Temple: A New Journey Begins
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Kwai Chang Caine followed Vance out of the ruins. He was going to need to get supplies; candles, tools to clear the brush, and what ever else he might need to repair the temple. First he would return to Sam's place and see if there were any there who could help him. Many monks still visited the shrine. Whether they knew of Shaolin principles was yet to be determined. What Kwai Chang Caine learned regarding building the temple was that it had to be built by hand. What remained of the walls, he could see that they were still solid in many places. Only where there had been explosions where the walls had been breached, were there problems of stability. Even so, it was going to be a major undertaking.
For now, he had another task that needed completing, one that he had avoided for so many years.
Vance watched Caine turn down a winding path. "Where are you going?"
"To say goodbye to some old friends."
Kwai Chang Caine continued down the winding path that led to the lake. It had been ten years since he had seen this place, a place he remembered as filled with pain and sadness, but now, it was filled with deep meaning and significance.
For the moment, Kwai Chang Caine forgot about Vance and headed to a chosen spot that all were drawn to. Several markers could be seen within the vicinity. The young man took off his meager belongings and knelt beside one specific marker. Had it really been ten years since his father's disappearance? Back then he did not understand. His father seemed so strong, so capable, and yet, his father had always told him he was just a man. The young man brushed his fingers along the beloved name, as if seeking some awareness in that touch. Though he knew the grave was empty, this marker served only as a means to have something concrete to hold onto. His eyes lingered on the name and he remembered some of the stories his father would tell him, stories that seemed inconceivable, yet he too learned they had been very real. Real, because in the ten years of his wandering, he also experienced similar things.
The young man drew in a sigh and his eyes wandered to the other markers in this space. Grandfather rested here as well beside his wife. Looking at the date, he drew in a whistle. Even she had died young, leaving his father when he was only two years old, he figured. Just like his mother had left him, though he had been five and could still recall much of her face. Her body was not here beside his father, having been long cremated, her ashes scattered in her homeland across the Pacific. Had it also been the same way like the others? The young man rose and walked to three other markers, two great-uncles and a great-grandfather who he had never met. He wondered just who they were and how they came to be here. Perhaps within his belongings, there may be answers. At first, he had been afraid to even look at what he carried. It was all he had left of his legacy, besides an old bamboo flute, a ring that had been passed from generation to generation, and a worn brown leather pouch that seemed to defy age.
The young man rose and walked back to where he had placed his belongings. He opened the pouch and pulled out its contents. Three books and an old computer CD were all that he carried, except for the odd herb or two that he used to make tea to keep his body nourished. Two of the books were bound in leather and contained a script that he knew and learned at an early age, besides his native language. The third book was made of cardboard and paper and was bound with a rubber band to keep it together. Its pages were falling out and needed to be badly repaired. The CD, though, was another story. It looked pristine and new as if it had been bought yesterday, but to read it required old technology that he was not certain still existed. Perhaps his father's old friend, Rachel Lowery, had such equipment. He would check with her when he returned to her home. If not, her son, Sam might know.
Uncle Sam. He would never forget the day when he met the tall blond Buddhist priest. Sam had insisted on the title, telling him stories when he had been a boy and how Caine's father and grandfather had helped him and his mother. On that day, he had wanted to go to the temple and see for himself, the ruins that had been his father's and grandfather's home. For some reason, the place drew him, but when his father disappeared, he could not face the place. He knew he was not ready. Today, however, was different. It seemed in his journey, he knew that one day he would be back. His feet setting out on this path, drawing him closer to a destiny that he could no longer deny was his. His feet had been set upon that path when he, too, took the brands at 21, following in the footsteps of his ancestors. He knew one day, he would be the one to rebuild what had been lost, and yet, had not been. Didn't his father say that so long as one Shaolin existed, the temple also existed, that he was that temple? Still, never was there a time when they were so badly needed.
The young man replaced the books and CD back in the pouch, picked up the bamboo flute, and flung them over his shoulder. His eyes rose to the top of the cliffs and he could barely see the stones nestled in the greenery that had grown up over the years. It was time. The temple would rise again, and the Shaolin would return.
Continues with Part 3
Alisa Joaquin Copyright@2003.
This story cannot be reprinted or sold in any other form without strict permission from
the author. It is being distributed here solely for your enjoyment.
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