People of the Canyons

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People of the Canyons Page 24

by Kathleen O'Neal Gear


  I’m mesmerized by the glossy interior; it’s so black I could be looking down a tunnel that leads into the deepest underworld where monsters live. At the bottom, far, far away, tiny lights glint. “Is it a tunnel? It looks like a tunnel.”

  My brother gives me a slight smile. “Yes. The Wellpot leads to the brilliant darkness of the Well of the Ancestors. That’s why she told Spots to use the Wellpot rather than an ordinary pot to catch her soul. I’m surprised that half-human creatures, like Bird-Man, haven’t already Danced their way up the tunnel and into this pithouse to pluck our eyes out.”

  “Please?” Grandfather reaches for the pot. “We should put the lid back on before they do.”

  “Of course, elder.” Maicoh hands it to him, then walks across the house and stares hard at the wall, his back to us, as though thinking about something.

  Grandfather carefully holds the lid and empty pot over the fire until the pitch heats up, then he fits the lid back on and clamps it down hard to make certain it reseals.

  Blue Dove’s face has turned an ugly shade of red with barely suppressed rage. “Do you realize how furious my father is going to be when he discovers the pot contains nothing? He will cut each of you apart piece by piece, eat your hearts, and feed the rest of you to the village dogs!”

  Grandfather hugs the pot to his chest and rocks it back and forth. “He may, in the end, but we will have fulfilled our part of the bargain. We brought him Nightshade’s soul pot. In exchange for the pot, he promised a personal audience and to grant one request.”

  “Yes. Well.” Blue Dove tosses her head imperiously. “In the heat of the moment, he may forget that bargain.”

  My brother bows his head. He still has his back to us when he says in a chilling voice, “That may be exactly what she’s waiting for.”

  Forty-two

  The Blessed Sun

  Leather Hand was sitting on a coyote hide in his chamber, warming his hands over a firebowl brimming with red-hot coals, when an earthquake rumbled through his body. He shook so badly he was sure he was having a seizure. Toppling to his side, all he could do was jerk and gnash his teeth, staring wide-eyed at the soul pots on the shelves in the rear of his chamber. Jittering and glowing, they appeared more like multicolored blurs than finely painted houses for the imprisoned dead.

  The fearsome pair of Black Ogres on the eastern red wall bent down to study him with their magnificent toothy muzzles gaping. The Ogre on the right slashed his obsidian blade through the air right in front of Leather Hand’s face, as though trying to keep his attention. Are you finally awake?

  The tremors eventually eased enough that Leather Hand could sit up in his blankets. As he did, he shouted, “Get away from me! What do you want?”

  The Ogre’s black blade glinted at the tip of his nose. It was a thing of beauty, the flaking of the obsidian done by an extraordinary flint knapper.

  Watch.

  “Watch what? I don’t see any…”

  The hiss of a coiling serpent filled the chamber.

  The Ogre leaned so close to Leather Hand that its black throat grew larger and larger until it swallowed Leather Hand and he stared into absolute darkness.

  Then, far away, a slender blade of crimson appeared. It bobbed up the Ogre’s throat, fluid as a ghost. As it came closer, Leather Hand realized it was a woman. Young and very beautiful, she had huge haunted eyes. Cold eyes, like lumps of black ice shining in their sockets. Leather Hand frowned. There was something familiar about her, but he couldn’t quite place it. Where had he seen her before?

  Still far away, Leather Hand could hear her chanting. As the woman floated through the ebony stillness, her voice echoed up the cavern, and he felt the ethereal beauty of her hunger, her yearning. The rhythm called to his blood, harkening to his own past, dredging up memories of long-gone War Walks, of skulls gloriously smashed beneath his club as he led his warriors through enemy villages, of last gasps for air torn from dying throats.

  He closed his eyes, blocking the sight of her, just listening. The unknown words of the song hovered around him. Beneath the strange breathy cadence, a deep bass note stretched outward in all directions, and for a long while he drifted through glittering blackness that he was certain had never seen sunlight. Her alien words were almost pictures in his mind, patterns emerging from another world and traveling across unknowable gulfs of darkness to crawl inside him and quake in his bones.

