It was probably
the fishermen who first noticed the wind, if not the difference. Blowing low across the strait that separated the island from
the mainland, it rushed toward the mountains that sheltered the northern part of the island. Caressing the mountain range,
it came in off the sea, across the beaches, and scaled the once lush heights.
The mountain forests were more sensitive in the
way their leaves immediately turned over and upward to entreat the dark night sky as the wind passed over them. Over the mountain
ridges, it plunged down into the valleys. It was former-abbot, Hui-sheng who was first alerted. His meditation hut, situated
below the summit and up the valley from the Flying Dragon Monastery, shook as the first draft of wind rushed down toward the
lowlands.
No ordinary wind could bring Hui-sheng out of
his meditation. He lived in the hut for over ten years, ever since the original monastery was destroyed. Hui-sheng loved the
higher regions of the mountain and soon left the relocated monastery that was located farther down the valley. He moved back
up the mountain and built his simple bamboo and reed hut. It was a compromise. There was no going back to the first Flying
Dragon Monastery. The forces up there were too strong for its re-establishment. So Hui-sheng found a place that was as close
to his old home as the mountain permitted.
Farther down the mountain, the abbot of the relocated
Flying Dragon Monastery was the next human being to sense the wind change. When it blew through the compound, it flapped altar
hangings, swayed bells, flickered candles and lamps, and swirled dry dust up from the ground, the abbot Ming-jing stood up
from his meditation cushion and beat the assembly gong. The wind left the waking monastery behind and continued downward to
the farmlands below.
A young stranger, who was on the way up the mountain,
caught the warm, subtle orchid scent of the wind as it reached the lowlands. He stopped and stared up at the mountain range
that rose before him in the moonlight. So, he thought, this is the place of my dreams. He felt the wind on his face. It was warm and moist. He closed his eyes. Dried
bamboo leaves, tossed up from the ground, gently patted his lips, nose, cheeks, and forehead. He smiled and continued up the
road that led into the mountains.
No doubt it was again the fishermen who first
noticed the frosty white mist that was soon borne along by the wind. They hauled up their sails and headed for the nearest
landfall. The mist, however, did not cloak the sea but made straight for the mountains. The mountain peaks disappeared in
frosty film. As the mist grew denser, it seemed less and less interested in leaving the mountain top. It didn't proceed any
farther down the mountain than the ruins of the old Flying Dragon Monastery.
In
the morning, everyone on the leeward side of the mountain said that the sky had lowered itself and now began just below the
old monastery. The farmer folk down in the villages rejoiced. They believed that the prayers being chanted at the Buddhist
compound succeeded in entreating the spirits to break the long drought which had gripped the island. The monks Hui-sheng and
Ming-jing knew better.
"We must redouble our efforts my Dharma brothers,
for a new situation has arisen that will require all our fortitude," said the abbot. The thirty monks below the abbot's lecture
chair remained attentive. Light danced wildly over the large assembly room as the wind played with the candles and oil lamps.
"Soon there will be rain," continued the abbot.
There was a stir amongst the monks.
"But, this is not the rain we have been praying
for. Our prayers have attracted something that requires caution." Murmuring from the monks grew audible.
"Please. This is not the time for ignorant speculation.
We must ask for the Buddha's protection of this whole island. There is little time to lose." These words had barely cleared
the abbot's lips when a tremendous clap of thunder let loose from the mountain peak. A brilliant lightning flash illuminated
thirty faces peering up from below the abbot's seat.
From
the peak, rain crashed down the valley. Hui-sheng felt the rush of air pushed by the impending torrent and ran for the cave
behind his hut. The hut had little chance; the tremendous force of the gathering rain reduced it to broken thatch and bamboo.
Perhaps, thought Hui-sheng as he watched the water sweep away his home, this time it would get what it wanted. He lit a small fire and took up a meditation position. Around him the earth
shook from the roar of the rain. Lightning flashes and peals of thunder rent the morning gloom.
The early morning light worked a great transformation
on the mountain. The peak had disappeared into the thick mist that clung to the upper regions of the mountain. Here and there,
the white, frosty vapor made forays down the mountain along the valleys that spread out from the top. The withered browns
that once formed a patchy network over the mountain flanks were now shining with new rain. Even the great pine forests, which
were the mountain's prime color and immune to seasonal change, had become pale, ghostly shadows haunting the upland regions.
A gray figure wafted out of the mists and approached
the main gate of the Flying Dragon Monastery. There were no attendants at the open gate so the young man walked through to
the main Buddha hall straight ahead. The rising and falling cadences of the monks’ chant filled the courtyard in front
of the hall. The monastery was small and, by Chinese standards, young. As he approached the main hall, just for a moment,
the young man heard another melody. Higher up above the chant, there was something. But when he noticed it and tried to discern
its rhythm he found only the sound of the wind.
