Two nights had passed over the world,
and the day star was shining over the mountains of
the east when the people of Povi-whah saw again Tahn-te
the Po-Ahtun-ho.
It was the sentinel on the terrace
who saw him, and he was at the ancient shrine at the
mesa edge, and a flame was there to show that prayers
were being made to greet the god of the new day.
And when he came down from the mesa,
and looked at the corn of the fields torn and beaten
low by the great storm, his face showed that he carried
a sad heart, and that he had gone from Te-gat-ha somewhere
into the hills for prayer.
And to his house went the old men,
and they listened to that which had been decided by
the council of Te-gat-ha. A man had already arrived
from Te-gat-ha to tell them that same thing, and to
tell them that an evil spirit of the forest who spoke
as a Navahu maid, had brought woe on the valley.
Some said it was the Ancient Star
calling on the voice of the wind for sacrifice, and
others said the tornado had come because the maid had
been let go with the sacred symbols of ceremony painted
on her body, and the gods of that ceremony called
for her on the wind. But whichever way was the
true way, the maid was linked to spirits of evil,
and the corn of that year would be less than half of
a full year, and the Te-gat-ha men asked that any
Te-hua man who found the evil maid would send a runner
to tell of it. Robes and blue beads would be
given for her: she belonged to the god of
the star, or the god of the mad winds, and on the
altar with prayers must she be given to them, that
they be not angry.
Tahn-te listened and
when they said the anger of the sky had come from
the west, as the maid had come, he was silent.
His first day of failure in council
had been the day when he shielded the Dream Maid on
the trail. The woman who had wept in Te-gat-ha
had said she was evil and a witch, and now the men
pointed to the killed corn as the work of her magic!
No word of his could undo these things
or wipe them from the Indian mind. In his own
mind he knew that a weakness had come upon him.
To live alone for the gods had been an easy thing
to think of in the other days, but now it was not
easy, and his heart trembled like a snared bird at
each plan made by the men for the undoing of the witchmaid
if she should be found.
The runner from Te-gat-ha looked strangely
at Tahn-te as he walked across the court, and
to Ka-yemo, he said:
“You men of Povi-whah are good
runners always, and your Ruler of the Spirit Things
has left you all behind always in the race. Yet
this time, to come from Te-gat-ha, he stays two sleeps,
and follows a trail no man sees!”
“In the hills he has been for
prayers so the old men say,” replied
Ka-zemo. But Yahn, whose ears were ever open,
gave stew of rabbit to the Te-gat-ha runner and asked
many things, and learned that the storm had washed
away all tracks of feet, but that the witch maid had
certainly run to the south every other way
was under the eyes of the sentinel on the wall.
By a little stream to the south had her tracks been
seen but not in any other place.
“Tahn-te crossed over the
trail,” said Yahn and laughed. “The
priest of the men of iron say that Tahn-te is
a sorcerer, who knows that he did not bury
owl-feathers or raven-feathers on the way to hide her
trail? If the witch maid was a maid of beauty,
is he not already a man?”
The man laughed with her, but he had
heard of the dance of Tahn-te to the ancient
stone god of the hills! The man who danced there
was not the man for the cat scratches of Yahn the
Apache, and though he laughed with her because she
was pretty and a woman, he was not blind to her malice,
and the meaning of her words went by him on the wind.
But the thought once planted in the
mind of Yahn did not die. The face of Tahn-te
held a trouble new and strange. He walked apart,
and the old men said he made many prayers that the
Great Mystery send a sign for the going of the white
strangers.
In her heart Yahn thought as Tahn-te
thought. The eyes of the man of the priest gown
went like arrows through her at times he
looked like a man who knew all things. To Ka-yemo
he talked until she was wild with desire to know the
things said between them. It angered her that
Ka-yemo was flattered by such attention. Padre
Vicente she hated for his keen eyes and his plain
speech of her. Don Ruy and the boyish secretary
had too many moments of laughter when her name was
spoken of to Juan Gonzalvo as it often
was! Their gifts she took with both hands, and
did the talking for them as agreed, but she sulked
at times even under their compliments, and Don Diego
instructed Saeh-pah to strive that the unruly beauty
be brought within the Christian fold.
