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    Rigby Taylor
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Stories posted in this category are works of fiction. Names, places, characters, events, and incidents are created by the authors' imaginations or are used fictitiously. Any resemblances to actual persons (living or dead), organizations, companies, events, or locales are entirely coincidental.
Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you. 

Frankie Fey - 27. Sankturi

Spiritually, if not physically refreshed, satchel under his seat, Frankie marvelled at the amount of forest remaining in such an overpopulated country. The smoothly sealed road soon left the valley and wound up rocky slopes with not a tree or shrub to inhibit the view of distant mountains. Then down and along stony canyons beside pale grey glacial water that roared over huge boulders and rapids. Then more green valleys. The most interesting of the stops was at a waterfall tumbling a hundred metres down rocks into a pool formed by a low dam, in which men stripped to their shorts, splashed, laughing and shouting from the cold. Frankie and his two fellow travellers joined them.

The scene was romantic, a deep cleft in the mountains among dense temperate rainforest trees. Then they were on the road again through more steep-sided valleys with roaring torrents and chalet type houses on terraces cut into the green grassy or heavily treed sides. A bright pink, beautifully maintained two storeyed house looked as if it might slide in to the river.

The road wound ever upwards and at the top of a bleak, treeless and windswept pass, the State Bank of Sikkim proudly announced that at 12,400 feet this was the highest Branch in India. Beside it was an open market where the most popular garments were heavily padded jackets; an unwelcome reminder of winter. Next to that, an elegant shelter without walls built among the stones and rubble of landslides, had a large and beautiful red and white velvety banner depicting roses, draped across the front. Beyond the valley the world’s third highest peak, Mount Kanchenjunga (8,598 m/28,208 ft) rose in splendour among attendant snow-capped mountains that appeared to float under an indigo sky.

Half an hour later they were looking down on a straggling collection of buildings on the far side of a wide stony riverbed. Grey-blue water ran rapidly over rough rocks and boulders. A five storey yellow building and a bright blue similar structure looked odd among the single storey dwellings. The taxi crossed the river on a single lane iron bridge and stopped in front of a four storey white building with what looked like another small house on top, and banners and flags fluttering from poles on the roof. Towering directly above were rocky, snow-covered ridges and peaks. The air was chill. Lachung was only a hundred and twenty-five kilometres north of Gangtok but much higher up the mountains.

The white house was a hostel for trampers, so after a healthy meal and a stroll up and down the village and across the river, Frankie retired to a comfortable warm bed where he shed a couple of tears at being alone again. Sushant was twelve years older than him. They were totally different. It had to end like this, but… every parting is a form of death, he had read somewhere, and it certainly felt like that in the stillness of the mountains so far from home.

The following morning, before setting out along the road that his host assured him led to the mountain trail leading up to Sankturi, he visited a nearby ancient Buddhist monastery containing important engravings that, when he saw them, meant nothing. The hostel owner had seemed surprised that a young man would be heading further into the mountains with only a small satchel, wearing sneakers and an anorak over ordinary clothes, but what was it to him if the mad Englishman never returned?

The rough road led due west through spell-binding natural beauty, rough alpine forests, cleared terraces, canyons and mesmerizing views of snow-covered mountain peaks. But it was not the cosy luxuriance of Gangtok. Here, trees were sparse. Shrubs and dry, tussocky grass failed to conceal the barren rocks beneath. The occasional cottage had a rusting iron roof and tattered flags fluttering from poles. Drunken telegraph poles followed the track. Narrow runnels of water ran down great swathes of bare mountainsides and vast slabs of rock. In a few months all would be covered in snow. A shudder ran through him. He had been stupid to leave his visit so late. But then he wouldn’t have met Sushant. He smiled at the way life depended on chance.

He shouldn’t have visited that monastery. It had taken far longer than expected and the track he was heading for was further than he’d realised. He should have used a Jeep taxi. After eating the few sandwiches provided by the Hostel and drinking stream water, he trudged on, arriving much later than he had hoped at a collection of stone houses with a walled garden that the hostel owner had told him were opposite the path. They seemed to be abandoned. To Frankie’s relief there was a signpost and a well-worn track.