The abbot left his raised seat and stood outside
the hall. He watched the young man.
"Have you heard something, young layman?"
The young man turned
to the abbot. "Old monk," the young man bowed. "So the tune has also touched your ears!"
He
shifted his blue shoulder bag, walked across the courtyard, and up the wooden steps to the raised platform that the hall stood
upon. The abbot saluted him with a Buddhist greeting: placing the palms of the
hands together chest high while chanting "Namo-o-mi-tuo-fo" and bowing. The young
man returned the greeting.
"I am the abbot Ming-jing. What brings you to
our small community?"
"Nothing in particular. I'm a wandering musician
seeking the inspiration of Nature."
"A musician?" the abbot reflected aloud as he
stroked his wispy white beard. "And your honorable name, sir?"
"I have many names, old monk. Some know me as
Wu Fei, others as ‘Red Flute.’"
"Red Flute!" The abbot's moth white eye brows
hovered over his soft brown eyes, which darted to the long slim cloth bag slung over the young man's shoulder.
"In the courtyard a moment ago, did you hear
anything?" asked the abbot.
"Yes, of course, the chanting of your monks."
"Beyond that? If you are truly the one known
as Red Flute, then you heard something else."
The young man smiled and drew the dizi (bamboo transverse flute) out of its bag. It was a long slender piece of bamboo, polished to a warm dark
hue; around the far end hung a red tassel. He placed the flute to his lips and blew lightly across the mouth hole. A faint
tune issued forth.
"Yes! Yes! That's it. We are honored to have
you amongst us, Master Red Flute."
The monks who had taken a break from their chanting
were listening to the conversation. The abbot invited Red Flute to the midday meal and had some of his disciples escort the
young man to the guest quarters. The monastery's supervisor approached the abbot.
"Old master, my hearing is not what it used to
be, as I am advancing in years, but neither I nor my fellow younger monks heard any sound issue from that fellow's flute.
Yet, it seemed as if you and he heard something. We are puzzled by this."
The old abbot laughed and then turned his kindly
countenance to his eldest disciple.
"I heard very little. We must all work harder
to become more attuned to the Way before we can hear clearly what he plays."
"Master?" the supervisor asked. The group of
listening monks grew larger and drew closer to the abbot.
"Let us continue our meditation practice and
seek from within ourselves the source of all sound, and you will gradually begin to hear the music of Master Red Flute," responded
the abbot.
Higher up the mountain, the monks had constructed
flood barriers of pounded earth and bamboo. Given the fate of the former Flying Dragon Monastery, the construction was positioned
to protect the new monastery down below. But the rain had worked furiously overnight to undermine the barrier's foundation.
When the materials from Hui-sheng's former hut slid into the protective earthen walls they completely collapsed.
Just as the abbot Ming-jing had finished his
admonition, a great mud slide struck the monastery's back bamboo wall. The woven bamboo snapped and burst as the mud rushed
through the rear courtyard racing for the front wall. Several wooden structures washed away as the mass of debris smashed
into the front wall. The wall held but the mud piled up as the water flowed over and around the muck. The main gate and wall
were being undermined by the constant work of the water. The rain was increasing. Soon, the whole compound would be swept
from the face of the mountain.
Monks were running here and there within the
compound trying to divert the water's flow. The abbot left the flood control
work to his monastery supervisor and sought out their new guest.
Red Flute was standing outside the guest rooms
looking up at the mist-hidden mountain peak. The abbot stopped and watched from across the courtyard to see what the young
man would do. After studying the mountain peak for a while, Red Flute took up his instrument and began to play. The abbot
could barely make out the tune, but he could immediately see the reaction on the mountain top - the storm’s intensity
relaxed. The mist that was boiling around the summit became tranquil. The thunder and lightning faded. It was, thought the abbot, as if the mountain peak was trying to listen
to Red Flute's tune.
By the time the abbot had crossed the courtyard,
Red Flute had already packed away his instrument.
"Ah, old monk, no need to see about me, I won't
be here long."
"Please, I must have a word with you, our monastery
is in grave danger and we need your help."
"I know. I'm preparing to climb the mountain
and deal with this situation."
"Sir, I can't presume upon your goodness without
giving you a complete explanation of what is going on here."
The
musician smiled. "Just tell me when and how all this started."
The abbot and the flute player sat inside the
guest quarters. The pause in the rain gave the monks a chance to repair part of the damage and prepare for a further onslaught.
"Ten years ago," the abbot began. "I was the
monastery supervisor at the original Flying Dragon Monastery higher up this mountain. At that time, our abbot, Hui-sheng enjoyed
meditating outside next to a natural pool behind the main hall. The compound was built up against the mountain side near a
pool that was fed by a beautiful waterfall."
Red
Flute sipped the tea that had been served and smiled faintly at the mention of the waterfall.
