people of the Lakes by Kathleen O'Neal Gear & W. Michael Gear Books by Kathleen O'Neal Gear & W. Michael Gear from Tom Doherty Associates the first north americans series People of the Wolf People of the Fire People of the Earth People of the River People of the Sea People of the Lakes People of the Lightning People of the Silence People of the Mist People of the Masks The Anasazi Mysteries The Visitant Books by Kathleen O'Neal Gear from Tom Doherty Associates Thin Moon and Cold Mist Sand in the Wind This Widowed Land Books by W. Michael Gear from Tom Doherty Associates Coyote Summer The Morning River Big Horn Legacy Long Ride Home Kathleen O'Neal Gear and W Michael Gear people of the Lakes A TOM DOHERTY ASSOCIATES BOOK NEW YORK NOTE: If you purchased this book without a cover you should be aware that this book is stolen property. It was reported as "unsold and destroyed" to the publisher, and neither the author nor the publisher has received any payment for this "stripped book." This is a work of fiction. All the characters and events portrayed in this book are fictitious, and any resemblance to real people or events is purely coincidental. PEOPLE OF THE LAKES Copyright © 1994 by Kathleen O'Neal Gear and W. Michael Gear All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof in any form. Cover art by Royo Maps and interior art by Ellisa Mitchell A Tor Book Published by Tom Doherty Associates, LLC 175 Fifth Avenue New York, NY 10010 www.tor.com Tor® is a registered trademark of Tom Doherty Associates, LLC. ISBN: 0-812-50747-9 Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 94-7145 First edition: August 1994 First international mass market edition: April 1995 First mass market edition: September 1995 Printed in the United States of America 09876 In memory of George H. Davis August 21, 1921 to October 21, 1992. He loved elk, horses, high country, and, above all, family and friends. George, we hope they have a crackling-warm fire, a jar of jalapenos, a plate of backstrap, and a strong cup of coffee ready when you get there. We miss you. ... And this one's for you and Shirley. Acknowledgments People of the Lakes would not have been possible without the help of a number of people. In the beginning, Michael Seidman--then executive editor at Tor Books--believed we should produce a series of novels about our nation's magnificent pre- contact heritage. He thought the books should educate as well as entertain. Robert C. Mainfort, Jr., regional archaeologist with the Tennessee Division of Archaeology, provided excavation reports, interpretation, and answered questions about Middle Woodland occupations at Pinson Mounds and in western Tennessee. Mark Norton, Theda Young, and Anita Drury, staff members at the Pinson Mounds State Park in western Tennessee, were also very helpful. Charles Niquette, of Cultural Resource Analysts, Inc., provided his expertise and archaeological reports relating to Middle Woodland period settlement patterns. Thanks, Chuck. We'll send you a dead armadillo one of these days. Dennis LaBatt, Nancy Clendenen, and David Grilling--the knowledgeable staff at the Poverty Point Archaeological site outside of Floyd, Louisiana--demonstrated the wonders of the huge Poverty Point site. From the Ohio Historical Society, James Kingery, of the Flint Ridge State Park, proved most helpful, as did Brad Lepper, of Newark Earthworks State Memorial. Brad's work on Ohio Hopewell road systems is remarkable. We are also indebted to our colleagues within the archaeological profession, specifically to the following: Naomi Greber, R. Berle Clay Dan Morse, Christopher Hays, Frank Cowan, Richard Yerkes, James Brown, and others who presented papers at the 58th Annual Meetings of the Society for American Archaeology. Special appreciation is extended to Adrian Gardner, Shirley Whittington, and Gord Laco, of Saint Marie Among the Hurons. Dawn Barry and Mr. Bancroft, of Serpent Mounds Provincial Park, provided us with a special day of discussion about the Middle Woodland in Ontario. Linda O'Conner and Lisa Roach, of Petroglyphs Provincial Park, opened early and stayed late to facilitate our research. Mima Kapoches, of the Royal Ontario Museum, took time from her busy schedule to discuss Hope- wellian interaction spheres. We would also like to extend sincere thanks to U.S. Forest Service archaeologists Ann Wilson and Gene Driggers, and to U.S. Department of Defense archaeologist Dr. Steven Chomko, for their part in helping to make this book possible. In addition, Dr. Cal Cummings, senior archaeologist for the National Park Service, located elusive field reports, films, and books. Dr. Linda Scott Cummings, of Paleo Research Laboratories, answered endless questions about pollen, fibers, and plant remains recovered from archaeological sites relevant to the story. Words cannot express what we owe to Lloyd and Julie Schott. Sierra Adare, our unflagging manager, kept us organized despite ourselves. We offer our most heartfelt thanks to Harriet McDougal, our brilliant editor, who still edits like they did in the golden days of publishing; and to Linda Quinton, Ralph Arnote, Tom Doherty, Roy Gainsburg, and the superb field force, which has always believed in this project. Our Canadian distributors, Harold and Sylvia Fenn, Rob Howard, and the fine people at H.B. Fenn, have supported us from the beginning. Three cheers to all of you. Foreword. Around the time of Christ, Middle Woodland peoples lived throughout eastern North America. Remnants of their magnificent cultures are scattered from Ontario to Florida, and spread as far west as Texas and Wisconsin. We know the sites of these cultures by many names: Adena-Hopewell, Havana, Copena, Marksville, Point Peninsula, Crab Orchard, and others. Archaeologists summarize them with a delightfully obtuse technical term: the "Hopewellian Interaction Sphere." These people remain a marvel--and an enigma. Sophisticated traders, artisans, and monument builders, they nevertheless appear to have had no chiefs, built no cities, and conquered no vast territories. Rather, they traded everywhere, traversing the rivers; and through their trade, they spread the traits of zone incised pottery, geometric earthworks, exotic burial tombs, and stone and metal trade goods. Their gigantic ceremonial earthworks and lavish tombs are found throughout the eastern half of the continent, but fewer than a dozen of their domestic sites--the locations where they built their houses and lived their daily lives---have been located or excavated. Hopewellian cultures domesticated many plants we now consider noxious weeds: goosefoot (Chenopodium berlandieri), marsh elder (Iva annua), knotweed (Polygonum erectum), may grass (Phalaris caroliniana), and, in some places, little barley (Hordeum pusillum). Of their domesticates, only sunflower THE lianthus annus) and squash (Cucurbita pepo) remain as modern crops. Isolated traces of corn appear around two thousand years ago, but the crop didn't really catch on until about 400 A.D., at the end of the Middle Woodland period; moreover, some researchers believe that corn might have contributed to the demise of the Hopewellian world by producing such food surpluses that the traditional social structure--founded upon small, independent farmsteads and transcontinental trade--collapsed and reformed into what archaeologists call Late Woodland peoples (400 to 800 A.D.). The Late Woodland period is characterized by a sharp decline in mound building and in the absence of exotic trade goods, but villages began to appear. Many of them were fortified by earthen or log enclosures, undoubtedly indicating social stress, perhaps even warfare. The luxury of a food surplus may have made these Woodland peoples targets for raiders from less fortunate cultures. PEOPLE OF THE LAKES is something of a Hopewellian travelogue that moves from the American Gulf Coast to Rice Lake in Ontario, Canada. We want the reader to experience both the similarities and the differences in Middle Woodland cultures two thousand years ago. In the story, we call the classic Ohio Adena peoples the High Head, and the Ohio Hopewell we designate as the Flat Pipe. Adena is the older culture, dating back to nearly 700 B.C. Hopewell seems to have merged syncretically with Adena to produce a golden age beginning around 1 A.D. Another center of activity is found in the Illinois and upper Mississippi river valleys. We call this Hopewellian group Havana, and their social organization appears to be the closest to a hereditary chieftainship of any of the Middle Woodland societies. The elite burials at the core of the mounds are almost exclusively male; we assume, therefore, that these were patrilineal clans. In places such as Tennessee, Mississippi, and Louisiana, females were accorded higher status, and were generally buried with more and richer burial goods. This probably indicates a matrilineage in what are known as the Marksville and Miller cultures. One of our major goals in writing this series of novels is to portray different personalities in the Native American world. Readers of our previous books have met Dreamers, berdaches, Healers, and shamans. The Contrary, one of many forms of the sacred clown, is uniquely Native American, and uses the humorous and the profane to communicate deeply serious and sacred lessons. The revelations of Contraries are often as stunning as they are profound. As you come to know Green Spider, we hope you will gain a glimmering of the Contrary's incredible power as a teacher, mystic, and reconciliator of the very duality he represents. Finally, writing a novel about the Hopewell is a sobering experience for professional archaeologists. The data accumulated in the past century come almost totally from excavations at spectacular burial mounds and geometric earthworks, not from the mundane sites that portray the everyday lives of the people. This is not primarily the fault of the researchers, but rather a fact of life in the struggle to find funding for archaeological work. It is simply easier to gain financial backing for the excavation of a grand architectural marvel than for the humble house of a farmer. Unfortunately, this leaves a critical gap in the information, which means that attempts to portray a dynamic series of interacting cultures may take us so far out on a limb that we end up clinging desperately to leaf tips. Nevertheless, in the following pages, we've attempted to give you a reasonable reconstruction of Hopewellian lifeways. If we have piqued your interest in the Middle Woodland peoples, we encourage you to consult the bibliography in the back of this book, to visit your nearest archaeological park or monument, and to learn more about this rare and precious era of our North American heritage. Introduction. State Park Supervisor William L. Jaffman clutched his hands behind his back and inhaled a deep breath of the fresh, storm- scented wind as he walked the nature path that led around the northeast end of the park, opposite the earthwork called "The Circle." Three people sauntered in a knot just ahead of him: an administrator, an engineer, a political appointee. They laughed and talked, quite oblivious to the magnificence of the Circle, where, two thousand years before, ancient astronomers had charted the cycles of stars that most modern Americans barely knew existed. When Bill had explained the Circle to them earlier, they had stared blankly at him, slightly irritated by his exuberance. This was a simple matter for them. The state needed thirty five acres of land. A mere thirty-five--one third of his park-- for a new highway project. Their strained smiles had informed him at the outset that nothing he said would change their minds--obviously the future had to take precedence over the past. So all day his heart had been pounding a staccato against his ribs, and now, as they neared the central mound beside the park office, he. thought it just might break through and ruin his new khaki uniform shirt. He calmed himself by studying the maple trees. Every leaf glistened with raindrops from the gentle afternoon shower that had fallen an hour before. Like tears, they dripped down upon him when the wind gusted, splatting on his high forehead and pointed nose, pearling over his brown curly hair. Was it his imagination, or did he hear soft, pitiful cries coming from inside the Circle? He cocked his head, listening more closely. The whimpers slid around the trunks of trees and crouched amongst the branches. Murmuring to him. Pleading with him. He shouldn't be surprised. Of course the ghosts knew. They had heard today's conversations. Bill had to jam his hands into his pants pockets and clamp his jaws to keep from shouting. All he really wanted to do was to tell these damnable bureaucrats to go straight to hell, to leave him and his park alone. But they'd just fire him, and then there would be no one left to fight for the rights of the faithful souls who still lived and worked here. Ahead, four shiny new state vehicles, Chevy Blazers--one complete with an aerodynamic police-light bar--stood in a short row. Behind them, and across the parking lot, hulked the galvanized-metal maintenance shed. As usual, the garage door hung open, revealing the nose of the tractor where Billy Hanson was no doubt struggling with the bent PTO again. One of the summer temps--a college kid up from the university--had backed it into a concrete