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The Ninth Buddha

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by Daniel Easterman




  The Ninth Buddha

  Daniel Easterman

  An international thriller in the classic tradition by the author of "The Seventh Sanctuary", this story follows the trail of murder and mystery initiated by the kidnapping of a young man. His father's search leads him to Mongolia and an encounter with the goddess Chindamani.

  From Publishers Weekly

  East collides with West--on a battlefield drawn along political, religious and metaphysical lines--in this superior, offbeat thriller set mainly in India, Tibet and Mongolia in 1921. When his 10-year-old son William is kidnapped at knifepoint, semi-retired British intelligence agent Christopher Wylam embarks on a nightmarish search that leads him to a gilded Tibetan monastery complex high in the mountains. William's abduction is bizarrely linked to a prophecy that an incarnation of the Buddha will become rightful ruler of Mongolia and the world. Bolshevik agents and White Russians want control of the young future potentate; so do Tibetan lamas and the British. The plot turns on reincarnation at a couple of key points, yet Easterman ( The Last Assassin ; The Seventh Sanctuary ) provides a cultural context that lends credibility. Christopher's tragic romance with Chindamani, a small, delicate woman whose body sometimes serves as vehicle for an incarnating goddess, makes for erotic, spiritual love scenes. To write about the exotic East without romanticizing is difficult enough, but Easterman goes one better: his suspenseful, beautifully written novel attains some kind of wisdom, an exceedingly rare achievement in an adventure-thriller.

  The Ninth Buddha

  by Daniel Easterman

  By the same author

  The Last Assassin

  The Seventh Sanctuary

  THE NINTH BUDDHA

  Copyright © Daniel Easterman 1988 All rights reserved.

  PART ONE

  Advent

  ‘.. . twenty centuries of stony sleep Were vexed to nightmare by a rocking cradle.. ..”

  W. B Yeats, The Second Coming’

  Hexham

  Hexham, England, December 1920 Snow had fallen in the night, a stark white emblem of another world, purity lost and stranded in the depths of our humanity.

  Above Causey Hill, a white, bloated fog hung like a freezing shroud. The long, low lights of Advent huddled in the cold and gloom, extinguishing their flames in preparation for the mystery that was to come. In halls and cottages, the fires of Christmas were emblazoned with frost and rimmed with soot. In village squares, in the ancient gathering darkness, ice formed on newly erected monuments to ten million dead.

  Night and the expectation of night to come, the great untrammelled dark barking and whispering beneath the eaves all winter long, the dull onslaught of mystery in the hard, silent heart of an unredeemed and unforgiving world. God and the expectation of God to come. The Lord of light and darkness would return as he had always done, born into the freezing flesh of the dying year.

  The Prince of Peace would come into a world freshly awakened from a nightmare of slaughter in which whole armies of innocents had died, a world at whose bloodletting even Herod might have blanched. It was harder now than it had ever been.

  In the soft, candled interior of St. Mary’s, evening mass was reaching its climax. In view of the bad weather, it had been decided to hold a second mass that day, for those who had not been able to attend in the morning. The ancient liturgy unfolded its mysteries among the shadows. At the altar, the violet-coloured vestments of the priest enhanced the darkness as his voice enhanced the silence.

  Holding the chalice in his left hand, the priest made the sign of the cross with his right.

  Benedixit, deditque discipuhs suis, dicens: Accipite, et bibite ex co omnes.

  He raised the chalice, blood mixed with water, wine

  Hie est emm Cahx Sangmms met .. . for this is the chalice of my blood...

  Christopher Wylam sat in the last row of worshippers, rising with them and sitting again, intoning the responses, telling his beads, inhaling the wafted incense. His son William sat beside him, tiny fingers echoing his father’s, speaking what he knew of the responses. William was ten, but he carried himself like an older child, as though he already knew a little of what life held in store for him.