The success was not great, for Saeh-pah
was brave in a new gift of silver spurs worn
on rawhide about her neck, for it was the time of
the Summer dance when the women choose companions,
and love is very free. If the man prefers not
to share the love of the dame who makes choice of
him he makes her a gift or she
chooses one.
The pious Don Diego had the secretary
give many lines in the “Relaciones” of
this strange custom where the fair fond ones offered
marriage or accepted a gift as memento.
He even strutted a bit that the poor heatheness offered
to him what best she could afford in exchange for
the divine grace of a good sprinkling of holy water.
But Yahn said things of the baptism not good for ears
polite, or for the “Relaciones,” and Saeh-pah
scuttled back in fear to her new master, and told
him, and told Juan Gonzalvo, that the veins
of Yahn Tsyn-deh must be cut open to let out
the Apache blood, before they could hope she might
be one of the heaven birds in their angel flock!
But Saeh-pah did not tell them that
the thing of torment awaking Yahn to wrath had been
the knowledge that Ka-yemo was somewhere across the
mesa, and the old people laughed that he could not
stay longer from the new wife, but had gone to seek
her in the place of the old ruins.
After that, divine grace had not shielded
Saeh-pah from vituperation, and when Juan Gonzalvo
came wooing, Yahn told him that across the hills was
a woman waiting for a man, and dressed in fine skins
and many beads: when he or his men had
won Koh-pe the daughter of Tsa-fah, to come back
and tell her. She did not mean to be won easier
than the other, and without a price!
Which was also a novel statement for
the truthful record of the adventurers, and the secretary,
on a terrace above, heard it, and rolled on the flat
roof in laughter, and wrote it down most conscientiously.
By such light matters was the dreariness of waiting
days lessened.
For plainly the days were to be of
waiting. All the good will of gift-bought friends
helped the strangers not at all to the finding of
the trail of gold. In the sands of the streams
some fragments no larger than seeds of the grass were
found, and in the canyon of Po-et-se some
of the adventurers dug weary hours in the strange soil
where the traces are yet plain of black ashes, and
charred cinders far beneath the sagebrush growth of
to-day.
But while the Te-hua men gave good
will for their digging, yet more than that they could
not give, for the reason that no more than two persons
could hold in trust that secret of the Sun Father’s
symbol and only certain members of the Po-Ahtun
order knew even the names of those two people.
After much patient delving had Ka-yemo
learned that this was so, for the thing was not a
tribal matter, but a thing of high medicine in the
Po-Ahtun order. Not even the governor knew who
held the secret. When the time came for certain
religious ceremonies, some of the yellow stone was
placed on the shrine of the weeping god with other
prayers, but it was a sacred thing, as was the pollen
of the corn, and no man asked from whence it came.
To be told meant that the person told was made guardian
until the death blankets wrapped him. It was a
great honor. No man could ask for it. A
brother might not know that his brother was the keeper
of the trust. Only the head men of the secret
order of Spirit Things could know.
In vain Juan Gonzalvo swore, and Padre
Vicente used diplomacy and made wondrous fine impression
as the ambassador for the king of all Spain and the
Indian Island!
Don Ruy took the secretary and Yahn
Tsyn-deh, and went to the governor of Kah-po
where his reception was kindly, but the information
given him was slight.
That dignitary told him that his men
of Mexico might dig great caves if they chose in search
for the yellow metal of the sun symbol, but that to
Povi-whah had been given the secret of the gold at
the time when Senor Coronado had burned the two hundred
men at the stake in Tiguex. All the old men knew
that gold was the one thing the men of iron searched
for. Before that time all villages had men who
knew where it was hidden by the Sun Father. But
a council of head men had been called. It had
been a great council and long. At the end of it,
one village was chosen, one order of that village,
and two members of that order, and in the ears of
those two alone was whispered the hiding place.