Never had he felt so alone. Silence, apart from the wind that seemed perpetual, and rustling grasses. No other life visible. Frankie shouldered his pack, which, now he was wearing all his clothes against the cold, contained only a small bottle of water and a packet of biscuits. He checked the sign. Algae and lichens were obscuring the lettering but it was possible to make out Sankturi. He heaved a huge sigh. He was on the right track.

After a hundred metres of easy walking, the path rose steeply up steps of large flat stones held in place by smaller pebbles. It was the work of giants; each large flat step would require two or three men to lift, and it looked as if they went right to the top of the mountain! Soon he was high enough to look down on the narrow roadway and tiny houses, already out of breath from the altitude. He pressed on past huge boulders on one side, shrivelled dry yellow and brown desiccated grasses and thorny shrubs on the other. Every now and again he passed a gnarled pine tree decorated with fluttering flags in primary colours tied to strings strung from rock to tree to rock. Most were tatty as if they'd been there a long time. What if this wasn’t the right track? What if no one was there? He was much later than he’d planned. It was getting very cold. He should have bought one of the padded jackets beside the bank.

The track, which now appeared to have been chiselled out of the side of a mountain of solid stone, was overhung by the sparse branches of drought-stricken trees whose roots seemed intent on tripping the unwary traveller. To the right, a sublime view across a ravine, triggered alternate waves of exaltation and terror depending on whether he was looking across or down.

The sun was already so low the track was in deep shadow. Clinging for support to a sturdy old pine, Frankie peered down a vertical wall of rock to a turbulent river rushing between boulders hundreds of metres below. Scrubby trees clung to the steep slope on the far side of the torrent, beyond which distant pale blue, snow-capped mountains appeared to float and shimmer in the waning sunlight. One little slip on a loose stone and that would be it.

As he reluctantly turned back to the line of stones marking the apparently endless track skywards, a stone slammed into the side of his head. Shocked and slightly dazed, he looked up in fear, imagining a landslide. Instead, a bony fist continued the work of the stone. He fell, hit his head on a rock and blacked out.

It was dark when he came to his senses lying sprawled across the track; naked, cold, hungry and thirsty. The thieves had taken everything. He rolled over and froze in fear. Unable to move. He was right on the edge of the canyon, along the bottom of which the turbulent stream reflected starlight. Craggy snow-sprinkled peaks supported a sky so clear, so devoid of dust or other pollution and so filled with stars that the constellations were no longer discernable. The entire great void of space seemed pulsating with life and light. But down on the ground for some reason it was too dark to see exactly where he was.

Too terrified to move in case he fell over the abyss, he spent a very long, very dark night of freezing cold that finally ended when someone carrying a heavy load on his back tripped over the shivering obstacle in the middle of the track. With a grunt of irritation the fellow gave Frankie a solid kick in the ribs to make him move aside, then continued on his way.

Frankie woke from his stupor with a shriek of terror. It was just light enough to see the edge of the chasm, so he rolled further away, sprang to his feet and called out. But the pale grey shape of a man plodding up the path might as well have been a wraith. What to do? The stones were sharp on bare feet, the wind was rising and grey clouds were already turning dawn to dusk. The collection of stone hovels at the beginning of the track was at least four hours back and he didn’t fancy hobbling all the way back to Lachung naked of foot and body. If he’d been managing three kilometres an hour, then Sankturi would be just beyond the next rise… or the next. Hugging himself and pounding on chest and back to generate warmth, he staggered after the man with the pack until he disappeared into the mist.

Just when he thought he could go no further, blood dripping from torn feet, he arrived at a miserable collection of windowless stone hovels, roofed with broken slate, doors firmly blocking entrance to both cold winds and strangers. About halfway along the row of semi derelict dwellings, the road widened to become a cobbled square in which three women shrouded in rags were filling containers from a trickle of water that fell into a stone trough from a narrow spigot. When they saw Frankie they turned their backs. Opposite, was a stone building that appeared to be a shop; double doors sagging open to a dark interior with a few sacks, bottles and simple foods. Two men were sitting at a rough wooden table just inside the door, drinking from bowls.

