Wednesday, November 21, 2012

Concerning Books #006: "the Bamboo Man" act II


...act I




           ...The sudden, strange noise echoed through the bamboo forest and through the Bamboo Man, shaking and shattering him like the broken jug at his feet. He began to tremble like the trees trembled in the Mountain wind. The sound was so alien to him, so out of place and out of distant memory that at first he could not recognize it. It had been a long time since last he heard another human voice, not to mention a baby’s cry.

          But once he understood the sound, he knew that only one thing had to be done. Yet once he realized where the sound came from, he turned reluctantly toward the dark cave. Without doubt, the cries of the child came from that yawning mouth of the earth.

          He suddenly suffered a mix of unaccustomed and very un-Bamboo-Man-like emotions: first, he became angry that someone had abandoned a baby in the cave, but then he grew afraid of the darkness there. A moment later he became frustrated with himself that he felt afraid at all and before he knew it, he felt a white-hot courage well up inside him. His wiry old legs marched his bent old body across the slippery, pebbled threshold at the entrance to the cave.

          He stuck his head inside. The cries of the child grew louder, echoing in the blackness. If the Bamboo Man had been in there before, he did not remember how dark it was. This place had never known summer or lanterns, stars or sunlight. The cave only knew haunting darkness and despair and cold.

He had only gone a few paces behind the waterfall till the darkness immersed him and he went blind as death. He tripped and fell flat on the rough cave floor. He looked up and saw nothing. He looked ahead and saw nothing. He looked back and saw the bright circle of daylight and the waterfall.

          He listened and could tell from the noise—since the crying had dwindled into a faint sniffling—that the lost baby still lay abandoned at least a hundred paces ahead.

          “Hold on, child!” his sandpapery voice faded into the darkness as he got up and ran backward out of the cave. He squinted in the sunlight like a newborn but he didn’t stop running. He scampered down the pebbly threshold and he dashed past the waterfall. He might have run past the pool if he hadn’t fallen in to it. But he got up again in a flash and ran dripping wet through the forest, down the Mountain toward his little hut, holding his bamboo hat to his bald head and his bamboo cane under his arm.

          The animals looked at him with disbelief. The rabbits looked on with pride and the turtles with envy. The bamboo whistled as he rushed past as if cheering on a sprinter.

          The Bamboo Man puffed out the words: “Morning viper, fox n’ stag, flying forest squirrel Mountain!”

          Finally, he burst breathless through the door of his little hut and scrambled across the floor to rummage through his belongings. Peco squeaked with alarm.

          “No time! It’s a boy! A baby, Peco! Cave-baby! …Aha!” he laughed as he held aloft his bamboo lantern. He took it along with his best blanket—not the bamboo one—and the last of his matches, then ran back out the door. Peco thought briefly about following the adventure, then shook her head and fell asleep again.

          The Bamboo Man flew through the forest.

          “Forest, Mountain, good viper, flying-stag, foxy squirrel morning...!” he panted as he shambled on as fast as he could. Minutes later, the cave gaped before him. He struck up a match, lit his bamboo lantern and, with a deep breath, plunged into the darkness.

          The tiny light of his tiny lantern shone like an insignificant star in all the black emptiness of the night. He could barely see the reflection of the light on the rock wall of the cave. Nothing gleamed in the darkness. Nothing shone back to him.

          He began to descend down the hole in the earth. The Bamboo Man went some steps in and strained his aged ears to listen. Beyond the noise of the waterfall, he heard nothing. The sound of the baby crying had ceased. He might have gone back and given up. After all, maybe someone else had heard the child and rescued it. Maybe the poor creature had no need any more of a rescue or maybe it didn’t want to be saved. But the Bamboo Man didn’t stop. He went on, though the rough cave floor cut his bare feet.

          He kept his lantern before him, his eyes on the floor and one hand against a side of the cave. Soon even the roar of the waterfall faded to total silence, his old familiar dinner guest. His hair stood on end. The cave was quiet as a tomb. A heavy feeling of dread descended upon him. Sweat like ice slithered down his back. It became hard to breathe.

          His heart began to pound within him at the thought of how far into the cave he had come by now, stooping at times and even crawling on his belly like a worm through the dirt. Still he strained his ears. Still he heard nothing.