  When he at last opened his eyes, the woman had floated closer, close enough now that he could clearly distinguish the silver lamps of her eyes, like shells flaring in brilliant moonlight. They were the eyes of a patient monster who was also a Powerful shaman.

  “Who are you, woman? Why do you come to me?”

  Faint peals of laughter echoed around the abyss …

  Forty-three

  Blue Dove

  Glumly, I watch the old woman set up the tripod at the edge of the flames. Moments ago, she arrived carrying supper, a basket of bread and a steaming pot of venison stew—gifts from the chief of Flower Moon Village. Bony and sallow-faced, she is named Sunki. Given her snowy hair and wrinkles, she’s survived as least fifty really hard winters. Gods, kill me before I look like that. She hangs the pot on the tripod, and arranges the legs so that the stew stays warm over the flames. I’m still upset about the empty soul pot. If there’s nothing in it, why was I so sick? I was paralyzed! I couldn’t move a muscle. I know the weak-minded can talk themselves into death if they wish to, but I’m not one of those people. Even worse, I keep wondering what my father will do when he twists off the lid of the soul pot and discovers nothing. Someone is going to suffer. Maybe everyone involved in this fiasco. I need some kind of leverage. My gaze strays to the ugly girl again, wondering how she’s related to Maicoh, Crane, and Tocho.

  “May I get you anything else?” Sunki asks with a bow.

  “What kind of bread did you bring?” Pulling the lid off the ugly basket, I gaze inside at the circles of fry bread. The sweet scent of pine nuts rises and I see them dotting the bread.

  “It’s a blend of ricegrass and goosefoot-seed flours, with a sprinkling of pine nuts.”

  “Oh well,” I say disdainfully as I put the lid back on. “It’ll probably be all right.”

  Apparently offended, Sunki gives me a cool look, bows again, and turns her attention to Tocho, who sits on the other side of the fire. The girl, Tsilu, sits between Tocho and Crane. They seem to be guarding her. The albino, however, has retreated to the far side of the pithouse, where he watches events with his blanket draped around his shoulders. Wasp Moth, Iron Dog, and Weevil hunch in a knot on their blankets, talking in quiet voices, drinking berry tea and waiting for supper to be served. If they think I’m going to serve them, they’ll be waiting forever.

  Sunki quietly walks around the flames and kneels close to Tocho. “Elder, may I ask you a question?”

  “Yes, of course,” Tocho says with smile.

  “Is it true that you studied with the legendary hero Spots?”

  “For a few days, I did, yes.” Tocho nods. “He came to our village to give my father a gift. Spots was the kindest man I’ve ever known.”

  The woman gives him a radiant smile, and excitedly replies, “My grandfather met him. Spots and his wife traveled through Dark Pines Village when they escaped Flowing Waters Town thirty summers ago. They told strange stories—”

  “What stories?” I lean forward to brace my forearms on my drawn-up knees and scowl at the old woman.

  Sunki wets her lips as though reluctant to tell me. Lowering her voice, she whispers, “Spots told my grandfather that he was with her when the Blessed Nightshade died, and he saw Mud Head Dancing away with the legendary heroes Ironwood and Night Sun, headed to the Star Road.” Her voice is filled with reverence. “With her last breath, Nightshade asked Spots to capture her soul in her old Wellpot and take her back to Cahokia. She told him she’d decided she had one final task to perform.”

  “What task?”

  The ol
d woman shakes her head. “Grandfather didn’t know. Spots never told him, I guess. Though Grandfather did say Spots carried a final message from Nightshade.”

  “A message for whom?”

  The snowy-haired crone shrugs. “Don’t know.”

  “I order you to tell me the truth.”

  “That is the truth!” the old woman objects. “If my grandfather knew the message, he never revealed it to me. Or anyone else for that matter.”

  Scanning her wrinkled face, I can tell it is the truth. “Very well. What else did your grandfather tell you? After Spots captured her soul in the pot, what happened then?”

  Sunki looks extremely uncomfortable now. She clearly never intended to have this conversation with me, the Blessed Sun’s daughter. When she gives Tocho a pleading glance, he softly says, “It’s all right to tell her.”

  Sunki swallows hard. “After that Spots and Cactus Flower trotted off with Nightshade’s soul pot for the famed land of the Mound Builders far to the east.”