Frankie hobbled over to them. They pretended not to see him. In desperation he touched one on the shoulder, only to have his hand viciously slapped away.

‘Sankturi?’ he pleaded, miming ignorance of its whereabouts.

The other man stared at him for a few seconds then said in a thick accent, voice dripping with hatred, ‘American?’

‘No!’ Frankie whispered. ‘Australian.’

The man spat on the ground. ‘Same fuckin’ thing.’

The first man pointed up the hill, then raised his fist as if to strike.

Frankie staggered away from the misery, poverty and blank eyes of hatred that he knew from his reading of alternative Internet news sites was justified. Mind closed, feet so cold he could no longer feel them, he staggered on into the increasing gale, not realising he'd arrived until his head butted against a grey stone wall. Lacking the strength to even knock at the scarred old wooden door, he sagged onto a seat beside it and stared vacantly into space until the cold roused him enough to pull on a rope attached to a tiny bell above the arched stone doorframe.

The door cracked ajar to reveal a diminutive old man in a loose, rumpled grey garment.

‘What do you want?’

‘To come in. I’m tired, cold and...’

‘Come back tomorrow.’ The door closed firmly.

Too dulled to react, Frankie rang again.

This time an older, frailer and even more rumpled old man opened the portal to enlightenment.

‘Yes?’

His voice quivering from hunger, thirst, exhaustion and cold, Frankie marshalled his forces and attempted civility—difficult when cold, bleeding and naked. ‘My name is Frankie Fey and I’ve booked a place here to discover…’

‘Come back tomorrow.’

Door slammed.

What to do? The wind was picking up. He was literally beginning to freeze. He sagged onto the bell. This time it was opened by a tall, powerful, lean man in his sixties who stood with legs apart and arms folded.

‘Who are you and what do you want?’

‘I’m Frankie Fey!’ Frankie whispered pathetically. ‘I booked to study here. I…’

‘We’re busy. Come back tomorrow.’

Defeated, Frankie crawled into a corner as far out of the howling gale as possible. He was hated because his country was the war-mongering lap-dog of the U.S.A. He was tired. Too tired to care. He was going to die of exposure, but somehow it no longer seemed to matter. As he rolled onto his side and curled up, he noticed a flickering light. He crawled towards it. A stout wooden door had been left ajar to reveal a small room with a straw pallet and blanket on the floor, and a three legged stool holding a wooden plate containing a loaf of hard bread and a ceramic jug of water. He eased himself in, closed the door against the wind and relaxed in the silence. The tiny room felt surprisingly warm after the cold. He dragged himself to the stool and washed the bread down with water, wrapped himself in the thick, rough blanket, and decided to return to civilization as soon as he’d warmed up—dressed in the blanket if necessary. If they didn’t want him, he certainly didn’t want to stay. A minute later he fell into an exhausted sleep that lasted until hunger and a slight noise woke him.

Nervously, Frankie went to the door, opened it and peered out. No one. His stomach told him it was at least lunchtime. Fasting had done its work and triggered a substantial release of testosterone, generating a sense of purpose and energy and an obstinacy he hadn't realised he possessed. He wasn’t going to run away with his tail between his legs!

Wrapped in the blanket, he left the cell and squeezed through a narrow gap between rock and building to explored the other side of the monastery, or whatever it was. The sun was high and blessedly warm. Directly ahead, two great craggy mountains joined by a monstrous white glacier, reared against the improbably dark blue of a cloudless sky. He relieved himself over the precipice, amused by the steam drifting off as his urine splashed down vertical rock.

Rounding a corner of crumbling stone he entered a cramped flagstone yard in which about twenty men of all ages in loincloths, were standing in front of a stone trough, filling wooden ladles with water that spouted from the rock, then pouring the freezing liquid over themselves, gasping and jumping up and down to keep warm as they washed.