No man could know who the two keepers of the secret
might be, for it had to do with sacred things and with
strong magic, and in that way did the villages decide
to guard the secret of the High Sun.
“No chance here for whispers
of courtiers and king’s counselors to get abroad
in the land,” decided Don Ruy as they mounted
their horses for the home ride and Yahn lingered to
gossip with neighbors. “In the south the
conquerors could fight for gold and win it but
in this land of silence with whom is one to fight?”
“Need you the gold so much that
you must come between these poor people and their
god in the sky?” asked the secretary doubtfully,
for the attitude of the two had been of extreme politeness
and not so much of comradeship since that morning
of confession when the lad had owned himself a deficient
page in the bearing of love messages, “Is
the finding of the gold a matter of life or of death?”
“It pays for most good things,”
stated Don Ruy. “How know you that I do
not beggar myself on this expedition? And to go
back with empty hands would win little of favor for
me from even the well-guarded Dona of the Mexic tryst.”
“You forget, Excellency,”
said the lad and smiled, “she is called mad
you know and to a mad maid you might return
in a cloak of woven grasses, or of shredded bark,
and lack nothing of welcome.”
“Humph! Only to a mad maid
dare I return coatless, and find an open gate?
And suppose it be another than the gentle maniac whom
I seek? a cloak of grasses would be a sorry
equipment to cover my failure.”
“There is one right good blanket
at your disposal,” said the lad looking straight
out across the river, yet feeling the color mount to
his hair as Don Ruy regarded him keenly and then clapped
him on the shoulder.
“I’ll claim half of the
blanket when the day comes!” he declared “and
in truth I’d not be so sorry to see the maid
of your discourse whether mad or of sanity. That
ever restless Cacique who strives to bar us out, shows
me that more than one Indian may have gone mad in the
same struggle. Think you he must know the keepers
of the secret of gold?”
“It would not be strange, since
he is the head of the magicians and the worker of
spirit things.”
“God send that Juan Gonzalvo
gets not that idea strongly in his mind it
would be the cap sheaf to the stack of his grievances.”
“And it would be the one to
weigh most heavily with his reverence the padre” added
Chico. “His soul is set on treasure for
the Holy Brotherhood and to win in secret
where Coronado and the church failed with all the
blare of trumpets, means that no man in the Indies
would have a name written above that of the patient
and devout Padre Vicente.”
“You say things, lad, with a
serious face; but with a mocking voice,”
commented Don Ruy. “Tell me truly if the
life of a page in the palace of the Viceroy teaches
you so much of politics and holy orders that you combine
the two and grow skeptic to each?”
“A page sees more than he understands ”
returned the lad, “it was the teaching of your
mad Dona of the silken scarf who saw things as the
priests told her they were not to be seen, she
it was who taught me to laugh instead of doing penance.”
“And she it was also no doubt
who taught you of magic Mexic things in keeping with
the fairy Melissa of Charlemagne’s day, and Merlin
the magian of Britain?”
“Heigh-ho! It is precious
magic those old romancers did tell of!” agreed
the lad. “Think how fine it would be if
we had those enchanted steeds and lances, and
the fair daughter of the Khan of Kathay for company
through the wilderness!”
“She was too fickle, and too
much the weeping fair,” decided Don Ruy.
“Bradamante the warrior maid is more to the fancy she
would fight for the lover she loved or
against him as the case might be, yet give love to
him all the time! She was the very pole-star of
those old romances but they make no such
maids except in books!”
“Not so much pity for that,”
commented the secretary. “Since she was
too easily won for the hearth stone of a plain man.
It is clearly set down that she spoke with her pagan
lover but once, and fell straightway so deep in love
that she would fight either Christian or Moor to find
the way to him. A maid like that looks well afar
off, but it would take a valiant man to house with
her!”
