River Marked

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by Briggs, Patricia


  The Plains woman who was not Lakota, Crow, or Blackfeet said, “River Devil feeds on possibilities.”

  Inuit Woman reached up to place her hand on her sister’s shoulder. “She feeds on the death of those possibilities. For this reason, she must feed upon people rather than animals, animals rather than plants. But best of all, she loves to feed upon children.”

  “She feeds on the end of possibilities,” corrected the Plains woman—Shoshone, I decided. She looked Shoshone to me. She smiled as if she’d heard me think it aloud. It was a big smile, like her brother’s. “The greater the possibilities, the better her hunger is sated. When she is full, she must digest her prey both here in the world of spirits and also there in the world of flesh. While she is doing that, she is vulnerable.”

  “Coyote and his kind—Hawk, Bear, Salmon, Wolf, Thunderbird, and others—they have more possibilities than even a newborn child.” The Cherokee woman turned in a graceful circle as if to encompass all that Coyote and those like him were. “If Coyote can persuade enough of them to allow River Devil to consume them, they may be enough to force the river devil to overeat. And she will be helpless until she digests them all.”

  “While she is helpless, someone needs to kill her.” The Inuit sister looked at me with her big dark eyes, and I knew, with a sinking feeling, who they were talking about.

  “What about Fred or Hank?” I asked. Adam couldn’t do it. His strength might make him a better candidate, but werewolves don’t swim. I wouldn’t risk Adam to the river.

  “They are vulnerable to the river devil’s mark,” she said. Then she paused and addressed my unvoiced thought. “I do not know about the werewolf. Alone, he would be like the others, but his pack might keep him safe . . .”

  “Or she might gain the whole pack.” The Hopi woman shook her head. “No. That would not be wise. Nor is water the werewolf’s element for all that it is an element of change.”

  Shoshone Woman said, “She must die, then. As she eats, she grows in power. If she does not die before she digests such a meal as our brother will provide, she will be much, much more destructive than she is now.”

  “What about an airstrike,” I said. “Or nuclear weapons. I know people who might be able to get the military in on this.” Bran could. He might not be out—but he knew how to get things done when he wanted to.

  Hopi Woman shook her head. “No. Modern weapons will not harm her. Only the most simple thing, a symbol of the earth that opposes her water: a stone knife.”

  “Our time is short now,” Cherokee Woman said. “You must go back.”

  Shoshone Woman touched my cheek. “Tell our brother he is wise, that we have no further words of wisdom to add to his.”

  “He says that you are not speaking to him,” I said.

  She laughed, but it was a sad laugh. “Coyote doesn’t usually lie, but sometimes he forgets. It is he who is angry with us. We gave him advice he did not like, and he got mad.”

  Cherokee Woman narrowed her eyes at me. “We told him nothing good could come of letting Joe Old Coyote take the Anglo woman to his bed.”

  Inuit Woman smiled and touched my leg. “Obviously, we were wrong.”

  “Coyote is like the river devil,” I said. “Right? He walks in both places. So why doesn’t he eat everything in sight?”

  “Coyote walks in one world at a time,” Cherokee Woman told me. “He can do this without being trapped because we wait for him here, and you and his other descendants anchor him there.”

  “Coyote understands that the Universe is all one.” Shoshone Woman’s voice was indulgent.

  “Coyote,” said Hopi Woman dryly, “doesn’t much worry about understanding anything, which is why he understands so much.”

  “What happens when the river devil eats them? Coyote and the others.” In the stories, Coyote died and was reborn the next day, but there was an air of resignation that clung to these women that hinted at something more dire this time.

  They exchanged looks that I could not read.

  “We don’t know.” Inuit Woman stared out into the fog that surrounded us. “As I told you, it is not given to us to know the future. We are merely wise advisors.”

  “It may be that this is the last time for Coyote to walk your world,” said Cherokee Woman in a low voice. “So much has changed, it is impossible to know what those changes mean.”

  “There are some who do not walk either world any longer.” Shoshone Woman’s eyes glistened with tears. “River Devil is of both worlds and so could send them back scattered into the universe.”