guard post. Jaffman had been a college kid once, and his father had never forgiven him for settling on a degree in archaeology. But that had been a different era, before the coveted MBA rose to such gaudy prominence, an era when kids went off to school to make a difference, to follow their hearts and learn about wonderful new things--not just to learn to make money. "You're wasting your life," his father, a CPA, had told him. "What's with this? Archaeology? Son, you've got to think about making a living, doing something for your future." "But, Dad, how can you know where you're going unless you can see the path you walked to get where you are now? I want to know where we came from! What makes us human!" Even at such a young age, he'd known in his heart that if human beings destroyed the past or continued to deny its relevance to the present, the species was doomed. Civilization was a fragile flower, with a shallow root system. Without vigilant protection and care, the roots would wither and die. "Hey, Bill? Wake up!" Ed Smith, the state Department of Transportation engineer, called, breaking Bill from his thoughts. "What is it, Ed?" Smith had been sent up from the capital, dutifully armed with maps, surveys, and a stack of different-colored notebooks. Smith always wore an off-white shirt--one with a plastic pen guard in its pocket. He kept his gray hair short, and thick, black- framed glasses dominated his thin face. Anne Seibowitz, state director of Parks and Recreation, and Bill's boss, stood to Smith's right, arms crossed. She wore a lavender twill skirt that hung to mid-calf, and a maroon-and gray sweater. Her nose always attracted Bill's attention; it looked like someone had pinched the sharp end of it closed with pliers. She wore her black, silver-streaked hair in a short, wavy cut completely in fitting with her status and age. Now she rocked on her Italian boots, unaware of the grass, of the trees, and, no doubt, of the pleading of the ghosts. Her real business, outside of cadging funding from the legislature, was that of scrutinizing visitation numbers, use-fee collection, and the cleanliness of public rest rooms. Across from Anne stood the suit, Roy Roman, the governor's aide. Around forty, he had blond hair and wore a pale blue shirt, dark blue tie, and had elected a brown tweed sport coat with leather patches on the elbows: the ultimate for an expedition into the paved-trail hinterlands of a state park. Roman propped his hands on his hips and said, "All right, let's get this started. The governor is very interested in finding a solution to this little problem. We've been getting a lot of heat from people about this highway improvement project. Unfortunately, it has been so blown out of proportion that we've started to get calls from Native American organizations. Maybe because this Soap group got involved." "Soap Group?" Ed Smith blinked, the effect amplified by his thick lenses. "What does soap have to do with anything? We're building a highway, for God's sake." "SOPA," Bill explained. "The Society of Professional Archaeologists. Look, you can't expect to bulldoze an Adenahopewell site of this importance without stirring up a hornet's nest. This park exists solely to protect the earthworks." "We are protecting the earthworks," Ed said forcefully. "The highway right-of-way is exactly twenty-eight feet and seven inches from the edge of the earthwork. Look, we've been out there. There's nothing but grass in the area we plan to bulldoze. We're not going to hurt the earthworks!" Bill folded his arms across his chest, trying to lessen the ache that swelled with each new gust of wind. "Please," he said. "I've explained this over and over. Just because you can't see anything, it doesn't mean it's not there. We're talking about archaeology, not--" "That's ridiculous," Seibowitz responded. "Either there's something there or there isn't! I personally walked over that area with Ed, and I didn't see anything but grass either. There's not even a tiny bump out there. It's as flat as a pancake." "There are houses out there," Bill insisted in a precise voice. "We had a field school up two years ago, remember?" She should, she'd tried to do everything she could to stop it. The only reasons Bill had managed to get his state excavation permit were that it didn't cost anything and that the prestige of the university lent status to the Parks Department. "They opened an exploratory trench across that part of the park--right where you want to run your road, Ed. Several domestic artifacts and features were uncovered from that trench. You know, potsherds, stone tools. They even hit a fire pit." When he drew annoyed looks from everyone around him, he added, "You can't see the houses. But they're there. Underground!" "Show me a house]" Smith retorted. "What are we talking about? Foundations? Basements? It had better be good, to stop a twenty-million-dollar highway improvement project!" Bill ground his teeth for a moment. "Listen, Ed. Middle Woodland domestic activities are the least understood aspect of one of the most important cultural periods in the prehistory of the world!" "Wait a minute." Roman raised his hand. "Middle what?" Bill exhaled tiredly. How many times did he have to repeat himself? "Middle Woodland. That's what archaeologists call the cultural period into which we fit all the Adenahopewell sites like this one. The period lasts from about two hundred B.C. to about four hundred A.D. Middle Woodland is extremely important, but it's largely an enigma." "What do you mean, an enigma?" Seibowitz asked, frown lines etching her forehead. "To hear the archaeologists talk, everything is an enigma." Damn you, woman! All the archaeological parks in this state are under your supervision--and you don't even know why they're important! Bill forced himself to remain calm, professional. "All right, think of it like this. These people developed trade relationships that exchanged silver, copper, and furs from Ontario for sharks' teeth, conch shell, and barracuda jaws from the Florida keys. They imported obsidian from as far away as Yellowstone Park in Wyoming. Mica was traded from North Carolina, greenstone from Alabama. Finished goods like platform pipes, and raw materials like Flint Ridge chert, were traded out of Ohio and then up and down all the major rivers. Had white settlers not built the city of Newark, Ohio on top of the earthworks, it would be one of the premier archaeological sites in the world today. The Hope well people there covered four and a half square miles with earth alignments. They built the first road in North America, from Newark, Ohio, to Chillicothe." "Yeah, but so what?" Smith asked. "We've got a bunch of weird piles of dirt, huge circles, octagons, squares ... what were they used for?" "They seem to have been places for worship and scientific study, as well as social centers. We're just beginning to understand them. Most of the complex earthworks were built to chart celestial events--the movements of the sun, moon, and stars. Archaeoastronomy is still in its infancy. I think we're in for a series of shocks as we begin to find out just how sophisticated these people really were." "So, it was like an empire? Similar to what they did in Rome?" Seibowitz asked, her nose looking even more pinched. "No. It wasn't an empire. And that's one of the big problems." Jaffman pressed his toe into the grass as he thought. Birds sang in the trees, but the whimpers still continued, seeming to follow the entourage around the park, rising and falling with the wind. "The culture appears to have been focused around trade rather than on military conquest. At Pinson Mounds in Tennessee, people piled up over a hundred thousand cubic meters of earth. At the "Hopewell site, in Ohio, they mounded almost fifty-four thousand cubic meters of earth. The amount of earth at Newark would have been anyone's guess, probably well over a hundred thousand cubic meters. The point is that it took generations--and considerable planning--to undertake such extraordinary engineering projects. You can't stand on the Eagle Mound inside the Great Circle at Newark, or look across the Octagon there, without being awe struck." "Right," Smith said. "Awestruck. Big deal. Some chief told his Indians, ' boys go dig here, and pile there,' and liking their scalps on their heads, they did." Bill tightened his arms, hugging himself. He wondered if Hopewell engineers, two thousand years ago, had that same single-minded lack of imagination. ' ' chiefs, Ed. Like I said, just farmers who came together on special occasions to build some of the most remarkable earthen monuments in the world." Roy Roman shook a strand of blond hair away from his face. "I don't get it. If these folks were so great and they were spread all over the eastern half of North America, why haven't I heard about them?" He pointed to the low mound of earth near the park office. "That mound doesn't look all that high and mighty." Bill answered, "You haven't heard about them because our educational system almost completely ignores the contributions of the native peoples. And ... " He exhaled heavily. "In the past four hundred years, we've systematically destroyed just about every major mound site in North America. For centuries, we couldn't even allow ourselves to believe that native peoples built these monuments. It had to be lost Welshmen, Vikings, the lost tribes of Israel, Phoenicians, anyone but our own American Indians. We--" "You're not gonna turn politically correct on me, are you, Bill?" Disgust twisted the set of Smith's lips. "I'm providing you with historical fact, not political opinion." "So why is it that we've only got dirt? Circles like this one?" Roman pointed across the park. "Didn't they do anything else?" "Of course they did. But their buildings were made of wood, thatch, and bark, and you know how long wood lasts in this climate. Certainly not for two thousand years. The soils all across the eastern half of the continent are wet and highly acidic. If I buried Ed out here and dug him up two thousand years from now, all we'd find would be the lenses from his glasses, the fillings from his teeth, those brass eyelets in his shoes, the snap on his pants, and his zipper. The rest would be gone." "Then what's the point?" Anne Seibowitz asked as she smoothed her lavender skirt. "If nothing's left, why--" "Because there is something left. We recover the copper, sil- ver, stonework, charred remains of magnificent textiles. Tool stone from all over the continent. Pollen grains, charred seeds, charcoal, bits of burned bone, broken pottery, phytoliths, and burials. We've got better tools now. We can even lift blood proteins--thousands of years old--from stone tools. We can isolate the DNA to see if the people were hunting mammoths or other human beings. We can trace each piece of copper we recover right back to the original vein it came from--the same with the chert." "Chert?" Roman asked. "Most people call it flint." Bill clenched his fists at his sides. "The point is that we need more excavations before we can truly grasp who these people were. We especially need information on their everyday activities. Can you imagine archaeologists trying to reconstruct our North American culture two thousand years from now? If they've only dug up our churches and synagogues, or the World Trade Towers, what do you think they'll say about us?" Smith tipped his head back, staring at the dark clouds that drifted across the afternoon sky. "Sounds like you want to dig up the whole eastern half of the continent. You park administrators are always--" "No. That's not what I said. I said that ninety-nine percent of it is already gone. You've flown over the entire Midwest, Ed. What do you see when you look out the plane window? One plowed field after another! Then city after city. We have a few tiny, undisturbed places left to look at. That's all we have. This is one of those places." -. "Listen, Bill, that's not my problem, okay? My problem is that I've got to run a highway across a corner of this park. The survey is complete; we've condemned and bought up the private ground on either side. We can't save every potsherd in America!" "No," Bill sighed. "We can't. But this site, this site, is very important. We--" "Come on, Bill! You're talking about a big circle and a mound inside a little postage stamp of green grass." The wind had died down and, with it, the mourning sounds of the ghosts, but he could still feel them there, watching, listening, praying. "Yes, and they were probably the focal point for a clan, or for a group of clans that occupied over six hundred square miles of this river valley and its tributaries. We have one hundred acres left, and you want to blade up thirty-five of them?" Ed Smith adjusted his black-rimmed glasses and took a step closer, his jaw set. "Why don't we face some facts, pal? We've got thirteen point six million dollars of Federal highway money going into this new beltway. The beltway is going in because all those nice yuppies have bought houses in the suburbs, right? They don't like waiting in traffic, burning up expensive gasoline in their expensive cars. Now, Mr. Roman here, from the governor's office, was called in because i/we can get this beltway in fast, a big computer manufacturer is going to build a sixty million-dollar plant out on Orchard Road." He raised a finger. "Are you