Eliot Pattison - Bone Mountain

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Winslow made a great show of looking into his pack and rummaging through its contents, then looked up. "Damn. Forgot my black tie and patent leather shoes," he declared with exaggerated chagrin.

"Perhaps you would share with us what's in the bag," Shan said.

"You want my dirty underwear? Sure, welcome to it. Light on the starch please." Then Winslow studied Shan's stern countenance and his face hardened. "I've taken enough shit off Chinese today," he said. "You don't even have a uniform."

"You're the only one claiming to work for a government." As Shan spoke the herd of sheep appeared around the outcropping and the caravan began marching past the rocks. Moments later Lokesh appeared, then Nyma and Anya. They stepped toward the American with uncertain expressions, sensing the tension in the air.

"You had a driver and a truck. Where are they?" Shan asked.

"Sent them back to Lhasa. I didn't like him. When the embassy asks the Chinese government for drivers you can be sure they work for Public Security."

Shan considered the American's words and realized he was right, which meant the knobs would soon know all about the confrontation at the village, and the caravan.

"This man saved us at the village," Nyma said to Shan in a low voice that had a hint of pleading. "You especially should know what it would have meant if that colonel had taken us back with him."

The nun's words caused Winslow to look at Shan with a sudden intense curiosity.

"I only asked him to show us what he is carrying in his bag," Shan declared quietly.

"He's American," Lokesh said.

"He works for the American government. The government in Washington cultivates relations with Beijing, not with Tibetans."

The American seemed pained by Shan's words, but he offered no argument. He raised his open palms to his shoulder, then extracted an expensive-looking camera and a compact set of binoculars before turning his rucksack upside down, spilling its contents onto the ground. Shan squatted to study the items. A large plastic bag of raisins. A grey sweatshirt rolled into a ball. A box of sweet biscuits. A small blue metal cylinder that matched the one fueling the stove. Two pairs of underwear and two pairs of socks, knotted together. Half a dozen bars of chocolate. A one liter bottle of water. A tattered guide book on Tibet, in English. A tiny first-aid kit. And a small black two-way radio.

"You could call your driver on that?" Shan asked, pointing to the radio.

"The driver, or the office he is assigned to. It's how I get back."

"You said the driver works for the knobs."

Winslow grimaced.

Shan realized that Nyma had stepped behind him now, with Lhandro. They were frightened of the little black box.

"It's my lifeline for Christ's sake," the American protested. "You think I'm trying to interfere with your caravan, maybe steal your animals?" he said impatiently, then studied Shan and the others for a long moment. His eyes widened. "Christ. You're illegal. That's why you were so scared about Colonel Lin. You have no papers or-" the American looked back at the animals as they wound their way up the slope "- you're carrying something illegal."

No one spoke, which was answer enough. The wind moaned around the corner of the rocks. The little stove continued its low hiss. In the distance sheep bleated.

The American looked into his hands with a pained expression. "The missing woman is named Melissa Larkin," he explained. "People seem to have given up on her. She is presumed dead. You'd be surprised how many Americans die in Tibet," he added. "For tourists, it's an expensive destination that takes a long time to see, which means many of the tourists are senior citizens. Then there's the dropouts who don't understand about bandits in remote places or the diseases they would never catch at home, or how altitude sickness can kill them overnight. You can die of things here that would never kill you in the States, because medical treatment can be so far away." He looked up with a frown. "It's the embassy that has to get the bodies home for burial."

"But surely the Chinese authorities must help when foreign bodies have to be collected," Shan stated with a pointed glance at the American.

Winslow bent to turn a knob on the stove. The hissing stopped. "This Larkin woman is different. Thirty-five years old. A scientist. Geologist, seismologist. Worked in the North Sea, Alaska, Patagonia. Someone who can handle herself."

"You mean she was working in Tibet?"

"In old Amdo for the past year," Winslow nodded. "Southern Qinghai Province, just across the border from the TAR," he said, meaning the Tibet Autonomous Region, Beijing's misleading name for what had been the central Tibetan provinces.

"A snow avalanche. Rockslide. Bandits," Shan said. "Just because she was independent didn't mean she could avoid bad luck."

"Right. That's what they all say. I had to argue with my boss just to get the right to look for her." Winslow spoke with an odd note of challenge in his voice. "I have two weeks, then off to a conference in Shanghai."

No one spoke. Shan and Lhandro exchanged sad glances, and Shan knew the Tibetan and he were sharing the same thought. They had been brought up in a world where people went missing all the time, where almost no family was exempt from the pain of losing someone. People might walk into the mountains and never come back. People were dragged off to prison without warning, without announcement. People might come back from prison and find that all those they had known had vanished. Shan himself was missing, although he doubted his former wife or even his son cared, and would prefer to assume him dead. Shan saw that his companions were all staring at the American. Winslow lived in a truly different world.

The entire caravan was visible above them now, climbing up a switchback trail on the slope above.

"I don't know these mountains," Winslow said in a softer, pleading tone. "I just need a way in, so I don't waste my time finding the right trail."

Still no one spoke. Suddenly the American sighed and handed Shan the radio. Shan held it in his hands a moment, then laid it on a flat rock, the American watching uncertainly. The Tibetans inched away. Shan grabbed a large stone, raised it over his head, and, as Nyma uttered a small surprised cry, slammed it down on the device. He hammered the radio once, twice, three times, until the case burst and bits of broken circuit board and wiring fell into the dirt.

"Dammit," the American growled. "You could have just taken the battery."

Shan ignored him, silently gathering the pieces of the radio and throwing them into a narrow cleft in the rock. "I still don't understand something," he said as he turned to face the American. "Why this pass? This woman could be anywhere in the mountains."

Winslow stared at the hole where the shards of his radio had disappeared, shook his head, and turned to Shan. "I spent four days looking around her base camp to the north and found nothing. Her company had other field teams out searching for her body. I thought I would work from the south up. But I didn't know where exactly. Then today after that yak and I met, I stopped to study the map with my driver, on the road below this spot."

The American hesitated a moment, pushing his hair back with a self-conscious expression. "A large bird, like a grouse, with white in its plumage, landed on a boulder nearby while I was working with the map. It kept staring at me. I walked over and it kept staring until it flew to another boulder a little way up the trail." Winslow shrugged and looked up sheepishly. "Like something was waiting for me up the trail."

Lokesh nodded solemnly. Shan studied the man. When speaking of the day's events, he had not mentioned meeting Colonel Lin, only meeting the yak.

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