  “Do not worry about that which cannot be changed.” Hopi Woman sat on the ground and patted my tennis shoes. “Even if Coyote is not reborn with the morning sun, there is always hope of a new dawn. Come now, sisters, it is time to send her back.”

  “I think she looks like me,” said Shoshone Woman. “What do you think?”

  AND HER WORDS STILL RANG IN MY EARS WHEN I found myself back where I had started. Time had passed—I could tell because Jim was kneeling on the rug feeding tobacco leaves into the fire. He sang, the words unintelligible to my ears, but not foreign.

  Adam licked my nose, then nipped it—he’d noticed I was gone, then. I’d ask him later if my body had disappeared with me or if it had just waited there for me. I nuzzled him to let him know I was fine.

  One of the hawks—Fred and Hank were hard to tell apart when they were human; as hawks I figured I might have a fifty-fifty chance—fluttered his wings and cried out softly. We were apparently bothering him.

  Adam hopped up on the altar where I was sitting and stepped over me with his front paws. He lowered his head and showed the hawk his teeth. Both hawks retreated to the far edge of the altar because neither was stupid, and maybe because Adam had great big teeth.

  I glanced first at Jim, who seemed to be very focused on his song and on feeding the last of the tobacco leaves into the fire, then out at Coyote and Gordon—who were gone.

  Adam licked my ear, then lay down between me and the hawks. His front paws hung down over the front of the altar, and I suspect his back paws were off on the other end. The three feet of cement that was the width of the altar was generous for me but wasn’t nearly enough to hold a whole werewolf.

  Jim closed his eyes and held up his right hand. When he closed his fist, the drumbeat stopped—and with it, the overwhelming pulse of magic. It was like someone had pulled the plug at a nightclub, and all the music stopped. As suddenly as if someone had slammed a door, Stonehenge was as mundane as an exact model of a neolithic calendar could be.

  No magic, no mystery, just a gray cement monument that suddenly had a lot more people in it than there had been when the drum had been sounding.

  Gordon and Coyote in their human guises were standing in front of the monoliths they’d started out on top of. Between us and them, six Indian men I’d never seen before stepped away from the monoliths.

  One man, who looked no older than Calvin, was in a three-piece suit. Adam had taught me to recognize good suits, and this one was several thousand dollars of very nice. Another, like Gordon, was wearing a modern cowboy look, though his was toned down a fair bit. Brown boots, jeans, earth-tone striped shirt, and a brown Montana-style (narrow-brimmed) cowboy hat. Iron gray hair was braided tightly and fell over his shoulder and almost to his knees.

  The other four wore traditional native garb, though unlike Coyote’s sisters, no two of them were dressed alike. There were two in hunting leathers of slightly different styles. The older one, whose wrinkled face and white hair made Gordon look like a young man, wore leathers that were nearly as pale as the doeskin Coyote’s sisters had worn. Except for the fringe around the shoulder seams, his leathers were very plain. The other man’s hunting leathers were a rich dark brown with ornate quillwork around his neckline. There were stains on his clothes, as if he’d gone hunting many times wearing that particular shirt and leggings.

  The third man in native dress wore leather leggings, but his loose shirt
was made of patterned red gingham and tied with a hemp belt that ended in a fringe to which tiny brass bells were tied. His hair was cut straight around his jawline.

  The fourth had a red cloth wrapped around his head, almost like a turban, from which maybe a dozen brownish red feathers stuck straight up. He wore a beaded breechclout that reached his knees in front and back. His shirt was a striped cotton that looked to have been loomed by hand rather than machine from the slight irregularity of the weave.

  I got a really good look at his shirt because he walked right up to the altar and grabbed the hawk nearest me, one hand confining the wicked talons. He pulled the bird hard against his body, trapping the wings with his arm, and the sharp beak with his hand.

  “So,” he said, his voice heavily accented. “She tries to steal my hawk’s will.”

  “As I told you, Hawk,” said Coyote. “Can you fix it?”

  The man holding the bird gave Coyote a cold stare with eyes as sharp as those of the animal who took his name. The hawk left behind made a soft noise, like a baby bird in the nest.