following me, Bill? Your entire park budget is fifty grand a year. Getting the picture here? It's priorities we're talking about." Bill shoved his hands into his pockets again, straining at his feeling of utter impotence. "It's always money, isn't it?" "Welcome to the real world, friend." Bill smiled humorlessly, took a deep breath and looked out across the park, meeting dozens of invisible eyes. "We're supposed to be able to excavate cultural resources as part of Federal highway money." "Yeah, well, that hasn't been budgeted," Smith stated simply, and began a diligent study of his fingernails. "Any final decision on such expenditures will come out of the governor's office, but I'll tell you this. DOT has already compromised. We guarantee we can miss the circle out there. You've got to meet us in the middle, Bill. Give a little." "Give a little? ... All right, I will." Bill turned to Anne Seibowitz. "I need twenty thousand dollars to test that thirty-five acres before it's bladed. In six months, with a crew of ten-- mostly students and volunteers--we can recover maybe ten percent. That's at least enough for a statistical sample of the domestic activities represented there." Her prim mouth pursed into a white line. "Where do you suppose Parks and Rec could find that kind of money?" "You spent two hundred and twenty thousand paving the parking lot up at Mallard Lake. You mean you can't find--" "Be serious!" She looked him up and down. "Recreational visitors must have a place to park so they can go in and spend money at the tourist centers. Parking lots are essential to our operations, Mr. Jaffman. Now if you were asking me for funding for a parking lot, and your visitation numbers could support it, which they can't, I'd consider--" "My God," Bill Jaffman softly replied. He dropped his face into his hands and briskly rubbed his forehead. "You'll give me money for a parking lot, but not a cent to excavate--" "Tell me something." Roy Roman cracked his knuckles. "Why would this house site be so important?" Bill swallowed--it was like choking down a knotted sock-- and turned to him. "Once again, it's because Middle Woodland houses are so very rare. We're talking about a society that lasted over six hundred years, traded across the continent--and didn't build large urban complexes." Roman glanced af Seibowitz, but spoke to Bill. "Well, I'll let the governor know what we're dealing with here. I'm sure he'll make the right decision." He paused. "If you just had something here. You know, something that people could see besides piles of dirt. Maybe then--" "I've been trying to get funding for an interpretive center for that very thing for the last three years," Bill replied passionately, and saw Anne's eyes narrow as she readied herself for combat. "With just two or three thousand dollars, I could use my summer volunteers to put in a goosefoot-and-maygrass field, build a charnel hut--maybe construct interpretive exhibits like the superb ones they have at the Cahokia site in Illinois, or at Poverty Point in Louisiana. At Saint Marie Among the Hurons in Ontario, they have a complete Huron long house and a living history program. We could do that here! Make it all come alive!" Anne Seibowitz turned away, looking out past the trees to where the peaked roofs of apartment buildings could be seen. "Bill, you know that visitation has been down here. If your numbers were up, if the public seemed at all interested in your little park, the budget might be--" "How can I attract visitors without an interpretive center to tell people what they're looking at and why it's important? I need funding, Anne!" She turned, lifting a thin eyebrow. "Bill, I'll be honest. I can't see how this freeway expansion is going to hurt. Look on the positive side. It might just give you more exposure. People will see the greenery from the highway, and, well ... who knows? They might just want to stop. When your visitation goes up, perhaps we can find the funding to put in some interpretive exhibits." Of course thirty-five acres of precious archaeology would be gone by then. Roy Roman's eyes widened suddenly, as if the light of escape had just been turned on for him. "Yes! It'll help visitation!" Bill felt the final straw settling on his back like a ton of lead. "There are laws to protect state antiquities, you know. If the governor sides with you, Mr. Roman, you won't just have SOPA on your back. The regional tribes will throw a fit. This is a sacred site for them, and once they hear--" "That's not a threat, is it, Bill?" Anne raised that eyebrow a little farther, and he understood only too well her own threat: It's easy to get rid of troublemakers like you, buddy boy. "I know you were trained as an archaeologist, but our state parks are more than just single-use sites. We've got to be responsive to everyone's needs. Joggers, hikers, bird-watchers--" "Freeway builders!" he half-shouted. "Forget it, Anne. I was hired by your predecessor just before she resigned. It was her misguided idea that it made good sense to put an archaeologist in an archaeological state park designed to protect some of the last Adena-Hopewell mounds in this part of the state." "Bill, you're pushing your--" "No, I'm just telling it like it is, Anne. I've beaten my head against the wall and the system for years. I still have interpretive signs out here that were written in the fifties by little old ladies from the local historical society. They claim these earthworks were forts, for God's sake!" "At least you've . signs," Roman said. "Some of our parks don't even have that luxury." Bill raised his arms as if imploring sense. "All right. If we can't interpret this site for the public, we can at least protect it, can't we? Give me some money to test that area before you blade it! Or has the governor decided that this state's prehistory isn't important? Is that it? Is that what we're really talking about?" Anne Seibowitz gave him a cold stare. Roy Roman had backed away and was scrutinizing the maintenance shed as if it had become inordinately fascinating. Seibowitz--her expression like marble--said, "I'm sorry to lose you, Bill. I'll have personnel announce the position vacancy in the next mailing." He should have been angry, should have raged, tramped up and down and cursed. Instead, only an empty sense of futility opened within him. A wind gust whipped around the park, and the cries rose, shrill and desperate. Bill stood alone on the nature trail, watching the dignitaries as they got into their vehicles and left. Rain had started again, falling in misty drops, beading on his hot face. He turned around and walked back toward the Circle to stand at the entry that led inside. He could imagine the shamans, resplendent in colorful costumes, watching him through hollow eyes, knowing in the manner of spirits that another part of their world had been condemned. "Forgive me," Bill whispered. "I'm sorry." The soft roar of traffic in the distance, the barking of dogs, and the occasional slamming of a door, carried across the chain link fence to this quiet corner of the park. Here, in another six months, there would be a different roar, that of bulldozers, earth movers, and graders. He dragged his feet through the grass, noting that it needed to be cut again, and to his surprise, spotted something protruding from amidst the green blades. Kneeling down, he removed his folding knife from his pocket and chiseled the soil away, exposing polished stone. With careful fingers, he freed the object. It felt cool and heavy in his hand. The piece had been crafted from banded slate; it was dark and lustrous, probably from the quarries in southern Ohio. Hopewell people had made pendants, gorgers, pipes, all sorts of beautiful stonework. What he now inspected represented some of the finest artistry he'd ever seen. It was a canoe, with an unusual fox head carved on the pointed bow. Four people sat inside. The second in line faced backward. Now, what did that signify? The specimen was roughly fifteen centimeters long and five centimeters tall. In the trees behind him, a crow cawed angrily. Bill looked up and saw the bird perched on the edge of a beech tree that overhung the circular earthwork. "Don't worry," he said wearily. "After all, that moron DOT engineer insisted they would miss the circle by exactly twenty-eight feet and seven whole inches." The crow flapped its wings in the slanting sunlight, ' the sheen from the feathers seemed to glow radiantly. He gazed down at the canoe again. He couldn't help but think of the carvings he'd seen at Petroglyph Provincial Park, in Ontario. Along with Gitchie Manitou and Nanabush, there were many, many canoe figures. But none like this. None with a fox head prow. He had studied Hopewell culture ever since graduate school and knew its artwork. Stylistically, this was new. Around him, the grass waved and bobbed, hiding the wealth of information just down under that root mat. "Damn you, Anne Seibowitz." The crow made a low, mournful sound, cocking its head, blinking. Bill sat back on the wet grass, not caring if he stained his uniform. Tomorrow he'd come out with the transit, shoot in the location of the effigy carving, and mail the little canoe down to the university for curation. Then anyone else finding a similar artifact could cross-reference it from the computer curation files--and maybe one of these days, someone would bitch like mad because the key to one more puzzle had been stripped away for a slab of asphalt. Maybe ... A pathetic laugh shook his chest. Who? And by then, Anne Seibowitz would have been promoted to a more influential job. The governor would be in Congress. No one would have to be responsible. Bracing a hand on the grass, he rose and started back toward the office and the row of shiny trucks, any one of which would have paid for the test excavation he'd pleaded for. The crow followed him, flying from branch to branch, People of the Lakes Id squawking. As he walked, he looked down at the four travelers in their canoe. Traders? Is that what they were? Hopewell traders had crisscrossed the continent, following the rivers.-carrying goods all over. It must have been both terrifying and wonderful. But that was an age of heroes ... He stopped by the admission booth, the "Gestapo Box" as he called it, and opened the mailbox to pull out the daily supply of advertisements and junk mail. The SAA Bulletin, the newsletter of the Society for American Archaeology, huddled among the dross. Bill chucked the rest into the garbage can and headed for the office, flipping through the newsletter as he walked. In the classified section, jobs were listed. He paused to read one: "Navajo Nation archaeological preservation project is currently seeking applications for full-time employment ... " A car horn blared in the distance. The crow had gone silent, but now flew down to land on the stack of orange-and-white traffic barricades propped against the rear wall of the office. "Window Rock, Arizona," Bill mused. He glanced at the crow, which peered back at him intently. "Do you think I could do it? Just throw everything into the truck and go? Uproot my whole life?" The thought frightened him. Way out there, alone, surrounded by a strange people in an alien land. So, what's keeping you here? His relationship with Marge had broken up weeks ago. He looked down, thinking about the Hopewell traders who had carried entire canoe-loads of obsidian down the river systems. Imagine that, from Yellowstone to the heart of the eastern woodlands. They did it. Two thousand years ago! He inspected the stone canoe and the faces of the people sitting inside. What would it have been like? Who were they? Heroes? They'd inspired this carving, whoever they were. The crow hopped to a wheelbarrow handle no more than an arm's distance away. It clucked to get his attention and studied him with one round black eye, then the other, as if measuring his soul. The stone canoe felt warmer in his fingers. To the crow, Bill said, "I've spent my entire life studying the Hopewell people, always living in my head with the ancestors, M Kathleen O'Neal Gear and W. Michael Gear trying to hear their ghosts, to learn from them." He smiled faintly. "Maybe it's time I go and share my efforts with some living people who care about something besides money. Do you think the Navajo will want to know about the Hopewell? Their roots are Athapaskan, from the Northwest, not Eastern Algonquian. Tell me, crow. Will they care ... and can I do it?" The crow launched itself and dove right in front of Bill's face, forcing him to backpedal. Then it flew one big circle around the administration office before heading due west. Bill gazed back out across the site. The ghosts had gone quiet, somber. His eyes narrowed with thought. "Thank you," he said, "for guiding me.". He tightened his grip on the stone canoe and thought about the adventure that lay ahead. In his heart, he sensed that these heroes from the past envied him. A very, very old story was told in the dead of winter, late at night, when Owl hooted across the frozen forests. Like all stories, it carried a lesson and a truth for the people. Some say the story came from the High Heads; others, that it was born of the wind and nurtured of the soul ... Once, long ago, in the time of the ancestors, people had refused to care for the Dead, and the earth was filled with ghosts who committed every kind of