"One night something happened between our abbot
Hui-sheng and that pool," continued Ming-jing. "To this day we don't know what it was. The abbot would never tell us. But
he ordered us to abandon the monastery and build another one down below at this location." Ming-jing’s eyes cast downward
as he spoke.
"The day after we left a great storm arose. The
original compound was destroyed by the ensuing floods." The abbot paused for a moment and gazed up at the dark black clouds
that were continuing to gather around the mountain peak. He moved closer to Red Flute and in a low voice said, "The source
of these storms is the same – and it remains unrequited."
"And the abbot?" asked Red Flute.
"He still lives up on the mountain. Not at the
old site but below it in a meditation hut, as a hermit. He is practicing asceticism and seems to be atoning for some sort
of wrong."
"Has anyone tried to find out from him what he
is doing?"
"I was his chief disciple and at first approached
him everyday. But alas he has taken a solemn vow of silence and does not respond to our supplications," the old monk sighed.
"I fear he will not survive this storm."
"Fear not," smiled Red Flute, "he is still alive,
and I will see him tonight."
"You must not venture up there. Whatever spirit
dwells there is evil and delights in the destruction of mankind."
"Do not worry. It is not evil."
The abbot's eyebrows took flight again. "How
do you know this!?"
Red Flute smiled. "Evil does not respond to music."
After taking a few supplies, Red Flute began
the long climb toward the summit. Ten years ago, there had been a trail up the mountain that serviced the original Flying
Dragon Monastery. But time, the disaster at the original location, and this new
storm had obliterated the track. Red Flute made his own path, following the natural inclinations of the mountain. Sometimes,
he walked along the banks of the raging torrents created by the storm. At other times, he followed the high ground along ridge
lines. By evening, he had reached Hui-sheng's cave.
The campfire was still burning, and Hui-sheng
was still in a meditative state. Red Flute needed to speak with him as soon as possible, but he knew it was dangerous to wake
someone from deep samadhi. He picked up his flute.
A
gentle melody, much like a nightingale's call, drifted from the instrument toward the cave. Hui-sheng began to stir. When
he had fully returned to the state of mundane consciousness, he saw Red Flute sitting outside the cave entrance.
"So you are the one who soothed the spirit's
temper."
Red Flute smiled and bowed giving a Buddhist
salute which Hui-sheng returned. The old monk bid the young musician enter and the two sat around the fire. Red Flute laid
out the supplies he had brought and told Hui-sheng about the damage to the monastery.
"Then no one was injured?" asked the old monk.
Red Flute assured him that the only physical
damage was to the structures within the compound. The storm's darkness crossed the monk's weathered face. "I fear she is out
to wipe every trace of human spirituality off the face of this mountain. I have offered my life in exchange for allowing my
brothers to live in peace with her, but each time she refuses."
"Old monk, I can help you, but I must know what
happened ten years ago between you and her."
"I have already ended a ten year vow of silence
by talking to you."
Red Flute nodded.
"I
have done so because I heard a little of the tune you played for her. You are no ordinary flute player."
"Old monk, tell me what happened."
For a moment, the old monk sat watching the fire.
"I used to meditate near the pool that was behind the main hall of the original Flying Dragon Monastery. It received that
name because of the legend that a dragon lived at the bottom of the pool. No one, in my generation, had ever seen the fabulous
beast; at least, until I began my meditation practice there. One night, as I was meditating, a stray thought entered my mind.
That thought, I later realized, was one of my former lives. I had once served an eminent master of the Way of Lao-zi, and
he had taught me a spell for making dragons rise to the sky. Once this thought entered my mind, I could not prevent the spell
from rising into consciousness. Unfortunately, the spell was genuine. The dragon was suddenly expelled from the pool. It rose
on high and mounted a cloud passing the mountain peak that night."
The
old monk stopped for a moment and took the cup of tea that Red Flute had brewed. After
a sip he continued. "The dragon transformed itself into a beautiful maiden. She was furious, saying, “You have forced
me from the pond where I have abided peacefully for a thousand years. I vow to
destroy this monastery and any attempts by humans to live on the mountain!”
“Her
weapon further startled me," the old monk paused.
Red Flute urged, "Yes, please go on – this
is crucial if I am to deal with her."
"Her weapon was the two-stringed erh-hu.
When she drew her bow across the strings and played of her sorrow at being disturbed after a millennia, we all wept. We experienced
her suffering. The depth of her sorrow drove some of my disciples mad. Then venting her rage, she turned Nature against us.
The monastery was swept away by a massive storm. Of course none of my disciples understood what happened for I was the only
one who could see her. They unwittingly suffered for my inability to control my wandering mind. So for these ten years I have
stayed here to discipline my mind." He laughed and said, "And even with all this practice, look how easy it was for you to
distract me."
