swarming in and out of the buildings, herding the few remaining inhabitants into the central square, while other officers stood at the edge of the field, blowing whistles at the retreating residents.
Meng gestured to the chaos. “Welcome to our model Pioneer community,” she said. “If Major Liang had his way he’d probably burn the town down.”
“I don’t understand.”
“The bodies. Late yesterday someone stole the bodies.”
Shan considered her words. “Late yesterday,” he pointed out, “someone attacked you. The constables came running, leaving that meat locker unattended.”
“The owner of the store has fled. Only one thing keeps Liang from arresting the whole town.”
“Officially the murders haven’t taken place,” Shan inserted. “Hard to explain arrests for stealing murder victims when no murder has been reported.”
“Exactly.” Meng was watching the dark clouds that were rapidly overtaking the town. “We don’t want to put a blemish on the heroic faces of our Pioneers. We just—”
At first Shan thought Meng was interrupted by someone throwing stones at his truck. Then the sound was more like rifle shots, accelerating into a machine-gun staccato. People began crying out in pain, flinching, clutching at their arms and shoulders as if they were being stung. Some of the immigrants dropped to the ground, curling up with their hands over their heads. Others ran, dashing for the nearest cover.
Hailstorms in Tibet came quickly and left just as quickly but they always brought with them destruction and terror, sometimes even death. Shan looked back toward Clear Water Camp. The ridge was empty. The dropka might ignore the orders of their camp manager but they knew how to read clouds.
Shan pulled his wide-brimmed hat low on his head and leapt out of the truck. He grabbed two of the buckets from the back and ran toward the fields. He pulled up an old man who had fallen to his knees, blood running from the hands that shielded his face, then held a bucket over the man’s head. The man gasped in confusion, then grabbed the bucket and pointed to a woman who had fallen a few feet away.
“I have her!” Shan shouted over the roar of the storm, then pulled the woman to her feet and covered her head with the second bucket. They ran, like most of the people in the fields, toward the open-walled pavilion that had been erected for the market. As Shan pushed the woman inside and turned back toward the field, the hail abruptly stopped.
People were crying. A donkey brayed. Dogs were barking. The police seemed to have forgotten their search and were climbing back into their trucks. Several stared dumbfounded at their cars. Most of their rooftop light fixtures were in pieces. Three windshields had been shattered. Voices, some frantic, crackled on their radios. One constable, a Tibetan, stared somberly toward the huge mountain that hovered over the valley. The angry storm had come from Yangon, home of the deities who protected the valley.
Shan searched the crowd, spotted the grey-haired man with the wire-rimmed glasses he had seen playing checkers and followed him to a small bungalow on the side street behind the town’s modest teahouse.
As the man paused at his front door to speak with a neighbor, Shan quickly circled the house and entered the rear door. He was sitting in the kitchen when the man entered. He did not seem surprised to see a stranger in his house.
“Your men already searched here,” the man said in a level voice. “You can see we have few possessions and even less space to hide anything.” His voice trailed away as he noticed Shan’s muddy boots and tattered work clothes.
Shan did not speak. He reached into his pocket and set the little jade dragon from Jamyang’s altar on the table in front of him. “You can buy these from stalls off Tiananmen Square for forty renminbi. A genuine relic from the Kang Xi emperor, the vendors will say, and the tourists never know any better. But my
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