by Suhotra Swami
“In Buddhism, dharma means the true nature of reality. Nagarjuna taught that this true nature seems different to different observers because there are different levels of understanding the dharma. There is the level of the eye of flesh. When one searches for the Jewel Island of Peace, he can’t locate it. Only pain can be found by that eye. One must raise the vision higher. Next one seeks the
Yamato
put his teacup down and gazed off into some phantom landscape. Then he leaned
forward on his desk and pressed his palms into his forehead. When he looked at Wiederoy
again, his eyes were rimmed with red.
His
characteristic raspy whisper seemed to have a sharper edge to it. Wiederoy
sensed that what Yamato would tell him next was of great importance to him.
“What
I’m talking about here is transmundane consciousness. That is how the essential
nature of reality—the ultimate information-code beyond what we see with the
eyes in our heads, beyond the moral compass that tells right from wrong, beyond
even metaphysics—is revealed. To use the Pali word, one must be an iddhi. That means a perfected being, possessed
with a consciousness that reaches further into the true nature of reality than
can the consciousness of people who are merely sensual, or moral, or
intellectual. Or all three.
Yamato
raised a cautionary finger. “But there’s always been a problem. In history,
time and time again, politicians trample consciousness with jackboots to keep
it down at the sensual, moral and philosophical level. You know, I read something
a few days back in Reader’s Digest. You’ve
been to college. I guess you know about the Reichstag Fire in Berlin , 1933.”
“Yessir.
The Reichstag was the German parliament. Someone set it ablaze one night not
long after Hitler became Chancellor of Germany. He used this incident as an
excuse to crack down on all civil liberties in the country. That’s how he went
from being a regular politician in a democratic system to the dictator of a
totalitarian state.”
“Exactly. For whatever it’s worth,
the Digest ran a sidebar in an
article about the Reichstag fire. It was about a man named Erik Hanussen. He
was widely reputed in Germany
as a clairvoyant—you know? Supposedly he foresaw the future. Parapsychologists
call it precognition. At least he was very good at convincing crowds he had
that power. The Digest said he became
a pet of the Nazi leadership as early as the ’20s because he foretold Hitler’s
rise to power—which did happen, but
only in January 1933, when Hitler was appointed Chancellor.
“A
month later, on 24 February, Hanussen announced that he’d had a vision of a
great house on fire that would result in a popular uprising all around the
country. That was three days before the Reichstag incident. Since the public was
well aware Hanussen was close to the Nazi Party, tongues started wagging as to
whether Hanussen really predicted the
fire or just already knew about a
plan the Nazis’ had up their sleeves to burn down the Parliament and blame it on the
communists. For its part, the German Communist Party did a good job of
convincing the world they were framed. Three months later, Hanussen’s body was
found in a ditch a few miles east of Berlin .”
Captain
Yamato’s thoughts again carried him off. He sipped his tea a while. Wiederoy,
sensing that things would move in an even stranger direction, could only think
to himself, “Curiouser and curiouser.”
At
last the captain continued. “Hanussen was a professional magician. He not only
foretold events, he demonstrated that he could see the objects people had in their
pockets. The police used him as a crime-solving psychic. He was a knife-thrower
and a fire-eater too. It’s all very well to argue he was an ordinary stage
conjurer with no genuine supernatural powers. Regardless, he had the reputation of a magician. For
politicians who build empires upon lies, that may be enough to put a fear into
them that believe that only wicked deeds will keep their heads on their
shoulders. They know only one thing about the truth—it is mighty, and therefore
dangerous. Magicians, psychics, prophets, soothsayers are feared because of
their reputation for seeing further, of being more conscious. When you trace back the origin of the word magic as far back as you
can go, you come to the Old Persian word magus
(‘mighty one’). Truth exists, lies are invented. One who knows this is the
true magus. Like the prophets of old,
he can bring down an invented civilization with just a single word of truth.”
Wiederoy was caught off-guard when all
at once the Captain asked about a name. The sudden change of subject forced Charles,
for the first tine since they’d known each other, to ask Yamato to repeat
himself.
“Wiederoy. Your name. What is it? German?
Dutch?”
“Well, sir, according to what my Dad
told my Mom, it started as a Norman-French name, Vidarleroi, “Vidar the King.” Vidar
goes back to Old Norse, the language of the Vikings. Vidar is the name of the
son of Odin who avenges his father by killing the Fenris Wolf. When the Vikings
settled in Normandy ,
they started speaking French. It’s said they found it a classier language. By
the same token, someone among my Dad’s ancestors thought Vidarleroi sounded
better than Kungvidar or whatever it was originally. The passage of time and my
Dad’s ancestors’ migrating to new places turned Vidarleroi into Wiederoy.”
“Ah,” Yamato mused. “You know, as a
kid I had to take what I guess you’d call catechism in Pure Land Buddhism.” His
voice, normally a forcible hiss, became airy with nostalgia. “That was at the Jodo Temple
in L.A. ’s
Little Tokyo. I even had to take two years of Sanskrit. For the sake of my
mother I also had to take two years of Latin, at a Catholic Sunday school.
“But anyway. For two years, every
Monday evening at the Pure
Land class, we had to
recite a prayer called the Kammuryoju-kyo. And on Wednesdays and Fridays we had to study its Sanskrit
back-translation, the Amitayur-dhyana-sutra.
“You know, it’s funny, Charles, that around
the same time I was learning Sanskrit, I read the story of Vidar. Used to love
those Viking myths. They’re so much like our own Samurai tales. Anyway, one
version of the saga is that Vidar grabs the Fenris Wolf by its upper and lower
jaws and pulls his mouth apart. Like King Kong does to that Tyrannosaurus Rex?
Remember that? Anyway, check this out. There’s this Sanskrit word, vidara,
which means ‘to tear apart.’ Vidara—Vidar—Wiederoy. Pretty cool, Lieutenant. Hey, seems to me I
remember that Vidar becomes the deity of the golden age that follows Ragnarok,
the fall of the Norse gods.”
Charles smiled a little sadly and
shrugged. On any other occasion he’d be interested, but this was hardly the
time for that.