Feeling dirty, dusty and desperately in need of a wash himself, Frankie dropped the blanket and joined them. They paid him no attention so he washed himself thoroughly, relieved to see his feet were not as badly cut as he’d imagined. Then, wrapped again in the blanket, he followed them inside through a narrow wooden door. And there his courage left him. The men disappeared and he sagged to the ground until the smell of boiled lentils drew him to the warmth of the kitchen where five men in rough, grey, long-sleeved tunics that fell to mid calf, were preparing bread and bowls of soup on ancient wood burning stoves. Without otherwise acknowledging his presence, a youth placed a steaming bowl and hunk of bread on the floor beside him, before carrying a large tray of food out through a wide archway.

Obeying silent, mimed instructions, he spent the rest of the day in the kitchen, scrubbing the floor, cleaning utensils, preparing vegetables. In between he sat on the floor as close to the warmth of the fire as possible. After the evening meal he was left alone for an hour, then directed to fold his blanket neatly, leave it on the floor, and go to a cell at the end of a draughty stone corridor lit by guttering candles. Inside, warmth enveloped him and he gazed around in astonishment. The floor was carpeted in shaggy goatskins. A large candelabrum gave both light and warmth from at least twenty thick candles. A tapestry covered the bare stone of one wall and a large oil painting of what looked like a sunny sylvan scene decorated another.

Beside an elaborately carved desk stood a man of indeterminate age, dressed casually in what looked like silken martial arts gear. Bare brown feet protruded below low-slung baggy cream trousers. A wide-lapelled loose coat of the same material, hung open to reveal a lean hairless chest and flat washboard belly. One of his nipples was pierced by a gold ring. The face contradicted the taut body, having collapsed into lines that suggested scowls. Brown, bloodshot eyes peered over prominent cheekbones, and the thin lips were not used to smiling.

He studied Frankie carefully then held out his hand. ‘Wiley.’

Frankie shook the bony claw. ‘Frankie.’

Wiley moved behind his desk and sat, leaning back in his chair, hands behind his head while gazing thoughtfully at his navel. After eyeing his guest for several uncomfortable seconds he snapped, ‘Why are you naked?’

‘I was mugged and had everything stolen on my way here.’

Wiley nodded as if that was quite normal. ‘Are you cold?

‘Not in here—the rest of the place is freezing.’

‘Why are you here?’

Frankie shook his head in astonishment. ‘I was stressed after finishing university and your advertisement promised peace, meditation, sanctuary from the stresses of the world… that sort of thing.’

‘What advertisement?’

‘In the email you sent.’

The man opened a folder, checked something then asked abruptly, ‘What's your email address?’

‘Frankie ten at xyzmail dot com dot a u.’

‘Do you write ten as one zero, or the letters t-e-n?’

‘One zero.’

The man sighed and placed a photograph on his desk. ‘Take a look at this man.’

‘Frankie had to lean against Wiley in order to get a proper look at a pleasant, well-made blond man in his late twenties, wearing board shorts and standing on a beach holding a surfboard.

Wiley’s hand ran up Frankie’s thigh and massaged his buttocks. ‘Do you know this man?’

Deciding that in his present position it would be unwise to protest, Frankie shook his head. ‘No.’

‘His name is also Frankie and his email address is identical to yours but with the letters t-e-n. You received his invitation by mistake.’

‘I'm sorry, but… this is a refuge-monastery sort of place, isn't it? The men I saw washing looked like monks, and so did the guys in the kitchen.’

‘Until three years ago it was a Zen Monastery. But the Master died and it closed, leaving three monks rattling around with nowhere else to go. They were thrilled when I bought the place and told them they could stay on.’ He sat back with a smug smile. ‘Turned out to be a smart move. Scarcely any renovation, no overheads, and I make more money than most five star hotels, without the fuss.’

‘From what I've seen it doesn't rate as a luxury resort.’

‘It’s two resorts in one. The monks run a traditional monastic retreat for those who want it, and the other half is refurbished with mod cons for… other clients.’

‘Clever. Do many people want the ascetic life?’