mischief. Finally, in desperation, the ghosts had appealed to First Man, explaining their plight. First Man heard their plaintive cries and sent his twin brother, Many Colored Crow, to help them. In those days, Crow possessed feathers so bright they made the painted bunting look dull and lusterless. Many Colored Crow walked across the land, telling the people about the Dead and their troubles. He explained that if the people would honor and care for their ancestors, the Spirits would reciprocate. They would help the living by bringing messages from the Spirit World. The ghosts would cease harming people and quit playing tricks on them. Everything would be better. The people heard the words of Many Colored Crow and began to care for the Dead. But so many ghosts walked the land that Many Colored Crow had to do something more. He had been passing through the forest when he found a high hill. Around the base of the hill, he gathered piles of dry brush. Then he climbed to the top and built a fire in a clay pot. He prayed for four days, Singing to the four sacred directions, and the ghosts heard. They came from all over the world to see what Many Colored Crow was doing. On the day of the winter solstice, all the ghosts had finally arrived. At last, one of the ghosts--a warrior who had died in battle and whose body had been cut up--asked Many Colored Crow, "What are you doing up here on top of this mountain, Singing and Dancing? We have all come to see." Many Colored Crow raised his hands to the morning sun, saying, "I have brought you here to Sing you to the Land of the Dead. But you cannot go as you are now. You are full of anger, trouble, and evil. You must be cleansed of this before I Sing you to the Land of the Dead." And saying that, Many Colored Crow picked up the pot with the fire burning inside it and whirled it around his head, scattering the burning embers into the dry brush. The brush instantly caught fire, and the whole mountain was engulfed in flames. The ghosts cried out and tried to escape, but the fire completely surrounded them. In the end, all that remained were ashes. These, Many Colored Crow collected and carried with him to the Land of the Dead, where the souls were finally freed. All the wickedness had been burned away. In the process, however, Many Colored Crow's brilliant feather colors had vanished, all of them burned a deep black-- which is why, to this day, Crow has black feathers. Prologue I was young then, foolish and wild. I traveled into the forbidden territory of the High Heads. There I climbed their sacred mountain. Searching ... I knew not for what. The voice in the Dream told me to go ... to search for something. I found a rock overhang on the northern side of the mountain where the sandstone had been undercut. A dead man sat there ... long, longtime dead, and dried out." Grandfather's words filled Mica Bird's memory, mingling with his fear. The young warrior walked in a world of dappled green, where the forest floor cushioned each step. Damp leaves, yellow, brown, and matted, crushed under his moccasined feet. Around him rose the sturdy boles of trees, thick and dark, creating an interwoven maze on the steep slope he climbed. The musky scent of the forest intensified. Vines of wild grape hung like impossible strands of rope, some of them as thick as a man's leg. Mica Bird stopped, panting, sweat glistening on his brown skin. Overhead, the leafy canopy of the forest interlaced in an emerald miracle; but in this place, where he paused to catch his breath, Mica Bird stood like a wraith in the brooding shadows. Here, so far into the hills, the oak, hickory, maple, and walnut giants prevailed. He placed a hand on the smooth, silvery bark of a beech, sensing the eternal Power of the ancient tree. The humid air pressed around him, breathlessly hot, even for this time of deep summer. Though he gasped, the air seemed to offer no relief for his laboring lungs. An earth oven might have been this searing, this miserable. High overhead, birds chirped and called. The trill of a redstart carried magically. In the distance, the sacred crow cawed and clucked. Late at night, they had been in the clan house. Mica Bird remembered Grandfather's rasping words: "I thought it was cy- rious that his people hadn't buried this dead man. That they had just left him sitting there. I stepped under the overhang, looking at the moss that hung down. Not a blade of grass grew in that place of darkness. It was cold--even in the summer heat. My heart beat with fear. Perhaps he had called me, sent his ghost to bother my Dreams." At the sudden scurry of sound, Mica Bird wheeled, frantically fumbling to nock a dart in the hook of his atlatl, then saw the gray squirrel that seemed to defy earth as it leaped up a dead sapling, jumped to a branch, and shot across open air to reach another tree. Mica Bird wiped the beading sweat from his forehead with a trembling hand. This wasn't his country, this land of the High Heads. Here, he was unwelcome--an intruder in this ominous forest. This place had a strange feel, unlike the rich bottomlands he knew so well. From childhood, he had learned the winding trails that led along the sluggish waters of the Moonshell River. In those familiar haunts, the ghosts of the ancestors watched over their clansmen. At any one of the farmsteads in the Moonshell valley, he could trace a relationship--sometimes back four tens of generations--and claim kinship. In this forest, people did not live. On steep slopes such as these, fields couldn't be cleared; the land wouldn't produce rich harvests of goosefoot, sunflower, marsh elder, or squash. This place the High Heads kept to themselves, calling it sacred ground. People traveled the forests, of course, but generally to hunt, or to collect walnuts, acorns, plums, or medicinal plants. In times of war, the clans fled to hilltop fortifications. This mountain, however, remained inviolate; even the High Heads avoided it. But Grandfather had come here, and so many years later, he'd told Mica Bird: ' ' fabric bag lay beside the dead man, and I could tell that it was something important, something precious. The corpse seemed to look at me, pleading. I felt that pleading, even though the eyes were gone--all shrunk away into pits in the skull. Its jaw had dropped open, as if crying out in death. "One dried-out hand, like a claw, you know? It lay on that bag. I thought the bag must hold something very valuable." In the clan-house firelight, Grandfather had looked away, seeing back into the past--into that rock shelter. Barely twenty winters in age, Mica Bird had grown wiry and tall. As the son of an important man in the clan, his forehead had been tattooed with a black stripe, which accented the firm lines of his jaw and his broad, straight nose. Normally, a serious intent filled his dark brown eyes, but here, in this haunting place, fear glinted instead. He traveled light, wearing only moccasins and a breechcloth. A mica pendant hung from a leather thong around his neck. His small pack, made from thick strands of double-twisted cord, hung over one shoulder. In his right hand he carried the atlatl, a supple stick a little longer than his forearm. The grip had been carved from the main beam of a white-tailed deer antler. A small black stone carved into the shape of a crow had been lashed to the center of the shaft to act as a counterweight. Finally, a bone hook capped the end. In his other hand he carried four war darts, each longer than he was tall. A crudely flaked point of black chert tipped each thin shaft, crafted from the arrowwood plant. Turkey feathers fletched the shaft and kept it stable in flight. The butt had been hollowed to fit into the hook at the end of the atlatl. The atlatl itself acted as an extension of the arm. With it, Mica Bird could catapult one of the darts with enough force to drive it the complete length of a bear's body--as he had proven in the past. A bear would be easy to deal with compared to the strangeness of this unfamiliar forest. He sensed a presence far more ominous lurking in this shadow-dappled wilderness. Skin prickled on his neck the way it would if unseen eyes were watching. Ghosts? Is that why the High Heads feared this place so much? Feverish winds brushed his bare chest, and he spun around, searching. The presence seemed to pulse with the wet heat, studying, gauging. A man had to know how to see in the forest. An odd angle, a shade of color, or a break in the uneven latticework of saplings and tree trunks, might be the only clue available to the hunter. Now he scrutinized the patterns of trunk and limb, of leaf and vine. In the crazy warp and weft of forest, he could find nothing out of place. Mica Bird swallowed hard. The thick bitterness of thirst coated his tongue. He eased around a beech tree. Sweat trickled down his chest, refusing to dry in the damp heat. He proceeded carefully, inspecting the steep slope above him. The old man had to have come here. The stories echoed in Mica Bird's memory. He could hear his grandfather's age-scratchy voice over the crackle of that long-dead fire: "So I stepped closer, farther under the overhanging rock ... and I could hear Singing. I swear it. I could hear the voice of an old woman Singing. Like this: "And among the People? Come the Brothers! Born of Sun. One is slaved. Here, by the long trail, his corpse is laid. Blood is spread, from the head. Black one goes ... aye, he's dead. He who loves is lost and gone. Render of the fair heart's Song. Woman, weep, for naught you know. Lose forever--or live in snow!" Mica Bird shook himself free of a sudden shiver. Yes, those were the words--as clear to him now as they had been that night. "I was afraid," the old man had said. "I began to shake, and I couldn't stop. It was as if Power possessed me. I couldn't help myself from reaching for the bag, taking it from the dead man's grasp. "I stepped back then, and tried to breathe, but a coldness had entered my lungs and spread through my soul. I backed away, legs trembling like a newborn fawn's. "When I was outside, beyond the covering of rock, I opened the bag and looked inside. There, as perfect as if it had just been made, lay the Mask." Mica Bird smiled greedily at the very thought of the Mask-- and of what it would mean to him. The Mask of Many Colored Crow had been a thing of awesome beauty. He had seen it only four times in all his life. The last time had been that night. Grandfather had pulled the worn sack over to his side and opened it with reverent ringers to expose the Raven Mask before lifting it free. In the firelight, it had gleamed. The wooden beak had been carved by a master and stained black. Glistening feathers covered the sides of the oval head, each feather lying flat, as if preened despite the confines of the sack. Funny, could this huge Mask really have appeared so small a bundle when bound by the sack? Grandfather's arms had begun to tremble, and the old man groaned as if in a struggle. The Mask turned, and the hollow eyes, like two openings into another world, stared at Mica Bird. The sensation created by those empty orbs had jolted him. A thrill, tingling with the intensity and pleasure of orgasm, had bolted along his nerves, while a sense of empty loss had leached into his soul, hollowing it out. Since then, that Spirit face had lurked behind his every thought. In his Dreams, the Mask stared at him--and the eyes glowed with Power. "He who looks through the Mask," Grandfather had stated solemnly, "sees through the eyes of Many Colored Crow. That long-ago day, I raised the Mask and looked through it. I never saw the world the same way again. It made me--made this clan--all that it is today." Mica Bird scaled the steep slope, his legs aching. He paused in the consuming shadow of a shagbark hickory. Something had happened to Grandfather, had driven him to take the Mask away. For he had worn it for the last time at the Feast of the Dead--the ceremony that marked the summer solstice, when the clan gathered to attend to the ghosts of the ancestors, to bury their dead, and to care for the mighty earthworks of the clan grounds. Afterward, the old man hadn't been the same. He'd stared with vacant eyes, more bent and crippled than ever. His last words, too, lingered in Mica Bird's ears: "it has eaten my soul. I should never have taken it. Back ... it must go back. This is not a thing for men." And the next day, the old man had disappeared. Mica Bird steeled himself and attacked the slope again, fighting upward in the still air. How high was this mountain? As he climbed through the wavering green shadows, sweat beaded and slipped down his muscular legs. Why hadn't the High Heads ever mentioned the Mask? Only now did the question fasten itself in his thoughts. Surely they must have heard that Grandfather had it; but no one had come looking for it, demanding it back. Why not? The Rattlesnake Clan had gone to war with the Many Paints when their sacred Deer Headdress was stolen. For three years, the two clans had warred upon each other, until a peace was brokered by the Goosefoot Clan and the Headdress had been returned. Why hadn't the High Heads--with all of their clans and influence --ever mentioned the Mask's disappearance? Stop thinking about it! Mica Bird sucked in a steadying breath. You'll drive yourself crazy. Perhaps he was crazy already. It had surprised him when he'd realized that he