  His father was something of an enigma to the boy. Until fourteen months ago, Christopher had been little more than a name to the boy. William still remembered the photographs in his mother’s room at Carfax, the house just outside Hexham where they lived with Aunt Harriet and his three cousins, Roger, Charles and Annabel. He had never been able to relate the man in those faded prints to the shadowy figure he had last seen at the age of three, waving sadly to him and his mother as their crowded train pulled slowly out of Delhi Station.

  But he remembered almost nothing of Delhi now, only little things, like snatches of dreams: an old ayah bending over him and singing softly into the throbbing night, a toy elephant on wheels that he had pulled along behind him on a length of string, great white mosquito nets suspended in the hot air above his cot.

  Christopher had returned to William’s world only to shatter it, a stranger in strange garb, claiming him for his own. The boy remembered his mother’s feverish excitement as the hour of Christopher’s return drew closer the dangerously flushed cheeks, the sunken eyes bright with thoughts of his homecoming. He himself had hoped for a soldier coming home from the war at last, wearing a uniform and bright medals that would catch the sun.

  “Bye, Baby Bunting, Daddy’s gone a-hunting,” his mother had sung in the nights to him when he was small, exorcizing the fatherless dark.

  “Gone to fetch a rabbit-skin to wrap a Baby Bunting in.” But he had been met at the gate by a quiet man in civilian dress, a man who had no tales of heroism to tell and no medals for his son to polish.

  William’s disappointment had been keen. His cousins had not helped:

  their father, William’s Uncle Adam, had been killed at the

  Somme three years before. His photographs, draped in black crepe, took pride of place on the high mantelpieces at Carfax; his medals lay on velvet in a glass case in the hall; and a tablet to his memory stood just left of the altar at St. Mary’s.

  Roger and Charles made William’s life a misery. They mocked his father, who, they said, had never been a soldier at all; or, if he had, must have sat at a desk in India throughout the war a sort of conchie, really. Once, they had left a white feather on William’s bed, bearing a little hand-made label: “For your father’.

  All this might have been hard enough for a boy of nine to bear.

  But his father’s return coincided with the beginning of his mother’s last struggle against the illness that had been consuming her for the past eighteen months.

  “The decline’, people said when they thought William was not listening, and he could tell from the way they averted their eyes that they expected the worst. She had kept going for the past six months in anticipation of Christopher’s return. He had seen it in her eyes each time he visited her in her cold bedroom: a violent craving that exalted and exhausted her.

  Two months after Christopher’s arrival, just before Christmas, when everyone seemed to be preparing for festivity, for new birth in an old world, his mother died in her sleep.

  Though he knew it to be unjust, William blamed his father for her death. And Christopher himself earned a measure of guilt about with him that only served to reinforce his son’s unspoken accusation. The truth was that he felt awkward with the boy and unable to come to terms with his wife’s death. Explanations were beyond him. In the hard winter that followed, he would walk for hours across cold, infertile fields, seeking to resolve his guilt or at least pacify it for a while. He kept a painful distance between himself and the boy.

  Spring had thawed the fields and laid the first flowers o
n Elizabeth’s grave, but it had done nothing to bring father and son closer. It was decided that William should go to Winchester that autumn. And then, abruptly, all that had changed. One day, while Christopher was in Hexham with his sister Harriet, William went unobserved to his father’s room and opened his desk. What was he looking for? He himself could not have answered that. In a sense, he was looking for his father. And in a sense he found him.

  Inside a drawer in the top right-hand corner, he found a small

  red box among a pile of papers. On the lid was the royal crest, and inside lay a medal in the shape of a cross. William recognized it at once: the Victoria Cross. He had seen a reproduction of it in a magazine during the war. In an envelope next to the box was a letter from Buckingham Palace, in which Major Christopher Wylam was commended in the highest terms for ‘exceptional bravery in service to his King and Country’.

