After a last great interval, a seventh sun will appear and the Earth will blaze with fire until it becomes one mass of flame.
The mountains will be consumed, a spark will be carried on the wind and go as far as the worlds of God.
Therefore, monks, even the monarch of mountains will be burnt and perish and exist no more—excepting those who have seen the path.
—Pāli Canon (29 BCE)
1
The Yak
Karma knows it is a bad omen.
He feels it in his body. A sudden chill in the summer air. A passing shadow in the white Tibetan sky. A hush in the rustle of the yellow grasses.
One moment, the yak calf had been with the herd. Now it is gone—the gift for the shaman on his visit. The benefaction. Their offering. Missing.
Karma hastens frantically up the rise, climbing hill and dune as he searches, the little boy beside him scampering to keep up, three little steps for every one of his.
Bad omen. Bad luck.
This day, of all days.
The shaman is to arrive at the village tonight. Soon, the fathers of the valley will bring their sons, and the mothers their daughters, to have their fortunes told, the spirits consulted.
It is Karma’s turn to graze the herd. His lot. His fate.
His fault.
Karma’s heart pounds as he scales the last hill. The tattered prayer flags of the village outskirts come into view, trembling slightly in the uneven wind. They have been placed here purposely, auspiciously, adorning the rusted ruins of the iron wreckage said to have once been able to fly, a stupa to a miracle of the time before the destruction known only by the name of “the Six Suns”—six fires said to have consumed all the earth, leaving only the barrens of this remote hinterland. Now the cloth images of the Four Dignities float like ghosts against the sinking of the western sun: the snow lion, the tiger, the phoenix, and the dragon—chained to the east, south, west, and north.
An incongruous form catches the corner of Karma’s eye, only paces away from the wreckage like some offering delivered before the stupa: white fur. No movement, except for the fluttering of a few woolen strands. His heart plummets. Before he can even fully comprehend what he is seeing, he already knows it is something terrible.
The calfling.
It lies on its side. Coming down the dune, Karma flinches at the sight of the animal’s belly. A large hole gapes from sternum to flank. A jumble of intestines bulge out like a heap of spilled rope from a sack. The ground is a patch of blood so dark it looks black. Karma is paralyzed at the sight, as if it were his own lifeblood drained to the earth.
No . . . it can’t be. Not the shaman’s offering . . .
Only hours ago, it was alive and with the herd. Now it is a bloody carcass, viscera baking in the sun.
“What . . . happened?” a boy’s voice gasps behind him.
Karma startles. It is his little cousin Lobsang. Karma moves to shield the boy from the sight, but the child is too far out of reach, or perhaps it is only Karma’s legs that are too numb.
“It . . . it was probably wolves,” Karma mumbles. “Maybe a pack of them, or something . . .”
His voice trails. True, there have been more sightings of wild animals, but his instinct tells him this is something else. None of the meat has been touched. The yak was a calf but by no means small. Looking at the sheer size of the wound, nothing on four legs could have done damage that looks like this.
A swarm of horseflies buzzes fiercely, as if to defend their quarry. A feeling comes over him, even more fearful than before. He has been afraid for the yak. But now that he’s found it, he is afraid for the village.
If not animals . . . then bandits?
Karma’s gaze flickers to the distance, to the flat horizon, the mountains long gone, where the border bandits are known to dwell. Lobsang mirrors his gaze. The vista is empty, but he knows the bandits prefer the night anyway, the better to avoid being shot by the villagers’ matchlock rifles. Still, if it had been them, wouldn’t they have stolen the calf, not wasted it? As depraved as they are, they are more deprived of food, no different from the rest of the Four Rivers and Six Ranges.
But if neither animals nor bandits . . .
Little Lobsang seems to read his thoughts. “Could it be a migoi?” he asks in a hushed voice, invoking the name for the supernatural creature that, thus far, to Karma was nothing but a child’s figment. “My father says that in the end, the cursed become even more savage because they know that their doom is near. It’s like the ghosts who mourn at night because they will never be reborn—”
Karma cannot help a shudder. First the missing yak, then the mutilation. Now talk of migoi, ghosts, and the coming of the Seventh Sun. The day is going from inauspicious to downright ominous.
“That’s quite enough, Lobsang. We shouldn’t speak of such things.”
The wind stirs, and the stink of slowly fouling meat hits them. Karma’s little cousin buries his nose in his sleeve, tangling his arm in the necklace of amber and coral that the boy’s father has given him that day.
“We should ask my father what to do,” Lobsang says, muffled behind his sleeve.
It is a perfectly reasonable course of action. Karma has the same urge, to leave this scene and go back to the village. But he feels as if he cannot. He is seventeen, not a child. This has happened on his watch. He cannot go back empty-handed. The bones and the hide. The hooves, the fat, and the tendons. He cannot lose the rest to wild animals overnight. As the son of the scoundrel—it would be unforgivable.
Karma makes up his mind. “There isn’t enough time. The shaman’s ceremony will be starting soon. We’ll have to drag it back with us. Salvage what we can there.” He could ask his mother to help him. He meets his cousin’s skeptical gaze. “The meat’s already turned,” he explains. “If I lose the offal . . .”
Your father will lash me for sure, is what he wants to say, but doesn’t need to. Lobsang seems to understand the logic. A look of sympathy crosses the boy’s face, and Karma wonders if his cousin, young as he is, actually understands a lot more. If so, he has never shown it. To him, Karma is not the cursed Sherpa’s boy, not the son of the scoundrel. He is just Karma—and for that, Karma has always loved him.