“I’m not saying I know for sure that
Wiederoy relates back to vidara, but
your Dad told your Mom it comes from Vidar. There’s magic in names, is what I’m
telling you. You know, in Japan
there’s a practice of connecting with magical beings through sound. It’s called
kotodama, ‘sound-spirit.’
“There was a time when, in all
cultures, people believed that sounds can evoke spiritual powers latent within our
bodies, minds, and souls. For example, according to the Japanese tradition, raiju, the spirit of lightning or fire,
is not only in the sky. It’s located in the navel. So in a sense, raiju corresponds to the third cakra of the Indian yoga system—the navel center called manipuraka. This chakra’s
element is fire, and its sound is ram.
Raiju, ram. The seed-sound ra is
an indicator of the sun or fire. The
ancient Greeks had a different name for the navel region—cholos. No ra phoneme
that we know of. But still, cholos was
known to Greek warriors as the spirit of wrath. Wrath is a flaming emotional state. That’s why at one point in The Illiad Paris told Hector he couldn’t sit down,
because the Trojans had aggravated his cholos.
“The sound-spirit of different
regions of the bodily microcosm or the universal macrocosm can reveal itself in
the form of an animal, or even a number of animals. The Japanese believe that raiju, for example, may appear as a cat.
The semblance with lightning is that sometimes it leaps from tree to tree, just
as a cat may do.
“Ryu-o
is the heavenly dragon king. That’s the animal form of the sound. Ryu-o also refers to the truth of clear
cosmic consciousness. The ancient Egyptians worshiped a dragon of heaven too.
Its body formed the archway of the sky along which the sun and moon journey. In
Egypt
the dragon of heaven was addressed as Ka-en-ankh Nereru. According to India ’s sacred
epic, Mahabharata, the same arch of
heaven is known as the Marut (wind or storm god) named Ahirbudhnya. Ahirbudhnya
is a naga, a celestial serpent. The
sun and moon that travel along the heavenly path that is a gigantic serpent are
the two eyes of God’s universal form. So, like Ryu-o, Ahirbudhnya is the truth of cosmic consciousness. Another
interesting parallel is that Ahirbudhnya is
not different from Seshnaga Ananta. This is a gigantic snake or dragon that
dwells at the bottom of the ocean from where He rules the flow of what some
mystics call the Draconic Current, which sustains everything. Holds it all together.
In Japan
the sound for the ocean dragon king is Ryujin.”
All at once Yamato was eyeing him with
curious calmness. “You like the tea? It comes as a gift from Iruma, you know…”
“Yes, you’ve told me, Captain
Yamato. It’s from the JDF.” He felt his face flush.
Silence.
“Excuse me sir, ah…”
“What is it, Lieutenant?”
“That
was quite a…er…loxodromic little voyage you just took me on.”
Yamoto
leaned back and studied him thoughtfully. “Lox-o-drom-ic,” he repeated the
strange word, savoring each syllable. “You know
what I’m gonna ask you next.”
Wiederoy
explained, using his hands to illustrate his words. “It’s an old naval term. In
the days before sailboats were as sleek in the water as they are now, equipped
with today’s deep keels, if they caught wind from the side but the helmsman kept
straight a course as he could, the boat’s tipped so far over that you’d think
the weight of its mast just might spill it into the ocean. The boat can’t stay
a trimmed course tipped over like that. It has to move at an oblique angle.
That’s loxodromic. This little narrative you just related, Captain. If I may
say so, it’s rather oblique.”
Yamoto
grinned sardonically as he poured himself another cup of Sayama tea. “It’s
going to take you a long time, Wiederoy, a long, long time. Things are never as
simple as they seem—not in this business, anyway. You’ve got to start finding
the wheels inside the wheels.”
Wiederoy
sat straighter in his seat, alert. Where’s the Captain taking this?
“‘To
each soul’—it’s another line from Heraclitus—“‘belongs a report that increases
itself.’ See, Charles, he’s talking about consciousness expansion. It’s ironic
that you walked in here this morning with the intention of reporting to me
about recent developments. But it’s been me reporting to you. And now my report
is about to increase. a little more.
Queasiness
crept up Wiederoy’s esophagus as he watched this man, his superior officer,
fall apart. It had to stop now. He’d been sent to Okinawa
specifically to check up on Yamato. And he’d grown to like and even trust his
so-called boss. Even this tape he was inclined to pass it off as nothing more
than a recording of Yamato’s own undercover work. But he’d gotten word last
night from Roy Earle, who was in Taiwan right now under ONI deep
cover. “Yamato is up fudge creek without a popsicle stick, and your tape is
what we need to prove it. Just put a cap on the mess he’s making by confronting
him with it. But be ready for trouble.” When
he walked into the CO’s office this morning, Wiederoy was feeling sorry for the
man. But now the Yamato’s increasingly loopy ambiage had stretched his patience
past all limits.
“Sir,”
said Wiederoy wearily, “speaking of the opinion of a superior officer,
Commodore Haines has heard this tape already. He signed a warrant for your
arrest.”
Yamato’s
herpetine eyes bulged, their black pupils pixilating with iridescent sparkles
of green and yellow. The desperate humanity that clung to them during his
laborious exposition on Erik Hanussen and magpies and the elastic racial
policies of the Third Reich had by now deliquesced.
“Wiederoy.”
Yamato’s voice was almost inaudible. Tears streamed down his cheeks. “At the
phenomenal fringe of this kinematic experience you and I are taking to be
reality, there is something at work that defies formulation. It has no name.
Its existence I can only surmise.”