had to have the Mask! With it, he would be the next leader of the Shining Bird Clan, and would raise his clan above all the others in the Moonshell valley--even above the clans to the north. Tumbled boulders, angular fragments of weathered sandstone, poked up through the leaf mat. Mica Bird struggled to catch his breath. The top had to be close now. Why did it have to be so hot and humid? The very air seemed to sap his strength. Step by trembling step, he continued his climb. Through the mass of trees, he could make out the irregular line of stone that marked the mountain's cap. Close, yes. It had to be here somewhere. He searched for any sign the old man might have made in passing. Grandfather didn't walk so well these days, his body crooked and bowed by age. How had the old man made this steep climb? Panting and gasping, Mica Bird picked his way over roots and vines until he reached the sullen scarp. The sandstone had blackened with age where it thrust out of the mountain's side. Sundered and cracked, it nevertheless provided a serious obstacle to any further progress. Squinting against the burning sweat that streamed down his face, Mica Bird studied the rise. A hill like this would have been fortified in his own territory. War didn't plague the clans often, but when it did, people liked a place to retreat to. The isolated farmsteads might be efficient for fanning, but not for defense. Placing his feet carefully, he worked his way along the broken rock, stepping around holes where trees had fallen, their massive trunks rotting away on the ground. On one flat surface, a pile of fresh bear manure still drew flies. Mica Bird's grip tightened on his atlatl. Bears didn't usually attack a man, but they could be dangerous if surprised. The cawing of the crow sounded louder. So where was this shelter? How far did the sandstone ledge extend? Or had the old man been blowing wind? Was that it? Had it all been a story? Was that why the High Heads had never mentioned the Mask? Grandfather was clever enough to make up such a story. He could have kept his authority by lies as easily as by the truth. Feeling suddenly weary, Mica Bird settled on one of the boulders. Mushrooms grew in the molded leaves at his feet. Had the old man hoaxed the clan? Was his Power nothing but illusion? Had his terrifying personal aura been a trick to keep the people under his control? Stories passed from lip to lip about how Grandfather had looked at a rival through the Mask ... and killed him dead. Could that have been feint? Perhaps a little water hemlock slipped into a drink? Mica Bird licked his dry lips, remembering the burning intensity in the old man's eyes. No, it couldn't have been a trick. He could not--would not--believe that. Standing, he forced himself onward, searching for the dry overhang. He disciplined himself to pay attention, battling to remain vigilant despite his weariness and thirst. The Mask of Many Colored Crow had to be here. The old' man had always done what he said he would do, whether it was the destruction of a rival or the offering of a sacrifice. He must have brought the Mask here, returned it to the shriveled hands of a dead man. Despite his keen eye, Mica Bird almost missed the place. Cedar trees had grown in a green web over the mouth of the overhang, hiding it. Only the curious odor of musty air caused him to backtrack. Mica Bird pushed through the supple branches and stared. The weathered sandstone caprock, splotched with moss and water stains, jutted out from the hilltop to create a small cavern. The roof of the hollow had been stained black by fires, and the rear wall looked rough and irregular. Bare ground lay before him, dark and dry from dung and old fires. When Mica Bird stepped into the recess, a sudden chill ate into him. Blinking in the gloom, he could make out two shapes leaning against the rear wall. He forced his weak legs to move and stepped into the darkness. The air seemed to swell and billow around him. "You've come." The old man's voice sounded weary, defeated. "Grandfather?" As Mica Bird's vision adjusted, he located his grandfather's withered form where it hunched against the rock in the back. How bent and crooked he appeared. Was this the same man Mica Bird remembered? Where had the broad shoulders gone? What had happened to that arrogant Power that had radiated from Grandfather like heat from a glowing rock? This man, this dried pod of a human, couldn't be the same, could he? Mica Bird turned his attention to the hunched form propped next to his grandfather. A shriveled corpse. The dead man from the story. The body was just as Grandfather had described it: hollow pits where the eyes had been, mouth open, the expression pleading. One rigid hand hung over empty air, as if patting something. For a long moment, Mica Bird stared, haunted by the desolation reflected in the corpse's posture. As if ... yes, as if its soul had been looted away and only emptiness remained. Mica Bird summoned his courage. "I ... I came for the Mask." ' Grandfather's stick-thin arms closed protectively around the familiar fabric bag that lay on his lap/When the old man tilted his head to look up, his face appeared wilted, as if eaten away from the inside. Through the shining white hair and the sunken flesh, the outline of the skull could be seen. Grandfather whispered, "Leave here. Now, boy. There is nothing here for you. Only sorrow ... pain." "I must have the Mask. You can't take that from me." The old man hunched in silence, staring at the dust before his feet. Finally, he asked, "And what would you have from it? Power? The ability to rule the clan? No, Mica Bird. Leave it here. This thing ... this cursed thing destroys." Mica Bird couldn't keep his gaze from straying to the hideous corpse. Brown strips of flesh cleaved to the brittle bones. Dry tufts of dusty hair still clung to the hardened scalp. Once-pliable lips had dried to leather and shrunk to a leering rictus, exposing broken teeth. The tattered remains of brightly dyed clothing-- dust-coated and faded--fit the dwindled corpse like sacking. Mice and wood rats had frayed the fine weave. Here and there, beads had fallen from the magnificent breastplate. What had once been the trappings of wealth and status now reeked of mold and decay. Mica Bird hesitated. Where was its ghost? Hovering in the air? Was that the cold presence Mica Bird sensed? Finally, he forced himself to meet his grandfather's haunted eyes. "Why did you come here?" "To die, boy. To die as I have lived. Alone, eaten away with hatred and selfishness. This Mask, its Power is that of death and misery. Don't follow in my footsteps. You'll destroy yourself." "Then why didn't you bring it back before? Why did you keep it if it's so horrible?" The old man chuckled evilly. "Because'it wouldn't let me. You must understand, boy, that when you look through the Mask, Many Colored Crow lets you see. Is that what you want? To see through a Spirit's eyes? To see nothing but the weakness in others? To see how you can hurt people? Use them for your benefit? You will lose all of the beauty in the world. You will never see a sunrise and admire its colors--you'll see only the possibilities that particular day might bring you. Is that what you want?" Mica Bird straightened. "I would have that Power." Grandfather made a huffing sound. "You don't know what you ask. Go home. Live your life. Be a farmer, and be happy. Don't ruin yourself. Don't become another victim of the Mask." "Victim? I'll be the most Powerful man among the clans. With the Mask, Star Shell will marry me. I will become the leader of my people. I shall construct the greatest monuments ever built. My name will be spoken from the lips of generations still unborn." Grandfather's head slumped forward. "Yes, it will give you Star Shell. But hear my words. You will never see her through loving eyes. When your children are born, you will see only what they can do for you, or what threat they might be to your status or your goals. You will never see your friends as they are, but for what they can gain you. You will lose that part of you which is human." "I don't believe you." "I don't suppose you would. But then, I have seen you through eyes different than anyone else's. From the time you were little, I've seen this coming." "Then why did you ever show me the Mask?" "Because it forced me to." He coughed and wiped his dirty sleeve over his mouth. "That night in the clan house. I couldn't stop myself. It wasn't I who showed you the Mask. Raven Hunter ... he did. He possessed me, as he's possessed me from the moment I first looked through his horrible Mask." "Raven Hunter?" "Many Colored Crow, Bird Man, call him what you will. The Dark Twin, boy. The bloody brother of First Man. For everything there is an opposite. Without both sides, there could be no balance. No harmony. The Mysterious One made the world that way." "So, if you are possessed by Many Colored Crow, why does he let you tell me this now?" "Because I'm dying. For the first time since I looked through the Mask, he's let go, freed my soul. I can see now, see what I've done. Terrible things. Only now, as I die, do I see the mistakes." Grandfather sighed wearily. "But you don't care, do you? Nothing I say will make any difference. That's why the Mask allows me to speak so freely. It knows you've already made your decision. You don't hear my words." Mica Bird glanced at the dried corpse again, struggling to keep from shivering. "You just want to keep the Mask, that's all. A prize you can't give up." Grandfather grunted and looked up, pity in his eyes. "The Mask has already taken your measure, boy ... like an engineer laying out an earthwork. It knows what it will gain from you." "Grandfather," he said, suddenly uncertain, "why didn't the High Heads ever ask for the Mask back?" The old man could barely shrug. "Why would they? They know that it carries its own curse. Having the Mask was punishment enough for what I did. If a man hides a rattlesnake in a pot and a thief steals it, do you warn him? Or do you let justice follow its own course?" Squaring his shoulders, Mica Bird forced confidence into his voice. "I am taking the Mask with me." "So you can build your monuments? Be a great leader?" "That is the way it will be." A bitter smile curled the old man's lips. "Is it? Hear me, boy. If you take the Mask, it will destroy you. Any monument you build will be as fleeting as a swallow's song on the wind. Where you walk in your false pride, one day the trees will grow tall and thick. Those whom you would love will flee in terror. What the Mask gives, it takes back threefold." Mica Bird wet dry lips. Did the corpse have to stare so? It seemed to mock him, exposing the few brown teeth left in the curled wreckage of mouth. Mica Bird forced his attention to Grandfather. "You ... you tell me this to keep me from taking the Mask, to keep me from becoming greater than you. That's it, isn't it?" "Believe what you like. But leave. Now! And never come back. Promise me!" The passion in the old man's voice almost persuaded him-- but not quite. "Die in peace, Grandfather. Die knowing that I will lead our people to a greatness that you can only imagine." "No! Get out of here! Run, boy. Run ... " "You can't stop me." Mica Bird stepped closer. Lackluster eyes stared up at him. The old man's chest rose and fell, the bones visible through the thin fabric of his beautifully woven shirt. "You ... you must believe me. You're not as strong as I was. Many Colored Crow knows this. Leave the Mask, Mica Bird. Leave it here with my ghost, or it will devour you before you know what's happened. You're weak ... too weak. I saw that from the moment you were born." Mica Bird cocked his head. "If I'm so weak, why would the Mask choose me the way you say it has?" "It only needs you for a little while, boy. It only needs you to take it back to the people ... yes," . said, and his eyes widened as if with realization. "That's it. A strong man will come along, someone ambitious. Then the Mask will break you. Throw you away the same as a man discards a dull flake when it has fulfilled its need." Mica Bird reached down, closing his fingers around the heavy fabric of the bag. "Farewell, Grandfather. I will Sing your praises at the Feast of the Dead. And bring your body back with me for proper burial." "No!" the frail voice shrieked. "Leave me here! Don't make me watch!" "Watch?" "My ghost will torment you, hound you to ... to ... " When Mica Bird tore the sacred sack away, Grandfather's body stiffened. A croaking sounded from that ancient throat. Then the body went limp, like so many sticks broken loose inside. "Yes," Mica Bird whispered to himself. "I'll take you back, Grandfather. Lay you out in uie charnel house ... have your body oiled and smoked. I'll build a tomb for you. A magnificent tomb. You'll be there. With each Feast of the Dead, you'll watch my greatness grow. I'll lay offerings on your tomb. You'll be proud of me." In death, the old man's face had taken on an expression of horror. Mica Bird stared into those dead eyes, memorizing the expression. Then he straightened and studied the finely woven fabric that covered the Mask. The sack had been beautiful once. He would have another made, even more beautiful. With anxious fingers, he opened the bag, reverently raising the magnificent Mask to his face so that he could stare out at the world through those