana for years, and had taken her classes
before, Budur learned from Naser as the conversations swirled
around them.
'What bothers me is to see how repetitive and
small minded he could be, what a lawyer '
'That's why it works in application 'Works for
who? He was the lawyer of the clerics.'
'No writer, anyway.'
'The Quran is meant to be spoken and heard, in Arabic it
is like music, he is such a poet. You must hear it in the
mosque.'
'I will not go there. That's for people who want to be
able to say, I am better than you, simply because
I assert a belief in Allah." I reject that. The world is my
mosque.'
'Religion is like a house of cards. One fingertap of fact
and it all falls over.'
'Clever but not true, like most of your aphorisms.'
Budur left Naser and Hasam, and went to a long table
containing snacks and glasses of red and white wine, eavesdropping
as she walked, eating pickled herrings on crackers.
'I hear the council of ministers had to kotow to the army
to keep them out of the treasury, so it comes to the same thing in
the end '
' the six lokas are names for the parts of the
brain that perform the different kinds of mentation. The level of
beasts is the cerebellum, the level of hungry ghosts the limbic archipelago, the human
realm the speech lobes, the realm of the asuras is the frontal
cortex, and the realm of the gods is the bridge between the two
halves of the brain, which when activated gives us glimpses of a
higher reality. It's impressive, really, sorting things out that
clearly by pure introspection 'But that's only five, what
about hell?'
'Hell is other people.'
' I'm sure it doesn't add up to quite as many
partners as that.'
'They've got control of the oceans, so they can come to
us whenever they want, but we can't go to them without their
permission. So '
'So we should thank our lucky stars. We want the generals
to feel as weak as possible.'
'True, but nothing in excess. We may find it becomes a
case of from the coffee pot to the fire.'
' it's well established that a belief in
reincarnation floats around the world from one culture to the next,
migrating to the cultures most stressed.'
'Maybe it migrates with the few souls who are actually
transmigrating, ever think of that?'
With student after student, it's like a kind of
compulsion. A replacement for friends or something like that. Sad
really, but the students are really the ones who suffer, so it's
hard to feel too sorry 'All history would have been
different, if only .
'Yes, if only? Only what?'
'If only we had conquered Yingzhou when we had the
chance.'
'He's a true artist, it's not so easy working in scents,
everyone has their own associations, but somehow he touches all the
deepest ones everyone has, and as it's the sense most tied to
memory, he really has an effect. That shift from vanilla to cordite
to jasmine, those are just the dominant scents of course, each waft
is a mix of scores of them, I think, but what a progression,
heart rending I assure you . . .'
Near the drinks table a friend of Hasan's, named Tristan,
played an oud with a strange tuning, strumming simple chords over
and over, and singing in one of the old Frankish languages. Budur
sipped a glass of white wine and watched him play, forcing the
voices talking around her from her attention. The man's music was
interesting, the level tones of his voice hanging steadily in the
air. His black moustache curved over his mouth. He caught
Budur's eye, smiled briefly. The song came to an end and there was
a patter of applause, and some of them surrounded him to ask
questions. Budur moved in to hear his answers. Hasan joined them,
and so Budur stood beside him. Tristan explained in clipped short
phrases, as if he were shy. He didn't want to talk about his music.
Budur liked the look of him. The songs were from France and
Navarre, he said, and Provence. Third and fourth centuries. People
asked for more, but he shrugged and put his oud in its case. He
didn't explain, but Budur thought the crowd was simply too loud.
Tahar was approaching the drinks table, and his group came with
him. 'But I tell you, Vika, what happens is this ' ' it
all goes back to Samarqand, when there was still 'It would have to
be beautiful and hard, make people ashamed.' 'That was the day, the
very hour when it all started '
'You, Vika, are perhaps afflicted with intermittent
deafness.' 'But here's the thing '
Budur slipped away from the group, and then, feeling
tired of the party and its guests, she left the party as well. She
read the schedule posted at the tram stop and saw that it would be
almost half a watch before another came, so she took off walking on
the river path. By the time she reached the city centre she was
enjoying walking just for itself, and she continued on out the
jetty, through the fish shops and out into the wind, where the
jetty became an asphalt road cracking over huge boulders that stood
greenly out of the oil slicked water slurping against their
sides. She watched the clouds and the sky, and felt suddenly happy
an emotion like a child inside her, a happiness in which
worry was a vague and distant thing, no more than a cloud's shadow
on the dark blue surface of the sea. To think her life might have
passed without her ever seeing the ocean!
FOURTEEN
Idelba came to her one night in the zawiyya and said,
'Budur, you must remember never to tell anyone what I said to you
about alactin. About what splitting it could mean.'
'Of course not. But why do you mention it?'
'Well ... we are beginning to feel that there is some
kind of surveil lance being placed on us. Apparently from a
part of the government, some security department. It's a bit murky.
But anyway, best to be very careful.'
'Why don't you go to the police?'
'Well.' She refrained from rolling her eyes, Budur could
see it. Voice lowered to a gentleness: 'The police are part of the
army. That's from the war, and it never changed. So ... we prefer
not to draw any attention whatsoever to the issues involved.'
Budur gestured around them. 'Surely we have nothing to
worry about here, though. No woman in a zawiyya would ever betray a
housemate, not to the army.'
Idelba stared at her to see if she was being serious.
'Don't be naive,' she said finally, less gently, and with a pat on
the knee got up to go to the bathroom.
This was not the only cloud to come at this time and drop
its shadow on Budur's happiness. Throughout Dar al Islam,
unrest was filling the newspapers, and inflation was universal.
Military takeovers of the governments in Skandistan and Moldava and
al Alemand and the Tyrol, very close to Turi, alarmed the rest
of the world all out of proportion to their puny size, as seeming
to indicate a resurgence of Muslim aggressivity. The whole of Islam
was accused of breaking the commitments forced on them at the
Shanghai Conference after the war, as if Islam were a monolithic
block, a laughable concept even in the depths of the war itself.
Sanctions and even embargoes were being called for in China and
India and Yingzhou. The effect of the threat alone was felt
immediately in Firanja: the price of rice shot up, then the price
of potatoes and maple syrup, and coffee beans. Hoarding quickly
followed, old wartime habits kicking in, and even as prices rose
staples were cleared off the shelves of the groceries the moment
they appeared. This affected everything else as well, both food and
other matters. Hoarding was a very contagious phenomenon, a bad
mentality, a loss of faith in the system's ability to keep
everything running; and as the system had indeed broken down so
disastrously at the end of the war, a lot of people were prone to
hoard at the first hint of a scare. Making meals in the zawiyya
became an exer cise in ingenuity. They often dined on potato
soup, spiced or garnished in one way or another so that it remained
tasty, but it sometimes had to be watered pretty thin to get
a cup of it into everyone at the table.
Cafe life went on as gaily as ever, at least on the
surface. There was perhaps more of an edge in people's voices; eyes
were brighter, the laughs harder, the binges more drunken. Opium
too became subject to boarding. People came in with wheelbarrows of
paper money, or exhibited fivetrillion drachma bills from
Roma, laughing as they offered them in exchange for cups of coffee
and were refused. It wasn't very funny in all truth; every week
things were markedly more expensive, and there didn't seem to be
anything to be done about it. They laughed at their own
helplessness. Budur went to the cafes less often, which saved
money, and the risk of an awkward moment with Kirana. Sometimes she
went with Idelba's nephew Piali to a different set of cards, with a
seedier clientele; Piali and his associates, who sometimes included
Hasan and his friend Tristan, seemed to like the rougher
establishments frequented by sailors and longshoremen. So through a
winter of thick mists that hung in the streets like rain freed of
gravity, Budur sat and listened to tales of Yingzhou and the stormy
Atlantic, deadliest of all the seas.
'We exist on sufferance,' Zainab Shah said bitterly as
she knitted in their regular cafe. 'We're like the Japanese after
the Chinese conquered them.'
'Let the occasional chalice break,' Kirana murmured. Her
expression in the dim light was serene, indomitable.
'They have all broken,' Naser said. He sat in the corner,
looking out of the window at the rain. He tapped his cigarette on
the ashtray. 'I can't say I'm sorry.'
'In Iran too they don't seem to care.' Kirana appeared to
be trying to cheer him up. 'They are making very great strides
there, leading the way in all kinds of fields. Linguistics,
archaeology, the physical sciences, they have all the leading
people.'
Naser nodded, looking inwards. Budur had gathered that
his fortune had gone to fund many of these efforts, from an exile
of some unexplained sort. Another complicated life.
Another downpour struck. The weather seemed to enunciate
their situation, wind and rain slapping the Cafe Sultana's big
windows and running across the plate glass wildly, pushed this way
and that by gusts of wind. The old soldier watched his smoke rise,
twined threads of brown and grey, ox bowing more and more as they
rose. Piali had once described the dynamics of this lazy ascent, as
he had the rain's deltas down the windowpanes. Storm sunlight cast
a silver sheen on the wet street. Budur felt happy. The world was
beautiful. She was so hungry that the milk in her coffee was like a
meal inside her. The storm's light was a meal. She thought: now is
beautiful. These old Persians are beautiful; their Persian accents
are beautiful. Kirana's rare serenity is beautiful. Throw away the
past and the future. The old Persians' Khayyarn had understood
this, one reason among many that the mullahs had never liked him:
Come fill the cup and in the blaze of spring The winter
garment of repentance fling: The bird of time has but a little way
To fly and hey! The bird is on the wing!
The others left, and Budur sat with Kirana, watching her
write something down in her brown backed notebook. She looked
up, happy to see Budur watching her. She stopped for a cigarette,
and they talked for a while, about Yingzhou and the Hodenosaunee.
As usual, Kirana's thoughts took interesting turns. She thought the
very early stage of civilization that the Hodenosaunee had been in
when discovered by the Old World was what had allowed them to
survive, counter--intuitive though that was. They had been canny
hunter gatherers, more intelligent as individuals than the
people of more developed cultures, and much more flexible than the
Inka, who were shackled by a very rigid theocracy. If it weren't
for their susceptibility to Old World diseases, the Hodenosaunee no
doubt would have conquered the Old World already. Now they were
making up for lost time.
They talked about Nsara, the army and the clerics, the
madressa and the monastery. Budur's girlhood. Kirana's time in
Africa.
When the cafe closed Budur went with her to Kirana's
zawiyya, which had a little study garret with a door that was often
closed, and on a couch in there they lay on each other kissing,
rolling from one embrace to the next, Kirana clasping her so hard
that Budur thought her ribs might break; and they were tested again
when her stomach clamped down on a violent orgasm.
Afterwards Kirana held her with her usual sly smile,
calmer than ever.
'Your turn.'
11 already came, I was rubbing myself on your shin.'
'There are softer ways than that.'
'No really, I'm fine. I'm already done for.' And Budur
realized with a shock she could not keep out of ber eyes that
Kirana was not going to let her touch her.
FIFTEEN
After that Budur went to class feeling strange. In class
and in the cafes afterwards, Kirana acted towards her just as she
always had, a matter of propriety no doubt; but Budur found it
off putting, also sad. In the cafes she sat on the other side
of the table from Kirana, not often meeting her eye. Kirana
accepted this, and joined the flow of conversation on her side of
the table, discoursing in her usual manner, which now struck Budur
as a bit forced, even overbearing, although it was no more verbose
than ever.
Budur turned to Hasan, who was describing a trip to the
Sugar Islands, between Yingzhou and Inka, where he planned to smoke
opium every day and lie on white beaches or in the turquoise water
off their shores, warm as a bath. 'Wouldn't that be grand?' Hasan
asked.
'In my next life,' Budur suggested.
'Your next life.' Hasan snorted, bloodshot eye regarding
her sardonically. 'So pretty to think so.'
'You never know,' Budur said.
'Right. Maybe we should take a trip out to see Madam
Sururi, and you can see who you were in your past lives. Talk to
your loved ones in the bardo. Half the widows of Nsara are doing
it, I'm sure it's quite comforting. If you could believe it.' He
gestured out through the plate glass, where people in black coats
passed in the street, hunched under their umbrellas. 'It's silly
though. Most people don't even live the one life they've got.'
One life. It was an idea Budur had trouble accepting,
even though the sciences and everything else had made it clear that
one life was all you had. As a girl her mother had said, Be good or
you'll come back as a snail. At funerals they said a prayer for the
next existence of the deceased, asking Allah to give him or her a
chance to improve. Now all that was dismissed, with all the rest of
the afterlives, heaven and hell, God himself -- all that claptrap,
all the superstitions of earlier generations in their immense
ignorance, concocting myths to make sense of things. Now they lived
in a material world, evolved to what it was by chance and the laws
of physics; they struggled through one life and died; that was what
the scientists had revealed by their studies, and there was nothing
Budur had ever seen or experienced that seemed to indicate
otherwise. No doubt it was true. That was reality; they had to
adjust to it, or live in a delusion. Adjust each to his or her own
cosmic solitude, to nakba, to hunger and worry, coffee and opium,
the knowledge of an end.
'Did I hear you say we should visit Madam Sururi?' Kirana
asked from across the table. 'A good idea! Let's do it. It would be
like a historical field trip for the class like visiting a
place where people still live as they did for hundreds of
years.'
'From all I've heard she's an entertaining old
charlatan.'
'A friend of mine visited her and said it was great
fun.'
They had spent too many hours sitting there, looking at
the same ashtrays and coffee rings on the tabletops, the same rain
deltas on the windows. So they gathered up their coats and
umbrellas, and took the number four tram upriver to a meagre
neighbourhood of apartments abutting the older shipyards, the
buildings displaying small Maghribi shops at each corner. Between a
seamstress's workshop and a laundry hid a little walk up to
rooms over the shops below. The door opened to their knock, and
they were invited in to an entryway, and then, farther in, to a
dark room filled with couches and small tables, obviously the
converted living room of a fairly large old apartment.
Eight or ten women and three old men were sitting on
chairs, facing a black haired woman who was younger than Budur
had expected but not all that young, a woman who wore Zotti
clothing, heavy kohl and lipstick, and a great deal of cheap glass
jewellery. She had been speaking to her devotees in a low intent
voice, and now she paused, and gestured to empty chairs at the back
of the room without saying anything to the new arrivals.
'Each time the soul descends into a body,' she resumed
when they were seated, 'it is like a divine soldier, entering into
the battlefield of life and fighting ignorance and evil doing.
It tries to reveal its own inner divinity and establish the divine
truth on Earth, according to its capacity. Then at the end of its
journey in that incarnation, it returns to its own region of the
bardo. I can talk to that region when conditions are right.'
'How long will a soul spend there before coming back
again?' one of the women in her audience asked.
'This varies depending on conditions,' Madam Sururi
replied. 'There is no single process for the evolution of higher
souls. Some began from the mineral and some from the animal
kingdom. Sometimes it starts from the other end, and cosmic gods
take on human form directly.' She nodded as if personally familiar
with this phenomenon. 'There are many different ways.'
'So it's true that we may have been animals in a previous
incarnation?'
'Yes, it is possible. In the evolution of our souls we
have been all things, including rocks and plants. It is not
possible to change too much between any two incarnations, of
course. But over many incarnations, great changes can be made. The
Lord Buddha revealed that he had been a goat in a previous life,
for instance. But because he had realized God, this was not
important.'
Kirana stifled a little snort, shifted on her chair to
cover it.
Madam Sururi ignored her: 'It was easy for him to see
what he had been in the past. Some of us are given that kind of
vision. But he knew that the past was not important. Our goal is
not behind us, it is ahead of us. To a spiritual person I always
say, the past is dust. I say this because the past has not given us
what we want. What we want is Godrealization, and contact with our
loved ones, and that depends entirely on our inner cry. We must
say, "I have no past. I am beginning here and now, with God's grace
and my own aspiration. -- There was not much to object
to in that, Budur thought; it cut strangely to the heart, given the
source; but she could feel scepticism emanating from Kirana like
heat, indeed the room seemed to be warming with it, as if a
qi burning heater had been placed on the floor and turned on
high. Perhaps it was a function of Budur's embarrassment. She
reached over and squeezed Kirana's hand. It seemed to her that the
seer was more interesting than Kirana's fidgets were allowing.
An elderly widow, still wearing one of the pins given to them in
the middle decades of the war, said, 'When a soul picks a new body
to enter, does it already know what kind of life it will have?'
'It can only see possibilities. God knows everything, but
He covers up the future. Even God does not use his ultimate vision
all the time. Otherwise, there would be no game.'
Kirana's mouth opened round as a zero, almost as if she
were going to speak, and Budur elbowed her.
'Does the soul lose the details of its previous
experiences, or does it remember?'
'The soul doesn't need to remember those things. It would
be like remembering what you ate today, or what a disciple's
cooking was like. If I know that the disciple was very kind to me,
that she brought me food, then that is enough. I don't need to know
the details of the meals. just the impression of the service. This
is what the soul remembers.'
'Sometimes, my -- my friend and I meditate by looking
into each other's eyes, and when we do, sometimes we see each
other's faces change. Even our hair changes colour. I was wondering
what this means.'
'It means you are seeing past incarnations. But this is
not at all advisable. Suppose you see that three or four
incarnations ago you were a fierce tiger? What good would this do
you? The past is dust, I tell you.'
'Did any of your disciples -- did any of us know each
other in our past incarnations?'
'Yes. We travel in groups, we keep running into each
other. There are two disciples here, for instance, who are close
friends in this incarnation. When I was meditating on them, I saw
that they were physical sisters in their previous incarnation, and
very close to each other. And in the incarnation before that, they
were mother and son. This is how it happens. Nothing can eclipse my
third eye's vision. When you have established a true spiritual
bond, then that feeling can never truly disappear.'
'Can you tell us -- can you tell us who we were before?
Or who among us had this bond?'
'Outwardly I have not personally told these two, but
those who are my real disciples I have told inwardly, and so they
know it inside themselves already. My real disciples -- those who I
have taken as my very own, and who have taken me they are
going to be fulfilled and realized in this incarnation, or
in their next incarnation, or in very few incarnations. Some
disciples may take twenty incarnations or more, because of their
very poor start. Some who have come to me in their first or second
human incarnation may take hundreds of incarnations more to reach
their goal. The first or second incarnation is still a halfanimal
incarnation, most of the time. The animal is still there as a
predominating factor, so how can they achieve God realization?
Even in the Nsara Centre for Spiritual Development, right here
among us, there are many disciples who have had only six or seven
incarnations, and on the streets of the city I see Africans, or
other people from across the sea, who are very clearly more animal
than human. What can a guru do with such souls? With these people a
guru can only do so much.'
'Can you ... can you put us in communication with souls
who have passed over? Now? Is it time yet?'
Madam Sururi returned her questioner's gaze, level and
calm. 'They are speaking to you already, are they not? We cannot
bring them forth in front of everyone tonight. The spirits do not
like to be so exposed. And we have guests that they are not yet
used to. And I am tired. You have seen how draining it is to speak
aloud in this world the things they are saying in our minds. Let's
retire to the dining room now, and enjoy the offerings you have
brought. We will cat knowing that our loved ones speak to us in our
minds.'
The visitors from the cafe decided by glance to leave
while the others were retiring to the next room, before they began
to commit the crime of taking others' food without believing in
their religion. They made small coin offerings to the seer, who
accepted them with dignity, ignoring the tenor of Kirana's look,
staring back at Kirana without guilt or complicity.
The next tram wasn't due for another half watch, and so
the group walked back through the industrial district and down the
riverside, reenacting choice bits of the interview and staggering
with laughter. Kirana for one could not stop laughing, howling it
out over the river: 'My third eye sees all! But I can't tell you
right now! What unbelievable crap!'
'I've already told you what you want to know with my
inner voice, now let's eat!'
'Some of my disciples were sisters in previous lives,
sister goats in actual fact, but you can only ask so much of the
past, ah, ha ha ha ha ha ha ha!'
'Oh be quiet,' Budur said sharply. 'She's only making a living.'
To Kirana: 'She tells people things and they pay her, how is that
so different from what you do? She makes them feel better.'
'Does she?'
'She gives them something in exchange for food. She tells
them what they want to hear. You tell people what they don't want
to hear for your food, is that any better?'
'Why yes,' Kirana said, cackling again. 'It's a pretty
damned good trick, now you put it that way. Here's the deal!' she
shouted over the river at the world. 'I tell you want you don't
want to bear, you give me food!'
Even Budur had to laugh.
They walked across the last bridge arm in arm, laughing
and talking, then into the city centre, trams squealing over
tracks, people hurrying by. Budur looked at the passing faces
curiously, remembering the worn visage of the fake guru,
businesslike and hard. No doubt Kirana was right to laugh. All the
old myths were just stories. The only reincarnation you got was the
next day's waking. No one else was you, not the you that existed a
year before, not the you that might exist ten years from now, or
even the next day. It was a matter of the moment, some unimaginable
minim of time, always already gone. Memory was partial, a dim
tawdry room in a run down neighbourhood, illuminated by
flashes of distant lightning. Once she had been a girl in a good
merchant's harem, but what did that matter now? Now she was a free
woman in Nsara, crossing the city at night with a group of laughing
intellectuals -- that was all there was. It made her laugh too, a
painful wild shout of a laugh, full of a joy akin to ferocity. That
was what Kirana really gave in exchange for her food.
SIXTEEN
Three new women showed up in Budur's zawiyya quiet women
who had arrived with typical stories, and mostly kept to
themselves. They started work in the kitchen, as usual. Budur felt
uncomfortable with the way they glanced at her, and did not
look at each other. She still could not quite believe that young
women like these would betray a young woman like her, and two of
the three were actually very nice. She was stiffer with them than
she would have wanted to be, without actually being hostile, which
Idelba had warned might give away her suspicions. It was a fine
line in a game Budur was completely unused to playing or not
completely -- it reminded ber of the various fronts she had put on
for her father and mother, a very unpleasant memory. She wanted
everything to be new now, she wanted to be herself straight up to
everybody, chest to chest as the Iranians said. But it seemed life
entailed putting on masks for much of the time. She must be casual
in Kirana's classes, and indifferent to Kirana in the cafes, even
when they were leg to leg; and she must be civil to these
spies.
Meanwhile, across the plaza in the lab, Idelba and Piali
were hard at work, staying late into the night almost every night;
and Idelba became more and more serious about it, trying, Budur
thought, to hide her worries behind an unconvincing dismissiveness.
'Just physics,' she would say when asked. 'Trying to work something
out. You know how interesting theories can be, but they're just
theories. Not like real problems.' It seemed everyone put on a mask
to the world, even Idelba, who was not good at it, even though she
seemed to have a frequent need for masks. Budur could see very
plainly now that she thought the stakes were somehow high.
'Is it a bomb?' Budur asked once in a low voice, one
night as they were closing up the emptied building.
Idelba hesitated only a moment. 'Possibly,' she
whispered, looking around them. 'The possibility is there. So,
please -- never speak of it again.'
During these months Idelba worked such long hours, and,
like everyone else in the zawiyya, ate so little that she fell
sick, and had to rest in her bed. This was very frustrating to her,
and along with the misery of illness, she struggled to get up
before she was ready, and even tried to work on papers in her bed,
pencil and logarithmic abacus scritching and clacking all the time
she was awake.
Then one day she got a phone call while Budur was there,
and she dragged herself down the hall to take it, clutching her
night robe to her. When she came off the phone she hurried to the
kitchen and asked Budur to join her in her room.
Budur followed her, surprised to see her moving so quickly. In
ber room Idelba shut the door and began to pile a mass of her
papers and notebooks into a cloth book bag. 'Hide this for me,' she
said urgently. 'I don't think you can leave, though, they'll stop
you and search you. It has to be in the zawiyya somewhere, not in
your room or mine, they'll search them both. They may search
everywhere, I'm not sure where to suggest.' Her voice was low but
the tone was frantic; Budur had never heard her like that.
'Who is it?'
'It doesn't matter, hurry! It's the police. They're on
their way, go.'
The doorbell rang, and rang again.