“How know you aught of how many
times eyes must meet or words be said ere
love comes?” demanded Don Ruy “Bantam
that you are! Must a man and a maid see
summer and winter together ere the priest has work
to do?”
“Alas and saints
guard us! we need not to live long to see
denial of that!” said the secretary and shrugged
and smiled. “But since a maid close to
my own house throws lilies to strange cavaliers, it
is not for me to make discourse of ladies light-of-love!”
“Light-of-love! Jack-a-napes!
You know not so much after all if you get that thought
cross wise in your skull! My ‘Dona Bradamante’
(for as yet neither you or the padre have given a
name to her!) the ’Dona Bradamante’ spoke
no word the most rigid duenna could have frowned down!
If you are her foster brother you might have gathered
that much of wisdom to yourself!”
“But your Excellency she
has never scattered wisdom broadcast on any one of
us! An elfish maid who needed guard of both duenna
and confessor: how was a mere friend to
know that a love of a mad moment would have made her
a wonder of wisdom and discretion?”
Whereupon Don Ruy suggested that he
go to the devil and learn sense, and added that if
the famous magic steed, or ring of invisibility were
to be found in the desert regions of these Indian provinces,
he would use them for a peep into the palace of the
Viceroy, or the nunnery of the Dona of the Lily.
No ambassador would he trust. For himself he
would see how much or how little of madness was back
of the message of the blossom, or the guerdon of the
silken scarf.
“If I were indeed a worthy page
I would make a song of your enchanted or
demented Dona, and pipe it to you to the tombe
of the medicine workers on the roofs,” declared
the lad in high glee that Don Ruy again spoke with
frankness to him.
But his excellency put aside the offer,
content to make his own songs when there was a maid
to listen.
“Dame Yahn Tsyn-deh might
listen and even make herself beautiful for
you.”
“The Dame Yahn is like enough
to make trouble without the singing of songs!
Whether it is the Indian war capitan, or our own, I
know not as to the favorite. But some game she
is playing, and I doubt if it is for Juan Gonzalvo,
despite his gifts.”
Padre Vicente and Jose were walking
apart under a group of the white limbed cottonwoods,
as the two riders drew near the village. Their
discourse was earnest, and the voice of the padre was
heard in decision.
“That is how it must be, Jose ”
he said. “You have found the way, the
gold is as good as ours!”
“By the faith!” said
Don Ruy swinging from the saddle to join them; “if
this be true let us fill wallets and break camp for
Mexico! there is a gentle maniac over there
with whom I would fain hold hands once more this
womanless paradise pleases me little!”
The padre regarded him with tolerance,
and never a blink of the eye to denote remembrance
of any gentle maniac in particular. Since the
dame had served a worthy purpose, forgotten was all
the episode!
“It is well you know the good
tidings of Jose,” he said “though
there is no hint that the gold is piled in bars waiting
for the lading. Speak, Jose.”
“It is a man of Ni-am-be,”
said Jose. “He has been outcast for a reason.
He lives alone, and the fear of the alone is growing
in him, for he is old! He was one of the men
who made medicine to forget where the sign of the
Sun Father hides in the earth. But the medicine
was not good medicine.”
“He does not forget?”
“He made a vow to the sky to
forget, but the sky did not listen and take the vow.
He does not forget.”
“And he will show the place?”
“It may be he will show the
place. He asks me if it is a good life to live
with your people, also if you would take him away when
you go.”
“Oh ho! he
fears what would happen if he was left behind after
telling he fears they would kill him?”
“Not so much of the to kill
is he afraid. He was a medicine man. He
knows what the other medicine men could do. He
would wish for the to die many times and they would
not let death come near to his cave in the rock.”
“By their magic?” asked Don Ruy.
“By their magic, Excellency.
Of all the head men is he afraid, but of Tahn-te
the Po-Ahtun-ho who has the sight of the dark is he
much afraid.”
“The sight of the dark?”
