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Then he poured another cup of tea and went to the old monk. To my surprise, he knelt down and offered him tea with the same piety and respect he'd paid to the Buddha.
After these offerings, the young monk, now looking relaxed, poured us steaming tea. Then he introduced the old monk to us as Master Detached Dust and himself as Eternal Brightness. Old Monk responded with an innocent smile.
Eternal Brightness said, "In comparison to our tortoise, my Master Detached Dust is quite a young man at only one hundred and five."
I translated this to Michael. He exclaimed disbelief, but then bowed respectfully to Detached Dust. And, I believed, to the mystery of his longevity.
Suddenly the master spoke. "Do you two watch TV?"
This question from a one-hundred-and-five-year-old Zen monk recluse really took me by surprise-he should have long transcended the seven emotions and the five desires.
I translated to Michael. He said, "I feel sorry for him; he must be extremely lonely here."
Then I turned back to Detached Dust. "We have a TV, but we don't watch much."
The master surprised me again by saying, "I've heard about it, but I've never seen it."
"Master, you mean never in your whole life, not even once? once?"
"No."
Now this living fossil really intrigued me. "Aren't you curious to watch TV?"
Instead of directly answering my question, he smiled contentedly. "I have my garden, my sutras, sutras, the sky and the clouds." the sky and the clouds."
I translated this to Michael and he said, "Ask him whether he's bored sometimes."
I turned and asked the master.
His reply was, "Night after night the moon s.h.i.+nes on the pond."
Eternal Brightness eagerly chimed in. "Since his youth, Master's eyesight has been weak," as if an apology were needed for Master's not watching TV, and not connecting to the modern world.
"Then how can he read his sutras? sutras?" I asked.
"He'd already memorized most of them before he reached twenty." He paused, then added, "But Master possesses the Buddha eye."
I translated this to Michael and he nodded, looking deep in thought.
A brief silence. Then the young monk stood up, went to the cauldron, and held out a bamboo tray on top of which lay fat, snowy-white buns. The bun, hot and steaming in my hands, seemed alive and palpitating.
Michael, probably very hungry by now after our long climb under the sun, was devouring the bun and gulping down the tea with relish.
"Mmm." He raised his thumb to the monks.
Eternal Brightness smiled back politely, while Master Detached Dust cupped his mouth with his gnarled hand and giggled.
Then, seeing that I was not eating, Detached Dust cast me a meaningful glance. "Miss, eat! Eat while it's still hot." Then he added, "Don't wait till it gets cool."
Was it a metaphor for my being indecisive about marrying Michael?
I smiled at him, then split open the bun. Paste of red beans spilled to peek at the world outside and immediately I stuck out my tongue to take them into this Mortal's Field of Red Hot Pa.s.sion.
When we finished our snack, Master Detached Dust said, "Honorable guests, I now have to work."
Work? At one hundred and five?
Seeing that I was staring doubtfully at his master, the young monk explained, "Master is going to tend to his garden." After that, he helped Detached Dust outside.
I told Michael about my conversation with the monks while we, amazed, watched Detached Dust at work. Though slow in his movements, he transmitted his special energy, his whole being spilling happiness. He moved deliberately but with a carefree air, watering, pulling out dead roots, cutting off yellowed leaves. He seemed not to feel the hot sun over his head or the baking earth under his straw-sandaled feet. He chanted in a faint voice as he went about his work.
Michael exclaimed, "Amazing! I hope I will live to his age and stay that active."
When Eternal Brightness came back to the room, I asked, "s.h.i.+fu, don't you think that Master Detached Dust should...retire?"
"I've begged Master many times not to work, but his reply is always to recite the Zen rule: a day without work is a day without food. So"-the young monk shrugged and smiled wryly-"there's nothing I can do. He always tells me that by cultivating the garden, he's cultivating the Way. So how can he stop?" A pause, then, "Master says that he's the guest of wind and dust. And his mind the ashes of dead fire."
We stood together watching Detached Dust.
Then Eternal Brightness spoke. "I must work also. Please stay in our temple as long as you like."
Suddenly I remembered the stone inscription in the main hall. "s.h.i.+fu, that inscription about the young man who fell in love with a village girl, then took refuge after she'd married someone else..."
The monk had already guessed my question. "That young man is my master, Detached Dust."
I was shocked to hear this. "Oh," I blurted out, "what a sad story."
The young monk cast me a curious glance, then corrected me. "No. Master determined to cut off all attachment after he realized his folly of falling into the entanglement of human desire." He pointed to the calligraphy and recited, "'So I have looped around. From the preciousness of sensation to the harmfulness of being attached to it.'"
He turned to look out the window. "So look how happy Master is now." He smiled. "Moreover, that's why he lived to this ripe age."
I followed Eternal Brightness's affectionate gaze and saw Detached Dust now talking cheerily to an orchid.
"It's Master's habit to recite his mantra of Amita Buddha to the plants and rocks here. He believes they also have Buddha nature."
I turned back to the young monk. "So, s.h.i.+fu, is this also the same reason you're...here?"
His face beamed. "Oh, yes. I am extremely fortunate, for Master was very strict in choosing his disciple."
Just then the old monk came in, studied each of us, and split a big, panting smile. "Tomorrow is another day; I'll take a nap today."
Eternal Brightness hurried to help him go back to his room.
After I'd translated everything to Michael, he said, "No matter how hard monks and nuns try to cut off from worldly desire, love still sneaks its way back in."