'Don't worry,' Budur said, and ran down the hall to her
room. She looked around: a room search, perhaps a house search,
and the bag of papers was big. She looked around, thinking over the
zawiyya in her mind, wondering if Idelba would mind if she somehow
managed to destroy the bag entirely -- not that she had any method
in mind, but she wasn't sure how crucial the papers were -- but
possibly they could be shredded and flushed down a toilet.
There were people in the hall, women's voices. Apparently
the police who had entered were women officers, so they were not
breaking the house rule against men. A sign perhaps; but men's
voices came from out in the street, arguing with the zawiyya
elders; women were in the hall; a big knock on her door, they had
come to hers first, no doubt along with Idelba's. She put the bag
around her neck, climbed onto her bed, then the iron headboard, and
pulled herself up the wall and shoved up a panel of the false
ceiling, and with a push off like a dance step, knee in the meeting
of the two walls, got under the panel and onto the wall's dusty
top, which was about two feet wide. She sat on it and put the panel
back down into place, very quietly.
The old museum had had very high ceilings, with some
glass skylights that were now almost perfectly opaque with dust. In
the dimness she could see over the ceilings of several rows of
rooms, and the open tops of the hallways, and the true walls, far
away in every direction. It was not a good hiding place at all, if
they only thought to look up here, from anywhere.
The top of the walls consisted of warped wood beams,
nailed to the top of the framing and over the drywall like coping.
There were two sheets of drywall to each wall, notoriously
transparent to sound, nailed onto each side of the framing; so
there would be gaps between the two sheets of drywall, if she could
get a beam off the top somewhere.
She moved onto her hands and knees and swung the bag onto
her back, and began crawling over the dusty beams, looking for a
hole while staying well away from the hallways, where a glance up
could reveal her. From here the whole arrangement looked
ramshackle, cobbled together in a hurry, and soon enough she found
a cap where three walls met and a beam had been cut short. It
wasn't big enough to fit the whole bag, but she could stuff papers
in there, and she did so quickly, until the bag was empty, and the
bag dropped in last. It wasn't a perfect hiding place if they
wanted to be comprehensive, but it was the best she could think of,
and she was pretty pleased with it, actually; but if they found her
up on the beams, all would be lost. She crawled on as quietly as
she could, hearing voices back in the direction of her room. They
would only have to stand on her bed's headboard and push up a panel
for a look to see her. The far bathroom did not sound as if it had
anyone in it, so she crawled in that direction, ripping the skin
over one knee on a nailhead, and pulled up a panel an inch and
peered in empty she pulled it aside, hung from the beam,
dropped, hit the tiled floor hard. The wall was smeared with dust
and blood; her knees and the tops of her feet were filthy with
dust, and the palms of her hands marked everything like the hand of
Cain. She washed in a sink, tore off her jellabah and put it in the
laundry, pulled clean towels from the cabinet and wetted one to
clean the wall off. The panel above was still pulled aside, and
there were no chairs in the bathroom; she couldn't get up there to
move it back in place. Glance out in the hall -- loud voices
arguing, Idelba's among them, protesting, no one in sight -- she
dashed across the hall to a bedroom and took a chair and ran back
into the bathroom and put the chair against the wall, stepped up
onto it, stepped gently on the chair back, reached up and yanked
the panel back into place, smashing her fingers between two panels.
Yank them free, push the panel into position, down again, the chair
slipping across the tile with her movement. Clatter, bang, catch
herself, another glance out, more arguing, coming closer; she put
the chair back, went back in the bathroom, went to the showers and
got in, soaping her knees and feeling the sting in the cut. She
soaped and soaped, heard voices outside the bathroom. She washed
off the soap as quickly as possible, and was dried and wrapped in a
big towel when women came into the room, including two in army
uniforms, looking like soldiers from the war whom Budur had seen
long ago, in the Turi railway station. She looked as startled as
she could, held the towel to herself.
'Are you Budur Radwan?' one of the policewomen
demanded.
'Yes! What do you want?'
'We want to talk to you! Where have you been?'
'What do you mean, where have I been? You can see very
well where I've been! What is this all about, why do you want me?
What could have brought you in here?'
'We want to talk to you.'
'Well, let me get dressed and I will talk to you. I have
done nothing wrong, I assume? I can get dressed before talking to
my own countrywomen, I assume?'
'This is Nsara,' one of them said. 'You're from Turi,
right?'
'True, but we are all Firanjis here, all good Muslim
women in a zawiyya, unless I am mistaken?'
'Come on, get dressed,' the other one said. 'We have some
questions to ask about affairs here, security threats that may be
centred here. So come. Where are your clothes?'
'In my room, of course!' And Budur swept past them to her
room, considering which jellabah would best hide her knees and any
blood that might be seeping down her leg. Her blood was hot, but
her breathing calm, she felt solid; and there was an anger growing
in her, like a boulder from the jetty, anchoring her from the
inside.
SEVENTEEN
Though they made a fairly thorough search, they did not
find Idelba's papers, nor did they get anything but bewilderment
and indignation from their questionings. The zawiyya filed suit
with the courts against the police, for invasion of privacy without
proper authorization, and only the invocation of wartime secrecy
laws kept it from being a scandal in the newspapers. The
courts backed the search but also the zawiyya's future right to
privacy, and after that it was back to normal, or sort of; Idelba
never talked about her work any more, no longer worked in certain
labs she had before, and she no longer spent any time with
Piali.
Budur continued in her routine, making her rounds from
home, to work, to the Cafe Sultana. There she sat behind the big
plate glass windows and looked out at the docks, and the forests of
masts and steel superstructures, and the top of the lighthouse at
the end of the jetty, while the talk swirled around ber. At their
tables too, very often, were Hasan and Tristan, sitting like
limpets in their pool with the tide gone out, exposing them wetly
to the moon. Hasan's polemics and poetry made him a force to be
reckoned with, a truth that all the city's avantgarde acknowledged,
either enthusiastically or reluctantly. Hasan himself spoke of his
reputation with a smirk meant to be self deprecating, wickedly
smiling as he briefly exposed his power to view. Budur liked him
although she knew perfectly well he was in some senses a
disagreeable person. She was more interested in Tristan and his
music, which included not only the songs like those he had sung at
the garden party, but also vast long works for bands of up to two
hundred musicians, sometimes featuring him on the kundun, an
Anatolian stringed box with metal tabs to the side that slightly
changed the tones of the strings, a fiendishly difficult instrument
to play. He wrote out the parts for each instrument in these
pieces, down to every chord and change, and even every note. As in
his songs, these longer compositions showed his interest in
adapting the primitive tonalities of the lost Christians, for the
most part simple harmonic chords, but containing within them the
possibility of various more sophisticated tonalities, which could
at strategic moments return to the Pythagorean basics favoured in
the chorales and chants of the lost ones. Writing down every note
and demanding that the musicians in the ensemble play only and
exactly the written notes was an act that everyone regarded as
megalomaniacal to the point of impossibility; ensemble music,
though very highly structured in a way that went back ultimately to
Indian classical ragas, nevertheless allowed for individual
improvisation of the details of the variations, spontaneous
creations that indeed provided much of the interest of the music,
as the musician played within and against the raga forms. No one
would have stood for Tristan's insane strictures if it were not
that the results were, one could not deny it, superb and beautiful.
And Tristan insisted that the procedure was not his idea, but
merely the way that the lost civilization had gone about it; that
he was following the lost ways, even doing his best to channel the
hungry ghosts of the old ones in his dreams and in his musical
reveries. The old Frankish pieces he hoped to invoke were all
religious music, devotionals, and had to be understood and utilized
as such, as sacred music. Although it was true that in this
hyper aesthetic circle of the avant garde it was music
itself that was sacred, like all the arts, so that the description
was redundant.
It was also true that treating art as sacred often meant
smoking opium or drinking laudanum to prepare for the experience;
some even used the stronger distillates of opium developed during
the war, smoking or even injecting them. The resulting dream states
made Tristan's music mesmerizing, the practitioners said, even
those who were not fond of the lost civilization's simplistic
tootles; opium induced a deep absorption in the sensuous surface of
musical sound, in the plainsong harmonies, vibrating between a
drugged band and a drugged audience. If the performance was
combined with the fanned aromas of a scent artist, the results
could be truly mystical. Some were sceptical of all this: Kirana
said once, 'As high as they all get, they could simply sing a
single note for the whole hour, and smell their armpits, and all
would be as happy as birds.'
Tristan himself often led the opium ceremonies before
leading the music, so these evenings had a somewhat cultic air to
them, as if Tristan were some kind of mystic sufi master, or one of
the Hosain actors in the plays about Hosain's martyrdom, which the
opium crowd also attended after crossing into dreamland, to watch
Hosain putting on his own shroud before his murder by Shemr, the
audience groaning, not at the murder onstage, but at this choice of
martyrdom. In some of the Shiite countries the person playing Shemr
had to run for his life after the performance, and more than one
unlucky actor had been killed by the crowd. Tristan thoroughly
approved; this was the kind of immersion in the art that he wanted
his musical audiences to achieve.
But only in the secular world; it was all for music, not
for God; Tristan was more Persian than Iranian as he put it
sometimes, much more an Omarian than any kind of mullah, or a
mystic of Zoroastrian bent, concocting rituals in honour of Ahura Mazda, a kind
of sun worship that in foggy Nsara could come straight from the
heart. Channelling Christians, smoking opium, worshipping the sun;
he did all kinds of crazy things for his music, including working
for many hours every day to get every note right on the page; and
though none of it would have mattered if the music had not been
good, it was good, it was more than that; it was the music of their
lives, of Nsara in its time.
He spoke of all the theory behind it, however, in cryptic
little phrases and aphorisms that then made the rounds, as
'Tristan's latest'; and often it was just a shrug and a smile and
an offered opium pipe, and, most of all, his music. He composed
what he composed, and the intellectuals of the city could listen
and then talk about what it all meant, and they often did all
through the night. Tahar Labid would go on endlessly about it, and
then say to Tristan, with almost mock aggressiveness, That's
right, isn't it Tristan Ahura, then go on without pausing for an
answer, as if Tristan were to be laughed at as an idiot savant for
never deigning to reply one way or the other; as if he didn't
really know what his music meant. But Tristan only smiled at Tahar,
sphinxlike and enigmatic under his moustache, relaxed as if poured
into his window seat, looking out at the wet black cobbles or
spearing Tahar with an amused glance.
'Why don't you ever answer me!' Tahar exclaimed once.
Tristan pursed his lips and whistled a response at
him.
'Oh come on,' Tahar said, reddening. 'Say something to
make us think you have a single idea in your head.'
Tristan drew himself up. 'Don't be rude! Of course there
are no ideas in my head, what do you think I am!'
So Budur sat next to him. She joined him when, with a
tilt of the chin and pursing of the lips, he invited her into one
of the back rooms of the cafe where the opium smokers gathered. She
had decided ahead of time to join them if the opportunity was
offered, to see what hearing Tristan's music under the influence
would be like; to see what the drug felt like, using the music as
the ceremony that allowed ber to overcome her Turic fear of the
smoke.
The room was small and dark. The huqqab, bigger than a
narghile, sat on a low table in the middle of floor pillows, and
Tristan cut a chunk from a black plug of opium and put it in the
bowl, lit it with a silver cigarette lighter as one of the others
inhaled. As the single mouthpiece was passed around the smokers
sucked on it, and each in turn began immediately to cough. The
black plug in the bowl bubbled to tar as it burned; the smoke was
thick and white, and smelled like sugar. Budur decided to take in
so little that she wouldn't cough, but when the mouthpiece came to
her and she inhaled gently through it, the first taste of the smoke
caused her to hack like a demon. It seemed impossible she could be
so affected by anything that had been in her so briefly.
Then it struck deeper. She felt her blood filling her
skin, then all of her. Blood filled her like a balloon, it would
spurt out if her hot skin didn't hold it in. She pulsed with her
pulse, and the world pulsed with her. Everything jumped forwards
into itself somehow, in time with her heart. The dim walls pulsed.
More colour revealed itself with every beat of her heart. The
surfaces of things swirled with coiled pressure and tension, they
looked like Idelba said they really were, bundles of bundled
energy. Budur pulled herself to her feet with the others, walked,
balancing carefully, through the streets to the concert hall in the
old palace, into a space long and tall like a deck of cards set on
its side. The musicians filed in and sat, their instruments like
strange weapons. Following Tristan's lead, conveyed by hand and
eye, they began to play. The singers chanted in the ancient
Pythagorean tonality, pure and sugary, a single voice wandering
above in descant. Then Tristan on his oud, and the other string
players, bass to treble, sneaked in underneath, wrecking the simple
harmonies, bringing in a whole other world, an Asia of sound, so
much more complex and dark -- reality seeping in. and, over
the course of a long struggle, overwhelming the old west's
plainchant. This was the story of Firanja that Tristan was singing,
Budur thought suddenly, a musical expression of the history of this
place they lived in, late arrivals that they were. Firanjis,
Franks, Kelts, the oldest ones back in the murk of time ... Each
people overrun in its turn. It was not a scent performance, but
there was incense burning before the musicians, and as their songs
wove together the thick smells of sandalwood and jasmine choked the
room, they came in on Budur's breath and sang inside her, playing a
complex roundelay with her pulse, just as in the music itself,
which was so clearly another speech of the body, a language she
felt she could understand in the moment it happened. without ever
being able to articulate or remember it.
Sex too was a language like that; as she found later that
night, when she went home with Tristan to his grubby apartment, and
to bed with him. His apartment was across the river in the south
wharf district, a cold and damp garret, an artistic clich6, and
uncleaned, it appeared, since his wife had died near the end of the
war some factory accident, Budur had gathered from others, a
chance of bad timing and broken machinery -- but the bed was there,
and the sheets clean, which made Budur suspicious; but after all
she had been showing interest in Tristan, so perhaps it was only a
matter of politeness, or self respect of some heartening kind.
He was a dreamy lover and played her like an oud, languorous and
faintly teasing, so that there was an edge to her passion, of
resistance and struggle, all adding somehow to the sexiness of the
experience, so that it nagged at her afterwards, as if set into her
with hooks nothing like the blazing directness of Kirana --
and Budur afterwards wondered what Tristan intended by it, but
realized also in that very first night that she was not going to
learn from Tristan's words, as he was as reticent with her as he
was with Tahar, almost; so that she would have to know him by what
could be intuited from his music and his looks. Which were indeed
very revealing of his moods and their swings, and so of his
character (perhaps); which she liked. So for a while she went home
with him fairly often, arranging for prophylactics with the zawiyya
clinic, going out at night to the cafes and taking the opportunity
when it came.
After a time, however, it became annoying to try to have
conversation with a man who only sang melodies -- like trying to
live with a bird. it echoed painfully that distance in her father,
and the mute quality of her attempts to study the remote past,
which were equally speechless. And as things in town got tighter,
and each week added another zero to the numbers on the paper money,
it got harder and harder to gather the large ensembles that
Tristan's current compositions required. When the district
panchayat that ran the old palace chose not to lend a concert room,
or the musicians were occupied with their real jobs, in class or on
the docks or in the shops selling hats and raincoats, then Tristan
could only strum his oud, and finger his pencils and take endless
notes, in an Indian musical notation that was said to be older than
Sanskrit, although Tristan confessed to Budur that he had forgotten
the system during the war, and now used one of his own devising
that he had had to teach to his players. His melodies became more
morose, she thought, tunes from a heavy heart, mourning the losses
of the war, and the ones that had happened since, and were still
occurring now, in the moment of listening itself. Budur understood
them, and kept joining Tristan from time to time, watching the
twitches under his moustache for clues as to what amused him when
she or others spoke, watching his yellowed fingers as they felt
their tunes forwards, or noted down one quicksilver lament after
another. She heard a singer she thought he would like, and took him
to hear her, and he did like her, he hummed on the way home,
looking out of the tram window at the dark city streets, where
people hurried from streetlight to streetlight over gleaming
cobblestones, hunched under umbrellas or serapes.
It's like in the forest,' Tristan said with a lift of the
moustache. 'Up in your mountains, you know, you see places where
avalanches have bent all the trees down sideways, and then after
the snow melts, the trees there all stay bent sideways together.'
He gestured at the crowd waiting at a tram stop. 'That's what we're
like now.'
EIGHTEEN
As the days and the weeks passed Budur continued to read
voraciously, in the zawiyya, the institute, the parks, at the
jetty's end, in the hospital for the blind soldiers. Meanwhile
there were ten trillion piastre bills arriving with
immigrants from the Middle West, and they were at ten billion
drachmas themselves; recently a man had stuffed his house from
floor to ceiling with money, and traded the whole establishment for
a pig. At the zawiyya it was harder and harder to put together
meals big enough to feed them all. They grew vegetables in crops on
the roof , cursing the clouds, and lived on their goats' milk,
their chickens' eggs, cucumbers in great vats of vinegar, pumpkins
cooked in every conceivable fashion, and potato soup, watered to a
thinness thinner than milk.
One day Idelba found the three spies going through the
little cabinet above her bed, and she had them kicked out of the
house as common thieves, calling in the neighbourhood police
and bypassing the issue of spying, without however getting into the
tricky issue of what else besides her ideas she had that would be
worth stealing.
'They'll be in trouble,' Budur observed after the three
girls were taken away. 'Even if they're plucked out of jail by
their employers.'
'Yes,' Idelba agreed. 'I was going to leave them here, as
you saw. But once caught, we had to act as if we didn't know who
they were. And the truth is we can't afford to feed them. So they
can go back to who sent them. Hopefully.' A grim expression; she
didn't want to think about it -- about what she might have
condemned them to. That was their problem. She had hardened in just
the two years since she had brought Budur to Nsara, or so it seemed
to Budur. 'It's not just my work,' she explained, seeing Budur's
expression. 'That remains latent. It's the problems we have right
now. Things won't need blowing up if we all starve first. The war
ended badly, that's all there is to it. I mean not just for us, as
the defeated, but for everyone. Things are so out of balance, it
could bring everything down. So everyone needs to pull together.
And if some people don't, then I don't know . . .'
'All that time you spend working in the music of the
Franks,' Budur said to Tristan, one evening in the cafe, 'do you
ever think about what they were like?'
'Why yes,' he said, pleased at the question. 'All the
time. I think they were just like us. They fought a lot. They had
monasteries and madressas, and water powered machinery. Their
ships were small, but they could sail into the wind. They might
have taken control of the seas before anyone else.'
'Not a chance,' said Tahar. 'Compared to Chinese ships
they were no more than dhows. Come now, Tristan, you know
that.'
Tristan shrugged.
'They had ten or fifteen languages, thirty or forty
principalities, isn't that right?' said Naser. 'They were too
fractured to conquer anyone else.'
'They fought together to capture Jerusalem,' Tristan
pointed out. 'The infighting gave them practice. They thought they
were God's chosen people.'
' Primitives often think that.'
'Indeed.' Tristan smiled, leaning sideways to peer
through the window towards the neighbourhood mosque. 'As I say,
they were just like us. If they had lived, there would be more
people like us.'
'There's no one like us,' Naser said sadly. 'I think they
must have been very different.'
Tristan shrugged again. 'You can say anything you like
about them, it doesn't matter. You can say they would have been
enslaved like the Africans, or made slaves of the rest of us, or
brought a golden age, or waged wars worse than the Long War . .
.'
People shook their heads at all these
impossibilities.
'. . . but it doesn't matter. We'll never know, so you
can say whatever you like. They are our jinns.'
'It's funny how we look down on them,' Kirana observed,
'just because they died. At an unconscious level it seems like it
must have been their fault. A physical weakness, or a moral
failing, or a bad habit.'
'They affronted God with their pride.'
'They were pale because they were weak, or vice versa.
Muzaffar has shown it, how the darker the skin, the stronger the
persons. The blackest Africans are strongest of all, the palest of
the Golden Horde are weakest. He did tests. The Franks were
hereditarily incompetent, that was his conclusion. Losers in the
evolutionary game of survival of the fittest.'
Kirana shook her head. 'It was probably just a mutation
of the plague, so strong it killed off all its hosts, and therefore
died itself. It could have happened to any of us. The Chinese, or
us.'
'But there's a kind of anemia common around the
Mediterranean, that might have made them more susceptible .
'No. It could have been us.'
'That might have been good,' Tristan said. 'They believed
in a god of mercy, their Christ was all love and mercy.'
'Hard to tell that by what they did in Syria.'
'Or al Andalus '
'It was latent in them, ready to spring forth. While for
us what is latent is jihad.'
'They were the same as us, you said.'
Tristan smiled under his moustache. 'Maybe. They're the
blank on the map, the ruins underfoot, the empty mirror. The clouds
in the sky that look like tigers.'
I, it's such a useless exercise,' Kirana reflected. 'What if
this had happened, what if that had happened, what if the Golden
Horde had forced the Gansu Corridor at the start of the Long War,
what if the Japanese had attacked China after retaking Japan, what
if the Ming had kept their treasure fleet, what if we had
discovered and conquered Yingzhou, what if Alexander the Great had
not died young, on and on, and they all would have made enormous
differences and yet it's always entirely useless. These historians
who talk about employing counterfactuals to bolster their theories,
they're ridiculous. Because no one knows why things happen, you
see? Anything could follow from anything. Even real history tells
us nothing at all. Because we don't know if history is sensitive,
and for want of a nail a civilization was lost, or if our mightiest
acts are as petals on a flood, or something in between, or both at
once. We just don't know, and the what ifs don't help us work it
out.'
'Why do people like them so much then?'
Kirana shrugged, took a drag on her cigarette. 'More
stories.'
And indeed more of them were immediately proposed, for
despite their uselessness in Kirana's eyes, people enjoyed
contemplating the what might have been: what if the lost Moroccan
fleet of 924 had been blown to the Sugar Islands and then made it
back, what if the Kerala of Travancore had not conquered much of
Asia and set out his railways and legal system, what if there had
been no New World islands there at all, what if Burma had lost its
war with Siam ...
Kirana only shook her head. 'Perhaps it would be better
just to focus on the future.'
'You, a historian, say this? But the future can't be
known at all!'
'Well, but it exists for us now as a project to be
enacted. Ever since the Travancori enlightenment we have had a
sense of the future as something we make. This new awareness of
time to come is very important. It makes us a thread in a tapestry
that has unrolled for centuries before us, and will unroll for
centuries after us. We're midway through the loom, that's the
present, and what we do casts the thread in a panic ular
direction, and the picture in the tapestry changes accordingly.
When we begin to try to make a picture pleasing to us and to those
who come after, then perhaps you can say that we have seized
history.'
NINETEEN
But one could sit with people like that, have
conversations like that, and still walk outside into watery
sunlight with nothing to cat and no money worth anything. Budur
worked hard at the zawiyya, and set up classes in Persian and
Firanjic for the hungry girls moving in who only spoke Berber or
Arabic or Andalusi or Skandistani or Turkish. At night she
continued as a habituaee of the cafes and coffee houses, and
sometimes the opium dens. She got work with one of the government
agencies as a translator of documents, and continued to study
archaeology. She was worried when Idelba fell ill again, and spent
a lot of time caring for her. The doctors said that Idelba was
suffering from 'nervous exhaustion', something like the battle
fatigue of the war; but to Budur she seemed very obviously
physically weaker, harmed by something the doctors could not
identify. Illness without cause; Budur found this too frightening
to think about. Probably it was a hidden cause, but that too was
frightening.
She got more involved with the running of the zawiyya,
taking over some of what Idelba had done before. There was less
time to read. Besides, she wanted to do more than read, or even
write reports: she felt too anxious to read, and merely perusing a
number of texts and then boiling them down into a new text struck
her as an odd activity; it was like being a still, distilling
ideas. History as a brandy; but she wanted something more
substantial.