  “That’s ridiculous. Why would he do that?” Reaching for a cup, I fill it from the stewpot and pick up a bighorn sheep spoon. As I plunge my spoon into the stew and stir it, I glare at the old woman. “I don’t believe it.”

  Sunki shrugs again, and turns to Tocho. “Isn’t that the story you’ve heard, elder?”

  Tocho reaches out and lightly places a hand on Sunki’s arm to pat it soothingly. “I know several versions of that story, but that’s the one I believe.”

  After chewing a bite of venison, I make a face. “How long ago was this deer killed? The meat has a vaguely rancid taste, like the hunter left it hanging in a tree until it was covered with green mold.”

  Horrified, Sunki says, “The chief’s son shot the deer just this morning! I saw him bring the buck down.”

  “Hmm. All right. Just a nasty deer, then.” Scooping up another chunk, I blow on it and put it in my mouth. After chewing and swallowing it, I say, “Why would Spots journey all the way to the lands of the Mound Builders? He would have had to travel through hostile territory for moons.”

  “Yes, I—I think he did. Grandfather told me Nightshade wanted them to carry her soul pot and the Tortoise Bundle to a great Priestess named Lichen, so that Lichen could renew the bundle and protect the pot. At least, to protect it until it was safe for Spots to bring it back to the Straight Path nation.” Sunki fiddles uneasily with her folded hands. “I don’t know if it’s true, of course.”

  “What’s the Tortoise Bundle? Never heard of it.”

  Wind gusts through the roof entry and whimpers around the pithouse like a horde of frightened children. As though oblivious to my dark mood, Iron Dog laughs at something Wasp Moth says, and Weevil cackles like a sage grouse that’s just been spooked off her nest by a bobcat.

  “Will you be quiet!” I half-shout, and my headache thunders in my skull.

  The warriors appear cowed. They lower their voices. Wasp Moth says, “Sorry, Blessed daughter.”

  Turning back to Sunki, I repeat, “What’s the Tortoise Bundle?”

  “Oh, I don’t really know the story very well,” the old woman says. “I guess the bundle goes all the way back to the beginning of the world, when Wolf—”

  “Give me the short version,” I order in irritation. “I hate stories that drone on and on.”

  Tocho tips his head deferentially. “If you don’t mind, Sunki, I’ll answer that.”

  An expression of relief slackens her face. “Thank you, elder.”

  Tocho thoughtfully steeples his fingers in front of his lips before saying, “Supposedly, the bundle was made by the greatest Dreamer of all time, Wolf Dreamer. But as the bundle was passed down from Dreamer to Dreamer over thousands of summers, it was renewed many times, changing names and being repainted until it was passed to Nightshade’s mother in Talon Town. By that time, it was painted with a yellow tortoise and called the Tortoise Bundle. When Lichen renewed it in Cahokia, she returned its name to the Wolf Bundle and repainted it with a blue wolf’s head.”

  My attention is drawn to the far side of the house where the albino speaks softly to the bundle hanging from his belt. He’s been carrying on a subtle conversation with the soul pot since we returned here, and it mystifies me. The pot is empty. Which I find intensely annoying. I expected some grand mystical event to occur when the pot was opened. Instead, nothing happened. Nothing at all. Except that it has vexed me so much I gave myself a headache.

  Tocho says, “Do you know who Wolf Dreamer was?”

  Glowering, I respond, “Don’t be insulting, old man. Everyone knows the name Wolf Dreamer. He was the First Man. The First Dreamer who led humans through the dark icy tunnels of the underworld and into this world of light.”

  “Yes, that’s right.”

  I take another bite of my stew. Around a mouthful of mushy overcooked wild potato, I say, “If true, my father will want that bundle. He collects Spirit objects.”

  “If the bundle agrees, I’ll be happy to present it to him as a gift.”

  Waving my spoon in the air, I reply, “He’ll just take it, so don’t bother asking the bundle.”

  “He can’t do that,” Tsilu says, and shakes her head so hard her chopped-off locks of hair flop around like dead appendages. “Only a bundle can decide its Keeper. If he just takes it—”

  “Tsilu.” Tocho clasps her hand hard, as though begging her to stay quiet. “I’m sure the bundle will agree. Let’s discuss it no more.”