          At last, he stopped. He didn’t feel the white-hot courage in him anymore. Should he give up? He did not know the cave like he knew the Mountain. Here he feared he could lose himself in the close darkness and the numbing silence.

          He promised himself he would go on, through the dark and the dirt and the silence.  Finally, he came to a deep chasm in the cave floor. He crept cautiously to the edge and lifted his lantern out over it. He couldn’t hope to see the bottom with that tiny light, nor could he see the other side of the gap. His adventure had reached its end, the terribly ordinary kind of end where nothing happens at all.

          Feeling that it had all been worthless, the Bamboo Man set his lantern on the cave floor and threw himself down beside it. He was out of breath. Then he made himself think, the way he would sit and think in his little hut down the Mountain. Time passed.

          He suddenly raised his head and reached for the pouch of bamboo sticks he carried on his shoulder. He pulled out the strongest shoots and bound them together with threads he pulled from his shirt. He worked with difficulty in the darkness but nobody was more skilled at his craft than the Bamboo Man.

Soon, he had bound three strong stems together. These were bound to three others end to end, and those three end to end with another three and so he had a long pole almost three times his height. The Bamboo Man lifted the pole and got to his feet, then carefully lowered his invention across the chasm. The end of it disappeared into the darkness but as he let it fall, it stopped, level with his feet! He raised it and let it fall again. It stopped again. He shuffled it about until he felt sure; he’d found the other ledge across the chasm.

Success! But now came the really horrible part of his plan. He took his pouch and dumped the rest of the bamboo out. He frowned to see the finest bits touch the dirty floor as he left them behind. Next, he twisted the empty pouch around his wrist and then tied his wrist to the bamboo pole, the pole that lay across the chasm. Finally, he took up his feeble lantern but realized he had to leave that behind too. This was the hardest choice. Leaving behind that tiny light was like leaving behind the greatest treasure of heaven. But the Bamboo Man was resolved to go on, light or no light.

Once more, he took a deep breath. Now came the time to leave behind the light and the old man, and to do what a man half his age might only dare to do. He lay himself down at the edge of the chasm. He gripped the pole as tightly as he could with his old hands and slowly, very slowly crept across the bamboo tight rope. The pole passed across his chest and belly and between his legs and knees. Once he had crept fully over the chasm, he did not look down into the dead drop. He knew that if he did, he would see nothing, but he would then certainly give up and turn back.

          “And, old man,” he told himself, “You cannot turn back.”

          His brow dripped with sweat and his aged body trembled. He was half way across. He looked and saw his tiny lantern sitting on the safety of the floor behind him, shining. He looked ahead and thought he could dimly see the other side. He crept further still. Now he was sure he could see the edge.

          He had crept almost to an arm’s reach from the other side when something hot and hairy blasted past his face. He shrieked and started, causing the bamboo pole to creak and bounce. When he finally dared to open his eyes, he saw perched before him the fattest, ugliest bat he had ever seen. It had a gnarled face and a nose like the roots of trees, and ears like the horns of the devil. Was that a trail of dark blood dripping from its fangs?

          “Move out of the way, bat!” the Bamboo Man shouted, “Away! Get out!”

          But the bat only spread its monstrous wings. A stench as of corpses hit the Bamboo Man in the face. He felt dizzy.

          “I’m not going to fall, bat. And I’m not going back,” the Bamboo Man said as firmly as he could for a man stretched out on his belly in mid-air, suspended by nothing more than a bundle of sticks. “Listen here, bat. You are going to move out of my way!”

          But the bat only nestled its hideous head as if it was going to fall asleep. The Bamboo Man furiously reached for the creature with his fist and the bat swept into the air. It swooped toward him. He felt icy claws in the flesh of his face. The wooden pole rocked and bounced and creaked and snapped. The Bamboo Man held on tight. His heart felt like it would burst.

          When he had caught his breath and opened his eyes, and when the bamboo pole had stopped swaying, the Bamboo Man found that the bat had disappeared into the darkness. He mustered his last strength and climbed across the last length of the pole. He grabbed hold of the edge of the chasm and slowly and clumsily hauled his body onto solid earth.