  For days William was torn between excitement at his discovery and guilt about the means by which he had come by it. On the Sunday, after church, he confessed to his father: by now he needed an explanation more than he feared any possible punishment. And that afternoon, for the first time, they talked in Christopher’s study until the fire died down and turned to ashes.

  Christopher told the boy that there was more to war than pitched battles or tanks or aeroplanes; that the war he had fought in India had been lonely and diseased and treacherous; and that what he now told William must remain an inviolate secret between them.

  From that day, they had begun to draw close, each sharing the other’s grief at last, as far as possible. It was agreed that William ought to stay at least another year at Carfax, after which they would decide whether he should go away to school at all. When summer came, there were roses on Elizabeth’s grave.

  They had reached the Paternoster. The priest recited the familiar prayer aloud, his lips moving with rich and practised smoothness.

  He must already have spoken those same words countless thousands of times in his lifetime. He was a young man, in his early thirties: he had served as a chaplain during the war. Christopher wondered what he thought of while he prayed, of Christ stretched out on the wooden frame of his consecrated life, nailed to him, hand to hand, foot to foot? Of the solemnity of these, his daily actions? Of his priestly role, ordained to bind and loose, to curse and bless? Or did he think of his dinner, of turnip and meat pie and roasted potatoes swimming in thick gravy?

  To an astute observer, it would have been obvious at a glance that

  Christopher Wylam was an Englishman who had spent little time in

  England. He seemed ill-at-ease in his winter clothes, and his skin

  still retained much of the colouring that can only be

  obtained in warmer climates. His fair hair had been bleached by the sun and was swept back from a high, mournful forehead. There were wrinkles at the corners of his eyes, finely etched lines radiating towards the temples like filaments spun from a spider’s web. The eyes themselves were dark and heavy-lidded, yet touched by a depth and clarity that caught others unawares. One sensed perhaps it was only a trick of the candlelight that his eyes were closed to what was happening in the church and opened on to other, more alien vistas.

  He looked round the small church. Not many had ventured out this evening. Men and women and restive children filled the front pews, some genuinely pious, others there from force of habit or a sense of duty. He himself came for William’s sake and perhaps as a penance for his betrayal of Elizabeth.

  The priest had broken the Host and taken the Body of Christ.

  He lifted the chalice and drank the consecrated wine, the blood of God, the blood of Christ, the blood of the world, red with redemption.

  Christopher imagined how the wine must taste, imagined it transformed into blood, and he felt a sour bile rising in his throat.

  Father Middleton had preached of Christ’s coming and prayed that the peace of Christmas might remain throughout the coming year; but Christopher had no welcome for the pale god-child of Christmas. There was no celebration in his heart tonight, only a dull anger that REGAINED against God and His season of specious joy There was silence as the priest raised a fragment of the Host and held it high before the congregation.

  “Ecce Agnus Dci, behold the Lamb of God,” he said, ‘ecce qui tollit peccata mundi, behold him who takes away the sins of the world.”

  One by one, the congregation rose and made for the altar, weighed down with sins, all but the children. Christopher stood up and followed William to join the line of waiting sinners. An old man knelt and opened his mouth, tongue partly extended to receive God’s body.

  Corpus Domini nostn .. .

  So many sins, thought Christopher, as he watched the silver paten flash in the candlelight. The Host touched the old man’s tongue. Mortal sins, venial sins, the seven deadly sins. Sins of commission and omission, the sins of pride and lust and gluttony, sins of the flesh, sins of the mind, sins of the spirit. Sins of the eye, sins of the hearing, sins of the heart.

  Jesu Christi .. .

  He knelt and opened his mouth. He felt the wafer touch his lips, dry, tasteless, forlorn. . custodial ammam tuam in vitam aeternam. Amen.

  When Elizabeth had died, something in him had followed her.

  He and William had visited her grave earlier that day, a little, snow-covered mound among so many behind the church. She belonged to the earth now. He remembered the funeral the frost, the ground hard like iron, the spades futile, out of season, the black horses, their breath hanging naked and abandoned in the thin winter air.