With
an anguished cry the captain lunged across his desk, his left hand scrabbling
for Wiederoy’s starched military tie while his right hand came up in a fist. Wiederoy’s
nervous system was instantly electrified by adrenalin, training, and the
emotionless logic of stopping an attacker. He jerked back in his chair, keeping
himself just out of the Captain’s grasp. This forced Yamato to half-rise from
his seat and awkwardly bend his body forward so that his fingers might close
the gap. Wiederoy seized his superior officer’s left hand with his own and, by twisting
leftward at the wrist as far as he could, he immoblized it. Pressing the hand against his shirtfront, he
held it fast. At the same time he swung his body leftward in his swivel-chair,
throwing the captain off balance. That motion led fluidly into the bringing
down of his right elbow hard into the crook of Yamato’s extended arm. His CO’s
face and chest bobbed above the desk as he struggled to get free while Wiederoy
kept turning leftward. In order to halt the sudden drop of his own face into
the varnished walnut surface, Yamato was forced to strike his right fist into
the desktop instead of into Wiederoy’s face.
Maintaining
his tight grip on Yamato’s twisted left wrist, the leftward spin of his
still-seated body, and the downward drive of his right elbow, Wiederoy effortlessly
broke his CO’s wrist. Screaming in pain, Yamato reared up to receive a lightning
strike in the right eye from Wiederoy’s right fist. The force of the punch came
not only from the Lieutenant’s elbow joint and shoulder that snapped out
straight from their fold deep in the crook of Yamato’s arm, but also from his
right foot that served as the mainspring of his whole body’s sudden leap onto
the desk. As he came over he swiftly seized Yamato’s throat with his left hand and
drew his right back to his ear in a cocked fist. Yamato fell back into his
chair, the front legs leaving the floor. His arms flailed like a broken-winged
bird as he tried to keep his balance.
Wiederoy
had landed on his haunches. He instantly uncoiled his taut leg muscles,
shooting his body onward. As he entered Yamato’s space his fingertips dug deep
into the Captain’s windpipe. For an instant he used that grip to jerk his head
forward, confusing Yamato as to his intentions. By making sure that the captain was pulled toward him for just an instant, he momentarily
arrested the Captain’s backward fall to the floor. That teetering split-second
was all Wiederoy needed to ball up his own body by folding his knees up to his
chest in mid-air. But it was with his knees on Yamato’s chest that he landed, driving him into the floor and slamming
all the wind out of his lungs. Wiederoy stopped him from refilling his chest
with his left hand, now a vise that squeezed shut his opponent’s windpipe. At
the exact instant the back of the Captain’s head collided with the floorboards,
Wiederoy’s right fist hammered the bridge of his nose. Before his CO could
collect his wits, Wiederoy, catlike, leaped away from the Captain’s body onto
his feet and stood ready. But Yamato just lay on his back gasping like a
beached mackerel, left eye staring upward at nothing, right eye purple and
closing, nose misshapen and bleeding, his legs splayed around the seat of his upended
chair. His broken left wrist was flung
out to the side; his right arm was folded at the elbow beneath his body and the
chairback..
Now
that Wiederoy looked down upon the Captain after that bit of excitement, he
felt little regret for him. In those days he believed that being directed from
above to do what he did that day was a means of stripping his eyes of the
scales that hid the naked evil of a fallen world. In this way Wiederoy was both
soldier and a Gnostic-in-the-making.
From
his mother he had inherited a penchant for deinosis, the envisioning of life at
its most hideous. She believed the material world to be inherently an evil
place. The only escape from its evil was by the mystical transformation of
matter to spirit by sacrifice (from the Latin sacer facere, “to make sacred”). The true nature of sacrifice—Christ’s
self-sacrifice on the Cross—was one of mystery, not ritual. Wiederoy thought he
had found the mystery of sacrifice in his work with the ONI.
Yamato
began to laugh. Even then it was just a whisper, the mere ghost of mirth. Wiederoy
eyed his CO carefully. He hadn’t moved an inch from where he’d fallen.
“Wiederoy,”
rasped the Captain between chuckles. “Hey, Wiederoy. Remember this: ‘And nine’s
the devil his own self.’ They’re not going to let us get away with it. The
magi…the cuckoos...they’re mad at us
for what we’ve been doing to them…for centuries..
And believe me, they’ve got the power to get their revenge.” He paused, and
laughed again. “I could have helped stop that. But I work for idiots. Tell
Haines and Earle and all those guys to shed no tears. I won’t be any more dead
than they’ve been for years.” His right arm came out from behind his back with a
Colt .45 military-issue pistol in the hand. Yamato shoved the muzzle into his still-laughing
mouth and pulled the trigger. Wiederoy flinched at the sound, turned his back on
the red spray, and reached for the phone.
In
a world ignorant of—or too stiff-necked to embrace—the inner spirit of sacrificial
transformation in the stead of outward liturgical formalities, the logic of the
moral distinction between good and evil breaks down into contradiction. How
often had Wiederoy heard from his mother Laima’s mouth the lament of a woman
whose faith was a relic of a Catholicism stabbed in the back over a millennia
ago? “Ash buvau keistoule shalyje, taip
ilgai,” she would mutter in the language of the old country. “I have been
for so long a stranger in a strange land.”
His
superiors, crew-cut gray-heads—whose stern faces were deeply lined from years
of feeding the blazes under the bubbling saucepans of small wars on the front
burners even as they anxiously tended the back flame so that the Big War never
got hotter than a simmer—found Lieutenant Charles P.R. Wiederoy interesting. Some
of their small wars, like Vietnam ,
had been just too open to the public for America ’s good. Intelligence
agencies are at their best in small wars waged under deep cover. The deeper the
cover, the less the moral logic of civilization applies. This was where Lieutenant
Charles Wiederoy’s budding Gnosticism fit right in. It became the germ for
Project Rathramnus.
The
Ryukyu-Shoto is a 650-kilometer long chain of islands that extends southwest
from Kyushu , southern Japan , to the
tip of Taiwan .
Before 1868, the Ryukyus formed a semi-independent kingdom ruled from Okinawa . Thereafter it became a ken or prefecture of the Empire of Japan. Their new rulers obliged
the Ryukyu islanders to learn Japanese, since their own language was
unintelligible to anyone but Okinawans.
In
April 1945 one of the bloodiest battles of the Second World War’s Pacific
Theater was fought on Okinawa between the
forces of the United States
and Japan .
For decades after the Ryukyu-Shoto was under the sole control of the American
occupation government. By 1972 the entire chain had been returned to Japanese
administration. However, through the end of the Twentieth Century, the U.S. maintained
eighty-eight military bases and thousands of troops in the Ryukyus.