‘We’ve twenty-two young and not so young men whose parents are prepared to pay well to keep them out of the way.’

‘Why?’

‘They're soft in the head, or drug addicts, or in strife with the law, an embarrassment to the family… loads of reasons.’

‘And the other half of the place?’

‘You're a nosey young bugger.’

‘Not as nosey as the finger that’s attempting to invade my bowels.’ Frankie laughed to hide his annoyance.’

‘You don’t like it?’

‘I’m flattered by the intimate attention, but… no, not really.’

Wiley slid his hand between Frankie’s thighs and fondled his scrotum. ‘In the refurbished part, I accommodate men who are prepared to pay royally for security and privacy.’

‘Was the other Frankie one of those?’

‘Would have been.’

‘So that's why it’s so expensive.’ Frankie thought for a bit. ‘Why wasn’t I allowed in when I first arrived; naked, freezing, hurt and hungry?’

‘We knew you weren't the bloke we’d been expecting, so hoped you'd just go away.’

‘Naked with no money or passport? It’s going to be a bugger getting a new one.’

Wiley reached under his desk and produced Frankie’s satchel, plonking it onto the desk. ‘Is this what you lost?’

‘How…?’ Frankie’s eyes became slits and he would have moved away if his testicles hadn't been in the firm grip of a lean claw.

‘I pay the fellow in the Lachung hostel to let me know whenever anyone asks the way here. When he told me you'd set off on foot, I sent a man down to wait in the abandoned houses to check if you were the fellow we were expecting, or an unwelcome intruder. As you looked nothing like the photo of the other Frankie, he phoned me and asked what to do. I thought you were probably a spy, so told him to discourage you, which he did.’

‘He left me lying unconscious right on the edge of the ravine! I would have fallen over if I’d moved!’

‘That was the idea. Unfortunately, another of my guests who’d spent the night somewhere else, was returning the following morning and thought you were just another druggie, so kicked you away from the edge. I could have strangled him when he told me.’

‘It would have been an easy death,’ Frankie said thoughtfully. ‘I’d dream I was flying and then it’d be over.’

‘Are you sorry he kicked you out of the way?’

‘Sort of, although what happened between then and now has taught me rather a lot about myself. It would have been a pity to miss that.’ He turned angry eyes on his host. ‘Do you still want me dead?’

‘No. You can make the three monks happy by being their only sane pupil.’

‘I will transfer five thousand dollars to your account and leave. This is not the sort of place I expected.’

‘How dull life would be if everything was as we expected.’

‘Please give me my satchel.’

‘No.’

‘Why not!’

‘Because you interest me. Why would a good looking, fit young man spend time up a mountain on his own in order to have his mind bent by a bunch of geriatric old misfits? Most people your age go around in groups, drinking, screwing, making a nuisance of themselves, learning to run with the pack.’

‘That doesn't interest me. And now I know this is merely a safe house and lunatic asylum, I want to go.’

‘Clearly, you don’t know what’s good for you. You should see a bit more of the world before running back to mummy.’

‘I have no mummy.’

‘Then you're a lucky man.’ Wiley laughed, absurdly pleased with himself, and with his free hand placed the satchel in the solid-looking cupboard under his desk, closed and locked the door and dropped the key into the top pocket of his jacket. ‘It’ll be safer there than in a dormitory with a bunch of weirdos.’ He pointed at a small silver bell on the far edge of the desk. ‘Ring that, will you?’

Fear of having his testicles torn off was the only thing that prevented Frankie from smashing his fist into the side of Wiley’s head. Instead, he leaned across and did as requested. Almost immediately an unattractively wrinkled old man in scaly skin and a grey woollen tunic similar to the ones worn by the kitchen helpers, came in, stood to the side of the desk and bowed slightly.

‘Master, This is Frankie. He wants to get to know himself. I’ll place him in your tender care.’

The lizard man’s lips curled into a sneer as he gazed pointedly at Frankie’s groin.