As they begin dragging the carcass away, Karma glances back over his shoulder. The sun is already beginning its descent behind the dusty horizon. Something about the light, the angle of his gaze—and a memory floods him, searing in its suddenness: An image of his father in this exact place, ten years ago. The entire village was there too. His mother, his aunt, his uncle the headman. And a caravan . . . waiting. But not Karma.
He was only seven years old then, but the memory is clear. He turns his face away.
Father’s farewell.
“Are you alright, Karma?”
Karma blinks and the memory vanishes, leaving in its place the empty western landscape, the fluttering prayer flags the only thing stirring. A strand of the pennants has come untethered and is snaking now in the air like a loose kite string, whistling as it whips back and forth, back and forth.
His little cousin’s head is cocked, watching him. “What is it?”
“It’s . . . nothing,” Karma says. “Nothing at all.”
He nods to resume their movement. But though they continue onward to the village, something lingers in the air, sticks to them like the scent of the fouling meat they carry, certain only to ripen even more. A feeling of some ill-fated consequence of the past now finding its way back home.
2
The Gathering
If the death of the yak signaled bad luck, bringing home its carcass augurs an even worse fate. In hindsight, Karma should have expected the reaction. Fear, anger, blame. He only wanted to do right by the village, thinking of their practical needs. He wanted not to let the people down. Not to anger them or remind them of . . .
Of father.
Wasn’t that the truth?
That is why he brought the calfling back, after all. When he should have known better. When he should have seen it for what it was. A sign of the end. A reminder of the Seventh Sun, of the curse that hangs over them, and of the powerlessness of herd or village to afford any refuge. But like a fool, he brought it back. And along with it . . . the ill fate it portends. Now his face stings with shame as he tends the fire in the lodge room alone, stoking the coals, waiting for the villagers to gather.
The door opens, bringing in a draft of cold, night air, accompanied by the low and wind-like moan. Of course, it is not the wind but the ghosts, who only come in the night, and tonight they are especially restless.
The elders enter first. In the shadows, in the flickering firelight, the sunken stares of their eyes are severe. At the front is Urgyen—Karma’s uncle and
Lobsang’s father, who as the village headman is the one to escort the shaman into the room. The shaman is a grisly sight in his ceremonial garb—a crow’s-nest weave of finger bones and mirror fragments, rosary necklace of skull beads, and belt carrying a flute fashioned out of what looks like a femur. Rattling and tinkling, the reflection of the shaman’s mirrors cast slivers of light, a burning skeleton on the move.
Next come the visitors from around the valley of Kham. Young men traveling with their fathers to hear the shaman’s divinations. Young women pushed forward by their mothers hoping for blessings in their future, and in them, answers about the fate of the world at large.
Last come the rest of the villagers, shuffling behind in order, his mother at the very end of the line. Their eyes are on him. All except his mother, who seems to linger, as if holding open the door to an escape into the ghostly land and fractured stars beyond. But then the door draws shut and the crowd closes in, room only enough to stand.
One of the fathers speaks. “Is it wise to continue with the ceremonies tonight, Urgyen? With the yak offering the Sherpa boy lost, would it not be more auspicious to wait for another date?”
The Sherpa boy. The scoundrel’s son.
Me.
The shaman is the one to reply, with a snort. “Six suns, six blasts in the sky,” he recites. “A seventh one, and the earth will die. Can there ever be an auspicious date?” The mirrored crown shimmers as he jerks his chin to the assemblage. “The infant doesn’t choose the day he is born, nor the old man the day he departs. What makes you think you can choose when your boys shall become men, or your young girls women?” The shaman imparts a jaundiced look to the father who has spoken. “When our days are numbered, how much time do you think your children have?”
The man shrinks back to the crowd. Uncle Urgyen regards the room impassively. They all know the prophecy. They have heard the recounting of the story that had been told to their grandfathers about the six distant blasts that were so bright they appeared like suns in the sky, and what they did to the rest of the world. An earth if not scorched, then frozen. Dried lakes and drowned deserts. Mountains sunken, valleys leveled. Cities transformed overnight, once-towering structures expended like incense to ash by morning. The destructive force of the blasts would have reached Tibet, would have burned them all, were it not for the tall range of the Himalayas which have been their only bulwark, their rock and their defense from the winds and the poisons.
But they also know about the telling of one seventh, final sun—a last and complete destruction. And there is nothing they can do to stop it. The end, they know, will arrive for them too.
Urgyen gives the nod. “The fire,” he commands.
Karma immediately pokes the coals, knowing his uncle is talking to him. It is a cold summer night, and the flames have gone down. Karma places more dung chips, then a few precious sticks of juniper brush. The belly of the room fills with smoke, the fire begrudgingly offering more of its heat.
“Move the kettle, or you’ll spill the chhaang,” chides one of the men.
Karma obliges, without emoting so much as a sigh of complaint. The brass kettle burns even through the potholder. He pours the steaming liquid into two bowls and carries them to his uncle. Urgyen takes one to the altar to make a set of seven bowls filled with water, grain, butter, and now—fermented barley. He hands the other to the shaman.
Despite the steaming heat, the old man tilts the cup to his mouth, slurping the hot brew down his throat.
Uncle Urgyen waves to Karma for more. “Pour it all. Tonight when the spirits speak, they speak for us all.”