“It is so, some men are born
into the world with it. They know the thought
of the other man, they see the hidden things.
Tahn-te has the strong medicine and the eyes
to see. He is much afraid of Tahn-te the
Ruler.”
“You see the power of these
necromancers with their satanic arts?” said
Padre Vicente. “We must make it plain to
these people that such fear is to be driven out only
by the true church and the power of its saints.”
“If we wait for the gold until
we teach them all that, the profit of this journey
will be to our heirs and not to ourselves,” decided
Don Ruy. “Pay the renegade for the secret
he should have forgotten, take him along with us,
and convert him at your leisure. In all good time,
and with a larger guard of men, you can come for the
further conversion of the tribe.”
“There is wisdom in what you
say,” replied the padre, “for converts
here will mean a waiting game. But once let us
take to Mexico the golden proof of the wealth in this
province and there will be eager troops and churchmen
in plenty to cross the deserts and defend the faith.
But for that devil-possessed Po-Ahtun-ho the road to
success would be shorter.”
“It is not good luck to say
things against the man of strong magic,” stated
Jose. “Ka-yemo, the war capitan would like
if Tahn-te had never come from the land of the
Hopitu but Ka-yemo says no evil words of
Tahn-te he knows that Tahn-te
has ears to hear far off, and eyes to see in the dark.”
“Do you forget you are a Christian
soul?” demanded the padre. “The holy
saints can kill the evil powers even in the sons of
Satan! Let me hear no more of the ’eyes
of the dark;’ pagan trickery!”
Jose said no more, but it was easy
to see that the veneer of foreign ritual had made
little impression on the Indian mind. He feared
all the devils of the Christian hell, and most of
the gods of the pagan pantheon. A policy of propitiation
towards all the unseen powers is the wise and instinctive
attitude of the primitive mind. He slipped his
prayer beads through his fingers as taught for prayer,
but to be quite certain that evil be bribed to keep
its distance, he stealthily scattered prayer meal
as he walked behind the others, and Yahn who was coming
behind them, saw him, and laughed. She was glad
of heart to see that the Te-hua, after years of the
white man’s religion, was still at heart, a
devotee of the Sun.
“He says that Tahn-te the
Ruler has not the strong magic,” he said lowly
to Yahn “but no one else says so in
this land.”
Yahn did not care to discuss the power
of Tahn-te it was a bitter thing in
her days.
And as the little group went on through
the fragrant sage and the yellow bloom, Tahn-te
himself stood almost on their trail, but a little
to one side where a knoll was.
Still as a thing of stone he stood
there. His hand shaded his eyes while he gazed
across the sage levels across the water
of the river and to the yellow and red sands beyond.
Even at their footsteps near, and
their voices, he made no sign and wavered not in his
gaze. Don Ruy glancing at him saw that his expression
was keen, yet incredulous. So strange was it that
Don Ruy instinctively turned in his saddle to see
the thing at which Tahn-te looked and frowned.
At first he could see only the wavering
lines of heat across the level and then
he saw the thing, and with a word halted the others
and pointed.
Out of the red and yellow sand and
soft green patches of the desert growth a group of
men were outlined against the low hills. Indians
with lances and with shields.
“That is a curious thing,”
said Don Ruy. “They walk this way yet their
steps bring them not closer! Is it a war party?”
Yahn gave one look, drew her breath
sharply, and turned speechless to Tahn-te.
Jose after a long look crossed himself many times and
gripped the sleeve of the padre.
“Navahu!” he
muttered, the terror of his ancient first captors coming
over him. “Navahu to battle!”
But Tahn-te made a little gesture
to reassure the startled interpreter.
“You do not see men alive there,”
he said, “these are not men, but
the shadows of men who will come.”
“Shadows?” the tones of the
padre were contemptuous.
“Spirit people of the shadows these
things do come to some eyes, some days, in our land,”
stated Tahn-te quietly. “This time
you have also been given to see that these things
are.”