We
may note that the figure “eighty-eight” included only military bases that were
publicly acknowledged by America
and Japan .
We may further note that since its formation in 1952, the NSA (National
Security Agency) has maintained absolutely no contact with the American public
and news media, giving rise to the joke that NSA stands for “No Such Agency.” It
is likewise noteworthy that the U.S. Air Force never directly acknowledged the
existence of its top secret facility at Groom Lake, Nevada—a land area as big
as a Benelux nation, above which 4,742 miles of air space were forbidden to all
civilian air traffic and even to military aircraft from other bases. Wild
rumors abounded about what the government was really up to at this place, known
to the public by such names as Area 51, Dreamland, The Box, The Ranch, and The
Remote Location.
No
doubt some secretive purpose was served there, but exactly what, the government
never revealed. Returning again to the
Ryukyus, here too there was at least one top secret, unacknowledged U.S. military
installation. For the sake of this narration it shall be called Base 89. What
it was called on the inside we shall probably never know, for unlike the NSA
and Area 51, Base 89—the tiny island of Kawazaruna—remained a complete secret
to all but a tiny fraction of the intelligence
personnel of the United States and Japan.
Like
other very small islands in the Ryukyu chain, Kawazaruna never had a civilian
population. Two years before Japan
attacked Pearl Harbor , she constructed a
high-security submarine base there. It was so secret that the U.S. military
did not learn of its existence until several weeks after the end of WWII,
whereupon the island immediately became an American installation as unknown as
the Japanese one before it.
At
war’s end the Red Army captured a Japanese installation of the same level of
high security. This was a plant at Hungnam
in what was to soon become communist North Korea . Under the Japanese occupation
of Korea ,
Hungnam was
known as Konan. A U.S. Army 24th Corps document states that for a
period of time after the war, the Soviets kept the Hungnam plant in operation; whatever was
being produced was collected every other month by Soviet submarines. Later the
North Korean communist government took over the plant. In time Hungnam became known as vital to that
country’s effort to produce a nuclear weapon.
An
investigator from the U.S. Army’s 24th Corps interviewed a Japanese
officer who claimed that three days before the war ended, Japanese scientists from
Hungnam
exploded a small atomic device on a nearby island. This officer declared the
plant—the heart of Japan ’s
nuclear weapons program—had earlier been moved from Japan to Korea because of B-29 raids. In the
course of this move, three months production time was lost. The officer is
quoted as saying, “We would have had (the bomb) three months earlier if it had
not been for the B-29.”
The
super-secret Japanese submarine base at Kawazaruna was in no way related to
Japan’s atomic bomb program. It was built to pursue a rather more esoteric plan
conceived by Uchida Ryohei, founder of the paramilitary, ultra-right-wing
Kokuryukai, The Amur River Society, notorious in the West by its more ominous
translation, “The Black Dragon Society.” We need not detain ourselves here with
the Black Dragons, save to say that besides training espionage agents,
assassins and saboteurs, their mission was to forge links with Buddhist
organizations across Asia . Indeed, though the
Black Dragon Society is remembered today for political intrigue, it maintained
formal ties only with Buddhist
religious societies. It had no alliance with any political party, Japanese or
foreign. Uchida Ryohei’s public image was not that of a strutting militarist-fascist.
He wore the robes, long hair and beard of a kenjin,
a man of profound and mystical knowledge. As a master of jojutsu, Japanese stick-fighting, he was also man to be feared.
In
1980, on a calendar date that became uncertain as soon as the next day dawned,
a kabu (Okinawan viper) coiled behind
a wastepaper basket—or a Kabu, the Okinawan nickname for the SR-71 “Blackbird” spy
aircraft that, had it flown 80,000 feet over Kawazaruna at Mach 3 with laser
listening technology pointed at the island—would have heard this conversation
within a puzzle-box at the heart of the puzzle-box of Base 89.
“I’m telling you, however you want to cut this chunk
of cheese, this kid will prove to be useful. Don’t, Mr. Sebastian, make too
much out of his lack of experience. And Mr. Ferguson, don’t bring up the words
‘young’ and ‘naïve’ again.”
Earle
theatrically dropped a file folder on the table at which they sat. The folder
was heavy with documents. It fell with the sound of a fly being swatted. “In Tokyo .” He dropped
another. It made the same swatting sound, as did the rest. “In Chiba .” He dropped a third. “In Yokohama .” He dropped a
fourth and a fifth. “In Osaka
twice.” He dropped a sixth and last. “And in Tokyo again.
“These
books are still open. Gentlemen, with what we’ve got going here [at Base 89]
it’s high time we closed them. Unsavory business, need I say that?” He pointed
to each file folder in succession as he recited a percentile. “Eighty percent
chance, sixty percent, sixty-five, NINETY and NINETY-FIVE, and finally,
fifty-five. These are the risks I’ve figured of each book knowing what
Kawazaruna was between 1939 and 1945. These two,” he lifted the two Osaka folders and let
them drop again, “may know where Kawazaruna
is. What you fail to understand, gentlemen, is that I am not proposing we give
Mr. Wiederoy all six books to close. Let him see all six, is what I am saying,
and pick one that he feels most comfortable with.”
Sebastian
drummed his fingers impatiently on the tabletop. “Mr. Earle, I can get a Seal
team to close these books, expertly and professionally. Your plan just raises
too many doubts in my mind.”
“You
seem to forget that a carload of Seals will stand out in these Japanese cities
like an 18-centimeter long Amazonian leech squirming on a freshly waxed white
tile floor. We need someone young, who can pass as a backpacker, and who speaks
good Japanese. That way, even if he blows it and gets caught by the civvie
police, we can plausibly deny the kid was acting under orders. Plausibly deny a
Seal team? You know those guys! Give them each a clean 9 mil and they’ll say,
‘What’m I gonna do with this toy?’ Then they’ll run out and grab God knows what
ordnance on Navy credit.”
