It was indeed bamboo, Shan saw as he knelt beside the rongpa, a sturdy piece over two inches in diameter. Shan dug a finger around the end of the cylinder, then abruptly pulled his hand away and looked at Ma, who returned his steady gaze. Lhandro finished the digging and raised his find. It was not a water pipe. It was capped at both ends, and made a rattling sound when he shook it. Shan looked from Ma to Jokar, who solemnly nodded as though to confirm Shan's suspicions. Lhandro saw the exchange, and looked from face to face, searching for an answer to the mystery. His gaze settled on his father.
'He's a good man, that professor,' Lepka said. 'We have told him things about what has happened to you, and to Shan.'
Lhandro took the cylinder to the professor, expectation in his eyes, but Ma simply placed it beside the other artifacts on the bench, without comment. Shan stood, and stepped to the wooden chest beyond the professor and opened it. Inside, beside the felt that covered the bronze shard he had seen before, was another piece of felt. He lifted the top layer. It covered a human skull, with a jagged hole in its temple.
'I don't understand,' Winslow said over his shoulder. Shan looked up and followed the American's gaze to Lhandro's father, who rose slowly and sat on the ground at the edge of the dig, rocking slowly back and forth. The American picked up the bamboo canister and shook it as Shan lifted the bronze shard and studied its markings again. He ran his fingers along the Chinese characters.
Shan took the cylinder from the American. He had one of his own, probably older than this one, handed down from his great-grandfather, left for safekeeping with the lamas in Lhadrung. He twisted the top of the cylinder and it loosened, then pulled free in his hand. He dumped the contents onto the bench. Lacquered sticks of yarrow wood, yellow with age.
'Sixty-four,' he said in a voice tight with emotion. 'There will be sixty-four sticks.' He looked up into the confused faces of those around him. 'Throwing sticks, for the Taoist verses.' He looked back at Lepka. Stickmen, he had said. Lepka had had nightmares about the stickmen. Shan turned to Winslow and quickly explained how the sticks were used to ritually build a chapter number by throwing them and separating them into groups of three, using the grouping remaining after the count to create solid or broken lines that in turn built one of the tetragrams which, in the tables memorized by students of the Tao referred to a specific chapter of the Tao te Ching. Like the tetragramLepka had unexpectedly drawn at the mixing ledge. 'I would throw sticks like these for hours with my father when I was young,' Shan said quietly, 'and we would take turns reciting the Tao.'
He fingered the shard again. Now that he knew what to look for, deciphering was simple. 'It is Chapter Seventy,' he explained, 'in Tibetan and Chinese.' He pointed to the characters. 'The verse ends here with these characters,' he said, and looked to Lepka.
'Evolved individuals wear a coarse covering with precious jade at the center,' the old Tibetan recited as he stared at the pile of sticks. Jade. The leg of jade was of an ox. It had been a statue of Lao Tzu, the Taoist sage, with his ox.
Shan continued to search Lepka's face. 'When the soldiers came, the Lujun troops, there weren't just Tibetans living in this valley,' he said.
The old man shook his head. 'My father explained the secret to me before he died,' he said, looking at Lhandro with apology in his eyes. 'Some Chinese had come, twenty or thirty years before the Lujun soldiers came, to build a small Taoist temple. They were scholars he said, who lived like hermits, trying to explain the similarities between the teachings of the Tao and the teachings of Buddha. To bridge the gaps between our peoples. Monks came from Rapjung sometimes and they would have debates or throw the sticks and recite verses for us. The village would come and listen.'
He looked at Jokar, who offered a nod of encouragement. 'They weren't any problem, they were peaceful, and built gardens for the herbs that the Rapjung monks used. They spoke of how wonderful it would be if Chinese and Tibetans could work together to study the mysteries of healing, and they themselves took lessons from the lamas.' Lepka looked toward the army tents for a moment, then turned his gaze back to the freshly turned soil. 'My father was away in the Tibetan army when it happened. He said those monks would probably have tried to stop the Chinese soldiers, too, that they would not have wanted bloodshed. But there was no one left from Yapchi when the soldiers left, no one to defend those Chinese monks. When people came from the villages nearby and found all the bodies, they went crazy.'