Even as he spoke the mirage of the
armed men faded in a whirl of sand caught up by a
wandering wind, and while the others still stared at
the place where it had been, Tahn-te passed them
and ran with easy stride across the levels to Povi-whah.
The Spanish crossed themselves, and
even Yahn Tsyn-deh trembled. Tahn-te
had chosen to show the men of iron that his medicine
was strong to bring visions, and what was most wonderful to
bring them before the eyes of other men!
Jose was shaking with fear.
“All things he hears,”
he muttered “all things! Under
the trees we spoke words far off they reached
his ears! He waited to show us that his eyes
were for the dark or the day or the
dead! The spirit men were Navahu.
Holy Father, he can bring all the men who ever died
to tramp us into the sand! Holy Father, my heart
is very sick!”
The others were silent. All were
awed, and Padre Vicente was thinking what was most
wise to say. There were enough in the group for
strong witness that Tahn-te had shown them a
thing which did not exist; only a sorcerer
could call up men out of the earth and send them away
on the wind!
“In the sorcery we had no part,
my children,” he said at last. “The
man who raised those demons fled, as you see, at the
sign of the cross! To-morrow morning we have
a mass. It is well to walk in prayer, when Satan
works with his chosen helpers.”
Don Ruy looked at him sharply for
the mirage could not be a thing of wonder for so travelled
a man. But his was not the task to correct eminence
as to natural or infernal agencies, and the effect
on the minds of the two interpreters might prove a
thing of grace!
Therefore he bent his head, and rode
onward, and smiled at the secretary, who was careful
to ride close, and showed none too much of courage
at this glimpse of the magic of the barbarian who clasped
hands with the gods or the demons!
“What dare be written in the
‘Relaciones’ of a thing like that?”
he queried. “You smile, Excellency,
as if you carried a magic shield, or enchanted sword
lifted from pages of old romance, but what think you
Senor Brancadori will say to this thing of wonder?
It does not belong to the living world we know.”
“Let it not get into your dreams,”
suggested Don Ruy “or if you do,
content yourself with the fancy that I indeed bear
a magic shield and am ever near enough for you to
hide behind it.”
“I am not so much a coward!”
retorted the lad, “to die for a good
cause in any human way is not a thing to fear but
these magical works ”
“Without doubt they do belong
to the sorcery of Satan,” said Don Ruy soberly,
yet with an eye on the padre “and
yon supple racer is of course one of his heirs.
Stay you close to me, lad, and forget not your orisons.”
When they reached the camp, a herald
was calling to the people from the terraces.
He was calling for all the men to prepare for battle.
In a vision of the bright day had Tahn-te seen
the coming of the Navahu. The medicine of Tahn-te
was strong. Not at home would they wait for battle.
To steal women had the enemy taken the trail to the
dwellings of the Ancient ruins in the hills, and there
must the warriors prepare to meet them on the trail.
The names of men were called as scouts,
and the response was quick, as one after another ran
to the kiva for orders, and then started on the run
towards mesa and forest.
Don Ruy looked after them with eyes perplexed.
“Does the Cacique regard the
mirage with earnestness?” he said to the padre
who also watched and listened. “The man
has a quick, good brain and marvellous understandings, but
to prepare for battle because of a sun picture in
the sand is scarce what I looked for in him.”
Padre Vicente smiled with his lips,
and stroked his beard.
“You have yet to learn that
the Indian magic workers let no tricks go by to prove
their greatness,” he said. “That
wench and Jose were witness to the thing thus
he must claim it as his own! When the scouts
find no Navahu warriors, be sure it will be for the
reason that the magic of the sorcerer caused them
to turn back in weakness on the trail!”
“That will but strengthen his
power, if it be so,” agreed the younger man, “and
how will you surmount that fear of him, and win the
renegade of Ni-am-be to give the word we need?”
“Protection and a life of ease
away from the Indian magicians is a good bribe for
an outcast, and it may be that fortune plays
into our hands. I could wish that the Cacique
would follow the scouts with his mummeries and incantations.