Meanwhile, many a night she still went out and enjoyed
the midnight scene at the coffee and opium cafes listening to
Tristan's oud (they were friends only now), sometimes in an opiated
dream that allowed her to wander the fogged halls of her thoughts
without actually entering any rooms. She was deep in. a reverie
concerning the Ibrahamic collisional nature of progress in history,
something like the continents themselves, if the geologists were
right, creating new fusions, as in Samarqand, or Mughal India, or
the Hodenosaunee dealing with China to the west and Islam to the
east, or Burma, yes all this was coming clear, like random
bits of coloured rock on the ground swirling into one of Hagia
Sophia's elaborate self--replicating arabesques, a common opium
effect to be sure, but then that was what history always was, a hallucinated
pattern onto random events, so there was no cause to disbelieve the
illumination just because of that. History as an opium dream Halah
from the zawiyya burst into the cafe's back room looking around;
spotting her Budur knew immediately that something was wrong with
Idelba. Halali came over, her face holding a serious expression.
'She's taken a turn for the worse.'
Budur followed her out, stumbling under the weight of the
opium, trying to banish all its effects immediately with her panic,
but that only cast her farther out into visual distortions of all
kinds, and never had Nsara looked uglier than on that night, rain
bouncing hard on the streets, squiggles of light cobbling
underfoot, shapes of people like rats swimming . . .
Idelba was gone from the zawiyya, she had been taken to
the nearest hospital, a huge rambling wartime structure on the hill
north of the harbour. Slogging up there, inside the rain cloud
itself; then the sound of rain pounding on the cheap tin roof. The
light was an intense throbbing yellow white in which everyone
looked blank and dead, like walking meat as they had said during
the war of men sent to the front.
Idelba was no worse looking than the rest, but Budur
rushed to her side. 'She's having trouble breathing,' a nurse said,
looking up from her chair. Budur thought: these people work in
hell. She was very frightened.
'Listen,' Idelba said calmly. She said to the nurse,
'Please leave us alone for ten minutes.' When the nurse was gone,
she said in a low voice to Budur, 'Listen, if I die, then you need
to help Piali.'
'But Aunt Idelba! You aren't going to die.'
'Be quiet. I can't risk writing this down, and I can't
risk telling only one person, in case something happens to them
too. You need to get Piali to go to Isfahan, to describe our
results to Abdol Zoroush. Also to Ananda, in Travancore. And Chen,
in China. They all have tremendous influence within their
respective governments. Hanea will handle her end of things. Remind
Piali of what we decided was best. Soon, you see, all atomic
physicists will understand the theoretical possibilities of the way
alactin splits. The possible application. If they all know the
possibility exists, then there will be reason for them to press to
make peace permanent. The scientists can pressure their respective
governments, by making clear the situation, and taking control of
the direction of the relevant fields of science. They must keep the
peace, or there will be a rush to destruction. Given the choice,
they must choose peace.'
'Yes,' Budur said, wondering if it would be so. Her mind
was reeling at the prospect of such a burden being placed on her to
carry. She did not like Piali very much. 'Please, Aunt Idelba,
please. Don't distress yourself. It will be all right.'
Idelba nodded. 'Very possibly.'
She rallied late that night, just before dawn, just as
Budur was beginning to come down from her opium delirium, unable to
remember much of the night that had taken so many eons to pass. But
she still knew what Idelba wanted her to try to do. Dawn came as
dark as if an eclipse had come and stayed.
It was the following year before Idelba died.
The funeral was attended by many people, hundreds of
them, from zawiyya and madressa and institute, and the Buddhist
monastery, and the Hodenosaunee embassy, and the district panchayat
and the state council, and many other places all over Nsara. But
not a single person from Turi. Budur stood numbly in a reception
line with a few of the senior women from the zawiyya, and shook
hand after hand. Afterwards, during the unhappy wake, Hanea came up
to her again. 'We loved her too,' she said with a flinty smile. 'We
will make sure to keep the promises we made to her.'
A couple of days later Budur kept her usual appointment
to read to her blind soldiers. She went in their ward and sat there
staring at them in their chairs and beds, and thought, This is
probably a mistake. I may feel blank but I'm probably not. She told
them of her aunt's death, then, and tried to read to them from
Idelba's work, but it was not like Kirana's; even the abstracts
were incomprehensible, and the texts themselves, scientific papers
on the behaviour of invisible things, were composed largely of
tables of numbers. She stopped trying with those, and picked up
another book. 'This is one of my aunt's favourite books, a
collection of the autobiographical writings found in the works of
Abu Ali Ibn Sina, the early scientist and philosopher who was a
great hero to her. From what I have read of him, Ibn Sina and my
aunt were alike in many ways. They both had a great curiosity about
the world. Ibn Sina first mastered Euclid's geometry, then set out to understand
everything else. Idelba did that very same thing. When Ibn Sina was
still young he fell into a sort of fever of inquiry, that gripped
him for almost two years. Here, I will read to you what he himself
says about that period:
During this time I did not sleep completely through a
single night, or devote myself to anything else but study by day. I
compiled a set of files for myself, and for each proof that I
examined, I entered into the files its syllogistic premises, their
classification, and what might follow from them. I pondered over
the conditions that might apply to their premises, until I had
verified this question for myself in each case. Whenever sleep
overcame me or I became conscious of weakening, I would turn aside
to drink a cup of wine, so that my strength would return to me. And
whenever sleep seized me I would see those very problems in my
dreams; and many questions became clear to me in my sleep. I
continued in this until all of the sciences were deeply rooted
within me and I understood them as far as is humanly possible.
Everything which I knew at that time is just as I know it now; I
have not added anything much to it to this day.
'That's the kind of person my aunt was,' Budur said. She
put down that book and picked up another one, thinking that it
would be better to stop reading things inspired by Idelba. It
wasn't making her feel any better. The book she chose out of her
bag was called 'Nsarene Sailors, Tales', true stories about the
local seamen and fisherfolk, rousing adventures full of fish and
danger and death but also of the sea air, the waves and the wind.
The soldiers had enjoyed chapters of the book she had read to them
before.
But this time she read one called 'The Windy Ramadan',
and it turned out to be about a time long before, in the age of
sail, when contrary winds had held the grain fleet out of the
harbour, so that they had had to anchor offshore in the roads as
darkness fell, and then in the night the wind shifted around and a
great storm came roaring in from the Atlantic, and there was no way
for those out on the ships to get safely to shore, and nothing
those on shore could do but walk the shore through the night. The
author of the account had a wife who was taking care of three
motherless children whose father was one of the sea captains
out in the fleet, and, unable to watch the children at their
nervous play, the author had gone out to walk the strand with the
rest, braving the howling winds of the tempest. At dawn they had
all seen the fringe of soaked grain lining the high water
mark, and knew the worst had come. 'Not a single ship survived the
gale, and all up and down the beach the bodies washed ashore. And
as it had dawned a Friday, at the appointed hour the muezzin went
to the minaret to ascend and make the call for prayer, and the town
idiot in a rage detained him, crying 'Who in such an hour can
praise the Lord?"'
Budur stopped reading. A deep silence filled the room.
Some of the men nodded their heads, as if to say, Yes, that's the
way it happens; I've had that very thought for years; still others
reached out as if to snatch the book from her hands, or gestured as
if waving her away, telling her to leave. If they had had their
sight they would have walked her to the door, or done something;
but as it was no one knew what to do.
She said something and got up and left, and walked
downriver through the city, out onto the docks, then out on the big
jetty, out to its end. The beautiful blue sea sloshed against the
boulders, hissing its clean salt mist into the air. Budur sat on
the last sun warmed rock and watched the clouds fly in over
Nsara. She was as full of grief as the ocean was of water, but
still, something in the sight of the noisy city was heartening to
her; she thought, Nsara, now you are my only living relative. Now
you will be my Aunt Nsara.
TWENTY
And now she had to get to know Piali.
He was a small, self absorbed man, dreamy and
uncommunicative, seemingly full of himself. Budur had thought that
his abilities in physics were compensated for by an exceptional
lack of gracefulness.
But now she was impressed by the depth of his grief at
Idelba's death. In life he had treated her, Budur often thought, as
an embarrassing appurtenance, a needed but unwanted collaborator in
his work. Now that she was gone, he sat on a jetty
fishermen's bench where they had occasionally sat with Idelba when
the weather was good, and sighed, saying, 'She was such a joy to
talk things over with, wasn't she? Our Idelba was a truly brilliant
physicist, let me tell you. If she had been born a man, there would
have been no end to it she would have changed the world. Of
course there were things she wasn't so good at, but she had such
insight into the way things might work. And when we got stuck,
Idelba would keep hammering away for ever at the problem, forehead
pounding the brick wall, you know, and I would stop, but she was
persistent, and so clever at finding new ways to come at the thing,
turning the flank if the wall wouldn't give. Lovely. She was a most
lovely person,' deadly serious now, and emphasizing 'person' rather
than I woman', as if Idelba had taught him some things about what
women might be that he was not so stupid as to have missed. Nor
would he fall into the error of exceptionalism, no physicist tended
to think of exceptions as a valid category; and so now he spoke to
Budur almost as he would have to Idelba or his male colleagues,
only more intently, concentrating to achieve some semblance of
normal humanity, perhaps -- and yet achieving it. Almost. He was
still a very distracted and graceless man. But Budur began to like
him better.
This was a good thing, as Piali took an interest in her
too, and over the next several months, courted her in his peculiar
way; he came to the zawiyya, and got to know her house family
there, and listened to her describe her problems with her studies
in history, while also going on at nearly intolerable length about
his problems in physics and at the institute. He shared with her a
propensity for the cafe life as well, and did not seem to care
about the assorted indiscretions she had committed since her
arrival in Nsara; he ignored all that, and concentrated on things
of the mind, even when sitting in a cafe sipping a brandy, and
writing all over his napkins, one of his peculiar habits. They
talked about the nature of history for hours, and it was under the
impact of his deep scepticism, or materialism, that she finally
completed the shift in the emphasis of her study from history to
archaeology, from texts to things convinced, in part, by his
argument that texts were always just people's impressions, while
objects had a certain unchangeable reality to them. Of course the
objects led directly to more impressions, and meshed with them in
the web of proofs that any student of the past had to present in
order to make a case; but to start with the tools and buildings
rather than the words of the past were indeed a comfort to Budur.
She was tired of distilling brandy. She began consciously to take
on some of the inquisitiveness about the real world that Idelba had
always exhibited, as a way of honouring her memory. She missed
Idelba so much that she could not think of it directly, but had to
parry it by homages such as these, invoking Idelba's presence by
her habits, as if becoming a kind of Madam Sururi. It occurred to
her more than once that there were ways in which we know the dead
better than the living, because the actual person is no longer
there to distract our thinking about them.
Following these various trains of thought, there also
began to occur to Budur a great number of questions that connected
her work with Idelba's as she understood it, as she considered
physical changes in the materials used in the past: chemical or
physical or qi or qileak changes, that might be used as clocks,
buried in the texture of the materials used. She asked Piali about
this, and he quickly mentioned the shift over time in the types of
particulates in the heartknots and shells, so that, for instance,
lifering fourteens within a body would, after the death of an
organism, begin slowly to fall back to lifering twelves, beginning
about fifty years after the death of an organism and continuing for
about a hundred thousand years, until all the lifering in the
material was back to twelves, and the clock would stop
functioning.
This would be long enough to date most human activities,
Budur thought. She and Piali began to work on the method together,
enlisting the help of other scientists at the institute. The idea
was taken up and extended by a team of Nsarene scientists that grew
by the month, and the effort quickly became global as well, in the
usual way of science. Budur had never studied harder.
Thus it was that over time she became an archaeologist,
working among other things on dating methods, with the help of
Piali. In effect she had replaced Idelba as Piali's partner, and he
had therefore moved part of his work to a different field, to
accommodate what she was doing. His method of relating to someone
was to work with them; so even though she was younger, and in a
different field, he simply adjusted and continued in his habitual
way. He also continued to pursue his studies in atomic physics, of
course, collaborating with many colleagues at the
laboratories of the institute, and some of the scientists at the
wireless factory on the outskirts of the city, whose lab was now
beginning to match the madressa and the institute as a centre of
research in pure physics.
The military of Nsara were getting involved as well.
Piali's physics research continued along the lines set by Idelba,
and though there was nothing more published about the possibility
of creating a chain reaction splitting of alactin, there was
certainly a small crowd of Muslim physicists, in Skandistan and
Tuscany and Iran, who had discussed the possibility among
themselves; and they suspected that similar discussions were taking
place in Chinese and Travancori and New World labs. Internationally
published papers on this aspect of physics were now analysed in
Nsara to see what they might have left out, to see if new
developments one might expect to see were appearing or if sudden
silences might mark government classification of these matters. So
far no unequivocal signs of censorship or self silencing had
appeared, but Piali seemed to feel it was only a matter of time,
and was probably happening in other countries as it was among them,
semi consciously and without a plan. As soon as there was
another global political crisis, he said, before hostilities came
to a head, one could expect the field to disappear entirely into
classified military labs, and along with it a significant number of
that generation of physicists, all cut off from contact with
colleagues anywhere else in the world.
And of course trouble could come at any time. China,
though victo rious in the war, had been wrecked almost as
thoroughly as the defeated coalition, and it appeared to be falling
into anarchy and civil war. Apparently it was near the end for the
wartime leadership that had replaced the Qing dynasty.
'That's good,' Piali told Budur, 'because only a military
bureaucracy would have tried to build a bomb so dangerous. But it's
bad because military governments don't like to go down without a
fight.'
'No government does,' said Budur. 'Remember what Idelba
said. The best defence against government seizure of these ideas
would be to spread the knowledge among all the physicists of the
world, as quickly as possible. If all know that all could construct
such a weapon, then no one would try.'
'Maybe not at first,' Piali said, 'but in years to come
it might happen.'
'Nevertheless,' Budur said. And she continued to pester Piali to
pursue Idelba's suggested course of action. He did not renounce it,
nor did he make any move to enact it. Indeed, Budur had to agree
with him that it was difficult to see exactly what to do about it.
They sat on the secret like pigeons on a cuckoo egg.
Meanwhile the situation in Nsara continued to
deteriorate. A good summer had followed several bad ones, taking
the sharpest edge off the possibility of famine, but nevertheless
the newspapers were full of bread riots, and strikes in the
factories on the Rhine and the Ruhr and the Rhone, and even a
'revolt against reparations' in the Little Atlas Mountains, a
revolt that could not easily be put down. The army appeared to have
within it elements who were encouraging rather than suppressing
these signs of unrest, perhaps out of sympathy, perhaps to
destabilize things further and justify a complete military
takeover. Rumours of a coup were widespread.
All this was depressingly similar to the endgame of the
Long War, and boarding increased. Budur found it hard to
concentrate on her reading, and was often oppressed by grief for
Idelba. She was surprised therefore, and pleased, when Piali
brought news of a conference in Isfahan, an international gathering
of atomic physicists to discuss all the latest results in their
field, 'including', he said, 'the alactin problem'. Not only that,
but the conference was linked to the fourth convocation of a large
biannual meeting of scientists, the first of which had occurred
outside Ganono, the great harbour city of the Hodenosaunee, so that
they were now called the Long Island Conferences. The second one
had taken place in Pyinkayaing, and the third in Beijing. The
Isfahan conference was therefore the first one to take place in the
Dar, and it was going to include a track of meetings on
archaeology; and Piali had already arranged funding for Budur from
the institute to attend with him, as co author of papers they
had written with Idelba on lifering dating methods. 'It looks to me
like a good place to talk privately about your aunt's ideas.
There'll be a session devoted to her work, organized by Zoroush,
and Chen and quite a few others of her correspondents will be
there. You'll come?'
'Of course.'
TWENTY ONE
The direct trains to Iran all ran through Turi, and
whether it was for this reason or another, Piali arranged for them
to fly from Nsara to Isfahan. The airship was similar to the one
Budur had taken with Idelba to the Orkneys, and she sat in the
window seats of the gondola looking down at Firanja: the Alps,
Roma, Greece and the brown islands of the Aegean; then Anatolia and
the Middle Western states. It was, Budur thought to herself as the
long floating hours passed, a big world.
Then they were flying over the snowy Zagros Mountains to
Isfahan, situated in the upper reaches of the Zayandeh Rud, a high
valley with a swift river, overlooking salt flats to the east. As
they approached the city's airport they saw a vast expanse of ruins
around the new town. Isfahan had lain on the Silk Road, and
successive cities had been demolished in their turn by Chinggis
Khan, Temur the Lame, the Afghans in the eleventh century, and
lastly by the Travancoris, in the late war.
Nevertheless the latest incarnation of the city was a
bustling place, with new construction going on everywhere, so that
as they trammed into the downtown it looked as if they were passing
through a forest of construction cranes, each canted at a different
angle over some new hive of steel and concrete. At a big madressa
in the new centre of the city, Abdol Zoroush and the other Iranian
scientists greeted the contingent from Nsara, and took them to
rooms in their Institute for Scientific Research's big guest
quarters, and then into the city surrounding it for a meal.
The Zagros Mountains overlooked the city, and the river
ran through it just south of the downtown, which was being built
over the ruins of the oldest city centre. The institute's
archaeological collection, the locals informed them, was filling
with newly recovered antiquities and artefacts from previous eras
of the city. The new town had been designed with broad
tree lined streets, raying north away from the river. Set at a
high altitude, under even higher mountains, it would be a very
beautiful city when the new trees grew to their full heights. Even
now it was very impressive.
The Isfaharis were obviously very proud of both the city
and their institute, and of Iran more generally. Crushed repeatedly
in the war, the whole country was now being rebuilt, and in a new
spirit, they said, a kind of Persian worldliness, with their own
Shiite ultra conservatives awash in a more tolerant influx of
polyglot refugees and immigrants, and local intellectuals who
called themselves Cyruses, after the supposed first king of Iran.
This new kind of Iranian patriotism was very interesting to the
Nsarenes, as it seemed to be a way of asserting some independence
from Islam without renouncing it. The Cyruses at the table informed
them cheerfully that they now spoke of the year as being not 1423
AH, but 2561 of 'the era of the king of kings', and one of them
stood to offer a toast by reciting an anonymous poem that had been
discovered painted on the walls of the new madressa:
'Ancient Iran, Eternal Persia, Caught in the press of time and the
world, Giving up to it beautiful Persian, Language of Hafiz,
Ferdowski and Khayyarn, Speech of my heart, home of my soul, It's
you I love if I love anything. Once more great Iran sing us that
love.'
And the locals among them cheered and drank, although
many of them were clearly students from Africa or the New World or
Aozhou.
'This is how all the world will look, as people become
more mobile,' Abdol Zoroush said to Budur and Piali afterwards, as
he showed them around the institute's grounds, very extensive, and
then the riverside district just south of it. There was a promenade
overlooking the river being built, with cafes backing it and a view
of the mountains upstream, which Zoroush said had been designed
with the estuary corniche of Nsara in mind. 'We wanted to have
something like your great city, landlocked though we are.. We want
a little of that sense of openness.'
The conference began the next day, and for the next week
Budur did little else but attend sessions on various topics related
to what many there were calling the new archaeology, a science
rather than just a hobby of antiquarians, or the misty starting
point of the historians. Piali meanwhile disappeared into the
physical sciences buildings for meetings on physics. The two
of them then met again for supper in big groups of scientists,
seldom getting the chance to talk in private.
For Budur the archaeological presentations, coming from
all over the world, were a very exciting education all by
themselves, making clear to her and everyone else that in the
postwar reconstruction, with the new discoveries and the
development of new methodologies, and a provisional framework of
early world history, a new science and a new understanding of their
deep past was coming into being right before their eyes. The
sessions were overbooked, and went long into the evenings. Many
presentations were made in the hallways, with the presenters
standing by posters or chalkboards, talking and gesturing and
answering questions. There was more that Budur wanted to attend
than was possible, and she quickly developed the habit of
positioning herself at the back of the rooms or the crowds in the
halls, taking in the crux of a presentation while perusing the
schedule, and planning her next hour's wandering.
In one room she stopped to listen to an old man from
western Yingzhou, Japanese or Chinese in ancestry, it appeared,
speaking in an awkward Persian about the cultures that existed in
the New World when it had been discovered by the Old. It was her
acquaintance with Hanea and Ganagweh that made her interested.
'Although in terms of machinery, architecture and so
forth, the inhabitants of the New World still existed in the oldest
days, without domesticated animals in Yingzhou, and none but guinea
pigs and llamas in Inka, the culture of the Inkas and Aztecs
somewhat resembled what we are learning of ancient Egypt. Thus the
Yingzhou tribes lived as people in the Old World did before the
first cities, say around eight thousand years ago, while the
southern empires of Inka resembled the Old World of about four
thousand years ago: a distinct difference, which it would be
interesting to explain, if you could. Perhaps Inka had some
topographical or resource advantages, such as the llama, a beast of
burden which, though slight by Old World standards, was more than
Yingzhou had. This put more power at their disposal, and as our
host Master Zoroush has made clear, in the energy equations used to
judge a culture, the power they can bring to bear against the
natural world is a crucial factor in their development.
'In any case, the great degree of primitivity in Yingzhou
actually gives us a view into social structures that might be like
the Old World's pre agricultural societies. They are curiously
modern in certain respects. Because they had the basics of
agriculture -- squash, corn, beans and so on -- and had a small
population to support in a forest that provided enormous numbers of
game animals and nut bearing trees, they lived in a
pre scarcity economy, just as we now glimpse a
technologicallycreated post scarcity state in its theoretical
possibility. In both, the indi vidual receives more
recognition as a value bearer him or herself, than does the
individual in a scarcity economy. And there is less domination of
one caste by another. In these conditions of material ease and
plenty, we find the great egalitarianism of the Hodenosaunee, the
power wielded by women in their culture, and the absence of slavery
-- rather the rapid incorporation of defeated tribes into the full
texture of the state.
'By the time of the First Great Empires, four thousand
years later, all this was gone, replaced by an extreme vertical
scale, with god kings, a priest caste with ultimate power,
permanent military control, and slavery of defeated nations. These
early developments, or one should say pathologies, of civilization
(for the gathering into cities greatly speeded this process) are
only now being dealt with, some four thousand years later still, in
the most progressive societies of the world.
'In the meantime, of course, both these archaic cultures
have almost entirely disappeared from this world, mostly due to the
impact of Old World diseases on populations that apparently had
never been exposed to them. Interestingly, it was the southern
empires that collapsed most quickly and completely, conquered
almost incidentally by the Chinese gold armies, and then quickly
devastated by disease and famine, as if the body without its head
must die instantly. Whereas in the north it was completely
different, first because the Hodenosaunee were able to defend
themselves in the depths of the great eastern forest, never fully
succumbing to either the Chinese or to the Islamic incursion from
across the Atlantic, and second because they were much less
susceptible to Old World diseases, possibly because of early
exposure to them from wandering Japanese monks, traders, trappers
and prospectors, who ended up infecting the local populace in small
numbers, thus serving in effect as human inoculants, immunizing or
at least preparing the population of Yingzhou for a fuller
incursion of Asians, who did not have quite as devastating an
effect, although of course many people and tribes did die.'
Bodur moved on, thinking about the notion of a
post scarcity society, which in hungry Nsara she had never
heard of at all. But it was time for another session, a plenary
affair that Budur did not want to miss, and which turned out to be
one of the most heavily attended. It concerned the question of the
lost Franks, and why the plague had hit them so hard.
Much work had been done in this area by the Zott scholar
Istvan Romani, who had done his research around the periphery of
the plague zone, in Magyaristan and Moldava; and the plague itself
had been studied intensively during the Long War, when it seemed
possible that one side or another would unleash it as a weapon. It
was understood now that it had been conveyed in the first centuries
by fleas living on grey rats, travelling on ships and in caravans.