“What
I am saying is this—Wiederoy’s a
decent chap, and since he took care of Yamato—brilliantly, I might add—his situation
is no longer the same. He’s gotten pretty deep into Buddhism. Earle, you can’t
just wave away the fact that after Yamato killed himself, Wiederoy had second
thoughts.
“Captain
Yamato was a strange one, and that made him a security risk for us. He was a
good Naval officer who nursed a serious personal grudge against the military.
Or better to say, against certain policies that the U.S. Government executes by
means of its armed forces. Despite that, Yamato befriended and trusted
Lieutenant Wiederoy. This was a man who after 1975 never trusted any other officer who worked with him! Yamato knew we
had him under the magnifying glass.
“Now
don’t get excited when I say this, Earle, but in his own way, Wiederoy’s a bit
of a weirdo too. He trusted Yamato in
return. On a level beneath the surface, these two men shared the same brand of
integrity. Wiederoy wrote in his report that the tape he made was not evidence enough to break his
personal trust in his commanding officer. It was because he was ordered to from above that he served notice to
Yamato.
“Earle,
I gotta tell you, it’s pretty damned hidebound to refuse to see beyond “for us,
this is all that counts—the man
did his job.” How many times can we count on ordering a man to act opposite of
his inner convictions, his nature, before we have another Captain Yamato on our
hands?
“You
tell him to target some old Yakuza pimp—especially Osaka number two, whom we’re
pretty sure took out ONI Captain John Converse because he was trying to find
out what really happened here at Kawazaruma that caused the crews of two PT
boats to vanish the day we found about this place and sent them in to occupy
it—yeah, he’d do it. What I don’t get, though, is why focus him on the removal of bad guys? What Yamato talked about on
the last day of his life, Wiederoy is internalizing.
Buddhism. As far as I know, nonviolence is pretty much essential to the Buddhist
way.”
Earle
snapped his fingers. “Yes! Buddhism. Ferguson ,
in your own ham-fisted manner, you’re starting to get the hang of playing
‘Chopsticks’ along with me. I know Wiederoy’s
not a cold-blooded killer. At the same time, if we ordered him to do it, he’ll take
out Osaka Two. You scored a point there, Fergie. I hadn’t thought the Captain
Converse angle through. We should see to it that he closes that book because it really plays off Wiederoy’s idealistic streak:
settle an old score, an eye for an eye, and all that moralistic tripe. He
couldn’t turn it down. The morning after he does the job, though, he’ll
probably look at himself in the bathroom
mirror and the same idealism will beat
him on the head for turning into a hired killer. ‘Dear Buddha! What’s happening
to me? I’m killing old Black Dragons. They were assassins. I’m just becoming an
assassin myself.’
“Wiederoy
will end up quitting the service,” Earle continued, “and right there’s the key
point in his psychology that differentiates himself from Yamato. All the
resentment Yamato had against the government for his dad’s death fed his
determination to stay in and get even. He thought he had our hands
tied because…”
Sebastian
completed the sentence: “…because he had the gift.”
Ferguson
added: “For thirty years we tried to update the communications technology the
Japanese started here: reaching out to our forked-tongue friends down below via
electronic transmission (microwaves, UHF, VHF, and ELF); plus experimenting
with seawater’s excellent conduction of direct acoustics over long distances, taking
that even to the point of amplifying underwater pre-recorded Indian snake charmer
music, and the Sciresci musical language. But the return we got was never
better than the Japs got, even though we were using technology way beyond that
of the 1940s. At least it was tantalizing enough to keep us going. We knew we
were stirring something up. VISUAL
IMAGERY—LOOK IN OCEAN BOOK. but there was no regular response.”
Sebastian
was not as familiar with the early history of the Kawazaruma project as the
other two. “What did the Japanese call their program here? I’m sure they
weren’t using the name of the island. Dead giveaway.”
“The
Dragons were only peripheral to Keitei once
the Imperial Navy set up shop here. It was the Navy that ran the signals and
acoustic tests. We knew that the leadership of the Black Dragon Society wanted
to get one Dr. Taniguchi involved. He was a psychical researcher who apparently
had done some impressive experiments in mind over matter phenomena. Taniguchi promoted
Buddhist and other Oriental forms of mentalism as sciences in their own right. So
you see, that’s why the Dragons were
hooking up with Buddhist groups all across Asia .
They were looking for a medium for the Keitei
program. Our people were like the Imperial Japanese Navy: they didn’t think Taniguchi’s
ideas had any value. That is, until Yamato came along.”
Earle
chuckled, “Well, I still don’t know what to think about that incident Kuzuo
Yoshihsa swore he witnessed himself here in 1940.” Sebastian looked puzzled.
“It’s a crazy story about a Buddhist nun from Bhutan up in the Himalayas .
She supposedly showed up in Japan ,
got an audience with Yoshihsa, who was Black Dragon number one after Ryohei’s
death in ’37. Before he could even open his mouth she told him about Project
Keitei and how the Navy was doing
everything wrong. Yoshihsa brought her to Kawazaruna by boat. But the Black
Dragons’ boat was intercepted by a Japanese Navy patrol boat and warned off. I
read the report submitted by the captain of the patrol boat. He described the
nun as ‘a shaven-headed woman in purple robes whose face was beautiful except
for her eyes, which looked like death.’ She stood at the aft of the boat and
made a ghostly shrill cry out upon the waves. Almost immediately a small sea
dragon with five heads surfaced and made a similar sound. The woman made the
same call again. The small creature—six or seven feet long—came right up to the
aft of the boat as a child would when called by its mother. The nun, who had
been standing very still while calling the creature, suddenly moved faster than
the eye could see, seized the dragon by one of its necks and pulled its body
into the boat’s propeller. The sea serpent’s lower half was shredded and the
animal was killed instantly. The woman pulled the bloody carcass onto the deck.
She flung it down and got to work with a knife, cutting small ruby-like jewels
out of each of the dragon’s heads. Yoshihsa and his men just looked on,
shocked. Terrified. After collecting the five jewels the woman tossed the
mangled body of the serpent overboard. She laughed like a mad fiend, holding up
the jewels for all to see. The boat turned back in the northerly direction from
which it came.”