          He lay there for some minutes on his back, breathing in and out long breaths of the stale cave air. Then he sat up and looked back across the chasm. He could see his lantern on the other side.

          Then he heard a small noise like a very small voice. Not the voice of the wind or of silence, but of a living soul. But where did it come from? Could a voice come from the dust?

He turned and felt around in the darkness. All of a sudden, his gnarled fingers touched the tender fingers of what could only be a little baby. The old man laughed in triumph, a sound that had never been heard in that dark cave. The darkness shivered, but the Bamboo Man gently picked up the infant and cradled it for a moment in his arms.

          “What a silly old Bamboo Man,” he quietly chuckled at himself, “You gave yourself breakfast, but brought none for the child.”

          Just then, he heard another small noise like a very small voice off to his left. He reached out a knobby hand and touched the soft foot of a second baby! Then he heard a whimper to his right and a sniffle to his left, two more babies! The Bamboo Man spent the greater part of an hour searching that far side of the chasm until he knew every space of it and had run up against every wall. He found a total of ten little children in all.

          “Ten children!” the Bamboo Man gasped, “And how did they get here, naked and cold and hungry?

          He never found another tunnel leading elsewhere on that side of the chasm. It was just the cliff: a dead-end. But he put down his curiosity at once. He knew the thing to do was get the babies out of the cave, all of them, safely and quickly. But he knew there could only be one way to carry them out of the darkness. He would have to carry them one by one back across the bamboo pole he had made, back across the deep chasm.

          The Bamboo Man acted with the utmost care. First, he re-counted all the children in the dark and laid them in a row as far away from the edge as possible. Then he removed the pouch he had tied around his wrist and wrapped the first little baby inside of it. Then he strapped the pouch around his neck, making certain this knot was the greatest knot ever tied in history. And finally, without a moment’s hesitation, he began to crawl back along the pole, swifter than ever, the first baby dangling from the pouch around his neck

          He arrived at his lantern in a little more than a minute and there carefully unwrapped the little child. It was asleep. He set it as far away from the edge as possible. Then he took up his pouch and went back for the second. Soon he crawled back for the third and then the fourth, then the fifth and the sixth. Drenched in sweat, he crept back for the seventh. Tired and shaking, he crossed over for the eighth. His hands were pierced and bleeding from the wood by the time he headed back to the ninth. Finally, he bent down to wrap up the tenth child for his tenth journey across the gap.

But as he carried it across the pit, an all too familiar creature flapped across his face. He smelled the stink of filth and felt the hot breath of the creature. The bat settled down in front of him again and hissed a challenge, unfolding its black wings. The pole was swaying beneath the Bamboo Man. He heard the wood creaking and snapping. He did not shut his eyes. He did not despair.

          He looked the hideous creature right in the eyes and screamed: “Out of my way! You can’t keep what isn’t yours!” And then he punched it right in its ugly face. The thing plummeted into the pit.

          At long last, the Bamboo Man carried the tenth child across the chasm to the safety of the other side. He knew what to do at once. He pulled the bamboo pole over the chasm to himself and then carefully wove both his pouch and his shirt around the pole in such a way that he made ten little pouches in a row. He carefully placed one child in each spot, checking and re-checking his knots and binding and threads, until all the children sat in place. Then he grunted and wheezed, and his legs groaned and his elbows ached as he hefted the pole up over his shoulder. Then he straightened himself, one hand balancing the pole and the other carrying the lantern.

          In this manner, he began to walk up out of the cave. As he ascended, he felt his grin creeping back to his face. Soon he could hear the dull roar of the waterfall. A hundred paces later he burst from the darkness of the cave into the red afternoon upon the Mountain. There at the pool, he let down the pole and checked on the children.

          Still they slept, ignorant of his sufferings, unaware of the bleeding hands and feet, the face torn by the bat’s claws, the aching bones and pains of their savior. In the fading light of the afternoon, he saw that each of them were boys, probably no older than their first year. He patted their heads with his wrinkled old hands and then lifted the pole once more upon his body.

          “Just one more path, silly old Bamboo Man,” he said aloud, “And then you shall be home to rest.”
 
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   ~norton


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