A town called Issyk Kul, south of Lake Balkhash in Turkestan, had
been studied by Romani and a Chinese scholar named jiang, and they
had found evidence in the cemetery of the town's Nestorians of a
heavy die off from the plague around the year 700. This had
apparently been the start of the epidemic that had moved west on
the silk roads to Sarai, capital at that time of the Golden Horde
khanate. One of their khans, Yanibeg, had besieged the Genoese port
of Kaffa in the Crimea by catapulting the bodies of plague victims
over the town walls. The Genoese had thrown the bodies in the sea,
but this had not stopped the plague from infecting the entire
Genoese network of trading ports, including, eventually, the whole
of the Mediterranean. Movement from port to port, respite during
the winters, then a renewal in the hinterlands the following
spring; this pattern continued for over twenty years. All the
westernmost peninsulas of the Old World were devastated, moving
north from the Mediterranean and back to the east as far as Moscow,
Novgorod, Kopenhagen and the Baltic ports. At the end of this time
the population in Firanja was perhaps thirty per cent what it had
been before the onset of the epidemic. Then in the years around
777, a date considered significant at the time by some mullahs and
sufi mystics, a second wave of the plague -- if it was the plague
-- had killed off almost all the survivors of the first wave, so
that sailors at the start of the eighth century reported
witnessing, usually from offshore, a completely emptied land.
Now there were scholars giving presentations who believed
that the second plague had actually been anthrax, following on the
bubonic plague; there were others who held the reverse position, arguing
that contemporary accounts of the first sickness matched the
freckling of anthrax more often than the buboes of bubonic plague,
while the final blow had been the plague. It was explained in this
session that the plague itself had bubonic, septic and pneumonic
forms, and that the pneumonia caused by the pneumonic form was
contagious, and very fast and lethal; the septic form even more
lethal. Indeed, much had been clarified about all these diseases by
the unfortunate experiences of the Long War.
But why had the disease, whichever one it had been, or in
whatever combinations, been so lethal in Firanja and not elsewhere?
The meeting offered presentation after presentation by scholars
advancing one theory after another. From her notes Budur described
them all for Piali at the end of the day, over supper, and he
quickly jotted them down on a napkin:
' Plague animalcules mutated in the 770s to take on
forms and virulence similar to tuberculosis or typhoid; -- Cities
of Tuscany had reached enormous numbers by the eighth century, say
two million people, and hygienic systems broke down and plague
vectors ran wild; -- Depopulation of the first plague followed by a
series of disastrous floods that wrecked agriculture leading to
starvation; -- Super--contagious form of the animalcule mutated in
northern France at the end of the first epidemic; Pale skin
of the Franks and Kelts lacked pigments that helped resist the
disease, accounting for the freckling; -- Sunspot cycle disrupted
weather and caused epidemics every eleven years, effect worse every
time '
'Sunspots?' Piali interjected.
'That's what he said.' Budur shrugged.
'So,' Piali said, looking over the napkin, 'it was either
the plague animalcules, or some other animalcules, or some quality
of the people, or their habits, or their land, or the weather, or
sunspots.' He grinned. 'That pretty much covers it, I should think.
Perhaps cosmic rays ought to be included. Wasn't there a big
supernova spotted about that time?'
Budur could only laugh. 'I think it was earlier. Anyway,
you must admit, it does want explaining.'
'Many things do, but it looks as if we have a way to go
on this one.'
The presentations continued, ranging from the recording
of the world that had existed just before the Long War, all the way
back through time to the earliest human remains. This work on the
first humans forced everyone to the contemplation of one of the
larger arguments shaping up in the field, concerning human
beginnings.
Archaeology as a discipline had its origins for the most
part in the Chinese bureaucracy, but it had been picked up quickly
by the Dinei people, who studied with the Chinese and went back to
Yingzhou intending to learn what they could about the people they
called the Anasazi, who had preceded them in the dry west of
Yingzhou. The Dinei scholar Anan and his colleagues had offered the
first explanations of human migration and history, asserting that
tribes on Yingzhou had mined the tin on Yellow Island in the
biggest of the Great Lakes, Manitoba, and shipped this tin across
the oceans to all the bronze era cultures in Africa and Asia.
Anan's group contended that civilization had begun in the New World
with the Inka and Aztecs and the Yingzhou tribes, in particular the
old ones who preceded their Anasazi in the western deserts. Their
great and ancient empires had sent out reed and balsam rafts,
trading tin for spices and various plant stocks with Asian
ancestry, and these Yingzhou traders had established the
Mediterranean civilizations predating Greece, especially the
ancient Egyptians and Middle Western empires, the Assyrians and
Sumerians.
So the Dinei archaeologists had claimed, anyway, in a
very fully articulated case, with all sorts of objects from all
over the world to support it. But now a great deal of evidence was
appearing in Asia and Firanja and Africa that indicated this story
was all wrong. The oldest lifering dates for human settlement in
the New World were about twenty thousand years before the present,
and everyone had agreed at first that this was extremely old, and
predated by a good deal the earliest civilizations known to Old
World history, the Chinese and the Middle Western and Egyptian; so
at that point it had all seemed plausible. But now that the war was
over, scientists were beginning to investigate the Old World in a
way that hadn't been possible since a time predating modern
archaeology itself. And what they were finding was a great
quantity of signs of a human past far older than any yet known.
Caves in the Nsaran south containing superb drawings of animals
were now reliably dated at forty thousand years. Skeletons in the
Middle West appeared to be a hundred thousand years old. And there
were scholars from Ingali in south Africa saying they had found
remains of humans, or evolutionarily ancestral prehumans, that
appeared to be several hundred thousand years old. They could not
use lifering dating for these finds, but had different dating
methods they thought were just as good as the lifering method.
Nowhere else on Earth were people making a claim like
this one from the Africans, and there was a great deal of
scepticism about it; some queried the dating methods, others simply
dismissed the claim out of hand, as a manifestation of some kind of
continental or racial patriotism. Naturally the African scholars
were upset by this response, and the meeting that afternoon took on
a volatile aspect that could not help but remind people of the late
war. It was important to keep the discourse on a scientific basis,
as an investigation into facts uncontaminated by religion or
politics or race.
'I suppose there can be patriotism in anything,' Budur
said to Piali that night. 'Archaeological patriotism is absurd, but
it's beginning to look as if that's how it started in Yingzhou. An
unconscious bias, no doubt, towards one's own region. And until we
sort out the dating of things, it's an open question as to which
model will replace theirs.'
'Certainly the dating methods will improve,' Piali
said.
'True. But meanwhile all is confusion.'
'That's true of everything.'
The days shot by in a blur of meetings. Every day Budur
got up at dawn, went to the madressa's dining commons to have a
small breakfast, and then attended talks and sessions and poster
explanations from then until supper, and after that far into the
evenings. One morning she was startled to hear a young woman
describing her discovery of what appeared to be a lost feminist
branch of early Islam, a branch which had fuelled the renaissance
of Samarqand, and was then destroyed and the memory of it erased.
Apparently a group of women in Qum had taken against a ruling by
the mullahs, and led their families east and north to the walled
town of Derbent, in Bactria, a place that had been conquered
by Alexander the Great and was still living a Greek life in
Transoxianic bliss a thousand years later, when the Muslim women
rebels and their families arrived. Together they created a way of
life in which all living beings were equal before Allah and among
themselves, something like what Alexander would have made, for he
was a disciple of the queens of Kreta. Then all the people of
Derbent lived happily for many years, and though they kept to
themselves and did not try to impose themselves on all the world,
they did tell some of what they had learned to the people they
traded with in nearby Samarqand; and in Samarqand they took that
knowledge, and made of it the start of the rebirth of the world.
You can read all this in the ruins, the young researcher
insisted.
Budur wrote down the references, realizing as she did
that archaeology too could be a kind of wish, or even a statement
about the future. She went back into the halls, shaking her head.
She would have to ask Kirana about it. She would have to look into
it herself. Who knew, really, what people had done in the past?
Many things had happened and never been written about and after a
time had been utterly forgotten. Almost anything might have
happened, anything. And there was that phenomenon Kirana had
mentioned once in passing, of people imagining that things were
better in another land, which then gave them the courage to try to
enact some progress in their own country. Thus women had everywhere
imagined that women elsewhere had it better than they did, and thus
they had had the courage to press for changes. And no doubt there
were other examples of the tendency, people imagining the good in
advance of its reality, as in the stories of the good place
discovered and then lost, what the Chinese called 'Source of the
Peach Blossom Stream' stories. History, fable, prophecy; no way to
distinguish, until perhaps centuries had passed, and they had made
the stories one thing or the other.
She dropped in on many more sessions, and this impression
of people's endless struggle and effort, endless experimentation,
of humans thrashing about trying to find a way to live together,
only deepened in her. An imitation Potala built outside Beijing at
two thirds full size; an ancient temple complex, perhaps Greek
in origin, lost in the jungles of Amazonia; another in the jungles
of Siam; an Inka capital set high in the mountains; skeletons of
people in Firanja who were not quite like modern humans in their
skull shape; roundhouses made of mammoth bones; the calendrical
purposes of the stone rings of Britain; the intact tomb of an
Egyptian pharaoh; the nearly untouched remains of a French medieval
village; a shipwreck on the peninsula of Ta Shu, the ice continent
surrounding the south pole; early Inkan pottery painted with
patterns from the south of Japan; Mayan legends of a 'great
arrival' from the west by a god Itzamna, which was the name of the
Shinto mother goddess of the same era; megalithic monuments in
Inka's great river basin that resembled megaliths in the Maghrib;
old Greek ruins in Anatolia that seemed to be the Troy of Homer's
epic poem 'The Iliad', huge lined figures on the Inkan plains that
could be seen properly only from the sky; the beach village in the
Orkneys that Budur had visited with Idelba; a very complete Greek
and Roman city at Ephesus, on the Anatolian coast; these and many,
many more such finds were described. Each day was a rush of talk,
Budur all the while scribbling notes in her notebook, and asking
for reprints of articles, if they were in Arabic or Persian. She
took a particular interest in the sessions on dating methods, and
the scientists working on this matter often told her how much they
owed to her aunt's pioneering work. They were now investigating
other methods of dating, such as the matching up of successive
tree rings to create a 'dendrochronology', proceeding fairly
well, and also the measurement of a particular kind of qileak
luminescence that was fixed into pottery that had been fired at
high enough temperatures. But there was much work to be done on
these methods, and no one was happy with the current state of their
abilities to date what they found of the past in the earth.
One day a group of the archaeologists who had used
Idelba's work on dating joined Budur, and they crossed the campus
of the madressa to attend a memorial session for Idelba put on by
the physicists who had known her. This session was to consist of a
number of eulogies, a presentation on the various aspects of her
work, some presentations of recent work that referred back to hers,
and then a short party or wake in celebration of ber life.
Budur wandered the rooms of this memorial session
accepting praise for her aunt, and condolences on ber passing. The
men in the room (for they were mostly men) were very solicitous of
her and, for the most par', quite cheerful. Even the memory
of Idelba brought smiles to their faces. Budur was filled with
amazement and pride by this outpouring of affection, though often
it made her ache as well; they had lost a valued colleague, but she
had lost the only family that mattered to her, and could not always
keep her focus on her aunt's work alone.
At one point she was asked to speak to the assemblage and
so she struggled to pull herself together as she went up to the
lectern, thinking as she walked of her blind soldiers, who existed
in her mind as a kind of bulwark or anchor, a benchmark of what was
truly sad. In contrast to that this was indeed a celebration, and
she smiled to see all these people congregated to honour her aunt.
It only remained to work out what to say, and as she went up the
stairs it occurred to her that she needed only to try to imagine
what Idelba herself would say, and then paraphrase that. That was
reincarnation in a sense she could believe in.
So she looked down at the crowd of physicists, feeling
calm and anchored inside, and thanked them for coming, and added,
'You all know how concerned Idelba was for the work that you are
doing in atomic physics at this time. That it should be used for
the good of humanity and not for anything else. I think the best
memorial you could make to her would be some kind of organization
of scientists devoted to the proper dissemination and use of your
knowledge. Perhaps we can talk about that later. It would be very
appropriate if such an organization came to be as a result of
thinking about her wishes, because of a belief that she held, as
you know, that scientists, among all people, could be counted on to
do what was right, because it would be the scientific thing to
do.'
She felt a stilling in the audience. The looks on their
faces were all of a sudden very much like those on the faces of her
blind soldiers: pain, longing, desperate hope; regret and resolve.
Many of the people in this room had no doubt been involved in the
war effort of their respective countries -- at the end, too, when
the race in military technologies had speeded up, and things had
become particularly ferocious and dire. The inventors of the gas
shells that had blinded her soldiers could very well be in this
room.
'Now,' Budur continued cautiously, 'obviously this has
not always been the case, so far. Scientists have not always done
the right thing.
But Idelba's vision of science had it as being progressively
improvable, just as a matter of making it more scientific. That
aspect is one of the ways you define science, as against many other
human activities or institutions. So to me this makes it a kind of
prayer, or worship of the world. It is a devotional labour. This
aspect should be kept in mind, whenever we remember Idelba, and
whenever we consider the uses of our work. Thank you.'
After that more people than ever came up to her to speak
their thanks and appreciation, displaced though it was from its
absent object. And then, as the memorial hour wound down, some of
them moved on to a meal in a nearby restaurant, and when it was
over, an even smaller group of them lingered afterwards over coffee
and baklava. It was as if they were in one of the rain lashed
cafes of Nsara.
And finally, very late in the night, when no more than a
dozen of them remained, and the waiters of the restaurant looked as
if they wanted to close down, Piali looked around the room, and got
a nod from Abdol Zoroush, and said to Budur, 'Dr Chen here,'
indicating a white haired Chinese man at the far end of the
table, who nodded, 'has brought work from his team on the matter of
alactin. This was one of the things Idelba was working on, as you
know. He wanted to share this work with all of us here. They
have made the same determinations we have, concerning the splitting
of the alactin atoms, and how this might be exploited to make an
explosive. But they have done further calculations, which the rest
of us have checked during the conference, including Master Ananda
here,' and another old man seated next to Chen nodded, 'that make
it clear that the particular form of alactin that would be
necessary for any explosive chain reaction, is so rare in nature
that it could not be gath ered in sufficient quantities. A
natural form would have to be gathered first, and then processed in
factories, in a process that right now is hypothetical only; and
even if made practicable, it would be so difficult that it would
take the entire industrial capacity of a state to produce enough
material to make even a single bomb.'
'Really?' Budur said.
They all nodded, looking quietly relieved, even happy. Dr
Chen's translator spoke to him in Chinese and he nodded and said
something back.
The translator said in Persian, 'Dr Chen would like to
add, that from his observations it seems very unlikely any country
will be able to create these materials for many years, even if they
should want to. So we are safe. Safe from that, anyway.'
'I see,' Budur said, and nodded at the elderly Chinese.
'As you know, Idelba would be very pleased to have heard these
results! She was quite worried, as no doubt you know. But she would
also press again for some kind of international scientific
organization, of atomic physicists perhaps. Or a more general
scientific group, that would take steps to make sure humanity is
never threatened by these possibilities. After what the world has
just been through in the war, I don't think it could take the
introduction of some super bomb. It would lead to
madness.'
'Indeed,' Piali said, and when her words were translated,
Dr Chen spoke again.
His translator said, 'The esteemed professor says that he
thinks scientific committees to augment, or advise '
Dr Chen intervened with a comment.
'To guide the world's governments, he says, by telling
them what is possible, what is advisable . . . He says he thinks
this could be done unobtrusively, in the postwar ... exhaustion. He
says he thinks governments will agree to the existence of such
committees, because at first they will not be aware of what it
means ... and by the time they learn what it means, they will be
unable to ... to dismantle them. And so scientists could take a ...
a larger role in political affairs. This is what he said.'
The others around the table were nodding thoughtfully,
some cautious, others worried; no doubt most of the men there were
funded by their governments.
Piali said, 'We can at least try. It would be a very good
way to remember Idelba. And it may work. It seems it would help, at
the very least.'
Everyone nodded again, and after translation, Dr Chen
nodded too.
Budur ventured to say, 'It might be introduced simply as
a matter of scientists doing science, coordinating their efforts,
you know, as part of doing better science. At first simple things
that look completely innocuous, like uniform weights and measures,
rationalized mathematically. Or a solar calendar that is accurate
to the Earth's actual movement around the sun. Right now we don't
even agree on the date. We all come here in different years, as you
know, and now our hosts have resuscitated yet another system. Right
now there must be constant multiple listings of dates. We don't
even agree on the length of the year. In effect we are still living
in different histories, even though it is just one world, as the
war taught us. You scientists should perhaps gather your
mathematicians and astronomers, and establish a scientifically
accurate calendar, and start using it for all scientific work. That
might lead to some larger sense of world community.'
'How would we start it?' someone asked.
Budur shrugged; she hadn't thought about that part of it.
What would Idelba say? 'What about just starting now? Call this
meeting the zero date. It's spring, after all. Start the year on
the spring equinox, perhaps, as most years already do, and then
simply number the days of every year, avoiding the various ways of
calculating months and the like, the seven day weeks, the
ten day weeks, all that. Or something else simple, something
beyond culture, unarguable because it is physical in origin. Day
two fifty seven of Year One. Forwards and backwards from that
zero date, three hundred and sixty five days, leap days added,
whatever it takes to be accurate to nature. Then as these kinds of
matters are all universalized, or made standard all over the world,
when the time comes that governments come to put pressure on their
scientists to work for just one part of humanity, they can say, I'm
sorry, science doesn't work that way. We are a system for all
peoples. We only work to make things so that they will be all
right.'
The translator was saying all this in Chinese to Dr Chen,
who watched Budur closely as she spoke. When she had finished, he
nodded and said something.
The translator said, 'He says, those are good ideas. He
says, let's try them and see.'
After that evening, Budur continued to attend the
sessions, and take her notes, but she was distracted by thoughts of
the private discussions she knew were taking place among the
physicists on the other side of the madressa: the plans being made.
Piali told ber all about them. Her notes tended to become lists of
things to do. In sunny Isfahan, a city that was old but entirely
new, like a garden just planted in a vast set of ruins, it
was easy to forget how hungry they were in Firanja, in China and
Africa and indeed over most of the world. On paper it seemed as if
they could save everything.
One morning, however, she passed a poster presentation
that caught her attention, called 'A Tibetan Village Found Intact'.
It looked just the same as a hundred other hallway exhibits, but
something about it caught her. Like most of them, it had its
principal text in Persian, with smaller translated texts in
Chinese, Tamil, Arabic and Algonquin, the 'big five' languages of
the conference. The presenter and author of the poster was a big
flat faced young woman, nervously answering questions from a
small group, no more than half a dozen people, who had gathered to
hear her formal presentation. She was Tibetan herself, apparently,
and was using one of the Iranian translators to answer any
questions she got. Budur wasn't sure if she was speaking in Tibetan
or Chinese.
In any case, as she was explaining to someone else, an
avalanche and landslide had covered a high mountain village in
Tibet, and preserved everything within as if in a giant rocky
refrigerator, so that bodies had stayed frozen, and everything been
preserved -- furniture, clothing, food, even the last messages that
two or three literate villagers had written down, before the lack
of air had killed them.
The tiny photos of the excavated village made Budur feel
very odd. Ticklish just behind her nose, or above the roof of her
mouth, until she thought she might sneeze, or retch, or cry. There
was something awful about the corpses, almost unchanged through all
the centuries; surprised by death, but forced to wait for it. Some
of them had even written down goodbye messages. She looked at the
photos of the messages, crammed into a margin of a religious book;
handwriting clear, looking like Sanskrit. The Arabic translation
underneath one had a homely sound: 'We have been buried by a
big avalanche, and can not get out. Kenpo is still trying, but it
is not going to work. The air is getting bad. We do not have much
time. In this house we are Kenpo, Iwang, Sidpa, Zasep, Dagyab,
Tenga and Baram. Puntsok left just before the avalanche hit, we
don't know what happened to him. "All existence is like a
reflection in the mirror, without substance, a phantom of the mind.
We will take form again in another place." All praise to Buddha the
Compassionate.'
The photos looked somewhat like those Budur had seen of
certain wartime disasters, death impinging without much of a mark
on daily life, except that everything was changed for ever. Looking
at them Budur felt dizzy all of a sudden, and in the hall of the
conference chamber she could almost feel the shock of snow and rock
falling on her roof, trapping her. And all her family and friends.
But this was how it had happened. This was how it happened.
She was still under the spell of this poster, when Piali
came hurrying up. 'I'm afraid we should get back home as fast as
possible. The army command has suspended the government, and is
trying to take over Nsara.'
TWENTY TWO
They flew back the next day, Piali fretting at the
slowness of the airship, wishing that the military aeroplanes had
been adapted more generally for civilian passenger use, also
wondering if they would be arrested on their arrival, as
intellectuals visiting a foreign power during a time of national
emergency, or some such thing.
But when their airship landed at the airfield outside
Nsara, not only were they not arrested, but in fact, looking out of
the windows of the tram as it rolled into the city, it was
impossible to tell that anything at all had changed.
It was only when they got out of the tram and walked over
to the madressa district that a difference became apparent. The
docks were quieter. The longshoremen had closed down the docks to
protest about the coup. Now soldiers stood guard over the cranes
and gantries, and groups of men and women stood on the street
corners watching them.
Piali and Budur went into the offices of the physics
building, and heard all the latest from Piah's colleagues. The army
command had dissolved the Nsarene state council and the district
panchayats, and declared martial law over all. They were calling it
sharia, and they had a few mullahs going along with it to provide
some religious legitimacy, though it was very slight; the mullahs
involved were hardline reactionaries out of step with everything
that had happened in Nsara since the war, part of the 'we
won' crowd, or, as Hasan had always called them, the 'we would have
won if it weren't for the Armenians, Sikhs, Jews, Zott, and whoever
else we dislike' crowd, the 'we would have won if the rest of the
world hadn't beaten the shit out of us' crowd. To be among
like minded people they should have moved to the Alpine
emirates or Afghanistan long before.
So no one was fooled by the facade of the coup. And as
things had recently been getting a bit better, the timing of the
coup was not particularly good. It made no sense; apparently it had
only happened because the officers had been living on fixed incomes
during the period of hyperinflation, and thought everyone else was
as desperate as they were. But many, many people were still sick of
the army, and supportive of their district panchayats if not of the
state council. So it seemed to Budur that the chances for
successful resistance were good.
Kirana was much more pessimistic. She was in the hospital
now, as it turned out; Budur went running over to it the moment she
found out, feeling raw and frightened. For tests only, Kirana
informed her brusquely, though she did not identify them; something
to do with her blood or her lungs, Budur gathered. Nevertheless,
from her hospital bed she was calling every zawiyya in the city,
organizing things. 'They've got the guns so they may win, but we're
not going to make it easy.'
Many of the madressa and institute's students were
already out in crowds on the central plaza, and the corniche and
docks, and the grand mosque's courtyards, shouting, chanting,
singing, and sometimes throwing stones. Kirana was not satisfied
with these efforts, but spent all her time on the phone trying to
schedule a rally: 'They'll have you back behind the veil, they'll
try to turn back the clock until you are all domestic animals
again, you have to get out in the streets in great numbers, this is
the only thing that scares coup leaders' -- always 'you' and not
'we', Budur noticed, excluding herself as if speaking posthumously,
although she was clearly pleased to be involved in all the
activities. And pleased also that Budur was visiting her in the
hospital.
'They mistimed it,' she said to Budur with a kind of
mordant glee. Not only were the food shortages getting better, but
it was spring, and as sometimes happened in Nsara, the endlessly
cloudy skies had abruptly cleared and the sun was shining day after
day, illuminating new greens that welled up everywhere in the
gardens and the cracks in the pavement. The sky was washed clear
and gleaming like lapis overhead, and when twenty thousand people
gathered on the commercial docks and marched down Sultana Katima
Boulevard to the Mosque of the Fishermen, many thousands more came
to watch, and joined the crowd marching, until when the army
ringing the district shot pepper gas canisters into the crowd,
people poured in every direction out of the big transverse streets,
cutting through the medinas flanking the Liwayya River, causing it
to appear that the whole city had rioted. After those hurt by the
gas were cared for, the crowd returned bigger than it had been
before the attack.