Once he’s out
of the service, his disgust with the world of evil—not with us, gentlemen, not with the military,
but with the world—will put him on a mystical
path. An unorthodox one.”
“You’re
guaranteeing that?”
“Mr.
Sebastian, it’s all in his background file. In the Second World War his father
was an OSS
operative. His mother was the communications liaison in a Lithuanian resistance
group that worked with our side. With America . Her people hated the
Russians. Their program was, get the Germans out, don’t let the Russkis back
in, and make Lithuania
an independent country again. Before hostilities Lithuania was a sovereign Baltic
state. In 1940 the Red Army marched in and took over as per a secret protocol
between Hitler and Stalin. So our boy’s mother and her group hated both Hitler
and Stalin. Espionage being the rat’s nest that it is, it turned out that both
the Abwehr and the NKVD had
infiltrated her group.
“On
top of that, Roosevelt couldn’t have cared
less about Lithuania .
It was just another thank-you gift for Uncle Joe. Not even that. As far as
Uncle Joe was concerned, Lithuania
already belonged to the Soviet Union . The
Germans just pick-pocketed it off him.
“So,
understanding the hand she was being dealt, our boy’s mother—her name was
Laima—begged her OSS
contact to get her out of there. Our boy’s father-to-be, at great personal
risk, managed to do that. Wartime hero. He got her to London where she turned out to be a top intelligence
asset. Their professional relationship became a wartime romance. War’s end, she
came Stateside with him where they married. In ’55 she gave birth to a son—our
boy Charles P.R. Wiederoy. His father died of a heart attack in ‘59. So our boy
was basically raised by Laima.
“Now,
the thing you have to understand about Lithuanians is, formally they are Catholics.
But scratch one and underneath you’ll find a pagan. Magic. Occultism.
Obscurantism. The boy soaked all this up from his Mom. Like Ferguson said, his second middle name is
Rathramnus, which he got from her. Laima told him practically every day that
his namesake should have been the Pope.”
“What’s
her status now?”
“She
died last year.”
But he won’t leave Japan . We can make sure of that. Yamato
understood them but couldn’t—or wouldn’t—talk back. And as we all know, he would
never let Nagakriti work for us. He
had the talent, but he was a damn sight
too difficult to deal with. Setting conditions! ‘No more Manzanars, no more
plutonium experiments.’ Boo-hoo. Kawazaruna is all about the business end of
government.”
“So
the difference here is Wiederoy’s need for a mystery religion.” said Ferguson . “Gnosticism—the
world as hell itself, created by a mischievous demiurge, not by God. The need
to go from the material to the spiritual by means of a sacrifice that cannot be
spoken of in words. That would tend to knock a man’s moral and social compass a
little off kilter. And make him very closed-mouthed, I would think. Notice Wiederoy’s
second middle name, Rathramnus. He got that from his mother. I looked it
up…here, let me read from my notes.
Rathramnus of Corbie in northern France —a Catholic
monk who died in A.D. 868. He wrote tracts against heresies. These earned him much
praise from his Church authorities. In 1050, however, nearly two hundred years
after his death, the Council of Vercelli condemned Rathramnus as a heretic. Because
they could not burn him at the stake, they burned his books. They saw in his
writings on transubstantiation—the mystical change during the Catholic Mass of
the substance, not the form, of bread and wine into Christ’s
flesh and blood—they saw possibilities of black magic.
Disbelieving
laughter rippled through the room. This sound of merriment was punctuated by
remarks made by cunning strategists whose minds were now fully in gear.
“Well,
you just gotta admire that level of paranoia. That’s how the Church of Rome
hung on to power for so long.”
“Ahhhh…this
is just the kind of stupidity that costs you the faith of the common man.
Rathramnus did good for the Church during his life and died in a state of
grace. Two centuries later they declared him anathema. What good can come from
that?”
“That’s
right. It’s exactly as if our President gave a State of the Union Address on TV
to announce to the world that George Washington is now known to have been a
British spy.”
“Correct.
Even if you have evidence of something like that, you cover it up.”
“Cover
it up and close the book on anybody who tries to uncover it.”
“Gentlemen,”
Earle spoke up. “Let’s get back on track, please. I’m telling you—no, I’m assuring you—our boy will do what we
want him to do. He’ll close at least one book. It will disgust him. But that disgust fits what he expects of the
world. Yes, I do predict he’ll opt for early discharge.
“You
said he has two middle names. Rathramnus is the second. What’s the first?
“Perseus.
That came from his father.”
“Perseus
is good. Nice military ring to it.”
“Pay
attention, gentlemen. Our young Lieutenant’s been over here just a few years
now, but in that time he learned Japanese. In his spare time he’s been doing
personal research into Buddhism. Reading
books. Japanese as well as English
books. He’s paid visits to several monasteries. On the advice of one of his
colleagues, who is in touch with a man who is in touch with a man who is in
touch with me, one of those monasteries is the Zentsugi. This is his way of
dealing with the recent loss of his mother. He’s shopping around for an
unorthodox belief of his own.
“To
draw a picture for you, gentlemen, we will assign him one case to begin with.
He will do the needful. We’ll give him another, and another, until the performance
of his duty sickens his soul. After that we know what he will do. He’ll seek spiritual
quietude the Buddhist way by entering a monastery. It’s all going to happen right
here in Japan ,
where we have the means to nudge him and to make sure the doors we want to open
for him open. Don’t think that his spiritual interests will just be a waste of
time. I believe they will prove to be very useful. He is just the type of guy who’ll
learn some very interesting, esoteric skills. Anything that can be put to
military use, we’ll be sure to extract.”
“Hmmm,”
Sebastian purred, “Cutting edge psywar techniques ‘R’ US . Remember Dr.
Jose Delgado? The man’s a genius in brain technology. Back in the ‘50’s the ONI
was the first intel group to see his value and fund him. When the CIA wanted in
on the action, we said, ‘Sure, if you guys pay him through us.’ That way we
stayed on top of whatever projects the Agency hired him to work on. Delgado single-handedly
invented brain implants.”