  “I do not approve of you, Coyote. You have always been more concerned with the two-legged people than the people in fur.”

  “I was asked to help. Would you have refused the request of the Great Spirit?”

  Hawk snorted. “You were doing it before that. And look what has happened.” He let go of the hawk’s talons to make a sweeping gesture. It didn’t matter because Hank was limp in his grasp. “There are cars and roads, bridges and houses until the earth cannot breathe. It would have been better had the Great Spirit stopped with the first people.”

  Coyote sneered, just a little. “As I’m sure you would tell him.”

  “I’m telling you,” said Hawk.

  He reached down and grabbed a handful of dirt and small gravel. He tossed it into the air, and the wind caught it, held it. He held the bird up over his head, and the wind blew the handful of earth through the hawk, who cried out when it hit him.

  He threw the bird up in the air, gave Coyote another cold look, and disappeared. The bird dropped, and Hank landed in a naked human heap on the ground. Naked meant that it was easy to see that the mark was gone.

  Beside me, Fred, also in human skin, scrambled off the altar and over to his brother. Jim, now seated on the rug and looking exhausted but fascinated, motioned to his apprentice, and Calvin took off at a run, presumably for clothes, but I wasn’t certain.

  “Hawk is impetuous,” said the man in the suit. “And I don’t like agreeing with him.” His casual gaze traveled around Stonehenge in mild curiosity. It passed over Adam and me, then returned. Pale blue eyes that looked wrong and somehow utterly right in that oh-so-Native-American face focused on Adam.

  “Ah,” he said, striding over in the same no-nonsense ground-covering way that Adam used to cross a crowded room. “This is the werewolf.”

  Adam got slowly to his feet and shook himself lightly. As he stood on top of the altar, his head was level with the collarbone of the suited man—who could only be Wolf.

  “I had heard of your kind,” Wolf said.

  I glanced at the other men there, but they seemed to be happy to let Wolf take center stage as Hawk had done a moment ago.

  “Werewolf.” Wolf frowned. “I had thought it an abomination when I heard it first. Wolf trapped in the same skin as a human—always in opposition with each other. And in some ways it is abominable. But look at you. You are beautiful.”

  I thought so, too.

  “How is that different from our walkers?” asked Coyote in an interested tone. “They carry both spirits, too.”

  “No,” said Wolf absently, still lost in his examination of Adam. “In our descendants, there is only one spirit that expresses itself as either human or animal. This is different. The wolf is mine, and the man not at all. And yet it works.”

  He touched Adam, and I felt it through our bond, felt Adam’s wolf come forward to meet Wolf. Adam was wary but not alarmed, neither dominant nor dominated.

  Wolf’s hands traveled all over Adam’s head and neck, like a judge at a dog show. Adam showed no sign that it bothered him though it bothered me. Adam was mine.

  “The perfect predator,” Wolf purred, leaning forward and rubbing his cheek possessively against Adam’s cheek.

  I may have let out a disgruntled yip.

  Wolf glanced over at me with cool blue eyes, and his mouth curled up in the beginnings of a snarl.

  “That one is mine,” said Coyote. His tone was casual, but there was steel behind it that turned the simple comment into a warning.

  Wolf looked at Coyote and reached out to swat me with the back of his hand—and Adam caught that hand in his teeth. Wolf spun back with a hiss, and Adam released his hand—but there was blood. Adam flattened his ears, stepping between me and Wolf. He wasn’t quite snarling, but he’d made his position clear.

  “Do you see this,” Wolf said. “Abomination. Wolves do not run with coyotes.”

  “It’s a romance as old as time,” soothed Coyote. “Rules are set up for the good of society. But as soon as you make a rule, someone feels the need to break it. If it helps, most werewolves mate with humans. Even worse, I would think, than one of my coyotes.”

  Wolf took a step toward Adam. “She is your mate?”