eye holes. The Mask's cool surface seemed to conform to his face. He could sense the Power welling, growing around him as he gazed through the green wall of cedar trees. He blinked. What was happening? Colors ... all the colors were draining from the world, bleeding away like life from a body with a mortal wound. The golden rays of sunlight that streamed through the branches paled to a dusty white, bleaching, sucking at the greens and blues until nothing remained but the mottled shades of thunderheads, and yet ... Yes, feel it! Power, flowing through me. Changing, making me great! Through the eye holes of the Mask, he glanced back at his grandfather's corpse, seeing a blackened, shriveled thing. Crow Caller, the name rose unbidden. Just like Crow Caller's soul when Wolf Dreamer Danced it away. Mica Bird lowered the Mask, awed by the >vords within him. His grandfather lay next to the desiccated corpse, but different now. Not the grandfather he'd always admired and feared, but a husk--like a maggot casing: It would be difficult to haul the body back, but the impression it would create on his people would make it all worthwhile. He had to think like a leader now. Everything must be calculated for the greatest effect. A faint whisper of his grandfather's voice seemed to echo in the hollow of the rocks. No! it repeated over and over. No, don't do this thing.' Don't make me watch your destruction! Taking a deep breath, Mica Bird replaced the Mask in its sack. When he turned to the task of bearing his grandfather's body, he thought he heard an old woman's voice Singing: Taken by sea, their father came, Born of Sun, of Sun the same. : One must live and one must die. See the souls rise to the sky. One The naked young man lay facedown on the split-cane matting of the temple floor. His name was Green Spider, but now he looked more like a plucked bird than a spider. His arms stuck out like wings, his legs were close together. He might have been dead, so limp did he lie. Only on close inspection could the faint rise and fall of his bony back be detected. Smooth, coppery skin sparkled with beads of sweat. Arching from the middle of each shoulder blade across to the collarbone, three deep cuts marred his flesh. The blood--an offering to the Spirit World---had trickled down the strips of muscle and bone that composed his sapling-thin body. A bone skewer, split from a deer's cannon bone and ground sharp on both ends, pinned the tight bun of thick black hair in place at the base of his skull. He looked young, no more than twenty-five winters in age Despite the awkward angle of his head, part of his face could be seen. Broad cheekbones accented a high brow, and the nose appeared narrow and hooked, like a raptor's beak. Thin shells-- each delicately carved into the shape of a spider and dyed bright green--dangled from the lobes of his ears; For four long days--deprived of food, sleep, and water--he'd lain thus: sweating, praying, falling into the hole in his soul, seeking, seeking ... ... and the Vision had begun to form, that of flight ... sailing ... twisting on the predawn currents of cloud and wind. Far below, the earth waited, gray and somber, locked in the grip of winter. Patches of ice-crusted snow molded around the boles of trees and contoured the mottled yellow-brown leaf mat of the oak-hickory forest. His strangely acute sight located the winding course of the Father Water and followed the familiar sinuous shape to the mouth of the Deer River, then turned eastward, up toward the divide. Nestled in clearings, small thatched huts clustered, awaiting the winter solstice sunrise. There, along the north bank of the Deer River, blocky earthen mounds had been constructed on the high terraces above the swampy bottoms. Some--centrally placed--rose higher than the trees and had an unbroken view of the distant horizon. Each capped with yellow sand, they glistened in the predawn light. Other earthen mounds had been placed along the solstice and equinox lines that radiated out from the towering central mound. These were rectangular, and capped with white sand in preparation for the Dances and offerings. Yet other mounds, smaller and rounded, bore the bones and ashes of the Dead. These mounds had been placed along the lines of the constellations. "Do you know this place?" a voice asked from the hazy gray distance. "The City of the Dead." The humped shapes of charnel houses clustered in the flats between the mounds. Young trees had been harvested for their construction, the butts placed in pest holes and bent to stress the wood into firm bows before saplings Wtre woven into the framework and lashed together. The whole had been covered by tightly laced shocks of grass. On this special day, the Spirits of the Dead waited, already anxious and hungry for the feast in their honor. ' 7 am giving you a special gift," the voice told him. ' 7 will let you see through my eyes ... the eyes of Many Colored Crow." And the sense of flight changed, altered, gaining Power and the memory of times long past and places far away. Green Spider circled, drawing the clouds around him like a thick cocoon. In one scaled foot he clutched the Power of lightning, ready to strike. With his keen Spirit, Vision, he studied the scene below. "Many Colored Crow?" "[ have heard you crying for a Vision." "But I ... it's so ... " ' ' down! Observe. This is one of the two holiest days of the year." Despite the sullen cold of winter, people had braved the chill to journey from isolated farmsteads or from the loose aggregates of oblong houses where they gardened, hunted, and gathered food during the year. From as far away as a six-day walk, they had converged on the mound center of the City of the Dead. They came wrapped in blankets, their feet bound to shield them from the crusted snow. Their backs were bowed, burdened by pots full of food, offerings, or the ashes of those who had died during the preceding year. Some had come along the rivers, paddling canoes through the icy waters of still swamps and meandering streams. People congregated here four times a year, on the solstices and equinoxes. Some came to bury their Dead, others to honor their ancestors, to bring them food or gifts--to remind the Dead that the living remembered and cherished them. To beg for help in the coming year. Still others came for the feasting and dancing, for on this winter solstice, the shamans would welcome the new year and invite Father Sun to begin his trip northward. Observances would be kept, and sacred artifacts would be cleaned, their Spirits ritually fed and cared for before being stowed in receptacles within the temple buildings. The ceremonial societies would Dance and perform the rituals that would ensure a good year for all. The young who sought initiation would be tested. Those who passed the ordeals would be accepted into the secrets of their societies. The structures and enclosures within which these events occurred would be inspected and plans laid for their upkeep. The sacred grounds of the City of the Dead would be policed, and invading saplings chopped out. During the four days of the ceremonies, clans conducted most of their business. The female clan leaders would decide which crops would be planted in spring. Fields needed to be rotated and farmsteads moved. Hours would be spent in serious council regarding soils, seed crops, and where the forests should be cleared. Internal matters would be dealt with: disputes settled, marriages negotiated, and in some cases, divorces granted. "Will this Vision give me the Power to call the storms? To control nature and people?" ' ', Green Spider. You seek order, and you will find only Truth. Look at them. See the people? You will never see them the same way again." As Green Spider gazed down from above, most of those people slept. He turned his attention to the long, thatched temple that stood just south of the highest mound in the central group. There, five men remained awake despite the hour. Four old men, the Clan Elders, sat inside the temple. They hunched like shriveled toads as they watched a naked young man prone on the floor. "Me ... that's me!" Green Spider's senseless body still lay facedown on the mat-covered floor. How pitiful his flesh looked, inert, little more than warm clay. "Yes, you ... as you were. Who are those old men who watch you so? Is their faith in you justified?" "They are the Clan Elders, the old men who see to the rituals. They are the Spiritual guardians of my people." Green Spider studied the familiar Clan Elders. Summer suns and winter winds had deepened and enriched those walnut complexions with a patina of age. Copper ear spools hung from stretched earlobes, and the wrinkles camouflaged faded tattoos. Mouths puckered around toothless jaws, but their eyes remained bright, sharply focused on Green Spider's inert body. They wore long winter coats, fringed shawls, and fur-lined moccasins that rose to mid-calf. The cloth, woven from processed nettle and milkweed, had been spun into the finest of fibers before master weavers had strung thread over loom. Great artistry had gone into the weaving, and intricate patterns decorated the carefully dyed cloth. The color represented each Elder's clan affiliation. The Red Bloods were the clan of the east; to them, the color red was sacred. They dyed it into the stunning fabrics they specialized in producing, and painted it on their bodies for the ceremonials. Blood represented the Power of life that was shared by all living things. With it, the clans renewed the fields in spring and painted themselves after a successful hunt to thank the Spirits of the animals upon which they depended. Old Man Blood carried a conch shell, the symbol of his office. The Sun Clan held the bench along the south wall and wore the color yellow--symbolizing Father Sun and the life he brought to all living things. This clan maintained the sacred fires in the temples and lit them in the surrounding clan houses for the seasonal rituals. The Sun Clan carried burning brands when new fields were to be cleared or old ones retired, for fire cleansed. Old Man Sun carried fire sticks. The western bench represented the Sky Clan, who donned blue for their sacred rituals. Blue was the color of water as well as the sky, for the two were interrelated. The sky provided rain for the fields and replenished the rivers for the fish, turtles, and waterfowl. Blue was the color of renewal. Old Man Sky carried a small jar of water. The northern bench belonged to the Winter Clan, and their color was black, that of war, the hunt, and the winter storms. For what good were blood, sun, sky, and water without courage, strength, and death? Life could not exist without death, nor could the day without the night. All things--be they yearly cycles or lifetimes--must eventually end. And from endings came new beginnings. Old Man North had rattles--crafted from sections of human skulls--tied to his knees so that each step he took rattled the passing of time and the inevitability of death. Had it not always been so? "I will be strong enough." Green Spider's soul chilled. Strong enough for what? "Before I grant you what you seek, I must test you," the voice of Many Colored Crow told him. ' ' you fulfill the needs of Power?" All of Green Spider's life, he'd prepared himself to be a Dreamer. He could always sense Power just beyond the fringes of his soul. He craved it, wished to savor it. With Power, he could heal injury, bring ram, cure illness, and encourage crops to grow. "I will do anything you ask that I may fulfill the needs of Power." "You seek Truth, Green Spider. If you are strong enough, I will let you experience the essence of Power. Look ... look at this temple you love so. See it,, learn it, remember it." Flames leaped and flickered in the rock-filled fire pit in the center of the room. The orange gleam washed the magnificently painted walls with their colorful images of First Man, Wolf, Falcon, Spider, Raccoon, Turtle, and Bear. Handprints created a line across the top of the wall, while spirals shone redly between the effigy drawings. Large pottery jars with conical bases and cord-marked sides rested beneath the low benches upon which the old men sat. The jars lay canted on their sides, each capped with fabric and tied shut with hemp cordage. Within them lay ashes: the cremated remains of the ancestors. Their Spirits had been called by prayers, the rhythmic clacking of rattles, and the Singing of the Clan Elders. Now they hovered about, watching the young man, hearing his desperate prayers. Faces of Spirit Animals and people had been carved into four heavy cedar posts that supported the thatched roof overhead. Firelight danced across the faces, and they seemed to change expression--ranging from intense sorrow to a mocking leer as they, too, studied the naked supplicant. "The temple is the heart of the people," Green Spider said. "The sacred objects are kept here. It is the most holy place of all the clans." "And very sacred to you, Green Spider. It has become the center of your life. The clans have nurtured you, cared for you, given you everything you needed to become a Dreamer. Will you become more. Green Spider? Look at those old men. Feel your love for them. Yes, that's right. Savor the warmth rising in your soul." Green Spider looked down, loving each of the old men, remembering the lessons they had taught him. They remained