The stars had marked the middle of
the night, and the Castilian camp slept, save for
the guards who paced quietly through the pine groves,
and the Te-hua sentinels on the summit above, who rested
in silence at the places where footholds carved by
pre-historic Lost Others in the face of the rock wall,
afforded a trail for the enemy if the enemy could
find it.
Between the Castilians in the pine
below, and the Te-hua sentinels on the rock mesa of
the ruins above, there stretched the line of cave
dwellings high in the rock wall. These needed
no guard for there the Te-hua warriors
slept, and Tahn-te read the fate of things in
the crystal, and made prayers.
But to the east where he had forbidden
wandering feet, a man and woman did crouch in a crevice,
and watch while the shining ones overhead travelled
to the center of the sky and then towards the mountains
in the trail of the sun.
For Tahn-te they watched and
the watching was so long that the man slept at intervals
in the arms of the woman but the woman did
not sleep! Victory was too near and
triumph beat in her blood, and like a panther of the
hills waiting for prey did she listen for the steps
of the man who had known her humiliation.
But when the steps did come, they
came not from the Po-Ahtun-ho, nor were they the steps
of a man.
A woman crept lightly as a mountain
squirrel from one to another of the boulders on the
eastern hill, and at last climbed to the dwellings
of the Ancient Ones, and reached the portal of the
sacred place of the star.
This was the place where the wise
men of old watched the coming of the gods as they
gazed upon earth through the mask of the glimmering
stars. It was not a place for women, for no woman
had been Reader of the Stars within known records
of the Te-hua people. Yet it surely was a woman
who crept upwards in the night to the place where women
feared to go.
Yahn Tsyn-deh slipped like a
snake from the crevice and watched from the shadow
of a rock, and was richly repaid. It was the Woman
of the Twilight who came to the place where Tahn-te
had forbidden the Castilians and warriors to walk,
and against the sky Yahn could see the outline of
a water jar borne on her back by the head-band of woven
hemp. She halted for breath, and leaned, a frail,
breathless ghost of a woman, against the wall.
Then with a pebble she tapped on the
portal of the star, four times she made the signal
ere another met her in the dusk, and took from her
the burden, and clung to her hand in dread.
In the dusk of the starlight they
sat and whispered, for no fire dare be lit within,
and the girl of the bluebird wing ate the bread and
drank water, and breathed her gratitude while she strove
to understand the words of the mother of Tahn-te.
That there was danger she knew for
she had seen the many men. Like things enchanted
had she seen them the men who looked like
part of the animals they rode! In dread and fear
had she waited for Tahn-te while she watched
the Ancient Star glowing like an eye of wrath in the
western heavens. It was looking back with an evil
look because no gift had been made to it on the altars
of the valley people. Tahn-te had told her
that so long as it shone must she remain hidden.
She did not need to ask why. When with the Navahu
savages she had been taunted at times because the
altars of her people knew well the blood of human
sacrifice which they offered with elaborate ceremony
to propitiate the gods of the stars in the sky.
“Tahn-te?” she whispered
to the mother, but the mother shook her head.
Apart from all woman-kind must a priest live when times
of stress come. Tahn-te was fasting and
making prayers. A girl hidden in the caves must
not go hungry, but the thought of her must not mingle
with thoughts of penance for the tribe. All heads
of the spiritual orders do penance and make prayers
for clear vision when the evil days come.
“And they are here?” questioned the girl.
“They are here. The land
was smiling, the corn was good, all was good.
Then the Great Star came and the men of
iron came the corn was laid low by the
God of the Winds. The Most Mysterious has sent
signs to his people, and the signs are evil and come
quickly. My son, the Po-Ahtun-ho, has seen these
signs, and the gods have talked with him.”
The maid knew that a mere stray creature
could not find room in the thoughts of so great a
man at so great a time; and she sat silent,
but she reached out and held the hand of his mother.
Since he could not speak with her he had sent to her
the woman most high and most dear. He could not
come, but he had not forgotten!
“He will come again?”
she murmured, and some memory in the heart of the
Twilight Woman made her speech very gentle.