He looked only at Shan now as he spoke, as if he were confessing, as if it were a story he had to tell to a Han. 'My father said probably those Chinese monks were trying to bury the bodies, trying to help. But the people were too angry.'
Too angry at Chinese, he meant. People came and became crazed with rage and the lust for revenge. Not soldiers, but the farmers and herders. He looked at the skull in the still-open bench. A hoe could have killed that monk, or a pick.
'They couldn't tell anyone afterwards,' Lepka said forlornly, wringing his hands. His wife stood beside him, holding his shoulder tightly. 'If word got out about the Chinese monks, the Chinese army would return. So our families burnt the Tao temple and covered it with a barley field.' Tears streamed down the old man's face. 'Afterwards, the monks from Rapjung heard. They came and said words for the Chinese, for all those who had died. They made the people reopen the grave that had been dug for the Yapchi villagers and bury whatever remains they could find of the monks with the villagers. Made the people who had killed the monks promise to send their first sons to become dobdobs at the gompa, so such a thing could not happen again.' He looked at the yak-like Dzopa. Enforcers of virtue, Chemi had called the monk policemen. 'My brother went,' Lepka said, 'but he died at Rapjung when Mao's children came.'
Suddenly there were loud voices at the platform, commands for workers to leave the platform and allow the dignitaries to be seated. The chairs and benches were quickly filled with Chinese and Tibetans in business suits. Jenkins's secretary stood at the top of the stairs, welcoming the guests, handing them paper programs, but glancing frequently toward one of the army tents, where a tight knot of soldiers had formed. Lin must be there, with Anya. Other soldiers were moving around the compound, holding their weapons conspicuously.
Professor Ma had opened Dzopa's backpack and produced a blanket from it to cover the fallen sentry but it was only a matter of time before the man revived, Shan knew, and more trouble would begin. An officer from Lin's command climbed onto the stage and stood beside a microphone on a stand, facing the assembled dignitaries as he waved a polished wooden pointer in the air. He was gesturing toward the ruined village, the denuded slopes, even the patch of scorched earth where the painted rock had been. He explained the victorious role of the People's Liberation Army in the opening of the valley, and pointed out the soldiers stationed on the outer perimeter of the camp like a security net.
Shan looked back at the blanket. It was white, heavily soiled but still white, streaked with lines of soot. Dzopa's blanket. Dzopa who had traveled with Jokar from India. Shan's vision seemed to blur a moment, and he saw something else, in his mind's eye. He saw Jokar sitting in the night wrapped in Dzopa's blanket. He saw Drakte running, frantic, in great pain, fleeing from Tuan's howlers, knowing the white-shirted men were pursuing, trying to capture him, perhaps even trying to ambush him. He saw Drakte pause as a white figure appeared before him, saw Drakte fit a stone to his sling and fire a shot into Jokar's neck. The shudder that coursed through his body somehow told Shan that he had glimpsed the truth.
Another figure appeared, striding purposefully up the stairs, watched expectantly by the seated figures. It was Jenkins, now wearing a clean blue shirt and red tie, leading half a dozen others in ties and blue shirts, including two Westerners. As Jenkins stepped aside and gestured his party onto the platform, Shan spotted another group assembling near the platform. Or being assembled. Over fifty Tibetans were being herded by soldiers toward the front of the platform. The forced laborers, Shan suspected, by the way several of them acknowledged Lhandro and Nyma with small, tight nods.
Finally came Special Director Zhu, and an older woman wearing a dark grey suit, and a large-brimmed straw hat against the sun, to sit in the last two seats of the front row. Zhu began to sit, then straightened, squinting toward the dig, toward Shan and Jokar and Tenzin. Even from the distance Shan sensed his sudden excitement and he watched as Zhu called a knob soldier to the edge of the platform and pointed in their direction. The knob took several strides toward the dig, then paused as an army officer called out. The officer bolted up the platform steps, looking toward the southern end of the valley as he spoke excitedly into a handheld radio. After a moment the officer ran to Jenkins and pointed southward with a victorious gleam.
Shan could not hear the conversation, but from the man's excitement, from the way the party in blue shirts raised their hands, clapping in Jenkins's direction, he knew the soldiers had scored one last victory. An army truck