faithful, trusting him. Green Spider loved them with all of his heart as they watched over his senseless body, stoic in their vigil. ' ' is Powerful, Green Spider. Are you strong enough to deny it?" "Deny it? Why?" "Love can distract us from Truth--from the reality of Power. Love is a Trickster." The fire had burned down, and Old Man Sun slowly stood, reached for another piece of firewood, and softly chanted as he added it to the fire pit. Then he traced the pattern of a web in the air. According to the beliefs of the people, the Sun Clan had been founded by Spider, who had brought fire to human beings just after the Creation. , The piece of cedarwood crackled and sparked, catching fire. The ghosts shifted as they floated around Green Spider's senseless body and whispered among themselves. A Song rose from beyond the walls of the temple. The solstice was dawning. The Red Blood Clan stepped out of their houses and into the chilly winter morning, Singing their welcome to the light. People lifted their hands to the east, staring up with expectant faces as they chanted the ritual greeting. The old men in the temple stirred uneasily. The ceremonies were beginning, and each of the Elders had responsibilities. How long would this vigil last? Four long days had passed since young Green Spider had prostrated himself in the Dream Quest. Old Man Blood sighed, the action little more than a wheezing exhalation. He fingered the large conch shell and thought for a moment. "We must stay. We promised." Acceptance brought the barest bobs of heads. They would stay. "These are honorable friends," Many Colored Crow declared. "All the better to test your determination. Are you preparing yourself, Green Spider?" "Preparing myself?" What did Many Colored Crow mean? Hadn't he already done that? "Oh, Green Spider, you've barely taken the first step. I have allowed you to fly, to slip into my Spirit wings. If you are strong enough, I will allow you to act in my place. You have made a request of Power. I will grant what you seek ... if you will grant me what I wish. The way is long, hard, dangerous, and painful. What will you sacrifice to Power?" "Anything. Just as my people are now sacrificing." If the Clan Elders would forgo their responsibilities on so important a day, didn't that serve as a lesson for Green Spider? The clans knew the rituals; others--the men . would eventually succeed these ancient Elders--would make the offerings and lead the ceremonies. "I will do as you wish, Many Colored Crow. Tell me what you desire. You can have anything that is mine to give." "Not yet," the voice of Many Colored Crow called to him from the distance. ' ' is just the beginning. You have a long way to journey yet. Green Spider's soul turned its attention to the stirring of the people who shivered and tugged brightly dyed blankets around themselves. Their breath frosted in the icy air. From the ceremonial huts around the clan mounds, Dancers emerged into the crystal cold of the purple morning. Dressed in their finery, they looked, one by one, toward the tall mound where the Elders should have been. Finding no familiar forms outlined against the heavens, they turned their attention toward the square building at the mound's base. The temple hunched in the gray light; its low palisade and tight cane walls obscured any hint of the Elders' doings. Whispered questions passed back and forth as people clutched their blankets and climbed the mounds to initiate the ceremonies that would bring the birth of a new year. Faces rose to the galena-gray sky, a wary squint in their eyes as they blew into cupped hands and stamped cold feet. The clouds twisted in the labor pains of a storm being born. Would snowflakes fall--or would freezing rain sheathe the bare, black tree limbs that transformed the rolling horizon into a fuzzy gray blanket? "Your people seem worried," Many Colored Crow noted. "They are wondering what has become of the Clan Elders. They know of my search for a Vision." Green Spider could sense the growing anxiety. Would the rituals be carried out correctly without the guidance of the old men? Would the coming of spring be affected? What did this mean to the lives of ordinary men and women? Green Spider's Spirit flipped and soared in a spiral over the earthen mounds. Didn't they understand? It would mean that he would be granted his wish; he would be able to intercede, to help them, to control the weather and the storms, illness, and injury. He tried to see it all, the entirety of the clan holdings that would be his responsibility. Beyond the limits of the City of the Dead, occasional clusters of houses and irregular plots of fields lay under a mantle of frost. They made a patchwork before giving way to the winter bare forest. Three more moons would have to pass while Father Sun worked ever higher to drive the blackness of winter into its northern lair once again. Then the rich soil could be tilled, the squash planted, and the maygrass and marsh elder gathered during the spring harvest. Knotweed, and goosefoot seeds, would be carefully inspected before being stabbed into the rich, red brown earth with sharpened digging sticks. Along the southern border of the City of the Dead, the Deer River meandered through swampy bottoms where drying racks and duck blinds stood. Fish weirs poked up like pickets, and shell beds lay beneath the ice-clotted brown waters. Crusted patches of snow mantled the leaf mat, reeds, and cane that lined the banks of the murky river. Canoes, side by side like pointed pegs, had been pulled up onto the landings where the bluffs sloped gently to the waters. Drying ricks of spindly poles awaited the next harvest, when they would be taken from the meandering channel and back swamps. Across those sullen waters lay the Sun Clan holdings, random dots of houses and conical storage huts intermixed with the helterskelter patchwork of fields. There, too, people stepped through door hangings to greet this special morning. Many offered their prayers to the sun and glanced northward toward the high, central mound that dominated the opposite shore. g them, as if each individual felt the weight of Power in the winter air. "Don't worry," he promised them. "I'm Dreaming for you. I will care for ... make your lives easier." "If you're strong enough," Many Colored Crow reminded. ' ' were I you, Dreamer, I' d not make a promise I didn' t know I could keep. My brother tells me I'm a fool to bet on a man--but he is making his own bets. He has no more sense than I." "I will keep my promises." "And help Power keep its own?" "Yes! Yes!" The joy of flight surged through him, rapture pulsing with each beat of his shining sable wtings. Within the snug shelters, people scooped the daily meal of hickory nuts, dried berries, or milled goosefoot seeds from the large ceramic jars stowed under the sleeping benches. Some lifted squash from storage cysts cut into the earthen floors as others heated piles of cooking clays for the earth ovens. Here and there, a canoe passed across the runways in the swamp. Word of the missing Clan Elders was traveling. Exclamations of wonder passed as widened black eyes turned in the direction of the temple. "It's all right," Green Spider cried, his voice lost in the clouds. "I'm being granted my Vision! Things will be better! I can make them better!" "Yes, perhaps you can. It would only be fair to tell you, Green Spider, that if you are truly strong enough to do as I ask, you will never be the same again." "I want Power!" he cried again. "Anything! Just let me see the Truth!" "To know the Truth, you, and all that you are, must die. Can you destroy yourself to find what you seek?" Despite the growing buzz of worried chatter, those who had traveled to the City of the Dead from outlying clan territories huddled about their fires, either telling--or listening to--the winter stories. Stories of Many Colored Crow calling the ghosts, tricking them onto the mountain of fire. The Dead knew so much more than ordinary folk. People glanced reverently at the beautiful pots that contained the ashes of family members who had died during the preceding year. On this day, they would mix the remains with those of the ancestors in the clan commons of the City of the Dead. None of their loved ones would ever be lonely again. Ashes came from as far away as the gulf coast. Kin who had died in those distant lands had been cremated, the remains carried up the waterways and over the divides in the packs of Traders. Now the remains were home, in the land of their birth, to rejoin their families. The charnel houses waited somberly, their roofs hoar-frosted. Within these structures, many corpses had been cared for during the preceding moons. Now the souls would be freed to mingle with the other ghosts. Excitement swept the people, all of them dressed in their finest fabrics. Gleaming shell, polished copper, or finely ground stone gorgets hung from their necks. Strands of bone, stone, and shell beads rattled gaily on proud chests. Feathers of shocking brightness had been woven into silky black hair, and faces had been painted with painstaking care. As the Dancers on the mounds gyrated and Sang their prayers to the Spirits, relatives removed corpses from the pole benches in the charnel houses and carried them to the crematories--shallow clay pits filled with ricks of dried hardwood. There the desiccated bodies would be laid out and fire brought from the Sun Clan's temple on the south of the mound complex. The flames would crackle up, returning the flesh into the nothingness from whence it came. Reverent relatives would pray and Sing to the souls of their departed. The ghosts knew they were remembered and had no reason to linger in the land of the living. Then food, drink, and gifts would be offered on the mound tops, or attached to the poles that canted out at an angle around the bases. Offerings would also be made to Crow, the carrion bird, the tricky hunter. Because Crow knew the Dead and did them favors, he could bring messages to people here in the world of the living. Therefore, Crow was revered, and his image was often carved on pipes, pounded into pieces of copper, and cut from sheets of mica. "Yes," Green Spider said, feeling haunted and uneasy. "I will die if it will grant me Power. I will do anything I must to learn the secrets of Power." "Are you sure? After all, you're only Dreaming, your soul drifting free from your body. You've lain there on the matting for four days and nights without food, without water. You've forced yourself to stay awake, to empty your soul of thoughts. Perhaps you're raving." "Are you telling me that this is all illusion? I can see everywhere ... the way Crow can see when he circles in the sky!" ' ' is illusion. But you will have to die before you understand." A pause. "You will miss the feast." Only after the Dead had been cared for could the mourners relax and turn their thoughts to the living and their concerns. Warm houses and anxious families awaited their return--and, of course, the news of the ceremonials. After all, winter was the time of talk around cheery fires, and of socializing. Lapidary work on celts, adzes, atlatl weights, and pipes continued as the people waited for the Planting Moon. Weavers created their works of art. Hunters stalked the uplands, seeking to snare the white-tailed deer, or to ambush turkey or grouse, entangling them with bolas--five thongs tied together at the top and weighted with stones on the ends. People journeyed to the City of the Dead for other reasons, too. Many came to ask their ancestors for advice, or to plead for help from the Spirit World. Others asked for courage and victory in war, or for the ability to heal the sick and the injured. The love-smitten young often came seeking success in marriage or seduction. Sometimes a person might ask the aid of the an42 Kathleen O'Neal Gear and W. Michael Gear cestors when something was lost, hoping that while they slept, the location would be revealed to them in a dream. Visions of the future might be granted--or warnings of coming trouble. "Is that all you ask? I will Trade a feast for Power." ' '? A feast for Power? You'd make a poor Trader, Green Spider. And if you will do as I ask, you'll make a Trade such as you never bargained for. A clever Trader would beware." Green Spider couldn't help but glance down at the Traders' camp that sat just up from the canoe landing. Humans were the same everywhere. Traders and artisans displayed their wares whenever opportunity presented. At solstice, rare goods were exchanged: fine textiles woven from carefully prepared fibers, brightly colored dyes, sharks' teeth and conch shell from the southern seas, effigy pipes from the great earthworks of the Serpent chiefs, copper and silver from the country north of the Fresh Water Seas, delicacies such as maple syrup from the far northeast--even obsidian from a mythical land far to the west where the grizzly bears lived. "Any Trader worth his calling would do what I'm willing to do." Many Colored Crow answered with silence. Solstice ceremonials accomplished many things for the living, as well as for the Dead. Young men met young women, and they smiled at each other. Old women watched the young with appraising eyes, ever alert for new alliances with different kin groups. Negotiations over territory, squabbles, and other frictions were settled. Competitions were held and gambled