Meng shook his shoulder. They were at the main gate, a guard leaning inside the window with a clipboard. “Your son’s name, Shan. They need his name.”
“Shan Ko,” he said, his voice breaking. “Barracks fourteen.”
The guard paused as he heard the name, then glanced pointedly at Meng and lowered the clipboard without looking at it. “Don’t waste your time,” he muttered.
“Is he or isn’t he a prisoner in the Four hundred and fourth?” Meng demanded.
“Of course he is. But he is in solitary. Locked up this past week. No visitors for those in solitary.”
Only when Meng cast a worried glance at him did Shan realize a moan had escaped his throat.
“We are coming in,” the lieutenant stated.
The guard shrugged and pointed to a strip of gravel inside the gate.
Shan did not argue when she told him to stay in the car. He watched the compound behind the razor wire, saw the rail-thin prisoners shuffling around the perimeter, saw old men too weak to walk being carried out into pools of sunlight, the Sunday rituals of the camp. This was no reeducation camp, this was where Beijing ground its enemies into dust. Shan found himself clutching the seat, as if part of him expected to be seized and thrown back inside the wire at any moment. It was always like this when he waited on visiting days. Some days he would pace back and forth in front of the gate, calming himself before going through. Once a prisoner always a prisoner.
It was nearly an hour before Meng finally returned, a guard at her side. “Only fifteen minutes,” she announced. “I’m sorry.”
As he climbed out he shot a confused glance toward her, knowing he should thank her. Here in the prison, with her standing by him in her uniform, he could not forget that more than once he had been interrogated, even beaten by women like her. But getting a prisoner out of the special punishment lockup, however briefly, was nothing short of a miracle.
They left him alone in the sterile, drafty chamber reserved for visits, with barred windows and four heavy metal chairs bolted to the cement floor, each with two stools in front of it. He stared out a window, looking for familiar faces among the prisoners until he heard the closing of the metal door at the end of the long corridor leading to the isolated room, then quickly sat on a stool, facing a chair. He knew better than to watch.
The rattle of the chains down the hall was always a slow torture for Shan. They seemed to wrap around his heart and wrench it with each step. He forced himself to stare at the metal chair, not looking up even when he realized the rattle was different this time, not the usual sound of Ko’s foot manacles.
Then suddenly they were beside him, two beefy guards flanking their slender prisoner. Shan clenched his jaw to keep from crying out. A heavy leather collar had been placed around Ko’s neck, with a link through which a chain was fastened. The chain was wrapped around hand manacles and connected to a link on his foot chains. The guards shoved him into the chair and looped still another chain to bind him to a metal ring on the chair before retreating.
When he looked up his son was grinning. “They seem to think I am the wildest tiger in their cage.”
Shan opened his mouth to speak and found he couldn’t. He swallowed and tried again. “What happened?”
“When I didn’t get your letter I was worried. But then they pulled me out of the barracks one night and dragged me to the lockup. Then I knew everything was all right.”
“But why, Ko? What was it?”
“Nothing. That’s what I mean,” Ko said, still grinning. “I didn’t do a thing this time. That’s when I realized you must be okay, that you had just done something that really pissed them off.”
Ko had been a handsome youth but his years in prison had aged him prematurely. He was hard and thin and scarred. Two fingers, once broken, had never healed properly and were permanently crooked. His grin revealed teeth chipped from beatings. He smelled of urine.
“Do they feed you?” Shan asked.
“Sure. Piles of beef and chicken. So much I had to go on a diet.”
Shan offered a hollow smile. He fought the compulsion to leap up and embrace his son for fear of bringing the guards from the back of the chamber. “I had a dream the other night,” he said to his son. “A memory really, but so vivid. I was visiting you when you were five or six. I took you to the cricket market in Beijing. There were hundreds of crickets, fighting crickets, singing crickets, crickets bred just to be beautiful, each in its own cage. I couldn’t drag you away. We stayed for hours, talking to the old men who sold them. Even the cages were amazing, intricate little things of bamboo and rosewood and molded gourds with carved ivory caps. One of them let you take his cricket for a walk on a leash of braided silk thread. You couldn’t stop laughing. I told you about my grandfather, who had a green cricket with a funny name that always sang at midnight. You kept laughing at the name, kept repeating it all the way home.”
Ko was staring at him now with an empty expression, as if he did not hear. Sometimes he would stay like that for Shan’s entire visit. For several months he had been confined to a hospital for the criminally insane, where experimental drugs had been used.
Shan kept speaking, about the weather, about Lokesh, about how he had made some friends in the new Pioneer town. He always kept talking when Ko blanked out, though he didn’t know if he did so for Ko, for himself, or for the guards.
“There’s an owl who comes,” Ko suddenly said.
Shan cocked his head.
“I have one of those tiny windows near the top of my cell. He comes in the middle of the night. He spits out fur and bones from his prey and I eat them.” Ko’s voice dropped to a whisper. “He dropped a feather the other night. I have to keep it hidden because they would confiscate it. But when the guards aren’t near I take it out and study it. It’s a miracle, you know, a feather.”
“I know what Lokesh will say. A deity has sought you out in owl form.”
Ko grinned again. “Five years ago I would have laughed at that. Now I am not so sure.”
“Then there is hope for you yet, Son.”
They both smiled. Despite where they were, despite the tortured paths their lives had taken, when they were together they smiled a lot. But Ko had seen something in his father’s eyes. “You have to push it down,” his son declared.
“I’m sorry?”
“You taught me that. The greatest power of a prisoner lies in pushing down his fear.”
The words made Shan’s throat constrict. He offered a small, slow nod.
Ko kept smiling as his face drifted back into the vacant, unfocused expression.
Shan became aware that the guards were at his side, releasing Ko from his chair. “Be well, Son,” he said quietly. “Lha gyal lo.”
When he turned he saw Meng waiting, staring at the two of them from the back of the room. She too was silent as his son was escorted past her into the corridor. Halfway down the hall Ko’s voice rang out. “Thunder Dragon!” he shouted. “Grandfather’s cricket was called Thunder Dragon!” He staggered as a guard pounded his shoulder, then slowly straightened and marched on.
Shan kept watching until the heavy metal door slammed behind his son.
* * *
It was Meng who broke the long silence on the drive back to the valley. “He’s going to survive,” she said in a tight voice. “I can see it in his eyes. They burn like yours.”
He pointed to a family of partridges crossing the road. He had no stomach for talk of prisons and prisoners. The visit with Ko had been more painful than most. He knew he would relive it, every second of it, the next time he tried to sleep.
Meng dropped him off where she had found him that morning. No one answered, however, when he knocked on Yuan’s door. He considered walking the miles to Lung’s compound for his truck but knew the repairs would not have been completed. In the square he sat on a bench across from the plinth. The statue that had been on it was gone. Someone had placed a little souvenir Buddha there instead, looking ridiculously small on the big stone base. It stood on its own plinth, a red book of Mao’s quotations.