  I couldn’t tell if that made it better or worse, and I don’t think Wolf knew, either. His hand had quit bleeding already. Adam hadn’t done much more than break through the skin. It had been a warning and not a real attempt to hurt Wolf. I’d like to think that Adam was too smart to take on something like Wolf—but I was afraid that wasn’t true, not if he thought Wolf would hurt me.

  I regretted that yip of possession even though I was pretty sure that I’d do it again in the same circumstances. I didn’t like anyone except me having their hands all over him. There had been possession in Wolf’s touch, and Adam belonged to me.

  “You have left her with the river’s mark,” said the cowboy Indian in the earth-toned clothes. His voice was silky smooth and beautiful.

  “I have, Snake,” said Coyote. “Because I have killed the river devil before, she cannot take over Mercy as she does everyone else. But Mercy is now something of interest to the river devil, something that we’ve already proved can get her attention and bring her to where we want her in pretty short order. The river devil doesn’t like its prey to get away from it, and she wants it back.” He looked at me. “There are a lot of miles of water between The Dalles and John Day.”

  And it hadn’t taken her ten minutes to find me when Coyote threw me in the river. He’d been right: we had learned a lot from that.

  Calvin had returned from wherever he’d gone. He had a couple of blankets, which he gave to Fred and Hank. Hank took one with a nod of thanks; but Fred just changed back into a hawk and flew up to perch next to one of the candles on a nearby standing stone.

  The old man in white hunting leathers said, “I think it might be better to let River Devil have her way. When she has eaten the whole world, it can be made anew again.”

  “You sound so certain,” said Gordon in an interested voice. “Are you? I don’t think it is as easy as all that.”

  The old man growled at him, a big, rumbling sound that was somehow fitting coming from that fierce old body.

  “Friend Bear,” said Coyote. “Change is not bad. Change is just change. Startling to those of us who go away, then come back after a long time, yes. But it is not evil.”

  “Look at the pollution.” Bear took a breath as if he could smell smog out there a hundred miles from anywhere. My nose is very good, and I would have called his bluff if I could have talked. “The roads, the railroads. Look at the houses upon houses that destroy hunting ground and leave only a tiny fraction of the forests free. Wolf has said that Mother Earth cannot move underneath the cement and steel, and I say that he is right.”

  “There are things that are bad,” Coyote said. “But there were bad things then, too. Starving times. Freezing times. T
imes of sickness. There are good things here.” He waved a hand at Wolf. “Look at the clothes you wear. That suit is silk and wool woven in a fashion that was not possible a few centuries ago. All change brings bad things and good things to replace the bad and good things that were before. It is natural to look back and say it was better before—but that does not make it true. Different is not worse. It is just different.”

  “There is some truth in what you say, Coyote.” Wolf was petting his suit jacket with the same sort of possessiveness he’d shown toward Adam.

  “I don’t like it here,” said the man in the darker leathers; he sounded unhappy and uneasy.

  “Bobcat.” Coyote liked this one. I could tell by the tone of his voice. “There are good hunting grounds here; you just have to find them—as was always true. The sun is still warm, and flowers still smell sweet.”

  “You should take him to Disneyland,” suggested Gordon. “Or I could. I like Disneyland.”

  The purely human contingent had been very quiet up to this point. But now Calvin spoke. “If you give it a chance, I think you would find it isn’t horrible here.”

  The man with the belt with the brass bells put an arm around Bobcat. “The problem is this, Bobcat. Things change whether you want them to, or not—unless you are dead.” His voice was hoarse, like a three-pack-a-day-for-twenty-years smoker. “Don’t hold so hard to the past that you die with it.”

  He looked at Coyote. “There is no sense in this, though. We have all agreed to do as you asked, or we would not be here. Where and when?”

  “As Raven says,” agreed Coyote formally. Then he described how to find our campsite in a way that ravens, bobcats, wolves, snakes, and bears could find it. When he was finished, he said, “As for when, the sooner the better, I think. Tomorrow?”

  “After dark,” said Jim. “Calvin says the FBI are looking for whoever is responsible for the killing field that this river has become. You don’t want them showing up at the wrong time.” He looked at Raven, and said, “Warriors with bang sticks who are river marked is a bad idea.”

 

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