You see how they have taught even Jose the fear of
him!”
“Yes I do see, and
but for the story that in this one village is held
the gold secret, I should say to move camp to some
province where bookish caciques hold no sway.
How account you for the keen brain of this wonder-worker?
We have pampered and tutored numbskulls in Seville
who know not even their own creed so well as it is
known by this heretic barbarian.”
“Without doubt it is the power
of the Prince of Darkness,” and Padre Vicente
gave the opinion with all due force having
in remembrance that scene of the gift of the rosary
in the kiva, and seeing clearly that the Spanish adventurer
had more than a little of admiration for the unexpected
daring of the pagan. “Witchcraft and
sorcery are of the Devil, and both white men and savages
do trade their souls for evil knowledge. To strip
him of his ill-gotten power would be a work of grace
for the Faith and it is a thing for which
each Christian should gladly say many prayers!”
Don Ruy well knew that these ardent
words were directed at his own luke-warmness in regard
to the young Ruler. Maestro Diego and Juan Gonzalvo
had distanced him in setting a good example to the
men of the guard!
A messenger from the kiva approached
and spoke to Yahn, and she came to the Spaniards with
a message.
A council was in the kiva. It
was about war if war came. The Po-Ahtun-ho thought
it was good that one of the white visitors be asked
to sit and listen; Don Ruy was invited to be that one.
The man Jose was to interpret.
Don Ruy speculated as to the cause
of this courtesy. The Ruler certainly did not
desire the help of the white men the message
did not even say as much. But it was plain that
there were two parties on that question, and Tahn-te
meant to show no fear of his opponents. They
would see he gave them fair chances.
So he went, and Jose followed, and
Yahn watched them to her great, yet silent
rage.
Ka-yemo only reached the village as
the last scout was started for the trail of the Po-et-se
canyon. Ka-yemo was the official for the
war orders, yet the orders had been given without
speech with him! Over his head had it been done,
and his protest to the governor, and to the old men
in council brought him little of pride or of comfort.
“On the trail to see your wife
you might have died,” said one of the old men, “or
on the way coming home. How could we know?
If you die and we have to fight we have
to fight without you. Before you were born we
fought without you.”
“I was not to see a wife!”
protested Ka-yemo. “I can stay away like
other men. Some one has talked crooked! I
was on the mesa talking with the guardians who make
the arrow heads. To the far away ones I talked.
The women send word to them that they are afraid.
A ghost is at Pu-ye. All the women but the Twilight
Woman are much frightened. They want men.”
“Good!” said the governor.
“The scouts are already on the trail. If
men are needed, each man is ready and each spear is
waiting. To the Po-Ahtun-ho has been shown a
vision of the enemy it was not a time to
wait for council.”
Ka-yemo’s handsome face was
still sulky. The vision of Tahn-te might
have waited. He had come down with a fine new
story of a ghost seen in the ruins of Pu-ye, and it
was ignored because Tahn-te the Po-Athun-ho had
found a vision!
Tahn-te entered not at all into
the discussion of the confiscated rights of Ka-yemo.
Even of the ghost frightening the women he asked no
question. Many things of war were talked of if
the Navahu should come to steal women or corn, and
the dusk of the twilight crept after the vanished
sun when Tahn-te turned at last to the war chief.
“Ka-yemo, with the men of iron
you have spoken much and often,” he said quietly.
“Do you know who told them first that in Povi-whah
was held the secret of the yellow metal for which
they search?”
The tongue of Ka-yemo became stiff
as all sat silent waiting for his answer.
“The padre asked me,” he
said at last, “the padre always makes
people speak I told the padre that which
I had heard.”
There was a slight stir among the
men, but Tahn-te quieted them with a glance.
“The priest of the iron men
has also been told one other thing,” he continued “and
it is well for you all, brothers, that you hear this
thing. Oh-we-tahnh, the outcast of Ni-am-be, was
a strong medicine man. He used magic in a dark
way for evil. His power was taken from him.