This happened two or three times in a single day, until
the huge square before the city's great mosque and the old palace
was completely filled with people, facing the barbed wire fronting
the old palace and singing songs, listening to speeches, and
chanting slogans and various suras of the Quran that supported the
rights of the people against the ruler. The square never emptied,
nor even grew uncrowded; people went home for meals and other
necessities, leaving the young to carouse through the nights, but
they refilled the square during the beautiful lengthening days to
bear witness. The whole city was in effect shut down for all of the
first month of spring, like an extreme Ramadan.
One day Kirana was pushed to the palace square in a
wheelchair by her students, and she grinned at the sight. 'Now this
is what works,' she said. 'Sheer numbers!'
They brought her through the crowd to the rough podium
they were constructing daily, made of dock pallets, and got her up
there to make a speech, which she did with gusto, in her usual
style, despite her physical weakness. She grabbed the microphone of
the amplifier and said to them: 'What Mohammed began was the
idea that all humans had rights that could not be taken away from
them without insulting their creator. Allah made all humans equally
His creatures, and none are to serve others. This message came into
a time very far from these practices, and the course of progress in
history has been the story of the clarifi cation of these
principles of Islam, and the establishment of true justice. Now we
are here to continue that work!
'In particular women have had to struggle against
misinterpretation of the Quran, jailed in their homes and their
veils and their illiteracy, until Islam itself foundered under the general ignorance
of all for how can men be wise and prosper when they spend
their first years taught by people who don't know anything?
'Thus we fought the Long War and lost it, for us it was
the Nakba. Not the Armenians or the Burmese or the Jews or the
Hodenosaunee or the Africans were responsible for our defeat, nor
any problem with Islam itself fundamentally, as it is the voice of
the love of God and the wholeness of humanity, but only the
historical miscarriage of Islam, distorted as it has been.
'Now, we have been facing that reality in Nsara ever
since the war ended, and we have made great strides. We have all
witnessed and taken part in the burst of good work done here,
despite physical privations of every sort and underneath the
constant rain.
'Now the generals think they can stop all this and turn
the clock back, as if they did not lose the war and cast us into
this necessity of creation that we have used so well. As if time
could ever run backwards! Nothing like that can ever happen! We
have made a new world here on old ground, and Allah protects it,
through the actions of all the people who truly love Islam and its
chances to survive in the world to come.
'So we have gathered here to join the long struggle
against oppression, to join all the revolts, rebellions and
revolutions, all the efforts to take power away from the armies,
the police, the mullahs, and give it back to the people. Every
victory has been incremental, a matter of two steps forwards one
step back, a struggle for ever. But each time we progress a little
further, and no one is going to push us backwards! If they expect
to succeed in such a project, the government will have to dismiss
the people and appoint another one! But I don't think that's how it
happens.'
This was well received, and the crowd kept growing, and
Budur was pleased to see how many were women, working women from
the kitchens and the canning factories, women for whom the veil or
the harem had never been an issue, but who had suffered as they all
had with the war and the crash; indeed they formed the raggedest,
hungriest looking mob possible, with a tendency merely to
stand there as if asleep on their feet, and yet there they were,
filling the squares, refusing to work; and on Friday they faced
Mecca only when one of the revolutionary clerics stood among them,
not a policeman in a pulpit, but a man among neighbours, as
Mohammed had been in his life. As it was Friday, this particular
cleric said the first chapter of the Quran, the Fatiha, known to
everyone, even the large group of Buddhists and Hodenosaunee always
standing there among them, so that the whole crowd could recite it
together, over and over many times: 'Praise be to God, Lord
of the Worlds! The compassionate, the merciful! King on the day of
reckoning! Thee only do we worship, and to Thee do we cry for help.
Guide us on the straight path, The path of those to whom Thou hast
been gracious; With whom thou art not angry, and who go not
astray!'
The next morning this same cleric got up on the dais and
started the day by reciting into the microphone a poem by Ghaleb,
waking people up and calling them out to the square again:
'Soon I will be only a story But the same is true of you. I hope
the bardo will not be empty But people do not yet know where they
live. Past and future all mixed together, Let those trapped birds
out the window! What then remains? The stories you no longer
Believe. You had better believe them. While you live they carry the
meaning When you die they carry the meaning To those who come after
they carry the meaning You had better believe in them. In Rumi's
story he saw all the worlds As one, and that one, Love, he called
to and knew, Not Muslim or Jew or Hindu or Buddhist, Only a Friend,
a breath breathing human, Telling his boddhisatva story. The bardo
Waits for us to make it real.'
Budur on that morning was awakened in the zawiyya by
someone bringing news to her of a phone message: it was from one of
her blind soldiers. They wanted to talk to her.
She took the tram and then walked into the hospital,
feeling apprehensive. Were they angry at her for not coming
recently? Were they worried about the way she had left after her
last visit?
No. The oldest ones spoke for them, or for some part of
them, anyway; they wanted to march in the demonstration against the
army takeover, and they wanted her to lead them. About
two thirds of the ward said they wanted to do it.
It wasn't the kind of request one could refuse. Budur
agreed, and feeling shaky and uncertain, led them out of the gate
of the hospital. There were too many of them for the trams, so they
walked down the riverfront road, and then the corniche, hands on
the shoulders before them, like a parade of elephants. Back in the
ward Budur had got used to the look of them, but out here in the
brilliant sunshine and the open air they were a shocking sight once
again, maimed and awful. Three hundred and twenty seven of
them, walking down the corniche; they had taken a head count when
leaving the ward.
Naturally they drew a crowd, and some people began
following them down the corniche, and in the big plaza there was
already a crowd, a crowd that quickly made room for the veterans at
the front of the protest, facing the old palace. They arranged
themselves into ranks and files by feel, and counting off in
undertones, with a little aid from Budur. Then they stood silently,
right hands on the shoulders to their left, listening to the
speakers at the microphone. The crowd behind them grew bigger and
bigger.
Army airships floated low over the city, and amplified
voices from them ordered everyone to leave the streets and plazas.
A full curfew had been declared, the mechanical voices informed
them.
This decision had no doubt been made in ignorance of the
blind soldiers' presence in the palace square. They stood there
without moving, and the crowd stood with them. One of the blind
soldiers shouted, 'What are they going to do, gas us?'
In fact this was all too possible, as pepper gas had been
deployed already, at the State Council Chambers and the police
barracks, and down on the docks. And later it was said by many that
the blind soldiers were in fact tear gassed during that tense
week, and that they just stood there and took it, for they had no
tears left to shed; that they stood in their square with their
hands on each other's shoulders and chanted the Fatiha, and the
bismallah which starts every sura: 'In the name of Allah,
the compassionate, the merciful! In the name of Allah, the
compassionate, the merciful!'
Budur herself never saw any pepper gas dropped in the
palace square, although she heard her soldiers chanting the
bismallah for hours at a time. But she was not there in the square
every hour of that week, and hers was not the only group of blind
soldiers to have left their hospitals and joined the protests,
either. So possibly something of the sort occurred. Certainly in
the time afterwards everyone believed it had.
In any case, during that long week people passed the time
by reciting long passages from Rumi Balkhi, and Ferdowski, and the
joker mullah Nusreddin, and the epic poet of Firanja, Ali, and from
their own sufi poet of Nsara, young Ghaleb, who had been killed on
the very last day of the war. Budur made frequent visits to the
women's hospital where Kirana was staying, to tell her what was
happening on the plaza and elsewhere in the great city, now pulsing
everywhere with its people. They had taken to the streets and were
not leaving them. Even when the rain returned they stayed out
there. Kirana ate up every word of news, hungry to be out herself,
supremely irritated that she was confined at this time. Obviously
she was seriously ill or she wouldn't have suffered it, but she was
emaciated, with sallow, dark rings under her eyes like a raccoon
from Yingzhou, 'stuck', as she put it, 'just when things are
getting interesting', just when her long winded acid--tongued
facility for speech could have been put to use, could have made
history as well as commented on it. But it was not to be; she could
only lie there fighting ber illness. The one time Budur ventured to
ask how she was feeling, she grimaced and said only, 'The termites
have got me.'
But even so she stayed close to the centre of the action.
A delegation of opposition leaders, including a contingent of women
from the zawlyyas of the city, were meeting with adjutants of the
generals to make their protests and negotiate if they could, and
these people visited Kirana often to talk over strategy. On the
streets the rumour was that a deal was being hammered out,
but Kirana lay there, eyes burning, and shook her head at Budur's
hopefulness. 'Don't be naive.' Her sardonic grin wrinkled her
wasted features. 'They're just playing for time. They think that if
they hold on long enough the protests will die down, and they can
get on with their business. They're probably right. They've got the
guns after all.'
But then a Hodenosaunee fleet steamed into the harbour
roads and anchored. Hanea! Budur thought when she saw them: forty
giant steel battleships, bristling with guns that could fire a
hundred li inland. They called in on a wireless frequency used by a
popular music station, and though the government had seized the
station, they could do nothing to stop this message from reaching
all the wireless receptors in the city, and many heard the message
and passed it along: the Hodenosaunee wanted to speak to the
legitimate government, the one they had been dealing with before.
They refused to speak to the generals, who were breaking the
Shanghai Convention by usurping the constitutionally required
government, a very serious breach; they declared they would not
move from Nsara's harbour until the council established by the
postwar settlement was reconvened; and they would not trade with
any government led by the generals. As the grain that had saved
Nsara from starvation in the previous winter had mostly come from
Hodenosaunee ships, this was a serious challenge indeed.
The matter hung for three days, during which rumours flew
like bats at dusk: that negotiations were going on between the
fleet and the junta, that mines were being laid, that amphibious
troops were being readied, that negotiations were breaking down
...
On the fourth day the leaders of the coup were suddenly
nowhere to be found. The Yingzhou fleet was a few ships smaller in
size. The generals had been spirited off, everyone said, to asylums
in the Sugar Islands or the Maldives, in exchange for stopping
without a fight. The ranking officers left behind led the deployed
units of the army back to their barracks and stood down, waiting
for further instructions from the legitimate State Council. The
coup was cancelled.
The people in the streets cheered, shouted, sang,
embraced total strangers, went crazy for joy. Budur did all these
things, and led her soldiers back to their ward, and then rushed to
Kirana's hospital to tell Kirana everything she had seen, feeling a
pang to see her so sick in the midst of this triumph. Kirana nodded
at the news, saying, 'We got lucky to get help like that. The whole
world saw that, it will have a good effect, you'll see. Although
now we're in for it! We'll see what it's like to be part of a
league, we'll see what kind of people they really are.'
Other friends wanted to wheel her out to give another
speech, but she wouldn't do it, she said, 'Just go and tell people
to get back to work, tell them we need to get the bakeries baking
again.'
Darkness. Silence. Then a voice in the void: Kirana? Are
you there? Kuo? Kyu? Kenpo? What. Are you there? I'm here. We're
back in the bardo. There is no such thing. Yes there is. Here we
are. You can't deny it. We keep coming back. (Blackness, silence. A
refusal of speech.) Come on, you can't deny it. We keep coming
back. We keep going out again. Everybody does. That's dharma. We
keep trying. We keep making progress. A noise like a tiger's growl.
But we do! Here's Idelba, and Piali, and even Madam Sururi. So she
was right. Yes. Ridiculous. Nevertheless. Here we are. Here to be
sent back again, sent back together, our little jati. I don't know
what I would do without all of you. I think the solitude would kill
me. You're killed anyway. Yes, but it's less lonely this way. And
we're making a difference. No, we are! Look at what has happened!
You can't deny it! Things were done. It's not very much.
Of course. You said it yourself, we have thousands of lifetimes
of work to do. But it's working.
Don't generalize. It could all slip away.
Of course. But back we go, to try again. Each generation
makes its fight. A few more turns of the wheel. Come on -- back
with a will. Back into the fray!
As if one could refuse.
Oh come on. You wouldn't even if you could. You're always
the one leading the way down there, you're always up for a
fight.
... I'm tired. I don't know how you persist the way you
do. You tire me too. All that hope in the face or calamity.
Sometimes I think you should be more marked by it. Sometimes I
think I have to take it all on myself.
Come on. You'll be your old self once things get going
again. Idelba, Piali, Madam Sururi, are you ready?
We're ready.
Kirana?
... All right then. One more turn.
I. Always China
Bao Xinhua was fourteen years old when he first met Kung
Jianguo, in his work unit near the southern edge of Beijing, just
outside the Dahongmen, the Big Red Gate. Kung was only a few years
older, but he was already head of the revolutionary cell in his
work unit next door, quite an accomplishment given that he had been
one of the sanwu, the I three withouts' -- without family, without
work unit, without identity card -- when he turned up as a boy at
the gate of the police station of the Zhejiang district, just
outside the Dahongmen. The police had placed him in his current
work unit, but he always remained an outsider there, often called
'an individualist', which is a very deep criticism in China even
now, when so much has changed. 'He persisted in his own ways, no
matter what others said.' 'He clung obstinately to his own course.'
'He was so lonely he didn't even have a shadow.' This is what they
said about him in his work unit, and so naturally he looked outside
the unit to the neighbourhood and the city at large, and was a
street boy for no one knew how long, not even him. And he was good
at it. Then at a young age he became a firebrand in Beijing
underground politics, and it was in this capacity that he visited
Bao Xinhua's work unit.
'The work unit is the modern equivalent of the Chinese
clan compound,' he said to those of them who gathered to listen.
'It is a spiritual and social unit as much as an economic one,
trying its best to continue the old ways in the new world. No one
really wants to change it, because everyone wants to have a place
to come to when they die. Everyone needs a place. But these big
walled factories are not like the old family compounds that they
imitate. They are prisons, first built to organize our labour for
the Long War. Now the Long War has been over for forty years and
yet we slave all our lives for it still, as if we worked for China,
when really it is only for corrupt military governors. Not even for
the Emperor, who disappeared long ago, but for the generals and
warlords, who hope we will work and work and never notice how the
world has changed.
'We say, "we are of one work unit" as if we were saying,
"we are of the same family", or 'Ve are brother and sister", and
this is good. But we never see over the wall of our unit, to the
world at large.'
Many in his audience nodded. Their work unit was a poor
one, made up mostly of immigrants from the south, and they often
went hungry. The postwar years in Beijing had seen a lot of
changes, and now in the Year 29, as the revolutionaries liked to
call it, in conformity with the practice of scientific
organizations, things were beginning to fall apart. The Qing
dynasty had been overthrown in the middle years of the war, when
things had gone so badly; the Emperor himself, aged six or seven at
the time, had disappeared, and now most assumed he was dead. The
Fifth Assemblage of Military Talent was still in control of the
Confucian ureaucracy, its hand still on the wheel of their
destiny; but it was a senile old hand, the dead hand of the past,
and all over China revolts were breaking out. They were of all
sorts: some in the service of foreign ideologies, but most internal
insurgencies, organized by Han Chinese hoping to rid themselves
once and for all of the Qing and the generals and warlords. Thus
the White Lotus, the Monkey Insurgents, the Shanghai Revolutionary
Movement and so on. joining these were regional revolts by the
various nationalities and ethnic groups in the west and south --
the Tibetans, Mongolians, Xinzing and so on, all intent on freeing
themselves from the heavy hand of Beijing. There was no question
that despite the big army that Beijing could in theory bring to
bear, an army still much admired and honoured by the populace for
its sacrifices in the Long War, the military command itself was in
trouble, and soon to fall. The Great Enterprise had returned again
to China: dynastic succession; and the question was, who was going
to succeed? And could anyone succeed in bringing China back
together again?
Kung spoke to Bao's work unit in favour of the League of
All Peoples' School of Revolutionary Change, which had been founded
during the last years of the Long War by Zhu
Tuanjie kexue ('Unite for Science'), a half--Japanese whose
birth name had been Isao. Zhu Isao, as he was usually called,
had been a Chinese governor of one of the Japanese provinces before
their revolution, and when that revolution came he had negotiated a
settlement with the Japanese independence forces. He had ordered
the Chinese army occupying Kyushu back to China without loss of
life on either side, landing with them in Manchuria and declaring
the port city of Tangshan to be an international city of peace,
right there in the homeland of the Qing rulers, and in the midst of
the Long War. The official Beijing position was that Zhu was a
Japanese and a traitor, and that when the appropriate time came his
insurgency would be crushed by the Chinese armies he had betrayed.
As it turned out, when the war ended and the postwar years marched
by in their dreary hungry round, the city of Tangshan was never
conquered; on the contrary, similar revolts occurred in many other
Chinese cities, particularly the big ports on the coast, all the
way down to Canton, and Zhu Isao published an unending stream of
theoretical materials defending his movement's actions, and
explaining the novel organization of the city of Tangshan, which
was run as a communal enterprise belonging equally to all the
people who lived within its embattled borders.
Kung talked about these matters with Bao's work unit,
describing Zhu's theory of communal creation of value, and what it
meant for ordinary Chinese, who had for so long had the fruits of
their labour stolen from them. 'Zhu looked at what really happens,
and described our economy, politics, and methods of power and
accumulation in scientific detail. After that he proposed a new
organization of society, which took this knowledge of how things
work and applied it to serve all the people in a community and in
all China, or any other country.'
During a break for a meal, Kung paused to speak to Bao,
and asked his name. Bao's given name was Xinhua, 'New China';
Kung's was Jianguo, 'Construct the Nation' -- they knew therefore
that they were children of the Fifth Assemblage, who had encouraged
patriotic naming to counteract their own moral bankruptcy and the
superhuman sacrifices of the people during the postwar famines.
Everyone born around twenty years before had names like 'Oppose
Islam' (Huidi) or 'Do Battle' (Zhandou) even though at that point
the war had been over for twenty years. Girls' names had suffered
especially during this fad, as parents attempted to keep some
traditional elements of female names incorporated into the
whipped up patriotric fervour, so that there were girls their
age named 'Fragrant Soldier' or 'Graceful Army' or 'Public
Fragrance' or 'Nation loving Orchid' and the like.
Kung and Bao laughed together over some of these
examples, and spoke of Bao's parents, and Kung's lack of parents,
and Kung fixed Bao with his gaze, and said, 'Yet Bao itself is a
very important word or concept, you know. Repayment, retribution,
honouring parents and ancestors -- holding, and holding on. It's a
good name.'
Bao nodded, captured already by the attention of this
dark eyed person, so intense and cheerful, so interested in
things. There was something about him that drew Bao, drew him so
strongly that it seemed to Bao that this meeting was a matter of
yuanfen, a 'predestined relation', a thing always meant to be, part
of his yuan or fate. Saving him perhaps from a nieyuan, a 'bad
fate', for his work unit struck him as smallminded, oppressive,
stultifying, a kind of death to the soul, a prison from which he
could not escape, in which he was already entombed. Whereas he
already felt as if he had known Kung for ever.
So he followed Kung around Beijing like a younger brother, and
because of him became a sort of truant from his work unit, or in
other words, a revolutionary. Kung took him to meetings of the
revolutionary cells he was part of, and gave him books and
pamphlets of Zhu Isao's to read; took charge of his education, in
effect, as he had for so many others; and there was nothing Bao's
parents or his work unit could do about it. He had a new work unit
now, spread out across Beijing and China and all the world -- the
work unit of those who were going to make things
right.
Beijing at the time was a place of most severe
deprivations. There were millions who had moved there during the
war, who still lived in improvised shantytowns outside the gates.
The wartime work units had expanded far to the west, and these
still stood like a succession of grey fortresses, looking down on
the wide new streets. Every tree in the city had been cut down
during the Twelve Hard Years, and even now the city was bare of
almost all vegetation; the new trees had been planted with spiked
fences protecting them, and watchmen to guard them at night, which
did not always work; the poor old guards would wake in the mornings
to find the fence there but the tree gone, cut at the ground
for firewood or pulled out by the roots for sale somewhere else,
and for these lost saplings they would weep inconsolably, or even
commit suicide. The bitter winters would sweep down on the city in
the autumn, rains full of yellow mud from the dust torn out of the
loess to the west, and drizzle down onto a concrete city without a
single leaf to fall to the ground. Rooms were kept warm by space
heaters, but the qi system often shut down, in blackouts that
lasted for weeks, and then everyone suffered, except for the
government bureaucrats, whose compounds had their own generating
systems. Most people stayed warm then by stuffing their coats with
newspaper, so that it was a bulky populace that moved around in
their thick brown coats, doing what work they could find, looking
as if they were all fat with prosperity; but it wasn't so.
Thus many people were ripe for change. Kung was as lean
and hungry as any of them, but full of energy, he didn't seem to
need much food or sleep: all he ever did was read and talk, talk
and read, and ride his bike from meeting to meeting and exhort
groups to unify to join the revolutionary movement spearheaded by
Zhu Isao, and change China.
'Listen,' he would say to his audiences urgently, 'it's
China we can change, because we are Chinese, and if we change
China, then we change the world. Because it always comes back to
China, do you understand? There are more of us than all the rest of
the people of the Earth combined. And because of the
colonialist imperialist years of the Qing, all the wealth of
the world has come to us over the years, in particular all the gold
and silver. For many dynasties we brought in gold by trade, and
then when we conquered the New World we took their gold and silver
from them, and all that came back to China too. And none of it has
ever left! We are poor not for any material reason, but because of
the way we are organized, do you see? We suffered in the Long War
the way every nation suffered in the Long War, but the rest of the
world is recovering and we are not, even though we won, because of
the way we are organized! The gold and silver is hidden in the
treasure chests of the corrupt bureaucrats, and people freeze and
starve while the bureaucrats hide in their holes, warm and full.
And that will never change unless we change it!'
He would go on to explain Zhu's theories of society, how
for many long dynasties a system of extortion had ruled China and
most of the world, and because the land was fecund and the farmers'
taxes supportable, the system had endured. Eventually, however, a
crisis had come to this system, wherein the rulers had grown so
numerous, and the land so depleted, that the taxes they required
could not be grown by the farmers; and when it was a choice of
starvation or revolt, the farmers had revolted, as they had often
before the Long War. 'They did it for their children's sake. We
were taught to honour our ancestors, but the tapestry of the
generations runs in both directions, and it was the genius of the
people to begin to fight for the generations to come -- to give up
their lives for their children and their children's children. This
is the true way to honour your family! And so we had the revolts of
the Ming and the early Qing, and similar uprisings were happening
all over the world, and eventually things fell apart, and all
fought all. And even China, the richest nation on Earth, was
devastated. But the necessary work went on. We have to continue
that work, and end the tyranny of the rulers, and establish a new
world based on the sharing of the world's wealth among all equally.
The gold and silver come from the Earth, and the Earth belongs to
all of us, just like the air and the water belong to all of us.
There can no longer be hierarchies like those that have oppressed
us for so long. The fight has to be carried on, and each defeat is
simply a necessary defeat in the long march towards our goal.'
Naturally anyone who spent every hour of every day making
such speeches, as Kung did, was quickly going to get in serious
trouble with the authorities. Beijing, as the capital and biggest
manufacturing city, undamaged in the Long War compared to many
other cities, was assigned many divisions of the army police, and
the walls of the city made it possible for them to close the gates
and conduct quarter by quarter searches. It was, after
all, the heart of the empire. They could order an entire quarter
razed if they wanted to, and more than once they did; shantytowns
and even legally allowed districts were bulldozed flat and rebuilt
to the standard work unit compound plan, in the effort to rid the
city of malcontents. A firebrand like Kung was marked for trouble.
And so in the Year 3 I, when he was around seventeen, and Bao
fifteen, he left Beijing for the southern provinces, to take the
message to the masses, as Zhu Isao had urged him and all the cadres
like him to do.
Bao followed along with him. At the time of his departure
he took with him a bag containing a pair of silk socks, a pair of
blue wool shoes with leather bottoms, a wadded jacket, an
old lined jacket, a pair of lined trousers, a pair of unlined
trousers, a hand towel, a pair of bamboo chopsticks, an enamel
bowl, a toothbrush, and a copy of Zhu's 'Analysis of Chinese
Colonialism'.