  Chastised, the girl stares at the floor, but her teeth are grinding beneath her cheeks. She doesn’t like me. Which I find faintly amusing. I must have a private discussion with this girl about her relatives. If Crane, Maicoh, and Tocho are her family, my father will …

  My head jerks up when I hear the soft scrape of scales across stone. “What was that?”

  Tocho stares at me blandly. “What?”

  “Didn’t you hear that? It sounded like a giant serpent slithering across rocks.”

  The old woman, Sunki, struggles to her feet on knobby knees and fearfully glances around the pithouse. “I have to be going now.” She hobbles toward the ladder and climbs up into the starry night.

  Crane, who has been sitting silently beside Tocho through the entire discussion, suddenly chuckles. “A giant serpent? Sounds like the beast in your father’s heart.”

  “Do you really believe that old men’s tale?” My voice drips derision. “It’s a fabrication invented by Father’s enemies to make him seem inhuman. He has a man’s heart just like any other.”

  “Not only do I believe it, I think the evil serpent drove out his breath-heart soul and it now coils in the hollow cavity like a beast waiting to strike.”

  Leaning over, Crane picks up a cup with his left hand, dips it into the stewpot, and hands it to Tsilu, then he fills cups for Tocho and himself, and hands out spoons. The girl gobbles the stew down like she’s starving to death.

  “Eat slowly, Granddaughter,” Tocho whispers. “You’ll make yourself sick.”

  “Yes, Grandfather.” Forcing herself to slow down, she seems to chew each bite fifty times before swallowing.

  When Crane lifts his cup to sip the broth, his sleeves pull back from his wrists, and I study the ugly scars. They resemble thick white worms.

  Pointing with my spoon, I say, “How’d you get those scars?”

  “What?” he looks down.

  “On your wrists. Did you slash them yourself, or did someone do it for you?”

  He pauses with his spoon halfway to his mouth. “Why do you care?”

  “I’m bored, and I assume the story must be more interesting than wild tales about old dead legends and moldering gods.”

  “No.” He puts the spoon in his mouth and chews a chunk of venison as he watches me. “It’s not.”

  “But they’re curious scars. I’m not sure they were caused by a blade. They might have been made by cords repeatedly sawing into your flesh over a long period of time. Were you tied up for moons at some point in your mise
rable life?”

  “My miserable life is my miserable business.”

  “So you’re not going to tell me? Really, what could it hurt?”

  Crane gives me a curious look, then cocks his head. “That’s an interesting tone of voice for you, Blue Dove. Reminds me of the yowling of a weasel in heat.”

  My lips smile, but it doesn’t reach my eyes. “Shall I order one of my warriors to crush your skull with his club?”

  “If I’m not mistaken, that’s going to happen anyway. Better now than later. I hate the waiting part.”

  “Which, I gather, you know something about.” I gesture to his scars again.

  “In fact,” Crane says in an insidiously soft voice, “I know a great deal about the long wait for death blows that never come.”

  “And why do you keep those children’s moccasins? Four pair, as I recall. Are your children dead?”

  Tsilu straightens and stares at Crane. The girl obviously knows more about the moccasins than I do, and my question has her on edge. Yes, a private talk soon.

  I look back at Crane and, for a split instant, he is the frightening man I first met in that cave outside OwlClaw Village. He goes as rigid as a statue. Behind his eyes I see memories flare and die. His stillness is preternatural, spine-tingling. The feeling of threat intensifies, and my breathing turns shallow. When his hands subtly tighten around his cup, it’s a weightless movement. In the background, I see the albino shift, as though preparing to jump to his feet and stop Crane from some terrible act.

  As though he senses it, Crane slowly turns to look over his shoulder at the albino. Their gazes lock and hold, both fierce, unyielding. Finally the albino eases back to the floor.

  “Well,” I say.

  “Well, what?” Crane snaps.

  I laugh. “Slowly, ever so slowly, my vision is beginning to clear. I just realized that the albino is not the dominant man here. You are. I find that fascinating, given that you keep claiming you are not Maicoh.”

  Crane’s ash-colored face and deeply set eyes flicker in the firelight. As though he has a thousand summers to complete the action, he lifts his cup to his lips and takes a drink of venison broth, then reaches for a horn spoon, dips out a chunk of meat, and leisurely chews and swallows it.

 

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