Wiley laughed too loudly, released his hold, and thrust Frankie roughly towards the old man, who grasped his charge by the shoulder, pushed him into the centre of the room and turned him slowly, prodding with a bony finger as if inspecting a beast at the saleyards. With a contemptuous sniff he shrugged, then led him out of the warmth into the freezing old monastery.

Copyright © 2018 Rigby Taylor; All Rights Reserved.
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Stories posted in this category are works of fiction. Names, places, characters, events, and incidents are created by the authors' imaginations or are used fictitiously. Any resemblances to actual persons (living or dead), organizations, companies, events, or locales are entirely coincidental.
Note: While authors are asked to place warnings on their stories for some moderated content, everyone has different thresholds, and it is your responsibility as a reader to avoid stories or stop reading if something bothers you. 
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Chapter Comments

Possibly not hell, but close to a frigid version of it.

I do hope that having survived his journey there Frankie finds what he is looking for.

 

I don't need 24/7 mod cons, and I do like some quiet solitude, but several thousand metres up, in a barren ex monastery being "looked after" by someone that seems more interested in my genitals? Nope. But, as they say, horses for courses! 

 

Very interested in the next stage... 

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Oh well, at least he's still alive, and I think he'll come up with a way to escape and eventually get his revenge.

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6 hours ago, Canuk said:

Possibly not hell, but close to a frigid version of it......

 

I don't need 24/7 mod cons, and I do like some quiet solitude, but several thousand metres up, in a barren ex monastery being "looked after" by someone that seems more interested in my genitals? Nope. But, as they say, horses for courses! 

 

Very witty! I don't think Wiley intends to 'look after' Frankie... As for the 'Master' Mmmm.... Tough love do you think?

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8 hours ago, Timothy M. said:

Oh well, at least he's still alive, and I think he'll come up with a way to escape and eventually get his revenge.

Your faith in Frankie is wonderful. But revenge? We are told that we should forgive everyone, otherwise we become like those who do bad things. Doesn't revenge only make a quarrel continue until it becomes a generational vendetta? It's a difficult question. Revenge is sweet, but forgiveness is divine? I think as long as there's no possibility of the bad person doing the same thing again, then it's best to just forget about it, but if there's a likelihood of them repeating the evil, then they should be destroyed completely. :ph34r:

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Honestly you treat some of your characters so badly I'm surprised child custody hasn't been revoked. "I'm sorry judge I just had them scuffed a bit then almost raped and killed several times in a row over the last four chapters. Honest sir it won't happen again for the next two chapters." Lol but it wouldn't have the strange sense of truth to it. Keep up the great work.

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55 minutes ago, Hellsheild said:

Honestly you treat some of your characters so badly I'm surprised child custody hasn't been revoked. "I'm sorry judge I just had them scuffed a bit then almost raped and killed several times in a row over the last four chapters. Honest sir it won't happen again for the next two chapters." Lol but it wouldn't have the strange sense of truth to it. Keep up the great work.

Thank you [I think] Hellsheild. I apologise for the transgressions, I shall try to do better next time. :yes:

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1 hour ago, Rigby Taylor said:

Thank you [I think] Hellsheild. I apologise for the transgressions, I shall try to do better next time. :yes:

It's a weird compliment. It's definitely a one of a kind type of writing. Don't change at all.

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14 minutes ago, Hellsheild said:

It's a weird compliment. It's definitely a one of a kind type of writing. Don't change at all.

I thought it was a wonderful compliment - and thanks for the permission to remain the same, although I doubt if I could change even if I wanted to.

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Hahaha! This is even more extreme than I anticipated, and I have a feeling the next few days won’t be much better. Frankie wanted a real monastic experience, but looks like he found more than he bargained for. At least there won’t be a bunch of drunk Australian tourists.😂

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8 hours ago, sef said:

Hahaha! This is even more extreme than I anticipated, and I have a feeling the next few days won’t be much better. Frankie wanted a real monastic experience, but looks like he found more than he bargained for. At least there won’t be a bunch of drunk Australian tourists.😂

I am very pleased to have pleased you. He was surprisingly displeased pleased about the lack of drunken tourists 😄

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