“He will come again when the
battle is over, and the days of the purification are
over. It is the work of the Po-Ahtun-ho to see
that the stranger is ever fed and covered with a shelter.
So has he brought you here, and so has he brought
the lion skin robe to you here. When the young
moon has grown to the great circle, and the strangers
have gone again to the camp by the river, then will
the Po-Ahtun-ho come to you here in this place.
He will come as the circle moon rises over Na-im-be
hills. Many prayers will be made ere that night
time, and he will come with wisdom to say the thing
to be done. Until then the strangers must not
see you, and the young foolish men of our tribe must
not see you.”
Not much of this was understood by
the bewildered maid who must be kept hidden in secret
even in the land of her own people.
But Yahn Tsyn-deh, crouching
in the sand outside the portal, heard and understood,
and her heart was glad with happiness, for a vengeance
would fall double strong on Tahn-te if it touched
also the medicine god woman, his mother!
From the broken, whispered sentences half
Navahu half Te-hua did Yahn
know that the hidden woman was indeed the Navahu witch
maid by whom evil spirits had been led from the west
into the great valley.
It had been a wonder night in the
life of Yahn Tsyn-deh. The love of her wild
heart had been given back to her and vengeance
against his rival had been put within reach of her
hands! The heights of Pu-ye were enchanted and
the Ancient Star had shone on her with kindness.
It was a good time in her life and she must work in
quickness ere the change came, for the watchful gods
of the sky do not stand still when the signs are good
signs.
And she crept back to the arms of
her lover, and they watched together the medicine
shadow woman creep downward until the dark hid her.
Yahn counseled that at once they go
to the governor and tell that which they heard, but
Ka-yema said “no,” for if the
Navahu enemy did come, the power of Tahn-te was
needed by the Te-hua warriors it was not
the time to kill the witch woman or kill the prayer
thoughts.
“You are strong to fight without
Tahn-te,” whispered the girl who made herself
as a vine in her clinging clasp of him.
“But not to fight against Tahn-te
and his secret powers of the sky,” answered
Ka-yemo. “The old men know he is strong
in visions. When the time comes that he fall
low in their sight, there will be many days that their
hearts will be sick. We must not make these days
come when we have enemies to fight.”
“Do you fear?” demanded
the temptress petulantly. It irked her that his
first thought was of caution while hers
was of annihilation for the man who loomed so large
that no other man could be seen in the land.
“If you think I fear would you
find me here in this witch place with you?”
he asked. “It has been forbidden that any
one comes here yet have I come!”
Plainly he felt brave that he had
defied the Po-Ahtun-ho in so much as he had walked
to the forbidden sacred places, and Yahn felt a storm
of rage sweep over her at the knowledge. But
it had been a storm of rage like that by which he
had once been driven away from her! And she smothered
all the words she would have spoken, and clung to him,
and whispered of his greatness, and the
pride he could bring to the clan when Tahn-te,
the lover of witches, no longer made laws in the land.
In her own heart she was making prayers
that the alarm of the Navahu warriors prove a false
thing, and the vision of Tahn-te be laughed at
by the clans. To hear him laughed at would help
much!
But that was not to be, for ere the
dawn broke, came shouts from Shufinne and
signal fires, and the Te-hua men of Pu-ye ran swiftly
to guide their Castilian brothers in arms, and the
savages who had hoped to steal women in the darkness,
found that thunder and lightning and death fought
for the Te-hua people and the men of iron
rode them down with the charmed animals and strange
battle cries.
When the daylight came there were
dead Navahu on the field south of Shufinne the
flower of the shields had bloom! Two dead Te-hua
men were also there, and a wounded Navahu had been
taken captive by Juan Gonzalvo. Ka-yemo carried
two fresh scalps, and Don Ruy lay huddled in a little
arroyo, where a lance thrust had struck him reeling
from the saddle, and Tahn-te had leaped forward
to grapple with the Navahu who, hidden on the edge
of the steep bank, waited the coming of the horseman
and lunged at him as head and shoulders came above
the level.