  He remembered her as she had been in those last two months:

  pale and feverish by turns, remote, her face turned to the wall, intensely conscious of death’s approach. There was nothing sculpted or romantic about her passage from the world, nothing fine or ethereal: just a young woman racked with pain, just blood and sputum, and in the end decay. After her death, men had come and burned her clothes and the furniture in her bedroom and scraped the walls as though they harboured some deadly miasmatic force. She had been thirty-one.

  For two months, he had sat by her bedside holding her hand;

  and for two months he had been conscious that they had become strangers to one another. She had died in his arms, but a nurse would have done as well. More than a war lay between them: in their world, love was as hard to come by as forgiveness. They had met in Delhi eleven years earlier, at the first dance of the winter season. She had come out with the “Fishing Fleet’ the annual contingent of eligible young ladies in search of husbands and had stayed behind as Mrs. Wylam. He had not loved her Fishing Fleet girls did not expect love but he had learnt to care for her.

  He sat down in his pew again. At the altar, the priest purified the chalice and began to recite the Antiphon: “Ecce Virgo conapiet et panel filium. Behold a Virgin shall conceive and bear a son.”

  In another month, Christopher would be forty, but he felt older.

  His generation what there was left of it was already old: young

  old men to rule a decaying Empire and heal the breaches left by war. He shuddered. There would be another war in Europe. A year ago, the thought would have left him cold. But now he had a son to fear for.

  Unlike so many who had fought in the trenches in France and Belgium, Christopher’s mind and body were intact. But his own war, that dark, secret and dirty war whose details he was not even permitted to speak of, had changed him. He had returned with his body whole and his spirit in tatters: cold, cold and lonely, and the dusts of India choking him, filling his throat and chest and nostrils with dry and bitter odours.

  Elizabeth’s death so soon after his return had made of that change a permanent and frozen thing, hard, calcified in the blood, ineradicable. It consisted in part of the obvious things that came through war and death: bitterness, a loss of joy, a certain coldness of the affections, grief written large, a deep sense of futility. But there were other feelings too, feelings that surprised him: a profound sense of huma
n worth under all the tawdriness, compassion both for the men he had killed and for himself in his former ruthlessness, patience to accept what he had come to believe was inevitable. At times he dreamed of tall white mountains and cool, wave less lakes. And he spent a lot of time with William.

  The priest read the last Gospel, final prayers were said, vespers were sung, and the service came to its appointed end. Christopher took William’s hand and led him out of the glittering church into the darkness. It was the Sunday before Christmas, but he found it hard to believe that God would ever return to earth.

  They did not notice the car waiting in the shadows further down the street.

  “Christopher.”

  He turned to see a figure approaching from the side door of the church.

  Father Middleton, still in his cassock, was making towards them.

  “Good evening, Father. What can I do for you?”

  “I’d like to talk with you, Christopher, if I may. Could I walk with you a little? Would you mind?”

  The priest was shivering slightly from the cold. His thin cassock was more a spiritual than a physical garment. But he was a strong man who made a point of defying the elements when he could.

  Christopher liked him: he made no show of piety and had helped after Elizabeth’s death by steering well clear of all talk of the blessed souls in paradise.

  “Perhaps we could talk in the church,” suggested Christopher.

  “It’s cold for you out here.”

  Father Middleton shook his head firmly.

  “Nonsense, Christopher. I won’t die. You’ve both got some way to go. And I only want a few words anyway: just along Hencotes past the Sele, then I’ll leave you and get back to my little fire.”

  Christopher nodded and they set off. He felt his son’s small hand in his, warm and fragile, the frosted snow giving beneath his feet, the fog gathering force beyond the limits of the flickering gas lamps The presence of the priest made him self-conscious. Somewhere behind them, a car door opened and closed in the darkness.

 

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