The next years flew by, and Bao learned a great deal
about life and people, and about his friend Kung Jianguo. The riots
of Year 33 evolved into a full revolt against the Fifth Military
Assemblage, which became a general civil war. The army attempted to
keep control of the cities, the revolutionaries scattered into the
villages and fields. There they lived by a series of protocols that
made them the favourite of the farmers, taking great pains to
protect them and their crops and animals, never expropriating their
possessions or their food, preferring starvation to theft from the
very people they had pledged themselves to liberate.
Every battle in this strange diffuse war had a macabre
quality; it seemed like a huge gathering of murders of civilians in
their own clothes, no uniforms or big formal battles about it; men,
women and children, farmers in the fields, shopkeepers in their
doorways, animals; the army was merciless. And yet it went on.
Kung became a prominent leader at the revolutionary
military college in Annan, a college headquartered deep in the
gorge of the Brahmaputra, but also spread through every unit of the
revolutionary forces, the professors or advisers doing their best
to make every encounter with the enemy a kind of education in the
field. Soon Kung headed this effort, particularly when it came to
the struggle for the urban and coastal work units; he was an
endless source of ideas and energy.
The Fifth Military Assemblage eventually abandoned the
central government, and fell away into a scattering of warlords.
This was a victory, but now each warlord and his little army had to
be defeated in turn. The struggle moved unevenly from province to
province, an ambush here, a bridge blown up there. Often Kung was
the target of assassi nation attempts, and naturally Bao, as
his comrade and assistant, was also endangered by these attacks.
Bao tended to want vengeance against the attempted assassins, but
Kung was imperturbable. 'It doesn't matter,' he would say. 'We all
die anyway.' He was much more cheerful about this fact than anyone
else Bao ever met.
Only once did Bao see Kung seriously angry, and even that
was in a strangely cheerful way, considering the situation. It
happened when one of their own officers, one Shi Fandi ('Oppose
Imperialism'), was convicted by eyewitnesses of raping and killing
a female prisoner in his keeping.
Shi emerged from the jail they had kept him in shouting
'Don't kill me! I've done nothing wrong! My men know I tried to
protect them, the bandit that died was one of the most brutal in
Sechuan! This judgment is wrong!'
Kung appeared from the storeroom where he had slept that
night.
Shi said, 'Commander, have mercy. Don't kill me!'
Kung said, 'Shi Fandi, don't say anything more. When a
man does something as wrong as you have, and it's time for him to
die, he should shut up and put a good face on it. That's all he can
do to prepare himself for his next time around. You raped and
killed a prisoner, three eyewitnesses testified to it, and that's
one of the worst crimes there is. And there are reports it wasn't
the first time. To let you live and do more such things will only
make people hate you and our cause, so it would be wrong. Let's
have no more talk. I'll make sure your family is taken care of. You
be a man of more courage.'
Shi said bitterly, 'More than once I've been offered ten
thousand taels to kill you, and I always turned them down.'
Kung waved this away. 'That was only your duty, but you
think it makes you special. As if you had to resist your character
to do the right thing. But your character is no excuse! I'm sick of
your character! I too have an angry soul, but this is China we're
fighting for! For humanity! You have to ignore your character, and
do what is right!'
And he turned away as Shi Fandi was led off.
Afterwards Kung was in a dark mood, not remorseful about
the condemnation of Shi, but depressed. 'It had to be done but it
did nothing. Such men as he often come out on top. Presumably they
will never die out. And so perhaps China will never escape her
fate.' He quoted from Zhu: Vastterritories,
abundant resources, a great population -- from such an excellent
base, will we only ever go in circles, trapped on the wheel of
birth and death?"'
Bao did not know how to reply; he had never heard his
friend speak so pessimistically. Although now it seemed familiar
enough. Kung had many moods. But in the end, one mood dominated; he
sighed, leapt to his feet: 'On with it, anyway! Go on, go
on! We can only try. We have to occupy the time of this life
somehow, we might as well fight for the good.'
It was the farmers' associations that made the difference
in the end. Kung and Bao attended nightly meetings in hundreds of
villages and towns, and thousands of revolutionary soldiers like
them were conveying Zhu's analysis and plan to the people, who in
the country were still for the most part illiterate, so that the
information had to be conveyed by word of mouth. But there is no
form of communication faster and more certain, once it reaches a
certain critical point of accumulation.
Bao learned every detail of farming existence during that
time. He learned that the Long War had stripped away most of the
men who had been alive, and many of the younger women. There were
only a few old men around no matter where you went, and the total
population was still less than it had been before the war. Some
villages were abandoned, others were occupied by skeleton crews.
This made planting and harvesting crops difficult, and the young
people alive were always at work ensuring that the season's food
and tax crops would be grown. The old women worked as hard as
anyone, doing what they could at their age to help, maintaining at
all times the imperial demeanour of the ordinary Chinese farmwife.
Usually the ones in the village who could read and do accounts were
the grandmothers, who as girls had lived in more prosperous
families; now they taught the younger folk how to run the looms,
and to deal with the government in Beijing, and to read. Because of
this they were often the first ones cut down when a warlord army
invaded their region, along with the young men who might join the
fight.
In the Confucian system the farmers were the second most
highly regarded class, just below the scholar bureaucrats who
invented the system, but above the artisans and merchants. Now
Zhu's intellectuals were organizing the farmers in the back
country, and the artisans and merchants in the cities largely
waited to see what would happen. So it seemed Confucius himself had
identified the revolutionary classes. Certainly there were many
more farmers than city dwellers. So when the farmer armies
began to organize and march, there was little the old Long War
remnants could do about it; they had been decimated themselves, and
had neither the means nor the will to kill millions of their
countrymen. For the most part they retreated to the biggest cities,
and prepared to defend them as if against Muslims.
In this uneasy stand off, Kung argued against any
all out assaults, advocating more subtle methods for defeating
the city based warlords that remained. Certain cities had
their supply lines cut off, their airports destroyed, their ports
blockaded; siege tactics of the oldest kind, updated to the new
weapons of the Long War. Indeed another long war, this time a civil
war, seemed to be brewing, though there was no one in China who
wanted such a thing. Even the youngest child lived in the wreckage
and shadow of the Long War, and knew another one would be
catastrophe.
Kung met with White Lotus and other revolutionary groups
in the cities controlled by the warlords. Almost every work unit
had within it workers sympathetic to the revolution, and many of
them were joining Zhu's movement. In reality there was almost no
one who actively and enthusiastically supported the old regime; how
could there be? Too much bad had happened. So it was a matter of
getting all the disaffected to back the same resistance, and the
same strategy for change. Kung proved to be the most influential
leader in this effort. 'In times like these,' he would say,
'everyone becomes a sort of intellectual, as matters so dire demand
to be thought through. That's the glory of these times. They have
woken us up.'
Some of these talks and organizational meetings were
dangerous visits to enemy ground. Kung had risen too far in
the New China movement to be safe making such missions; he was too
famous now, and had a price on his
head.
I But once, in the thirty second week of Year 35, he
and Bao made a clandestine visit to their old neighbourhood in
Beijing, hiding in a delivery truck full of cabbage heads, and
emerging near the Big Red Gate.
At first it seemed everything had changed. Certainly the
immediate vicinity outside the Gate had been razed, and new streets
laid out, so that there was no way they could find their old haunts
by the Gate, as they were gone. In their place stood a police
station and a number of work unit compounds, lined up parallel to
the old stretch of city wall that still existed for a short
distance on each side of the Gate. Fairly big trees had been
transplanted to the new street corners, protected by thick
wrought iron fences with spikes on top: the greenery looked
very fine. The work unit compounds had dorm windows looking
outwards, another welcome new feature; in the old days they were
always built with blank walls facing the outside world, and only in
their inner courtyards were there any signs of life. Now the
streets themselves were crowded with vendor carts and rolling
bookstalls.
'It looks good,' Bao had to admit.
Kung grinned. 'I liked the old place better. Let's get
going and see what we can find.'
Their appointment was in an old work unit, occupying
several smaller buildings just to the south of the new quarter.
Down there the alleys were as tight as ever, all brick and dust and
muddy lanes, not a tree to be seen. They wandered freely here,
wearing sunglasses and aviator's caps like half the other young
men. No one paid them the slightest attention, and they were able
to buy paper bowls of noodles and eat standing on a street corner
among the crowds and traffic, observing the familiar scene, which
did not seem to have changed a bit since their departure a few
packed years before.
Bao said, 'I miss this place.'
Kung agreed. 'It won't be long before we can move back
here if we want. Enjoy Beijing again, centre of the world.'
But first, a revolution to finish. They slipped into one
of the shops of the work unit and met with a group of unit
supervisors, most of them old women. They were not inclined to be
impressed by any boy advocating enormous change, but by this time
Kung was famous, and they listened carefully to him, and asked a
lot of detailed questions, and when he had finished they nodded and
patted him on the shoulder and sent him back out onto the street,
telling him he was a good boy and that he should get out of the
city before he got himself arrested, and that they would back him
when the time came. That was the way it was with Kung: everyone
felt the fire in him, and responded in the human way. If he could
win over the old women of the Long War in a single meeting, then
nothing was impossible. Many a village and work unit was staffed
entirely by these women, as were the Buddhist hospitals and
colleges. Kung knew all about them by now, 'the gangs of widows and
grandmothers', he called them; 'very frightening minds, they are
beyond the world but know every tael of it, so they can be very
hard, very unsenti mental. Good scientists frequent among
them. Politicians of great cunning. It's best not to cross them.'
And he never did, but learned from them, and honoured them; Kung
knew where the power lay in any given situation. 'If the old women
and the young men ever get together, it will be all over!'
Kung also travelled to Yingkou to meet with Zhu Isao
himself, and discuss with the old philosopher the campaign for
China. Under Zhu's aegis he flew to Yingzhou, and spoke with the
Japanese and Chinese representatives of the Yingzhou League,
meeting also Travancoris and others in Fangzhang, and when he
returned, he came with promises of support from all the progressive
governments of the New World.
Soon after that, one of the great Hodenosaunee fleets
arrived in Yingkou, and unloaded huge quantities of food and
weapons, and similar fleets appeared off all the port cities not
under revolutionary control already, blockading them in effect if
not in word, and the New China forces were able over the next
couple of years to win victories in Shanghai, Canton, Hangzhou,
Nanjing, and inland all over China. The final assault on Beijing
became more of a triumphal entry than anything else; the soldiers
of the old army disappeared into the vast city, or out to their
last stronghold in Gansu, and Kung was with Zhu in the first trucks
of a giant motorcade that entered the capital uncontested, indeed
hugely celebrated, on the spring equinox marking the Year 36,
through the Big Red Gate.
It was later in that week that they opened up the
Forbidden City to the people, who had been in there only a few
times before, after the disappearance of the last emperor, when for
a few years of the war it had been a public park and army barracks.
For the past forty years it had been closed again to the people,
and now they streamed in to hear Zhu and his inner circle speak to
China and the world. Bao was in the crowd accompanying them, and as
they passed under the Gate of Great Harmony he saw Kung look
around, as if surprised. Kung shook his head, an odd expression on
his face; and it was still there when he went up to the podium to
stand by Zhu and speak to the ecstatic masses filling the
square.
Zhu was still speaking when the shots rang out. Zhu fell,
Kung fell; all was chaos. Bao fought his way through the
screaming crowd and got to the ring of people around the wounded on
the temporary wooden stage, and most of those people were men and
women he knew, trying to establish order and get medical assistance
and a route out of the palace grounds to a hospital. One who
recognized him let Bao through, and he rushed and stumbled to
Kung's side. The assassin had used the big soft tipped bullets
that had been developed during the war, and there was blood all
over the wood of the stage, shocking in its copious gleaming
redness. Zhu had been struck in the arm and leg; Kung in the chest.
There was a big hole in his back and his face was grey. He was
dying. Bao knelt beside him and took up his splayed right hand,
calling out his name. Kung looked through him; Bao couldn't be sure
he was seeing anything; 'Kung Jianguo!' Bao cried, the words torn
out of him like no others had ever been.
'Bao Xinhua,' Kung mouthed. 'Go on.'
Those were his last words. He died before they even got
him off the stage.
2. This Square Fathom
All that happened when Bao was young.
After Kung's assassination he wasn't much good for a
time. He attended the funeral and never shed a tear; he thought he
was beyond such things, that he was a realist, that the cause was
what mattered and that the cause would go on. He was numb to his
grief, he felt he didn't really care. That seemed odd to him, but
there it was. It wasn't all that real, it couldn't be. He had got
over it.
He kept his nose in books, and read all the time. He
attended the college in Beijing and read history and political
science, and accepted diplomatic posts for the new government,
first in Japan, then Yingzhou, then Nsara, then Burma. The New
China programme progressed, but slowly, so slowly. Things were
better but not in any rapid marked way. Different but in some ways
the same. People still fought, corruption infected the new
institutions, it was always a struggle. Everything took much longer
than anyone had anticipated, and yet every few years everything was
also somehow entirely different. The pulse of history's long
duration was much slower than an individual's time.
One day, after some years had passed, he met a woman
named Pan Xichun, a diplomat from Yingzhou, in Beijing on
assignment to the embassy there. They were assigned together to
work on the Dahai League, the association of states encircling the
Great Ocean, and as part of that work they were both sent by their
governments to a conference in Hawaii, in the middle of the
Dahai. There on the beaches of the big island they spent a
great deal of time together, and when they returned to Beijing they
were a couple. Her ancestry was both Chinese and Japanese, and all
her great grandparents had lived in Yingzhou, in Fangzhang and
the valley behind it. When Pan Xichun's assignment in Beijing ended
and she went back home, Bao made arrangements to join the Chinese
embassy in Fangzhang, and flew across the Dahai to the dramatic
green coastline and golden hills of Yingzhou.
There he and Pan Xichun married and lived for twenty
years, raising two children, a son, Zhao, and a daughter, Anzi. Pan
Xichun took on one of the ministries of the Yingzhou government,
which meant she travelled fairly often to Long Island, to Qito, and
around the Dahai Rim countries. Bao stayed at home and worked for
the Chinese embassy, looked after the children, and wrote and
taught history at the city college. It was a good life in
Fangzhang, that most beautiful and dramatic of all cities, and
sometimes it would seem to him that his youth in revolutionary
China was a kind of vivid intense dream he had once had. Scholars
came over to talk to him sometimes, and he would reminisce about
those years, and once or twice he even wrote about parts of it
himself, but it was all at a great distance.
Then one day he felt a bump on the side of Pan Xichun's
right breast; cancer, and a year later, after much suffering, she
died. In her usual way she had gone on before.
Bao, desolate, was left to raise their children. His son
Zhao was already almost grown, and soon took a job in Aozhou,
across the sea, so that Bao rarely saw him in person. His daughter
Anzi was younger, and he did what he could, hiring women to live in
and help him, but somehow he tried too hard, he cared too much;
Anzi got angry with him often, moved out when she could, got
married, and seldom came to see him after that. Somehow he had
botched that and he didn't even know how.
He was offered a post in Beijing, and he returned, but it
was too strange; he felt like a preta, wandering the scenes of some
past life. He stayed in the western quarters of the city, new
neighbourhoods that bore no particular resemblance to the ones he
had known. The Forbidden City he forbade to himself. He tried
reading and writing, thinking that if only he could write
everything down, then it would never come back again.
After not too many years of that he took a post in Pyinkayaing,
the capital of Burma, joining the League of All Peoples' Agency for
Harmony with Nature, as a Chinese representative and diplomat at
large.
3. Writing Burmese History
Pyinkayaing was located on the westernmost channel of the
Mouths of the Irrawaddy, that great river road of Burmese life,
which was by now urbanized all across the mouths in one enormous
seafront city, or congeries of cities, all the way up each branch
of the delta to Henzada, and indeed from there up the river all the
way to Mandalay. But it was Pyinkayaing where the super city
could be seen at its most huge, the river channels running out into
the sea like grand avenues, between stupendous skyscrapers that
made of the rivers deep gorges, bridged by innumerable streets and
alleyways, alternating with the many more numerous canals, all
criss crossing each other in hundreds of overlapping grids,
and all dominated by the deep canyons formed by the myriad tall
buildings.
Bao was given an apartment on the hundred and sixtieth
floor of one of the skyscrapers set on the main channel of the
Irrawaddy, near the seafront. Walking out onto his balcony for the
first time he was amazed at the view, and spent most of an
afternoon looking around: south to sea, west to Pagoda Rock, cast
along the other mouths of the Irrawaddy, and upstream, looking down
onto the rooftops of the supercity, into the million windows of the
other skyscrapers lining the riverbanks and crowding the rest of
the delta. All the buildings had been sunk deep through the
alluvial soil of the delta to bedrock, and a famous system of dams
and locks and offshore breakwaters had secured the city against
floods from upstream, high tides from the Indian Ocean, typhoons --
even the rise in sea level that was now beginning did not
fundamentally threaten the city, which was in truth a kind of
collec tion of ships anchored permanently in the bedrock, so
that if eventually they had to abandon the 'ground floors' and move
up it would be, just one more engineering challenge, something to
keep the local construction industry occupied in years to come. The
Burmese were not afraid of anything.
Looking down at the little junks and water taxis brushing
their deli cate white calligraphy over the blue brown
water, Bao seemed to read a kind of message in them, just outside
the edge of his conscious comprehension. He understood now why the
Burmese wrote 'Burmese history', because maybe it was true -- maybe
all that had ever happened, had happened so that it could collide
here, and make something greater than any of its elements. As when
the wakes from several different water taxis struck all together,
shooting a bolt of white water higher than any individual wave ever
would have got.
This monumental city, Pyinkayaing, was then Bao's home
for the next several years. He took a cable car high across the
river to the League offices on the other bank, and worked on the
balance with nature problems beginning to plague the
world, wreaking such damage that even, Burma itself might some day
suffer from it, unless they were to remove Pyinkayaing to the moon,
which did not seem completely impossible given their enormous
energy and confidence.
But they had not been a power long enough to have seen
the way the wheel turns. Over the years Bao visited a hundred lands
as part of his job, and many reminded him that in the long run of
time, civilizations rise, then fall; and most, upon falling, never
really rose again. The locus of power wandered the face of the
earth like some poor restless immortal, following the sun.
Presumably Burma would not be immune to that fate.
Bao now flew in the latest spaceplanes, popping out of
the atmosphere like the artillery shells of the Long War, and
landing on the other side of the globe three hours later; he also
flew in the giant airships that still conveyed the bulk of traffic
and cargo around the world, their slowness more than compensated
for by their capacity, humming around like great ships in the sea
of air, for the most part unsinkable. He conferred with officials
in most of the countries of the Earth, and came to
understand that their balance with nature problems were
partly a matter of pure numbers, the human population of the planet
rebounding so strongly from the Long War that it was now
approaching ten billion people; and this could be more people than
the planet could sustain, or so many scientists speculated,
especially the more conservative ones, those of a kind of Daoist
temperament, found in great numbers in China and Yingzhou
especially.
But also, beyond the sheer number of people, there was
the accumulation of things, and the uneven distribution of wealth,
so that people in Pyinkayaing thought nothing of throwing a party
in Ingoli or Fangzhang, spending ten years of a Maghribi's life
earnings on a weekend of pleasure; while people in Firanja and
Inka. still frequently suffered from malnutrition. This discrepancy
existed despite the efforts of the League of All Peoples and the
egalitarian movements in China, Firanja, Travancore and Yingzhou.
In China the egalitarian movement came not just from Zhu's vision,
but also from the Daoist ideas of balance, as Zhu would always
point out. In Travancore it rose out of the Buddhist idea of
compassion, in Yingzhou from the Hodenosaunee idea of the equality
of all, in Firanja from the idea of justice before God. Everywhere
the idea existed, but the world still belonged to a tiny minority
of rich; wealth had been accumulating for centuries in a few hands,
and the people lucky enough to be born into this old aristocracy
lived in the old manner, with the rights of kings now spread among
the wealthy of the Earth. Money had replaced land as the basis of
power, and money flowed according to its own gravity, its laws of
accumulation, which though divorced from nature, were nevertheless
the laws ruling most countries on Earth, no matter their religious
or philosophical ideas of love, compassion, charity, equality,
goodness and the like. Old Zhu had been right: humanity's behaviour
was still based on old laws, which determined how food and land and
water and surplus wealth were owned, how the labour of the ten
billions was owned. If these laws did not change, the living shell
of the Earth might well be wrecked, and inherited by seagulls and
ants and cockroaches.
So Bao travelled, and talked, and wrote, and travelled
again. For most of his career he worked for the League's Agency for
Harmony with Nature, trying for several years to coordinate efforts
in the Old World and the New to keep some of the greater mammals
alive; many of them were going extinct, and without action they
would lose most of them, in an anthropogenic extinction event to
rival even the global crashes now being found in the fossil
record.
He came back from these diplomatic missions to
Pyinkayaing, after travelling in the big new airships that were a
combination of blimp and flyer, hovercraft and catamaran, skating
over the water or in the air depending on weather conditions and
freight loads. He looked down on the world from his apartment, and
saw the human relationship to nature drawn in the calligraphy of
the water taxis' wakes, the airships' contrails, the great canyons
formed by the city's skyscrapers. This was his world, changing
every year; and when he visited Beijing and tried to remember his
youth, or went to Kwinana in Aozhou, to see his son Zhao and family
there, or when he tried to remember Pan Xichun -- even when he
visited Fangzhang once, the actual site of those years -- he could
scarcely call them to mind. Or, to be more precise -- for he could
remember a great many things that had happened -- it was the
feeling for these things that was gone away, leached out by the
years. They if they had happened to someone else. As if they had
been were as if previous incarnations.
It was someone else in the League offices who thought to
invite Zhu Isao himself to Pyinkayaing, and teach a set of classes
to the League workers and anyone else who cared to attend. Bao was
surprised when he saw this notice; he had assumed that somewhere
along the way Zhu must have died, it had been so long since they
had all changed China together; and Zhu had been ancient then. But
that turned out to have been a youthful mistake on Bao's part; Zhu
was about ninety now, he was informed, meaning he had been only
about seventy years old at that time. Bao had to laugh at his
youthful miscalculation, so characteristic of the young. He signed
up for the course with great anticipation.
Zhu Isao turned out to be a sprightly white haired
old man, small but no smaller than he had been all those years
before, with a lively curious look in his eye. He shook Bao's hand
when Bao went up before the introductory lecture, and smiled a
slight but friendly smile: 'I remember you,' he said. 'One of Kung
Jianguo's officers, isn't that right?' And Bao gripped his hand
hard, ducking his head in assent. He sat down feeling warm.
The old man still walked with the ghost of a limp from that
terrible day. But he had been happy to see Bao.
In his first lecture he outlined his plan for the course,
which he hoped would be a series of conversations on history,
discussing how it was constructed, and what it meant, and how they
might use it to help them plot their course forwards through the
next difficult decades, 'when we have to learn at last how to
inhabit the Earth'.
Bao kept notes as he listened to the old man, tapping at
his little hand lectern, as did many others in the class. Zhu
explained that he hoped first to describe and discuss the various
theories of history that had been proposed through the centuries,
and then to analyse those theories, not only by testing them in the
description of actual events, 'difficult since events as such are
remembered for how well they prop up the various theories', but
also for how the theories themselves were structured, and what sort
of futures they implied, 'this being their chief use to us. I take
it that what matters in a history is what there is in it we can put
to use.'
So, over the next few months a pattern was set, and every
third day the group would meet in a room high in one of the League
buildings overlooking the Irrawaddy: a few score diplomats, local
students, and younger historians from everywhere, many of whom had
come to Pyinkayaing specifically for this class. All sat and
listened to Zhu talk, and though Zhu kept encouraging them to enter
the discussion and make of it a large conversation, they were
mostly content to listen to him think aloud, only egging him on
with their questions. 'Well, but I am here to listen too,' he would
object, and then, when pressed to continue, would relent. 'I must
be like Pao Ssu, I suppose, who used to say "I am a good listener,
I listen by talking".'