“Yeah,
that was great back in the fifties, Sebastian. But you know there’s a big
loophole in implant tech. Metal in the head shows up under X-rays. It sets off
metal detectors. And so now, the public’s getting hip to it. We need to look
into pure psychic phenomena. Telekinesis, teleportation, mind reading…”
“Yeah,
I am in perfect agreement. We should move on this fast. Through a back channel I’ve
gotten word that since ‘77 the Army’s had this Special Forces Lieutenant
Colonel investigating the whole New Age scene. Jim Channon, that’s his name.
Channon’s very much into Buddhist techniques of mental concentration. He’s got
some wild plan for a First Earth Battalion.”
“Need
I remind you, Sebastian, landlubbers will never get it right. Since before the
war, the real action has been right here at Kawazaruna. Lucky we’re on top of
it now instead of the Japs. Though we have to keep the ones we can trust in the
game. The future of warfare, the future of everything, is at the bottom of the ocean. We’ve
known it for a quarter of a century. UFOs? The Air Force can’t catch them
because they think flight is all about Newtonian mechanics. The Army’s First
Earth Battalion? Let’em wear flowers in their hair. Even the Russkis, God bless
‘em, with all their research into psi powers, haven’t got a clue of what we’re
sitting on right here. This will make the H-Bomb look like a firecracker.”
“So
this is what’s on for Rathramnus? Inner space exploration?”
“Mister,
I think you’ve just coined the name for this operation. Project Rathramnus.
Sound good?” (Agreement all around.)
“I’m
pretty confident Project Rathramnus will turn out to be a plan for life. This
guy is a searcher. He’ll step out of the world for a while, then step back in
once he thinks he has the secret means of transformation. All we have to do is two
things—one: make sure he meets a man who can teach him the secret we need him to learn, and two: wait for
him. And we will. Right here in Japan .
Or anywhere he goes.”
Charles
never knew that such a conversation about him took place. Within the next year
his superiors gave him several dangerous covert assignments. Of these, only one
was a mission to “close a book.” It left him devastated. He retired from the
Navy in 1982. The same year he entered a Buddhist monastery and stayed for the
minimum trial period of three years. He was introduced to a number of “skillful
means” that could not be explained by Occidental science. While visiting Nepal in 1987,
he received initiation into a Vedanta-yoga sampradaya
(disciplic tradition). After his move to the States his wife, and the
children they would have later, would take initiation in a Vedanta tradition of
a similar philosophical outlook as his, one that had taken root in the U.S. in the
mid-sixties.
In
1997 he and Yayoi followed a strange news report out of Japan . It was
about the Pokemon cartoon panic. More
than 700 children were hospitalized because of the effects of a scene twenty
minutes into the TV cartoon that touched off what was reported to be
“photosensitive epilepsy.” Children went into convulsions. One even stopped
breathing. The report hypothesized that behind the Pokemon incident was a test of a “neurosemiological communications
system” called HENSHU.
If
Charles had been keeping more attentive track of his blissful time in San Diego , he would have
noticed that three days after the Pokemon
report, his old friend Roy Earle contacted him. He and a few others he’d
gotten to know in the ONI had climbed the career ladder into the Pentagon. He
was surprised to hear how much they knew about what he’d been doing since he
left the Navy. Obviously he was being tracked. It was strange but not alarming,
for his friends seemed very proud of him. They told him his presence was
greatly desired in Washington
D.C. They promised him all that
was wanted of him was what he had been doing in San Diego : teaching. It sounded exciting. At
first Yayoi was reluctant to leave California ,
but at last she relented.
After
thirteen years, he was back with the ONI. Not as a military operative but as a
civilian teacher. He persuaded himself that he was home again, right where he
belonged. What really made his new job seem important were his students. They
were being groomed for high security positions in defense intelligence. These
young men and women were America ’s
best and brightest.
In
Washington Wiederoy’s wife also attained a new level of happiness. She gave
birth to twins, a boy and a girl. She nicknamed them her momo (“peaches”), using the Japanese gender form momotaroo for the boy, Mohana, and momoko for his sister, Mohini.
It
did not take long for a faint scent of the same disgusting odor that had driven
Wiederoy out of the Navy in ’82 to wrinkle his nostrils in Washington . His old buddy Roy Earle let slip
in a conversation that while Charles might have quit the ONI, the ONI never let
go of him. On another day he absent-mindedly picked up a file left in a place
where he was sure to notice it. Giving it a cursory glance, Wiederoy was
stunned to discover a fact sheet inside that reported Yukio Nakano’s Kairyu Dantai
had worked hand in glove with an unnamed faction within the Japanese and United States
intelligence community since the mid-sixties. He made discreet inquiries about
this faction to persons he thought he could trust. What he got back were
whispers about secret societies.
In
late 1998, he found laid across his desk three papers marked “classified.” They
seemed to be summaries of experiments in unconventional uses of electronic
communications media. One was an enigmatic document on some outfit called T.I.A.M.A.T.—“The
Internet As a Magickal-Aethyric Tool”—that mixed the Internet and hypnosis for occult
purposes. Another was about Nicola Tesla’s Wardenclyffe project, which failed
in 1905 because of his sponsors’ reluctance to see it through. Whoever wrote
this report was convinced that there was no reason why Tesla’s idea would not have
worked. Not only would have radio messages have been wirelessly transmitted between huge towers built in Long Island and
London, but also a tremendous amount of useable current would been exchanged.
The author of the piece anticipated that if the public were openly exposed to a
steady burst of hundreds or thousands of watts of power, “weird” biological
and/or psychological side-effects were very likely over time.
The
third report Wiederoy found to be at the same time the strangest and the most
familiar. That was because it was about Japan . Reading it transported him
back in time to when he was a Lietenant j.g. field agent.
It
briefly described a Japanese society he had never heard of, Seicho No-ie, Truth of Life, founded by
Dr. Masaharu Taniguchi in the 1930s. This name rang no bell. “Dr. Taniguchi,”
the report read, “scientifically developed ways to put to technical use the seven
axioms of The Kybalion, a book on
hermetic knowledge published in the United States in 1908 that still
enjoys a degree of popularity in occult circles.”