He was told by the council to forget the secret of
the sun symbol. Brothers, he has not forgotten!
He has come to the camp of the men of iron. He
eats their food: last night he slept by
their walls.”
“Our brothers of Ni-am-be will
not be glad with us if we let this be,” stated
one man. “The evil magic must be outcast
always.”
“Send some one and find the
man,” said Tahn-te. “When the
sun of to-morrow comes, all who listen here may be
on the war trail. It is not good to leave a coyote
loose to do harm when no one watches.”
In a little while the outcast was
brought into the circle. He cringed with fear,
and his eyes were restless as those of a trapped wolf.
The governor questioned him as to his presence there,
reminding him that the council of Ni-am-be had granted
him life only if he take that life out of sight of
his kind. Why then did he come to Povi-whah and
stay in the camp of the strangers?
His only reply was that he would go
now, and he would go quickly.
“No not quickly,”
said Tahn-te. “You will not go quickly
any where ever again. I am looking at you!
I say so!”
The man stared at Tahn-te like
a bird that was under a charm. All the others
saw the steady gaze of Tahn-te, and saw also that
the outcast began to tremble.
“Hold out your hand,”
said Tahn-te, and when it was done, Tahn-te
took from his medicine pouch some pieces of yellow
gold. They were heavy, he passed them around
until all might see, then he put the gold in the hand
of the outcast.
“Your clan was a proud clan
and good, and you made them ashamed,” said Tahn-te.
“You had strong medicine and you used it for
evil until your name must not be spoken by your brothers.
To these men of iron you would trade that which is
not yours: Without speech of council you would
do this and to do it would be traitor!
Because your heart wishes to give the sun symbol to
these strangers, I send you to them with what your
hand can hold. To the priest of the white god
give it! Tell him I, the Po-Ahtun-ho, send it,
and no more than that will he ever see here in Povi-whah.
Tell him that the weight of it makes your hand shake
and your body shake. Tell him that the sickness
is now in your blood, and when the day comes again
your tongue cannot make words to tell him things.
Tell him if his men put you in the saddle, or carry
you to the hidden place of the Sun Father, that the
light of your eyes will go out on the trail!
I am looking at you! and you, who once
had a name, and were a worker of magic, know that I
look on you with Power, and that it will be as I say.”
He stooped and drew in the ashes of
the place of fire, the figure of a man with hand stretched
out, then, with a breath, he sent the ashes in a little
cloud and each line was obliterated.
“To destroy you would not be
good,” he continued. “It
is better that the boys and the young men see the
fate given to a traitor. My brothers, is
this well?”
“It is well!” said the
men, but the voice of the war chief was not loud,
and his hands shook until he clasped them together
and held them steady.
Tahn-te looked around the circle
as though undecided, and then rested on Ka-yemo.
“You speak the words of the
Castilian man, and like to speak them,” he said
quietly, “so it will be well for you to make
the words for this man who carries to their priest
the gift of the sun symbol. Forget no thought
of it for all the words have meaning.”
And this speech to Ka-yemo was in
Castilian, and was plainly said, and Ruy Sandoval
knew then why the courtesy of the council had been
extended to him.
And the outcast, holding the nuggets
in his trembling outstretched hand shook so that he
could not go alone up the ladder to the world above.
Ka-yemo, with a still, strange face
of fear, put out his hand to help the outcast, who
looked as if Great King Death had called his name.
No more words were spoken, and the
men in silence followed after. They had seen
a thing of strong medicine, and the Great Mystery had
sent power quickly. That palsy by which the man
had been touched had come with the swiftness of the
wind when it whirls the leaves of the cottonwood.
They all knew that the tongue would be dumb, and the
eyes would be blind in the given time if need be.
And Don Ruy like the others, was touched
with awe of the man who had wrought the thing.
As he went up the ladder he looked back at the Ruler
who sat still gazing into the ashes of the
place of sacred fire.