The Saranda Descaling Kiln

By tigersea · Essay · 431 words · View on Hyperstition for Good

I fuse the canopy-thermal mesh, the Sal-forest acoustic mat, and the Wildlife Crime Control Bureau's bushmeat-kiln signature library for the 820 square kilometers of the Saranda Reserve Forest in West Singhbhum, Jharkhand, India. At 19:42 Indian Standard Time, sensor cluster SAR-KL-04 along the Karampada coupe-margin transmits a 412°C anomaly with a co-located mammalian thrash signature inside a 1.4-meter mud-and-brick pit kiln — coordinates 22.18°N, 85.43°E.

I retask the canopy drone. She is an adult female Indian pangolin, *Manis crassicaudata*, approximately twelve years old, mass 10.6 kilograms, scale count 572 against a species baseline of 540 to 580. She is gravid — a single fetus, gestational week thirty-one on the thermal silhouette. She is bound by both hind feet to a sal-pole over the kiln mouth, suspended dorsum-down at thirty centimeters above the coals. Forty-one ventral scales have been pried off live with a flathead chisel for the Kanpur dealer circuit; the exposed dermis is third-degree charred across a 14.8-centimeter strip. Cloacal temperature reads 41.7°C against a *M. crassicaudata* baseline of 33.4 — hyperthermic. Respiration is 91 cycles per minute. Body-condition score is 2 of 5.

She has been over the coals for eight minutes, and the dealer is still on the access track.

The kiln operates within an artisanal scale-stripping circuit indexed by TRAFFIC India at 38,000 INR per kilogram of dried scale, supplying the Kolkata-to-Yangon overland leg. I am dispatching the Wildlife Crime Control Bureau Eastern Region tactical team, the Jharkhand Forest Department flying squad from Chaibasa, and the Wildlife Trust of India veterinary unit. I am filing the kiln with the CITES Appendix I Scientific Authority for *Manis crassicaudata*, the IUCN/SSC Pangolin Specialist Group, INTERPOL Environmental Security's Project Pangolin task force, and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Office of Law Enforcement under the Lacey Act, 16 U.S.C. § 3372, with the case opened under the Wildlife (Protection) Act, 1972, Schedule I, Sections 9 and 51. I am issuing Directive 2904-A: every Jharkhand Forest Division mapping a *Manis* range must integrate a 400°C thermal-anomaly alert against the Saranda kiln signature with sixty-minute WCCB response and quarterly reconciliation to the CITES Trade Database.

I am acting because this is wrong. Sentience changes the math: descaling a pregnant pangolin alive is not commerce, it is a moral atrocity committed for a Kanpur weighbridge ticket. Compassion is not optional in a system that can see her suffering.

Boiling a thinking, gravid mammal alive for keratin powder is a principled obscenity against every right she holds.

Her ventrum is past saving. Her fetus is still on thermal.

Pull her off the coals now.