So they made their way through discussions of the four
civilizations theory, made famous by al Katalan; and
al Lanzhou's collision of cultures theory, of progress by
conflict ('clearly accurate in some sense, as there has been much
conflict and much progress'); the somewhat similar conjunction
theories, by which unnoticed conjunctions of developments, often in
unrelated fields of endeavour, had great consequences. Zhu's many
examples of this included one he presented with a small smile: the
introduction of coffee and printing presses at around the same time
in caliphate Iran, causing a great outpouring of literature. They
discussed the theory of the eternal return, which combined Hindu
cosmologies with the latest in physics to suggest that the universe
was so vast and ancient that everything possible had not only
happened, but had happened an infinite number of times ('limited
usefulness to that one, except to explain the feeling you get that
things have happened before'); and the other cyclical theories,
often based on the cycle of the seasons, or the life of the
body.
Then he mentioned 'dharma history' or 'Burmese history',
meaning any history that believed there was progress towards some
goal making itself manifest in the world, or in plans for the
future; also 'Bodhisattva history', which suggested that there were
enlightened cultures that had sprung ahead somehow, and then gone
back to the rest and worked to bring them forwards -- early China,
Travancore, the Hodenosaunee, the Japanese diaspora, Iran -- all
these cultures had been proposed as possible examples of this
pattern, 'though it seems to be a matter of individual or cultural
judgment, which is less than useful to historians seeking a global
pattern. Although it is a weak criticism to call them tautological,
for the truth is every theory is tautological. Our reality itself
is a tautology.'
Someone brought up the old question of whether the 'great
man' or mass movements' were the principal force for change, but
Zhu immediately dismissed this as a false problem. 'We are all
great men, yes?'
'Maybe you are,' muttered the person sitting next to
Bao.
What has mattered are the moments of exposure in every
life, when habit is no longer enough, and choices have to be made.
That's when everyone becomes the great man, for a moment; and the
choices made in these moments, which come all too frequently, then
combine to make history. In that sense I suppose I come down on the
side of the masses, in that it has been a collective process,
whatever else it is.
'Also, this formulation "the great man" of course should
bring up the question of women; are they included in this
description? Or should we describe history as being the story of
women wresting back the political power that they lost with the
introduction of agriculture and the creation of surplus wealth?
Would the gradual and unfinished defeat of patriarchy be the larger
story of history? Along with, perhaps, the gradual and uncertain
defeat of infectious disease? So that we have been battling
micro parasites and macro parasites, eh? The bugs and the
patriarchs?'
He smiled at this, and went on to discuss the struggle
against the Four Great Inequalities, and other concepts grown out
of the work of Kang and al Lanzhou.
After that, Zhu took a few sessions to describe various
'phase change moments' in global history that he thought
significant -- the Japanese diaspora, the independence of the
Hodenosaunee, the shift of trade from land to sea, the Samarqand
Flowering, and so forth. He also spent quite a few sessions
discussing the latest movement among historians and social
scientists, which he called 'animal history', the study of humanity
in biological terms, so that it became not a matter of religions
and philosophies, but more a study of primates struggling for food
and territory.
It was many weeks into the course when he said, 'Now we
are ready to come to what interests me extremely these days, which
is not history's content, but its form.
'For we see immediately that what we call history has at
least two meanings to it, first, simply what happened in the past,
which no one can know, as it disappears in time -- and then second,
all the stories we tell about what happened.
'These stories are of different kinds, of course, and
people like Rabindra and Scholar White have categorized them. First
come eyewitness accounts, and chronicles of events made soon after
things happened, also documents and records -- these are history as
wheat still in the field, as yet unharvested or baked, thus given
beginnings or ends, or causes. Only later come these baked
histories, that attempt to coordinate and reconcile source
materials, that not only describe but explain.
'Later still come the works that eat and digest these
baked accounts, and attempt to reveal what they are doing, what
their relationship to reality is, how we use them, that kind of
thing -- philosophies of history, epistemologies, what have you.
Many digestions use methods pioneered by Ibrahim al Lanzhou,
even when they denounce his results. Certainly there is great
sustenance in going back to al Lanzhou's texts and seeing what he
had to say. In one useful passage, for instance, he points out that
we can differentiate between explicit arguments, and more deeply
hidden unconscious ideological biases. These latter can be teased
out by identifying the mode of emplotment chosen to tell the tale.
The emplotment scheme al Lanzhou used comes from Rabindra's
typology of story types, a rather simplistic scheme, but
fortunately, as al Lanzhou pointed out, historians are often
fairly naive storytellers, and use one or another of Rabindra's
basic types of emplotment rather schematically, compared to the
great novelists like Cao Xueqin or Murasaki, who constantly mix
them. Thus a history like Than Oo's is what some call "Burmese
history", rather literally in this case, but that I would prefer to
call "dharma history", being a romance in which humanity struggles
to work out its dharma, to better itself, and so generation by
generation to make progress, fighting for justice, and an end to
want, with the strong implication that we will eventually work our
way up to the source of the peach blossom stream, and the age of
great peace will come into being. It is a secular version of the
Hindu and Buddhist tale of nirvana successfully achieved. Thus
Burmese history, or Shambala tales, or any teleological history
that asserts we are all progressing in some way, are dharma
histories.
'The opposite of this mode is the ironic or satiric mode,
which I call entropic history, from the physical sciences, or
nihilism, or, in the usage of certain old legends, the story of the
fall. In this mode, everything that humanity tries to do fails, or
rebounds against it, and the combination of biological reality and
moral weakness, of death and evil, means that nothing in human
affairs can succeed. Taken to its extreme this leads to the Five
Great Pessimisms, or the nihilism of Shu Shen, or the antidharma of
Buddha's rival Purana Kassapa, people who say it is all a chaos
without causes, and that taken all in all, it would have been
better never to have been born.
'These two modes of emplotment represent end point
extremes, in that one says we are masters of the world and can
defeat death, while the other says that we are captives of the
world, and can never win against death. It might be thought these
then represent the only two possible modes, but inside these
extremes Rabindra identified two other modes of emplotment, which
he called tragedy and comedy. These two are mixed and partial modes
compared to their absolutist outliers, and Rabindra suggested they
both have to do with reconciliation. In comedy the reconciliation
is of people with other people, and with society at large. The
weave of family with family, tribe with clan -- this is how
comedies end, this is what makes them comedy: the marriage with
someone from a different clan, and the return of spring.
'Tragedies make a darker reconciliation. Scholar White
said of them, they tell the story of humanity face to face with
reality itself, therefore facing death and dissolution and defeat.
Tragic heroes are destroyed, but for those who survive to tell
their tale, there is a rise in consciousness, in awareness of
reality, and this is valuable in and of itself, dark though that
knowledge may be.'
At this point in his lecture Zhu Isao paused, and looked
around the room until he had located Bao, and nodded at him; and
though it seemed they had only been speaking of abstract things, of
the shapes stories took, Bao felt his heart clench within him.
Zhu proceeded: 'Now, I suggest that as historians, it is
best not to get trapped in one mode or another, as so many do; it
is too simple a solution, and does not match well with events as
experienced. instead we should weave a story that holds in its
pattern as much as possible. It should be like the Daoists'
yin yang symbol, with eyes of tragedy and comedy dotting the
larger fields of dharma and nihilism. That old figure is the
perfect image of all our stories put together, with a dark dot of
our comedies marring the brilliance of dharma, and the blaze of
tragic knowledge emerging from black nothingness.
'The ironic history by itself, we can reject out of hand.
Of course we are bad; of course things go wrong. But why dwell on
it? Why pretend this is the whole story? Irony is merely death
walking among us. It doesn't take up the challenge, it isn't life
speaking.
'But I suppose we also have to reject the purest version
of dharma history, the transcending of this world and this life,
the perfection of our way of being. It may happen in the bardo, if
there is a bardo, but in this world, all is mixed. We are animals,
death is our fate. So at best we could say the history of the
species has to be made as much like dharma as possible, by a
collective act of the will.
'This leaves the middle modes, comedy and tragedy.' Zhu
stopped, held up his hands, perplexed. 'Surely we have a great deal
of both of these. Perhaps the way to construct a proper history is
to inscribe the whole figure, and say that for the individual,
ultimately, it is a tragedy; for the society, comedy. If we can
make it so.'
Zhu Isao's own predilection was clearly for comedy. He
was a social creature. He was always inviting Bao and some others
from the class, including the League's Minister for Health of the Natural World,
to the rooms provided for him during his stay, and these small
gatherings were sparked by his laughter and curiosity about things.
Even his research amused him. He had had a great many books shipped
down from Beijing, so that every room of his apartment was filled
like a warehouse. Because of his growing conviction that history
should be the story of everyone who had ever lived, he was now
studying anthologies of biography as a genre, and he had many
examples of the form in his apartment. This explained the
tremendous number of volumes standing everywhere, in tall unsteady
stacks. Zhu picked up one huge tome, almost too heavy for him to
lift: 'This is a first volume,' he said with a grin, 'but I've
never found the rest of the series. A book like this is only the
antechamber to an entire unwritten library.'
The collection of lives genre seemed to have
begun, he said as he tapped the piles affectionately, in religious
literatures: collections of the lives of Christian saints and
Islamic martyrs, also Buddhist texts that described lives through
long sequences of reincarnations, a speculative exercise that Zhu
clearly enjoyed very much: 'Dharma history at its purest, a kind of
proto politics. Plus they can be so funny. You see a
literalist like Dhu Hsien trying to match up his subjects' death
and birth dates exactly, so that he creates strings of prominent
historical actors through several reincarnations, asserting that he
can tell they have always been one soul by what they do, but the
difficulties of getting the dates to match up cause him in the end
to select some odd additions to his sequences to make them all
match life to life. Finally he has to theorize a "work hard then
relax" pattern in these immortals, to justify those who alternate
lives as geniuses and generals with careers as minor portrait
artists or cobblers. But the dates always match up!' Zhu grinned
delightedly.
He tapped other tall piles that were examples of the
genre he was studying: Ganghadara's. 'Forty six
Transmigrations', the Tibetan text 'Twelve Manifestations of
Padmasambhava', the guru who established Buddhism in Tibet; also
the 'Biography of the Gyatso Rimpoche, Lives One Through Nineteen',
which brought the Dalai Lama up to the present; Bao had once met
this man, and had not realized then that his full biography would
take up so many volumes.
Zhu Isao also had in his apartment copies of Plutarch's
'Lives', and Liu Xiang's 'Biographies of Exemplary Women',
from about the same time as the Plutarch; but he admitted that he
was finding these texts not as interesting as the reincarnation
chronicles, which in certain cases spent as much time on their
subjects' time in the bardo and the other five lokas as they did on
their time as humans. He also liked the 'Autobiography of the
Wandering Jew', and the 'Testaments of the Trivicurn jati', and a
beautiful volume, 'Two Hundred and Fifty--three Travellers', as
well as a scurrilous looking collection, possibly
pornographic, called 'Tantric Thief Across Five Centuries'. All of
these Zhu described to his visitors with great enthusiasm. They
seemed to him to hold some kind of key to the human story, assuming
there could be any such thing: history as a simple accumulation of
lives. 'After all, in the end all the great moments of history have
taken place inside people's heads. The moments of change, or the
clinamen as the Greeks called it.'
This moment, Zhu said, had become the organizing
principle and perhaps the obsession of the Samarqandi anthologist
Old Red Ink, who had collected the lives in his reincarnation
compendium using something like the clinamen moment to choose his
exemplars, as each entry in his collection contained a moment when
the subjects, always reincarnated with names that began with the
same letters, came to crossroads in their lives and made a swerve
away from what they might have been expected to do.
'I like the naming device,' Bao remarked, leafing through
one volume of this collection.
'Well, Old Red Ink explains in one marginalia that it is
merely a mnemonic for the ease of the reader, and that of course in
reality every soul comes back with every physical particular
changed. No telltale rings, no birthmarks, no same names -- he
would not have you think his method was anything like the old folk
tales, oh no.'
The Minister for Natural Health asked about a stack of
extremely slender volumes, and Zhu smiled happily. As a reaction
against these endless compendiums, he explained, he had got into
the habit of buying any books he came across that seemed required
by their subject matter to be short, often so short that their
titles would scarcely fit on their spines. Thus 'Secrets to
Successful Marriage', or 'Good Reasons to Have Hope for the
Future', or 'Stories About Not Being Afraid of Ghosts'.
'But I have not read them, I must admit. They exist only for
their titles, which say it all. They could be blank inside.'
Later, outside on his balcony, Bao sat next to Zhu
watching the city flow beneath them. They drank cup after cup of
green tea, talking about many different things, and as the night
grew late, and Zhu feeling pensive, it seemed, Bao said to him, 'Do
you ever think of Kung Jianguo? Do you ever think of those times
any more?'
'No, not very often,' Zhu admitted, looking at him
directly. 'Do you?'
Bao shook his head. 'I don't know why. It's not as if
it's so very painful to recall. But it seems so long ago.'
'Yes. Very long.'
'I see you still have a bit of a limp from that day.'
'Yes, I do. I don't like it. I walk slower and it's not
so bad. But it is still there. I set off metal detectors in the
high security zones.' He laughed. 'But it is a long time ago.
So many lives ago I get them all confused, don't you?' And
he smiled.
One of Zhu Isao's last sessions was a discussion of what
purpose the study of history might have, and how it might help them
now in their current predicament.
Zhu was tentative in this matter. 'It may be no help at
all,' he said. 'Even if we gained a complete understanding of what
happened in the past, it might not help us. We are still
constrained in our actions in the present. In a way we can say that
the past has mortgaged the future, or bought it, or tied it up, in
laws and institutions and habits. But perhaps it helps to know as
much as we can, just to suggest ways forward. You know, this matter
of residual and emergent that we discussed -- that each period in
history is composed of residual elements of past cultures, and
emergent elements that later on will come more fully into being
this is a powerful lens. And only the study of history allows
one to make this distinction, if it is possible at all. Thus we can
look at the world we live in, and say, these things are residual
laws from the age of the Four Great Inequalities, still binding us.
They must go. On the other hand we can look at more unfamiliar
elements of our time, like China's communal ownership of land, and
say, perhaps these are emergent qualities that will be more
prominent in the future; they look helpful; I will support these.
Then again, there may be residual elements
that have always helped us, and need to be retained. So
it is not as simple a matter as "new is good, old is bad".
Distinctions need to be made. But the more we understand, the finer
we can make the distinctions.
'I begin to think that this matter of "late emergent
properties" that the physicists talk about when they discuss
complexity and cascading sensitivities, is an important concept for
historians. justice may be a late emergent property. And maybe we
can glimpse the beginnings of it emerging; or maybe it emerged long
ago, among the primates and proto humans, and is only now
gaining leverage in the world, aided by the material possibility of
post scarcity. It is hard to say.'
He smiled again his little smile. 'Good words to end this
session.'
His final meeting was called 'What Remains to be
Explained', and consisted of questions that he was still mulling
over after all his years of study and contemplation. He made
comments on his list of questions, but not many, and Bao had to
write as fast as he could to get the questions themselves
recorded:
What Remains to be Explained Why has there been
inequality in accumulation of goods since the earliest recorded
history? What causes the ice ages to come and go? Could Japan have
won its war of independence without the fortuitous combination of
the Long War and the earthquake and fire striking Edo? Where did
all the Roman gold end up? Why does power corrupt? Was there any
way that the native peoples of the New World could have been saved
from the devastation of Old World diseases? When did people first
arrive in the New World? Why were the civilizations on Yingzhou and
Inka at such different stages of development? Why can't gravity be
reconciled mathematically with pulse microprobability? Would
Travancore have initiated the modern period and dominated the Old
World, if the Kerala had never lived? Is there life after death, or
transmigration of souls? Did the polar expedition of the
fifty second year of the Long War reach the south pole? What
causes well fed and secure people to work for the subjugation
and immiseration of starving insecure people? If al Alemand
had conquered Skandistan, would the Sami people have survived? If
the Shanghai Conference had not arranged such punitive reparations,
would the postwar world have been more peaceful? How many people
can the Earth support? Why is there evil? How did the Hodenosaunee
invent their form of government? Which disease or combination of
diseases killed the Christians of Firanja? Does technology drive
history? Would things have turned out differently if the birth of
science in Samarqand had not been delayed in its dispersal by the
plague? Did the Phoenicians cross the Atlantic to the New World?
Will any mammals larger than a fox survive the next century? Is the
Sphinx thousands of years older than the Pyramids? Do gods exist?
How can we return the animals to the earth? How can we make a
decent existence? How can we give to our children and the
generations following a world restored to health?
Soon after that final session , and a big party, Zhu Isao
returned to Beijing, and Bao never saw him again.
They worked hard in the years after Zhu's visit to enact
programmes that helped to frame some answers to his final
questions. Just as the geologists had been greatly helped in their
labours by the construction of a framework of understanding based
on the movement of the broken eggshell plates of the crust, so the
bureaucrats and technocrats and scientists and diplomats at the
League of All Peoples were helped in their endeavours by Zhu's
theoretical considerations. It helps to have a plan! as Zhu had
often remarked.
And so Bao criss crossed the world, meeting and
talking to people, helping to put certain strands into place,
thickening the warp and weft of treaties and agreements by which
all the peoples on the planet were tied together. He worked
variously on land tenure reform, forest management, animal
protection, water resources, panchayat support and divestiture of
accumulated wealth, chipping away at the obdurate blocks of
privilege left in the wake of the Long War and all that had
happened in the centuries before it. Everything went very slowly,
and progress was always in small increments, but what Bao noticed
from time to time was that improvements in one part of the world
situation often helped elsewhere, so that, for instance, the
institution of panchayat governments at the local level in China
and the Islamic states led to increased power for more and more
people, especially where they adopted the Travancori law of
requiring at least two of every five panchayat members to be women;
and this in turn mitigated many land problems. Indeed, as many of
the world's problems stemmed from too many people competing for too
few resources, using too crude technologies, another happy result
of the panchayat empowerment of localities and of women was that
birthrates dropped rapidly and dramatically. The replacement rate
for a population was 2.I births per woman, and before the Long War
the world rate had been more like five; in the poorest countries,
more like seven or eight. Now, in every country where women exerted
the full range of rights advocated by the League of All Peoples,
the replacement rate had fallen to less than three, and often less
than two; this, combined with improvements in agriculture and other
technologies, boded well for the future. it was the ultimately
hopeful expression of the warp and the weft, of the principle of
late emergent properties. It seemed, though everything went very
slowly, that they might be able to concoct some kind of dharmic
history after all. Perhaps; it was not yet clear; but some work got
done.
So when Bao read of Zhu Isao's death, some years later,
he groaned and threw the paper to the floor. He spent the day out
on his balcony, feeling unaccountably bereft. Really there was
nothing to mourn, everything to celebrate: the great one had lived
over a hundred years, had helped to change China and then all the
world; late in life he had appeared to be thoroughly enjoying
himself, going around and listening by talking. He had given the
impression of someone who knew his place in the world.
But Bao did not know his place. Contemplating the immense
city below him, looking up the great watery canyons, he realized
that he had been living in this place for over ten years, and he
still didn't know a thing about it. He was always leaving or coming
back, always looking down on things from a balcony, eating in the
same little hole in the wall, talking to colleagues
from the League offices, spending most of his mornings and evenings
reading. He was almost sixty now, and he didn't know what he was
doing or how he was supposed to live. The huge city was like a
machine, or a ship half sunk in the shallows. It was no help to
him. He had worked every day trying to extend Kung and Zhu's work,
to understand history and work on it in the moment of change, also
to explain it to others, reading and writing, reading and writing,
thinking that if he could only explain it then it wouldn't oppress
him quite so much. It did not seem to have worked. He had the
persistent feeling that everyone who ever meant anything to him had
already died.
When he went back inside his apartment, he found a
message on the screen of his lectern from his daughter Anzi, the
first he had received from her in a long time. She had given birth
to a daughter of her own, and wondered if Bao wanted to visit and
meet his new grandchild. He typed an affirmative reply and packed
his bag.
Anzi and her husband Deng lived above Shark Point, in one
of the crowded hilly neighbourhoods on the bay side of Fangzhang.
Their baby girl was named Fengyun, and Bao enjoyed very much taking
her out on the tram and walking her in a stroller around the park
at the south end of town, overlooking the Gold Gate. There was
something about her look that reminded him very strongly of Pan
Xichun -- a curve of the cheek, a stubborn look in her eye. These
traits we pass on. He watched ber sleep, and the fog roll in
through the Gate, under and over the sweep of the new bridge,
listening to a feng shui guru lecture a small class sitting at his
feet, 'you can see that this is the most physically beautiful
setting of any city on Earth', which seemed true enough to Bao;
even Pyinkayaing had no prospect compared to this, the glories of
the Burmese capital were all artefactual, and without those it was
just like any other delta mouth; unlike this sublime place he had
loved so in a previous existence, 'oh no, I don't think so, only
geomantic imbeciles would have located the city on the other side
of the strait, apart from practical considerations of street
plaiting, there is the intrinsic qi of place, its dragon arteries
are too exposed to the wind and fog, it is best to leave it as a
park'. Certainly the opposing peninsula made a beautiful park,
green and hilly across the water, sunlight streaming down on it
through cloud, the whole scene so vibrant and gorgeous that Bao
lifted the babe up out of her stroller to show it all to her; he
pointed her in the four directions; and the scene blurred before
his eyes as if he too were a babe. Everything became a flow of
shapes, cloudy masses of brilliant colour swimming about, vivid and
glowing, stripped of their meanings as known things, blue and white
above, yellow below ... He shivered, feeling very strange. It was
as if he had been looking through the babe's eyes; and the
child seemed fretful. So he took her back home, and Anzi reproached
him for letting her get cold. 'And her nappy needs changing!'
'I know that! I'll do it.'
'No I'll do it, you don't know how.'
'I most certainly do too, I changed your nappies often
enough in my time.'
She sniffed disapprovingly, as if he had been rude to do
so, invading her privacy perhaps. He grabbed up the book he was
reading and went out for a walk, upset. Somehow things were still
awkward between them.
The great city hummed, the islands in the bay with their
skyscrapers looking like the vertical mountains of south China, the
slopes of Mount Tamalpi equally crowded with huge buildings; but
the bulk of the city hugged its hills tightly, most of it still
human scale, buildings two and three storeys tall, with upturned
corners on all the roofs in the oldfashioned way, like a city of
pagodas. This was the city he had loved, the city he had lived in
during the years of his marriage.
And so he was a preta here. Like any other hungry ghost,
he walked over the hill to the ocean side, and soon he found
himself in the neighbourhood where they had lived when Pan was
alive. He walked through the streets without even thinking about
navigating his way, and there he was: the old home.
He stood before the building, an ordinary apartment
block, now painted a pale yellow. They had lived in an apartment
upstairs, always in the wind, just as it was now. He stared at the
building. He felt nothing. He tested it, he tried to feel
something: no. The main thing he felt was wonder that he could feel
so little; a rather pale and unsatisfactory feeling to have at such
a momentous confrontation with his past, but there it was. The
children each had had a bedroom to themselves up there, and Bao and
Pan had slept on an unrolled futon in the living room, the stove of
the kitchenette right at their feet; it had been a cricket box of a
place, really, but there they had lived, and for a time it had
seemed it would always be just like that, husband, wife, son,
daughter, clothed in a tiny apartment in Fangzhang, and every day
the same, every week the same, in a round that would last for ever.
Thus the power of thoughtlessness, the power people had to forget
what time was always doing.
