Chapter 1
Jayawijaya Mountains, Irian Jaya
1977
“What
the hell is that?” Angie grumbled as an updraft jolted her Cessna. She grabbed
her binoculars from her knapsack and stripped the newspapers off her
windscreen.
Fighting
to control the plane and focus at the same time, she cursed as she shook her
dark hair from her eyes. ‘I gotta get this cut one of
these days,’ she lied to herself again. Angie knew how the men watched her and
she knew what turned them on. It had been that way since high school and she’d
liked it then, too. But sometimes being a woman was a bother,’ she sighed.
‘Like now,’ she swept her hair back again, cursed her vanity and concentrated
on the stone peaks bursting from the forest floor. Cradling a creamy white
glacier in the their rocky palm, the mountains held an
ocean of ice and snow high above the tropical island’s dense jungle. She
scanned the surface, glowing white gold in the rising sun, as the shadow of her
Cessna slid across its undulations.
Naked
brown natives were fleeing across the glacier in obvious fear. As Angie wheeled
her plane around for another pass, she saw armed soldiers cresting the ridge of
ice. Dressed in black fatigues, combat boots, black cowls and berets, the
soldiers kneeled and took aim at the scrambling natives. They raised their
rifles. Her airplane’s engine drowned out the noise, but Angie saw the white
flashes burst from their barrels. She swung her gaze back to the natives. Three
men staggered and fell. Angie circled the scene again. The natives struggled
and rose from the blotchy red snow. They lurched and staggered along the
glacier till they finally fell and lay motionless. The advancing soldiers fired
point blank into the twitching bodies.
Angie
watched in horror. One soldier pointed up at her plane. Her eyes widened. The
killers raised their rifles. She stared, mesmerized. They prepared to fire.
Angie saw the muzzle flashes. She snapped out of her shock and hauled back on
the yoke. The Cessna wheeled away. She banked southeast toward the mission at Dekai. She had to reach Father Frank. Tell him what she’d
seen. Frank had lived with the Asmat for ten years
now. He’d be royally pissed when he found out the government was hunting his
people again.
Dekai, Irian Jaya
The
comments on Volente’s Midwestern Missionary Services
bulletin board when Angie’d left her base in Sentani had all the optimism of a Paul Thoreaux
travelogue. The pilots that flew for MMS were a decidedly more freewheeling
group than the pious men and women they ferried back and forth to the interior.
Their summaries of airstrip landing conditions posted at the Sentani airfield reflected the kind of humor you’d expect
from people who landed small planes on inadequate runways under impossible
conditions. The fact that they did the job at all attested to their faith that,
in order to take off, fly and live to tell about the landing, God had damned
well better be their copilot.
The
notation for the landing strip at Dekai read, ‘Pig
damage again. Don’t hot dog your landing.’ An ‘amen’ was added by a comic hand
for emphasis. Angie remembered smiling at the notice. But after seeing the
natives killed on the glacier, what she saw on the ground was no laughing
matter.
Father
Frank’s mission occupied a ground level hut in an isolated stilt village at the
bend in the Atse River.
Though populated by the upriver cousins of the area’s indigenous woodworking
cannibals, the Asmat, Frank Nunzio’s
neighbors had also developed a taste for his brand of Catholicism. But when
Angie sighted the deserted landing strip, she knew something was wrong. She
circled it once to make sure of her approach and then swung into the wind to
land.
Frank
and the natives of his congregation had hacked the airstrip out of the jungle.
They had sunk a muddy, metal grating into the slime of the forest floor to
provide traction for the planes. The steel lattice section the pigs had torn up
had been patched with new mud and hammered back into place. But there were no
villagers to meet the plane. And that was strange.
The
natives believed that the missionary flights brought gifts from the Gods. They
never failed to meet one when it appeared in the sky. They’d known about the
Gods who lived in the sky long before the white missionaries came to puzzle
them with their silly stories. The Asmat remembered
how the white warriors spoke to their Gods through the green boxes with the
long tails. The village elders had told marvelous stories of presents tumbling
from the sky to the sloppy foreign soldiers after they performed their rituals.
And like other miracles witnessed by other natives with a need to believe in
something other than the Fates or Chance, those rituals became the basis for a
new religion.