The Kybalion’s axioms are 1) all is mind; 2) mind is transmutable by
polarization; 3) the reality, or The All, is perceived by us to be the
physical, mental and spiritual planes, but there is never contradiction between them; 4) the three planes of The All are
three general levels of vibration that are dividable into millions of millions
of planes; 5) the physical, mental and spiritual planes exist because the
vibrations that flow between the poles of transmutation are rhythmic, 6) this
exchange of rhythm is related as
cause and effect, hence the theory of random chance is wrong; 7) all the poles
co-vibrating in rhythm may be understood as male and female principles that
constantly procreate at every level: gross, subtle, and transcendental.
The
report cited a 1934 radio interview in which Dr. Taniguchi said, “We in Japan are at a
cultural advantage over other nations in bringing forth the science of The Kybalion. The fundamental concept is
no different from the creative interplay of Yin and Yang. In yoga we find the same concept of a power
exchange between prakrti, the female
principle, and purusa, the male
principle. In mikkyo (esoteric)
Buddhism, monks perform ceremonies in which the vajra (thunderbolt, or diamond) represents the cosmic male
principle and the bell represents the cosmic female principle.
“The Kybalion takes this twin-pole model of vibratory exchange that sustains the
universe at all levels, mental as well as matieral—a model very familiar to the
Asian mind—and elaborates on it in a way that catches the scientific
imagination. I see possibilities of advanced kigooroni, of communication not by language but by oto nashi no ohna, inaudible signals
that directly stimulate the brain and nervous system. Perhaps we can
systematically develop telepathy and communication with non-human life forms.
“I
have designed some machinery that could be developed into devices with multiple
applications. If we in Japan
can make such devices work we shall lift science out of the pessimistic ditch
it’s been driven into by Western materialism. Western physicists have promoted
the nightmare of entropy. The concept is so alien to our way of thinking we
don’t even have a Japanese word for it, therefore our children are taught this
foreign-based word in school, entoropi. It
means that in the natural world things will inevitably run down, deteriorate.
The universe will one day just run out of power and stop. But there is an
opposite concept, ectropy. It is the universe’s nature to renew itself, to
develop matter and energy, form and diversity.’
The
report ended with this short paragraph: “In 1935, Dr. Taniguchi’s Truth of Life
message of a caught the attention of Uchida Ryohei and his successor, Kuzuo
Yoshihsa, of the Kokuryukai, the Black Dragon Society. Ryohei had several
meetings with Taniguchi. Although Ryohei died in 1937, he had by that time
already passed on a plan to Yoshihsa…” The last three lines of the document
were blacked out.
Despite
minor bouts of depression that usually accompanied these stray bits of
intrigue, Charles stayed on at the Pentagon. Sometimes he ran into Roy Earle.
He expected that sooner or later an attempt would be made to rope him into the
darker side hinted at by these documents. But as time passed, whenever he saw Roy he seemed increasing
distant, preoccupied…even worried.
On
September 11, 2001 ,
it all changed. He was in a different wing of the building, but the rocking of
the floor beneath his feet almost threw him down. The sound of the explosion
deafened him for several minutes. He never saw Roy, Alec Sebastian, John
Ferguson or the others again. In the months that followed new people, young
people, flooded the Pentagon. It was a different place. In the midst of
strangers he was able to see more, and the more he saw, the more didn’t like.
In 2002 he quit for good. And this time the ONI seemed happy to let go of him once
and for all.
All
the while he and Bjoern stayed in touch. Every two, three years they’d meet up
somewhere. It was when he passed seventy that Ingvaldssen started saying, “I’m
just living out my life from day to day.” Kauai
is an earthly paradise; Bjoern had a beauty of a sailboat, and money to burn.
But he ended up just watching the days pass, thinking harder and harder about
his past.
One
evening, during a visit Wiederoy made to Kauai ,
Bjoern took him out on his boat to the Na Pali coast. Near the Tunnel of Terror
sea cave, he dropped anchor and played a searchlight over the jagged double
opening to the underworld. “There’s a waterfall inside the cave,” said Bjoern.
“If I had a Zodiac boat, we could zip in there through the hole on the right.
We’d pass right under the waterfall. Get ourselves soaking wet. Hook a
ninety-degree turn, zip right out again through the hole on the left. Easy.”
Ingvaldssen
paused. When he spoke again, his voice was hesitant and heavy with the strain
of fear. “You know what, Charlie? I don’t think it’s going to be as easy to zip
round a corner in hell and find an exit door back to this world.”
That
night, as the boat rose and fell with the waves that ceaselessly made their way
into the dual maw of volcanic rock, Wiederoy met a man he didn’t know at all—a
man made more of secrets than he was of flesh. Like the soul, his secrets would
live on after the body named Bjoern Ingvaldssen was gone. Some of his secrets
were deadly.
Last
spring they found his boat anchored halfway between Kauai
and Niihau Island . His body floated to the surface
a few days later. Suicide wouldn’t have surprised Wiederoy. He didn’t believe
it was murder. Or perhaps the more honest thing to say was, he hoped it wasn’t
murder. But you never could be sure. The only thing that was sure was, Bjoern’s
secrets were now his secrets…secrets that even Roy Earle didn’t know.
In the late October morning sun, Wiederoy
blinked back the tears as the black Andruss cruised by, leaving the street open
for him to cross. “A good life,” he said aloud. He sprinted across the road,
but in the middle a wave of grief almost folded his knees. Steadying himself,
he reached the other side. The border-grove of the Ogham-Rune trees that
followed the whole length of the road now loomed around him. He could hardly
see the nine rows of trees for the flooding of his eyes. “A good life,” he said
again in a croaking whisper. “What the hell does that mean?”
“Nine
is the devil his own self.”
He
looked around wildly. “Who’s there? Who’s
there!” He was sobbing openly now, and felt like a searing gullet of pain
was swallowing him whole. “Captain Yamato? Sir? Is that…is that you?” But there
were only the trees.