Where the breastplate ends at the
throat he struck, and the blade of volcanic glass
cut through the flesh. At the savage yell of triumph
the horse swerved stumbled, and with a clatter
of metals rolled down the embankment.
As the Navahu rushed downward with
lifted axe and eager scalping knife, an arrow from
the bow of Tahn-te pierced the temple of the
savage, and with a grunt he whirled and fell dead beside
the Castilian.
The horse had quickly regained his
feet, but the rider lay still, the blood pulsing from
his throat and staining the yellow sand. With
dextrous fingers Tahn-te removed the helmet and
breastplate that the position of the body might be
eased. With sinew of deer from his pouch, and
a bone awl of needle-like sharpness, he drew together
the edges of the wound, then turning to where the
Navahu lay prone on his face in the sand, he deftly
cut a strip of the brown skin a finger’s width
across, and in length from shoulder to girdle; this
he took from the yet warm body as he would take the
bark from a willow tree, and bound it about the throat
with the flesh side to the wound.
“Take my horse and follow,”
whispered Don Ruy, who had recovered breath and speech, “I
am not yet so dead that I need the grave digger you
can ride take my horse and follow.”
Tahn-te had leaped to the saddle,
when a cry at the edge of the arroyo caused him to
halt, it was so pitiful a cry, and tumbling down through
the sand and gravel came Master Chico with staring
eyes of fear, and lips that were pale and quivering.
The flayed back of the savage had he caught sight
of, and the white face of Don Ruy who looked dead
enough for masses despite his own assertion to the
contrary, and the lad flung himself on his excellency
with a wail that was far from that of a warrior, and
then slipped silently into unconsciousness.
With the thought that a death wound
had struck the lad who had come to die with his master,
Tahn-te turned the face back until the head rested
on the arm of the Castilian, lightly he ran his hands
over the body, and then halted, his eyes on the face
of Don Ruy, who gazed strangely at the white face
on his arm. The cap was gone, the eyes were closed,
and the open lips showed the white teeth. In every
way the face was more childish than it had ever appeared
to him childish and something more something
Then Tahn-te, who held the wrist
of Chico, laid it gently on the hand of Don Ruy.
“Only into the twilight land
has she gone, Senor,” he said softly “even
now the heart beats on the trail to come back to
you!”
Don Ruy stared incredulously into
the eyes of the Indian, and a flush crept over his
own pale face as he remembered many things.
“Dona Bradamante!” he
murmured, and nodded to Tahn-te, who leaped on
the horse and rode where the yells of the victors sounded
in the pinyons towards the hills. Beyond all
the other horsemen he rode, and saw far above in the
scrubby growth, the enemy seeking footholds where
the four-footed animals could not follow. Then,
when Ka-yemo had called the names of the trailers
who were to follow the enemy beyond the summit, Tahn-te
the Po-Athun-ho turned back and chanted the prayer
of a prophet to whom the god had sent true dreams.
The Castilians watched him as he came;
so proudly did he carry himself that the men swore
an army of such horsemen would win half the battle
by merely showing themselves, and the old men of Te-hua
knew as they looked on him, and as they counted the
slain and wounded, that Tahn-te had indeed been
given the gift of the god-sight to save the women of
the valley.
Juan Gonzalvo swore ugly oaths at
sight of the horse of Don Ruy. Since the pagan
had taken it as his own, it was plain to be seen that
some woeful thing had chanced to his excellency.
But to their many questions Tahn-te
led them to the arroyo where Don Ruy was indeed wounded,
and where a pale secretary was carrying water in his
hat to bathe his excellency’s head, and his excellency
let it be done, and exchanged a long look of silence
with Tahn-te, who understood.
The ankle of Don Ruy had a twist making
it of no use to stand upon. The Po-Ahtun-ho made
a gesture to Chico to hold the horse while he, with
a soldier to help, put it straight with a dextrous
wrench, and the secretary several paces away, turned
white at the pain of it.
Then was his excellency helped again
to his saddle, and the men from Mexico marvelled at
the surgery of the pagan priest who killed and flayed
one man to mend another with.