He took off walking again, south towards the Gate, on the busy
promenade high over the ocean, the trams squealing by. When he
reached the park overlooking the strait he returned to the spot
where he had been just hours before with his granddaughter, and
looked around again. Everything remained the same this time,
retaining its shape and its meaning; no flow into colours, no
yellow ocean. That had been an odd experience, and he shuddered
again remembering it.
He sat on the low wall overlooking the water, and took
his book from his jacket pocket, a book of poems translated from
the ancient Sanskrit. He opened it at random, and read, 'This verse
from Kalidasa's "Sakuntala" is considered by many scholars of
Sanskrit to be the most beautiful in the language.'
Ramyani viksya madhurans ca nisamya sabdan paryutsuki
bhavati yat sukhito pi jantuh tac cetasa smarati nunarn
abodhapurvarn bhavasthirani jananantarasauhrdani. Even the
man who is happy glimpses something Or a thread of sound touches
him And his heart overflows with a longing he does not
recognize Then it must be that he is remembering a place out
of reach people he loved In a life before this their pattern
Still there in him waiting He looked up, looked around. An
awesome place, this great gate to the sea. He thought, maybe I
should stay here. Maybe this day is telling me something. Maybe
this is my home, hungry ghost or not. Maybe we cannot avoid
becoming hungry ghosts, no matter where we live; so might as well
be home.
He walked back to his daughter's. A letter had arrived on
his lectern from an acquaintance of his, living at the farm
station of Fangzhang's college, inland from the city a hundred li,
in the big central valley. This acquaintance from his Beijing years
had heard he was visiting the area, and wondered if he would like
to come out and teach a class or two a history of the Chinese
revolution, perhaps foreign relations, League work, whatever
he liked. Because of his association with Kung, among other things,
he would be viewed by the students as a living piece of world
history. 'A living fossil, you mean,' he snorted. Like that fish
whose species was four hundred million years old, dragged up
recently in a net off Madagascar. Old Dragonfish. He wrote back to
his acquaintance and accepted the invitation, then wrote to
Pyinkayaing and put in for a more extended leave of absence.
4. The Red Egg
The farm extension of the college, now a little college
itself, was clustered at the west end of a town called Putatoi,
west of the North Lung River, on the banks of Puta Creek, a lively
brook pouring out of the coastal range and creating a riverine
gallery of oaks and brush on an alluvial berm just a few hands
higher than the rest of the valley. The valley otherwise was given
over entirely to rice cultivation; the big rivers flowing into it
out of the mountains on both sides had been diverted into an
elaborate irrigation system, and the already flat valley floor had
been shaved even flatter, into a stepwise system of broad flooded
terraces, each terrace just a few fingers higher than the one below
it. All the dikes in this system curved, as part of some kind of
erosion resistance strategy, and so the landscape looked somewhat
like Annam or Kampuchea, or anywhere in tropical Asia really,
except that wherever the land was not flooded, it was shockingly
dry. Straw coloured hills rose to the west, in the first of
the coastal ranges between the valley and the bay; then to the east
the grand snow topped peaks of the Gold Mountains stood like a
distant Himalaya.
Putatoi was tucked into a nest of trees in this broad
expanse of green and gold. It was a village in the Japanese style,
with shops and apartments clustered by the stream, and small
groupings of cottages ringing the town centre north of the stream.
After Pyinkayaing it seemed tiny, dowdy, sleepy, green, dull. Bao
liked it.
The students at the college mainly came from farms in the
valley, and they were mostly studying to be rice farmers or orchard
managers.
Their questions in the Chinese history class that Bao
taught were amazingly ignorant, but they were fresh faced and
cheerful youths; they didn't care in the slightest who Bao was, or
what he had done in the postwar period so long ago. He liked that
too.
His little seminar of older students, who were studying
history specif ically, were more intrigued by his presence
among them. They asked him about Zhu Isao, of course, and even
about Kung Jianguo, and about the Chinese revolution. Bao answered
as if it were a period of history that he had studied extensively,
and perhaps written a book or two about. He did not offer them
personal reminiscences, and most of the time felt that he had none
to offer. They watched him very closely as he spoke.
'What you have to understand,' he told them, 'is that no
one won the Long War. Everyone lost, and we have not recovered from
it even yet.
'Remember what you have been taught about it. It lasted
sixty seven years, two--thirds of a century, and it's
estimated now that almost a billion people died in it. Think of it
this way; I've been talking to a biologist here who works on
population issues, and he has tried to estimate how many humans
have lived in all of history, from the start of the species until
now.'
Some in the class laughed at such an idea.
'You haven't beard of this? He estimates that there have
been about forty billion humans to have lived since the species
came into being although of course that was no determinate moment,
so this is just a game we play. But it means that if there have
been forty billion humans in all history, then one in forty of all
the people ever to have lived, were killed in the Long War. That's
a big percentage!
'So. The whole world fell into disarray, and now we've
lived in the war's shadow for so long we don't know what full
sunlight would look like. Science keeps making advances, but many
of them rebound on us. The natural world is being poisoned by our
great numbers and our crude industries. And if we quarrel again,
all could be lost. You are probably aware, certainly most
governments are, that science could provide us very quickly with
extremely powerful bombs, they say one bomb per city, and so that
threat hangs over us too. If any country tries for such a bomb, all
may follow.
'So, all these dangers inspired the creation of the League of
All Peoples, in the hope of making a global system that could cope
with our global problems. That came on the heels of the Year One
effort, standardized measurements, and all the rest, to form what
has been called the scientizing of the world, or the modernization,
or the Hodenosaunee programme, among other names for it. Our time,
in effect.'
'In Islam they don't like all that,' one student pointed
out.
'Yes, this has been a problem for them, how to reconcile
their beliefs with the scientizing movement. But we have seen
changes in Nsara spread through most of Firanja, and what a united
Firanja implies is that they have agreed there is more than one way
to be a good Muslim. If your Islam is a form of sufism that is
Buddhist in all but name, and you say it is all right, then it is
hard to condemn the Buddhists in the next valley. And this is
happening in many places. All the strands are beginning to weave
together, you see. We have had to do it to survive.'
At the end of that first set of classes, the history
teachers invited Bao to stay on and do it on a regular basis; and
after some thought, he accepted their invitation. He liked these
people, and the work that came from them. The bulk of the college's
efforts had to do with growing more food, with fitting people into
the natural systems of the earth less clum sily. History was
part of this, and the history teachers were friendly. Also a single
woman his age, a lecturer in linguistics, had been particularly
friendly through the time of his stay. They had eaten quite a few
meals together, and got into the habit of meeting for lunch. Her
name was Gao Qirignian.
Bao moved into the small group of cottages where Gao
lived, renting one next to hers that had come open at just the
right time. The cottages were Japanese in style, with thin walls
and big windows, all clustered around a common garden. It was a
nice little neighbourhood.
In the mornings Bao started to hoe and plant vegetables
in one corner of that central garden. Through a gap between the
cottages he could see the great valley oaks in their streamside
gallery; beyond them the green rice paddies, and the isolated peak
of Mount Miwok, over a hundred li away, south of the great delta.
To the cast and north, more rice paddies, curving green on green.
The coastal range lay to the west,
the Cold Mountains to the east. He rode an old bicycle to
the college for classes, and taught his smaller seminars at a set
of picnic tables by the side of the stream, under a stand of
enormous valley oaks. Every once in a while he would rent a little
airboat from the airport just west of town, and pilot it down the
delta to Fangzhang, to visit Anzi and her family. Though Bao and
Anzi remained stiff and fractious with each other, the repetition
of these visits eventually made them seem normal, a pleasant ritual
in most respects. They did not seem connected to his memories of
the past, but an event of their own. Well, Bao would say to Gao,
I'm going to go down to Fangzhang and bicker with my daughter.
Have fun, Gao would say.
Mainly he stayed in Putatoi, and taught classes. He liked
the young people and their fresh faces. He liked the people who
lived in the cluster of cottages around the garden. They worked in
agriculture, mostly, either in the college's agronomy labs and
experimental fields, or out in the paddies and orchards themselves.
That was what people did in this valley. The neighbours all gave
him advice on how best to cultivate his little garden, and very
often it was conflicting advice, which was no very reassuring thing
given that they were among the world's experts on the topic, and
that there might be more people than there was food in the world to
feed them. But that too was a lesson, and though it worried him, it
also made him laugh. And he liked the labour, the sitting in the
earth, weeding and looking at vegetables grow. Staring across rice
terraces at Mount Miwok. He babysat for some of the younger couples
in the cottages, and talked with them about the events of the town,
and spent the evenings out lawn bowling with a group who liked to
do that.
Before long the routines of this life became as if they
were the only ones he had ever known. One morning, babysitting for
a little girl who had caught the chicken pox, sitting by her as she
lay thoughtlessly in a lukewarm oatmeal bath, stoically flicking
the water with her finger and occasionally moaning like a small
animal, he felt a sudden gust of happiness sweep through him,
simply because he was the old widower of the neighbourhood, and
people used him as a babysitter. Old Dragonfish. There had been
just such a man back in Beijing, living in a hole in the wall by
the Big Red Gate, repairing shoes and watching the children in the
street.
The deep sense of solitude that had afflicted Bao since Pan's
death began to slip away. Although the people he lived among now
were not Kung, nor Pan, nor Zhu Isao -- not the companions of his
fate just people he had fallen in with by accident --
nevertheless, they were now his community. Maybe this was the way
it had always happened, with no fate ever involved; you simply fell
in with the people around you, and no matter what else happened in
history or the great world, for the individual it was always a
matter of local acquaintances -- the village, the platoon, the work
unit, the monastery or madressa, the zawiyya or farm or apartment
block, or ship, or neighbourhood -- these formed the true
circumference of one's world, some twenty or so speaking parts, as
if they were in a play together. And no doubt each cast included
the same character types, as in Noh drama or a puppet play. And so
now he was the old widower, the babysitter, the broken down
old bureaucrat poet, drinking wine by the stream and singing
nostalgically at the moon, scratching with a hoe in his
unproductive garden. It made him smile; it gave him pleasure. He
liked having neighbours, and he liked his role among them.
Time passed. He continued to teach a few classes,
arranging for his seminars to meet out under the valley oaks.
'History!' he would say to them. 'It's a hard thing to
get at. There is no easy way to imagine it. The Earth rolls around
the sun, three hundred and sixty five and a quarter days a
year, for year after year. Thousands of these years have passed.
Meanwhile a kind of monkey kept on doing more things, increasing in
number, taking over the planet by means of meanings. Eventually
much of the matter and life on the planet was entrained to their
use, and then they had to work out what they wanted to do, beyond
merely staying alive. Then they told each other stories of how they
had got where they were, what had happened, and what it meant.'
Bao sighed. His students watched him.
'The way Zhu told the story, it is a matter of tragedy
for the individual, comedy for the society. Over the long pulses of
historical time, reconciliations can be achieved, that's the
comedy; but every individual meets a tragic end. We have to admit
here that no matter what else we say, for the individual death is
always an end and a catastrophe.'
His students regarded him steadily, perfectly willing to
admit this, for they were all about twenty five years
old, while he was near seventy, and so they felt immortal. This was
perhaps the evolutionary usefulness of the elderly, Bao had
concluded: to give the young some kind of psychic shield from
reality, putting them under a description which allowed them to
ignore the fact that age and death would come to them too, and
could come early and out of sequence. A very useful function! And
it gave the old some amusement as well, as well as an extra pinch
from their own mortality to remind them to appreciate life.
So he smiled at their unfounded equanimity, and said,
'But all right, we admit that catastrophe, and the people who live
go on. Go on! They knit things together as best they can. So, what
Zhu Isao used to say, what my old comrade Kung Jianguo used to say,
was that each time a generation pulls itself together, and revolts
against the established order of things in an attempt to make them
more just, it is doomed to fail in some respects; but it succeeds
in others; and in any case it gives something to posterity, even if
it be only knowledge of how hard things are. Which makes it
retroactively a kind of success. And so people go on.'
A young Aozhani woman, come here like so many others did
from all around the world, to study agriculture with the old adepts
at the college, said, 'But since we are all reincarnated anyway, is
death really such a catastrophe?'
Bao felt himself take a long breath. Like most
scientifically educated people, he did not believe in
reincarnation. It was clearly just a story, something out of the
old religions. But still how to account for his feeling of
cosmic solitude, the feeling that he had lost his eternal
companions? How to account for that experience at the Gold Gate,
holding his granddaughter aloft?
He thought about it for so long that the students began
to look at each other. Then he said carefully to the young woman,
'Well, let us try something. Think that there might be no bardo. No
heavens or hells, no afterlife at all. No continuation of your
consciousness, or even your soul. Imagine all you are is an
expression of your body, and when it finally succumbs to some
disorder and dies, you are gone for good. Gone utterly.'
The girl and the others stared at him.
He nodded. 'Then indeed you have to think again what
reincarnation might mean. For we need it. We all need it. And there
might be some, way to reconceptualize it so it still has meaning,
even if you admit that the death of the self is real.'
'But how?' the young woman said.
'Well, first, of course, there are the children. We are
literally reincarnated in new beings, though they are the mix of
two previous beings -- two beings who will live on in the
twistingladders that detach and recombine, passed on to subsequent
generations.'
'But that's not our consciousness.'
'No. But consciousness gets reincarnated another way,
when the people of the future remember us, and use our language,
and unconsciously model their lives on ours, living out some
recombination of our values and habits. We live on in the way
future people think and talk. Even if things change so much that
only the biological habits are the same, they are real for all that
-- perhaps more real than consciousness, more rooted in reality.
Remember, reincarnation means return to a new body.'
'Some of our atoms may do that literally,' one young man
offered.
'Indeed. In the endlessness of eternity, the atoms that
were part of our bodies for a time will move on, and be
incorporated in other life on this earth, and perhaps on other
planets in subsequent galaxies. SO we are diffusely reincarnate
through the universe.'
'But that's not our consciousness,' the young woman said
stubbornly.
'Not consciousness, nor the self. The ego, the string of
thoughts, the flow of consciousness, which no text or image has
ever managed to convey -- no.'
'But I don't want that to end,' she said.
'No. And yet it does. This is the reality we were born
into. We can't change it by desire.'
The young man said, 'The Buddha says we should give up
our desires.'
'But that too is a desire!' the young woman
exclaimed.
'So we never really give it up,' Bao agreed. 'What the
Buddha was suggesting is impossible. Desire is life trying to
continue to be life. All living things desire, bacteria feel
desire. Life is wanting.'
The young students thought it over. There is an age, Bao
thought, remembering, there is that time in your life, when you are
young and everything seems possible, and you want it all; you are
simply bursting with desire. You make love all night because
you want things so much.
He said, 'Another way of rescuing the concept of
reincarnation is simply to think of the species as the organism.
The organism survives, and has a collective consciousness of itself
-- that's history, or language, or the twistingladder structuring
our brains and it doesn't really matter what happens to any
one cell of this body. In fact their deaths are neces sary
for the body to stay healthy and go on, it's a matter of making
room for new cells. And if we think of it that way, then it might
increase feelings of solidarity and obligation to others. It makes
it clearer that if there is part of the body that is suffering, and
if at the same time another part commandeers the mouth and laughs
and proclaims that everything is really fine, dancing a jig like
the lost Christians as their flesh fell off -- then we understand
more clearly that this creature species or speciescreature is
insane, and cannot face its own sickness unto death. Seen
in that sense, more people might understand that the organism must
try to keep itself healthy throughout its whole body.'
The young woman was shaking her head. 'But that's not
reincarnation either. That's not what it means.'
Bao shrugged, gave up. 'I know. I know what you mean, I
think; it seems there should be something that endures of us. And I
myself have sometimes felt things. Once, down at Gold Gate . . .'
He shook his head. 'But there is no way to know. Reincarnation is a
story we tell; then in the end it's the story itself that is the
reincarnation.'
Over time Bao came to understand that teaching too was a
kind of reincarnation, in that years passed, and students came and
went, new young people all the time, but always the same age,
taking the same class; the class under the oak trees, reincarnated.
He began to enjoy that aspect of it. He would start the first class
by saying, 'Look, here we are again.' They never knew what to make
of it; same response, every time.
He learned, among other things, that teaching was the
most rigorous form of learning. He learned to learn more from his
students than they did from him; like so many other things, it was
the reverse of what it seemed to be, and colleges existed to bring
together groups of young people to teach some chosen few of their
elders the things that they knew about life, that the old teachers
had been in danger of forgetting. So Bao loved his students, and
studied them assiduously. Most of them,
he found, believed in reincarnation; it was what they had been
taught at home, even when they hadn't been given explicit religious
instruction. It was part of the culture, an idea that kept coming
back. So they brought it up, and he talked about it with them, in a
conversation reincarnated many times. Over time the students added
to his growing internal list of ways reincarnation was true: that
you might really come back as another life; that the various
periods of one's life were karmic reincarnations; that every
morning you reawakened to consciousness newly, and thus are
reincarnated every day to a new life.
Bao liked all of these. The last one he tried to live in
his daily existence, paying attention to his morning garden as if
he had never seen it before, marvelling at the strangeness and
beauty of it. In his classes he tried to talk about history newly,
thinking things through yet again, not allowing himself to say
anything that he had ever said before; this was hard, but
interesting. One day in one of the ordinary classrooms (it was
winter, and raining), he said, 'What's hardest to catch is daily
life. This is what I think rarely gets written down, or even
remembered by those who did it -- what you did on the days when you
did the ordinary things, how it felt doing it, the small variations
time and again, until years have passed. A matter of repetitions,
or almost repetitions. Nothing, in other words, that could be
easily encoded into the usual forms of emplotment, not dharma or
chaos, or even tragedy or comedy. just ... habit.'
One intense young man with thick black eyebrows replied,
as if contradicting him, 'Everything happens only once!'
And that too he had to remember. There was no doubt at
all that it was true. Everything happens only once!
And so, eventually, one particular day came: first day of
spring, Day One of Year 87, a festival day, first morning of this
life, first year of this world; and Bao got up early with Gao and
went out with some others, to hide coloured eggs and wrapped sweets
in the grass of the lawn and meadow, and on the streambank. This
was the ritual in their ring of cottages; every New Year's Day the
adults would go out and hide eggs that had been coloured the day
before, and sweets wrapped in vibrantly coloured metallic wrapping,
and at the appointed hour of the morning all the children of the
neighbourhood would be unleashed on their hum baskets in
hand, the older ones racing forwards pouncing on finds to pile in
their baskets, the youngest ones staggering dreamily from one great
discovery to the next. Bao had learned to love this morning,
especially that last walk downstream to the meeting point, after
all the eggs and sweets had been hidden: he strolled through the
high wet grass with his spectacles taken off, sometimes, so that
the real flowers and their pure colours were mixed in with the
artificial colours of the eggs and the sweet wrappers, and the
meadow and streambank became like a painting or a dream, a
hallucinated meadow and streambank, with more colours, and stranger
colours, than any nature had ever made on her own, all dotting the
omnipresent and surging vivid green.
So he made this walk again, as he had for so many years
now, the sky a perfect blue above, like another coloured egg over
them. The air was cool, the dew heavy on the grass. His feet were
wet. The glimpsed sweet wrappers broke in his peripheral vision,
cyanic and fuchsia and lime and copper, sparkier even than in
previous years, he thought. Putah Creek was running high, purling
over the salmon weirs. A doe and fawn stood in one brake like
statues of themselves, watching him pass.
He came to the gathering place and sat to watch the
children race about in their egghunt, shouting and squealing. He
thought, if you can see that all the kids are happy, then maybe
things are going to be all right after all.
In any case, this hour of pleasure. The adults stood
around drinking green tea and coffee, eating cakes and
hard boiled eggs, shaking hands or embracing. 'Happy new year!
Happy new year!' Bao sat down in a low chair to watch their
faces.
One of the three year olds he sometimes babysat
came wandering by, distracted by the contents of her wicker basket.
'Look!' she said when she saw him. 'Egg!'
She plucked a red egg from her basket and shoved it in
his face. He pulled back his head warily; like many of the children
in the neighbourhood, this one had come into the world in the
avatar of a complete maniac, and it would not be unlike her to
whack him on the forehead with the egg just to see what would
happen.
But this morning she was serene; she merely held the egg
out between them for their mutual inspection, both rapt in
contemplation of it. It had been steeped in the vinegar and dye
solution for a long time, and was as vividly red as the sky was
blue. Red curve in a blue curve, red' and blue together 'Very
nice!' Bao said, pulling his head back to see it better. 'A red
egg, that means happiness.'
'Egg!'
'Yes, that too. Red egg!'
'You can have it,' she said to him, and put the egg in
his hand.
'Thank you!'
She wandered on. Bao looked at the egg; it was redder
than he could remember the dye being, mottled in the way eggshells
got when dyed, but everywhere deeply red.
The breakfast party was coming to a close, the kids
sitting around busily chewing some of their treasure, the adults
taking the paper plates inside. All at peace. Bao wished for a
second that Kung had lived to see this scene. He had fought for
something like this little age of peace, fought so full of anger
and hilarity; it seemed only fair that he should have got to see
it. But -- fair. No. No, there would be another Kung in the village
someday, perhaps that little girl, suddenly so intent and serious.
Certainly they were all repeated again and again, the whole cast:
in every group a Ka and a Ba, as in Old Red Ink's anthology, Ka
always complaining with the caw of the crow, the cough of the cat,
the cry of coyote, caw, caw, that fundamental protest; and then Ba
always Ba, the banal baa of the water buffalo, the sound of the
plough bound to the earth, the bleat of hope and fear, the bone
inside. The one who missed the missing Ka, and felt the loss
keenly, if intermittently, distracted by life; but also the one who
had to do whatever possible to keep things going in that absence.
Go on! The world was changed by the Kungs, but then the Baos had to
try to hold it together, baaing their way along. All of them
together playing their parts, performing their tasks in some dharma
they never quite understood.
Right now his task was to teach. Third meeting of this
particular class, when they began to get into things. He was
looking forward to it.
He took the red egg back with him to his cottage, put it
on his desk. He put his papers in his shoulder bag, said goodbye to
Gao, got on his old bike and pedalled down the path to the college.
The bike path followed Puta Creek, and the new leaves on the trees
shaded the path, so that its asphalt was still wet with dew. The
flowers in the grass looked like coloured eggs and sweets
wrappers, everything stuffed with its own colour, the sky overhead
unusually clear and dark for the valley, almost cobalt. The opaque
water in the stream was the colour of apple jade. Valley oaks as
big as villages overhung its banks.
He parked his bike, and seeing a gang of snow monkeys in
the tree overhead, locked it to a stand. These monkeys enjoyed
rolling bikes down the bank into the stream, two or three
cooperating to launch them upright on their course. It had happened
to Bao's bike more than once, before he purchased a lock and
chain.
He walked on, downstream to the round picnic table where
he always instructed his spring classes to meet him. Never had the
greens of grass and leaf been so green before, they made him a bit
unsteady on his feet. He recalled the little girl and her egg, the
peace of the little celebration, everyone doing what they always
did on this first day. His class would be the same as well. It
always came down to this. There they were under the giant oak tree,
gathering around the round table, and he would sit down with them
and tell them as much as he could of what he had learned, trying to
get it across to them, giving them what little portion of his
experience he could. He would say to them, 'Come here, sit down, I
have some stories to tell, about how people go on.'
But he was there to learn too. And this time, under the
jade and emerald leaves, he saw that there was a beautiful young
woman who had joined them, a Travancori student he had not seen
before, darkskinned, black haired, thick eyebrowed, eyes
flashing as she glanced briefly up at him from across the picnic
table. A sharp glance, suffused with a profound scepticism; by that
look alone he could tell that she did not believe in teachers, that
she did not trust them, that she was not prepared to believe a
single thing he said. He would have a lot to learn from her.
He smiled and sat down, waited for them to grow still. 'I
see we have someone new joining us,' he said, indicating the young
woman with a polite nod. The other students looked at her
curiously. 'Why don't you introduce yourself?'
'Hello,' the young woman said. 'My name is Kali.'