"What do you mean?"
Michael answered my question with another one. "The monk's love story is inscribed here in the temple, right?"
Not wis.h.i.+ng to further disturb the two monks, we took our leave. The young monk walked us all the way to the level land and the steps.
Michael and I bowed deeply with our hands together. I said, "Thank you, s.h.i.+fu. We really appreciate your and Master Detached Dust's hospitality."
Under the warm sun, his tanned, healthy face seemed to s.h.i.+ne with wisdom and detachment. "You're welcome. Please come back and visit us again."
"We certainly will."
Michael asked me to tell him that he really enjoyed his bun and that he wished the Master good health and longevity.
I told the young monk and he said, "Thank you, but the master's health and longevity depend on karma, not men's wishes." A pause. Then he added, "By the way, it's master who cooked those buns, not me."
We silently picked our way down the long flight of steps. I felt depressed to leave this separate world of the small temple and plunge back into the dusty world.
Michael took my hand. "Meng Ning, let's hurry to the taxi. It's going to rain."
At the bottom of the steps, our taxi driver was fast asleep, curled up in the backseat. As we began to quicken our steps, the rain was already pelting mercilessly. We pounded on the door of the taxi, awakening the surprised driver, who quickly got out and let us, now dripping, into the back. Through the smudged window I watched the raindrops plunge, hiss, and bounce on the ground. I felt a rush of nostalgia. Their natural energy made me think of the two mountain monks. Their temple, though only up the nearby flight of steps, already seemed so distant. Would we have the chance to return to that simple beauty in this lifetime?
34.
The Car Accident After the pleasant diversion of the Peach Blossom Garden, we were now finally heading toward the famous colossal Buddha carved into the Le Mountain. As we drove, the rain abated.
The taxi driver caught my gaze in the rearview mirror. "Miss, you and your friend had a good time up there?"
"Oh, yes." I made my answer short, for I didn't want to share my intimate temple experience with this stranger.
But the driver couldn't keep quiet for long. As the car bounced up and down over potholes, he began to tell us stories about the big Buddha carved out of the Le Mountain. His eyes, flickering behind his thick gla.s.ses, kept peeking at us in the rearview mirror.
In a dramatic tone, he began. "Believe it or not, this Leshan statue is really really a Buddha." Then he paused, for suspense, I believed. a Buddha." Then he paused, for suspense, I believed.
I asked, "What do you mean?"
"Ah, you've never heard anything about it?"
"No," I answered abruptly. Still savoring my other-worldly experience, I wanted to be left alone.
Michael asked, "Meng Ning, what did he say?"
"Nothing."
"What do you mean, nothing? He surely is talking a lot."
The driver asked, "What did your laowai laowai friend say?" friend say?"
"He wants to know what you said."
He chuckled and paused to think. "Ah, so your laowai laowai friend hasn't heard anything about it neither, eh?" friend hasn't heard anything about it neither, eh?"
"I don't know, but one thing I'm sure about-" I could hear irritation in my own voice. "My old barbarian friend knows more about Buddhism than you do."
Instead of being offended, he smiled, his large, neurotic eyes locking my gaze in the mirror. "Ah, but I don't think so. I'm sure he doesn't know the fact that this Leshan statue is a real Buddha."
Feeling really annoyed now, my voice raised an octave. "Driver, just tell me what this 'Leshan statue is a real Buddha' is all about."
Michael took my hand. "Meng Ning, what's the matter? What did he say to annoy you?"
"Nothing."
Just then the driver spoke again. "When I say the statue is a real Buddha, I mean that it's alive with a spirit."
Now he had my attention. He paused to wet his thick lips, the color of coagulated blood. "During the Cultural Revolution, many times people tried to destroy the Leshan Buddha, but all failed."
"What did they do?"
"They climbed up the statue-that is, the mountain top-and tried to chop off his head."
"But that head's the size of a small house!" I'd seen many pictures of the famous Buddha.
"No, not that, miss." He chuckled. "It's because each time they tried, something happened-a comrade fell off the mountain and got killed; another seized by a panic so that he had to be carried down the mountain; yet another one had a ma.s.sive heart attack and died on the spot. Finally the vandals agreed that chopping was impractical. A new idea was born; they climbed up the statue and tied sticks of dynamite around the Buddha's head-"
"Oh, no! Then what happened?"
Michael turned to me. "Please translate what he said!"
"Shhh! Let me hear the whole story first."
I prodded the driver: "Then what happened?"
"Be patient, miss. That's what I'm about to tell you." He took time to wet his lips, swallow hard, and after that, plunged on. "Then, when they tried to detonate the dynamite, it thundered. It had been a fine day, but suddenly there was a bolt of lightning!" He struck the steering wheel sharply. "And-"
Michael jolted. "Meng Ning, what happened?"
"Quiet, please, Michael, would you please let him finish?"
"I want to know what he's saying."
I ignored Michael's remark while searching the driver's eyes in the mirror. "And what?"
"And it struck everybody dead. Dead!" He spat out the window, then he lifted his hands from the steering wheel and stretched them wide apart, his excited voice echoing in the small confines of the car. "Their corpses looked like huge, roasted sausages!"
"Oh, my G.o.d!"
Michael's voice, now very upset, rose next to me. "Meng Ning, when you talk to him he takes his hands from the steering wheel-better stop asking him things. The road is still wet and slippery."