"Old abbot, you are too hard on yourself. There
are few men on this earth who would not be ‘distracted,’ as you put it, by my flute playing. This is no ordinary
instrument, and I am no ordinary player. I will deal with the erh-hu maiden."
Suddenly
the cave was empty, only the old monk and the fire remained.
Near the mountain peak, the thick mist bounded
the ruins of the original Flying Dragon Monastery. Wild weeds overgrew the area, but Red Flute found the pool by following
the roar of the waterfall that plunged into it and the orchid scent that permeated the area.
As Red Flute moved toward the pool in the dark,
the moon suddenly filtered down through the mist and bathed the whole area in a ghostly pale-blue light. It was then, for
the first time, that he heard the erh-hu music clearly – a lonely, thin sound that perfectly complemented the
moonlight. He reached the side of the pond and gazed upon the splendor of the waterfall. It looked like a white silk robe
tossed by the wind as its pearly froth flew every which way. But it was the sound that attracted him the most – the
waterfall was the source of the erh-hu music. The flow of the water matched the flow of the music.
Red Flute raised his instrument and began to
play. At first he followed the lead of the waterfall, gently laying his notes along her melody line. Then he began developing
his own line and intertwined it with hers. Sometimes he followed her, and sometimes, only briefly at first, she followed him.
The music suddenly stopped. A beautiful maiden
appeared on the other side of the pool from Red Flute. She was tall with long silken hair as black as the deepest night and
eyes that burnt like the very stars in the heavens. Her gown was opalescent as if she was cloaked in a rainbow with the moon
as its source.
"Who are you?" she called to him.
"I am whoever you would like me to be."
"Don't toy with me. I could destroy you with
one pluck of my string. That is how insignificant you are to me."
"Yes that could be, but then where could you
ever find anyone to accompany you?"
"I need no accompaniment. Have you no ears? My
playing is superb."
"It is, and I am in awe of it. But think for
a moment of the music that could be made were two superb instruments such as the dizi and the erh-hu joined
by two such superb players as us? Are the instruments not made for each other?"
"Yes, but are the players?"
"Well, then we must have a match!"
"You are good, but don't presume you are my equal."
"My dear rain maiden, so far I've merely followed
and that has been rather simple."
"How dare you!" She picked up her instrument
and drew the bow across its two strings. Lightning struck near Red Flute. He
then took up his flute and blew just one note. The very ground that held the pool quaked. The maiden stopped.
"Hah, then your mortal form is just a convenience.
Perhaps, this might be an interesting match. What do you propose, musician?"
"We accompany each other until one cannot match
the other. At that point, the leader is declared winner."
"But what does the winner win and the loser lose?"
the maiden said, a smile played across her lips.
"If I lose I will destroy my flute and leave
the mountain to you. You can destroy the humans as is your present inclination. But if you lose then you must marry me, and
become my dutiful wife."
Lightning flashed and thunder roared at the words
"dutiful wife."
"If it were not for your flute playing, this
would be a test of martial ability instead!" blazed the rain maiden. "I agree to your terms and look forward to sweeping the
humans off this mountain." With that she took up her instrument and began to play.
The waterfall burst forth and raged on and on.
So forceful was the water that it split some of the boulders below. But the dizi managed to hang on and stayed with
the falcon’s plunge that she provided.
The pace, however, proved too fast for the rain
maiden forcing her to slow or lose the tune. At that moment, Red Flute, who had been conserving his strength, took command.
A bright rippling melody played out of his flute. It danced merrily along wafting high above the waterfall turning the moon
light golden.
The
rain maiden struggled to keep up with him but soon became lost in the merriment of his melody. To her surprise she found herself
carried away. Not only could she stay with him, but her bow and fingers wove a bright air of her own within his.
The playing went back and forth. At one moment,
he led, at another she. The music picked up pace and then relaxed, gathering strength. Then another surge took them higher
and again, exhausted, their music fell back down into the valleys; it mellowed and touched the sweetness of their exhaustion.
The music ranged up and down the mountain and all across the island. For a week the islanders enjoyed the most heavenly music
ever to dance in mortal ears.
Then it stopped. The storm dissipated and the
weather resumed its normal patterns over the island. Hui-sheng climbed to the ruins and the pool with his fellow monks. Master
Red Flute was nowhere to be found.
In time, the original monastery was rebuilt and
named the Upper Flying Dragon Monastery, while the one below had "Lower" added to its name. Near the pool they dedicated a
shrine to Red Flute and one to the rain maiden.
However, there was one curious discovery. Near
the edge of the pool a new stand of bamboos flourished – they were red bamboos, a type never native to the island. The
local people claim that on misty moonlit nights, if one listens very carefully, erh-hu music can be heard coming from
the waterfall, and, as the wind blows through the stand of red bamboos, the sound of dizi music is also heard. The
music of the two instruments is always in perfect, natural harmony.
THE END