over. And, of course, after the Dead had been feted, the living feasted and laughed, and celebrated. Green Spider hovered in the chilly air, watching the sun rise over the platform mound to the southeast. Members of the Blood Clan danced their greeting, peering back occasionally, searching in vain for the withered Elder who normally Sang the blessing and called benedictions down upon them. "Poor Green Spider," the voice twirled out of the dawn. ' ' brother refused to answer your call. You shall not be forsaken. After all, I, too, was once as human as you, and just as anxious to experience Power. I know how your soul seeks." Green Spider had heard the old admonition that no one wanted to be a Dreamer. The desperate crying in his soul belied it. "I want Power to call the storms and to help my people. I have this craving ... to find the reason of things. To know everything in its place/' "To know? Oh, Green Spider, I promise, I shall show you everything. Look down there, just above the canoe landing. Do you see that house?" "A great warrior lives there. A horrible and brooding man." ' ', Green Spider. I will allow you one of the gifts of Power. You will be able to see into his soul." At the edge of the bluff, overlooking the precipice leading down to the marshy floodplain, a low mound had been raised to guard one of the canoe landings. Before it stood a single oblong house. Protruding from the four center posts, wooden effigies of Crow, Rattlesnake, Snapping Turtle, and Vulture glared out to the four cardinal directions. On the south side of the big house, two tall posts thrust upward. The wood had been intricately carved to mimic the zigzags of lightning. Faces of the ancestors stared outward, as did the Spirit Animals of War: Eagle, Rattlesnake, Snapping Turtle, and Bobcat. To the top of each pole, a human skull--dyed soot black--had been fixed, the jawbones attached with sinew. The empty orbits stared out over the entrance to the City of the Dead, mindful of the Power and fame of the house's owner. He was called the Black Skull. His past had been filled with terrible deeds--both inflicted and suffered. Some thought him possessed by malicious Spirits. Others suspected that a more malignant evil lingered in Black Skull's soul. Most believed him to be the greatest warrior who had ever lived. All considered him the most dangerous man alive. No one called him a friend. Green Spider shook his head as he watched. "He's haunted, terribly. He doesn't like me much. He doesn't like anyone." ' ' is a man in pain, searching, as you are. As I am." "What could Many Colored Crow be searching for?" "A hero, a Dreamer willing to travel north and recover a sacred Mask. Are you that hero? I will show you Power and Truth, allow you to experience what few other humans have ever experienced, if you will commit yourself to my cause." Green Spider stared uncertainly at the brooding warrior, the first seeds of doubt cast in his soul. Did he only Dream? Or did he truly fly like the Spirit of Many Colored Crow? "Concentrate on the warrior. Green Spider. Look into his soul." As the morning Songs of the Red Bloods filtered through the City of the Dead like predawn mist, Black Skull---armed with his deadly war club---ducked through the low doorway and stepped out to stand between the carved poles. Muscles rolled under the sun-bronzed skin of his massive shoulders. He perched on the balls of his bare feet, poised on powerful legs that corded as he shifted his balanced weight. Scars crisscrossed his flesh, some ' them puckered, others ragged. His face, too, had taken its share of abuse. A Copena war club had crushed the left cheekbone, leaving his face lopsided. The jaw had been broken and had mended askew, which added to the off-balanced effect. Hefting his war club, Black Skull bounded to the top of the platform mound behind his house. Despite the wreckage of his face, keen black eyes cataloged the familiar scene, checking, as he did every morning, that everything occupied its place, that nothing had been disturbed in the night. The doorways remained closed on the storage huts, the misty haze of smoke rose lazily over the charnel houses below the death mounds. Here and there, fires crackled up from the crematoriums, accompanied by the chants of mourning relatives. He nodded, shifting his gaze to the east, where the sunrise remained hidden behind thick clouds. His wealth of blue-black hair had been knotted into a single tight bun at the nape of his neck. His scarred right hand gripped the heavy war club, made from the stout wood of an old hickory. The weapon had been carefully crafted, thinned, and polished. The warhead consisted of a stream cobble the size of a goose's egg, ground to a sharp point on one end, then grooved. Green sinew had been used to bind it to the rectangular wooden, shaft. When the sinew dried, it had shrunk tight around wood and stone. Inset immediately below the cobble were two copper blades--each sharpened into a murderous spike. As he stared out at the City of the Dead, Black Skull began swinging his club, loosening the muscles in his shoulders. He switched the club from hand to hand, twirling it ever faster as he listened to the weapon's whirring song. Weaving and feinting, he began to leap from foot to foot, shifting and spinning as he twisted and swung his club. With the grace of a dancer, he pirouetted around the terrace on his mound top, aware of the harmonic perfection of his body as he moved. "I would have to travel with that killer? It is said that he murdered his own mother." "He did. Her ghost continues to torment him. Like you, he seeks to surround himself with order, with predictability. Unlike you, he is unwilling to look beyond his rage." With one final leap, Black Skull vaulted into the air, dropping into a crouch as he landed; the wicked club flashed down to stop within a finger's width of the sandy surface of the mound top. Panting, Black Skull straightened, raising the war club to the blessing light of the new day. From under his feet, he could feel the approval of the ancestors, hear their faint voices as the ghosts of the Winter Clan murmured. Throughout the night, the ancestors had slipped through the walls of his house and lurked about Black Skull's bed, irritating his Dreams, blowing eerily across his face, and whispering into his ear. Black Skull filled his lungs with the chilly air and watched his breath condense into a frosty cloud. The odor of cook fires carried to him, and he could sense the eyes of the people checking on him, knowing he practiced with his club every morning. A dog barked, and the crying of a child carried to Black Skull's position atop the Spider mound. In the gray morning, the central temple where the Elders waited seemed particularly ominous. So they continued their vigil--despite the significance of the day. Black Skull shook his head. No good would come of this. Green Spider heard Many Colored Crow whisper, "Go ahead, Black Skull. Worry. It costs nothing more than little pieces of the soul. The time has almost come for me to give my Vision to Green Spider. And, afterward, lonely warrior, your life will never be the same." The sun ascended higher in the cloud-strewn sky as the sacred Songs resonated across the hills and the ghosts were freed to their eternal future. Through it all, the young man. Green Spider, continued to lie facedown on the split-cane mat ... lost in the Spiral. "Green Spider, hear me. If you are willing to die and give up all that you love, I will grant you knowledge known to no living man. You may climb the tree of the world, walk the Land of the Dead, and finally I will open your eyes to the Mysterious One. You will have your Truth, Dreamer," "And I will go and find your Mask." "Prepare yourself. The moment has almost arrived." When the sun reached the highest point in the sky, Green Spider blinked, his aching, tortured body lying on the split-cane mat. He knew what was happening beyond the walls of the temple. As the Feast of the Dead was laid out, people began reaching into steaming cook pots. Time to die. He could feel Many Colored Crow tighten a taloned foot on the lightning, take aim, and cast. The flickering bolt crackled through the clouds, blasting asunder the temple where Green Spider's body lay. People whirled, stunned. In the echoes of the thunderbolt, silence fell over the City of the Dead. Tongues of fire crackled in the wreckage of the temple as dry wood ignited. Within seconds, flames leaped and roared, and piteous cries rang out. Two My first sensation is of unimaginable blinding light, hot, searing. My eyes are closed, of that I am fairly sure, yet the light penetrates my body like tens of tens of slivers, piercing clean through my soul. My thoughts are disjointed at first, firming like crystals of ice on a puddle. What ... what is happening to me? "You were crying for a Vision," a disembodied voice answers from a great distance. "Where am I?" "In the place between life and death." I am afraid. I twist and turn, seeking to hide from the terrible brilliance. "I can't see! It's burning my eyes out!" "Of course. Brilliance always blinds. Light gives birth to Darkness. And Darkness gives birth to Light. All the time, back and forth, back and forth. Never ending. Remember that. Green Spider, you can only see Truth if you look at it backward. I am shaking now. I don't understand. All I know is that I feel my flesh burning, burning ... Moon Woman's face shimmered silver-white through the thin film of clouds that rode down out of the northwest. A faint few of the Star People shimmered around her, bright enough to penetrate the nacreous veil. Pale white light bathed the land, illuminating the riverbank and the canoes that lay canted on the beach like fat black lances. A lone man, tall and muscular, stood with braced feet and stared out over the mighty river. A winter shirt woven of heavy fabric dyed yellow and red hung down past mid-thigh. Leather leggings kept his legs warm above tall moccasins. A foxhide coat draped open over his shoulders--too warm for even this cold time of the year, when the moon deepened after the winter solstice. His breath puffed out in ragged white billows. His people--the White Shell Clan--called him Otter. Up and down the river, however, he was known by another name: the Water Fox. And what more complimentary name could a Trader have? The river ran smoothly before him; waves pushed out onto the black surface by the wind that blew across his left shoulder like a sash, and onward, southeastward, across the giant river and onto the breaks that rose in flat-backed, mottled humps on the far bank. In the faded moonlight, the trees created a hazy dove-colored fur on those distant eastern uplands. Otter's attention, however, centered on his obsession: the river. His life had been altered by the roiling Spirit of the Father Water. On this night, of all nights, he knew the extent of its Power over his soul. With reverent fingertips, he bent down to touch the gentle lap of water on sand. The surface stretched black and forbidding, and only as his vision traveled out toward the channel did flecks of moon glow dance silver across the waves. He could feel the strength of the current as it flowed southward toward the sea. Feel it? Feel the call of the river? Powerful, beckoning, like a woman's soft touch, like ... It all came back to women, didn't it? For him, it came back to one woman: Red Moccasins. Otter took a deep breath and filled his lungs with the familiar heady musk of water, the tang of sandy mud, and the pungency of the backswamp. The backswamps were critical to the river people. Otter knew the swamps' quiet ways--ghosts of the old river channel--the water still and spotted with ice that clutched at the brown reeds, cane, and cattails. The smooth mottling of the ice mocked the bulbous bases of the tupelo and moored to the lined columns of cypress trunks. Somewhere, to his right and behind him, a night predator disturbed the ducks, who quacked warily. Out of the darkness, Owl hooted as he drifted on silent wings. A fish thrashed the water in pursuit--or escape. The bitter threat of storm traveled on the night wind. Otter could sense frigid air rolling down from the north, and he shivered at the increasing cold. A cold to mock the chill in my soul. He stuck his hand farther into the icy water, his fingers burrowing down into the cold, dark mud. Faint laughter carried on the night breeze. He stood, knotting his fist so the sticky mud squeezed out between his fingers in wedge-shaped curls. Turning, looking westward into the wind, he could see the Tall Cane clan houses--the source of the laughter. Otter had just come from that place, had walked down to the landing where his long, sleek canoe waited with its promise of freedom. The Tall Cane Clan celebrated for the fourth night with Singing and Dancing, feasting and storytelling, and the exchange of gifts. This marriage was a lucky union between the White Shell Clan and the Tall Cane Clan. All of the lineages were linked now, as if this final marriage created one people out of two. The clans, their territories facing each other across the river, had been enemies in the distant past. In the beginning, the White Shell Clan had built its clan house and burial mound on the eastern bluffs overlooking the river. The Tall Cane clan house and earthen mound had been built later, when the clan moved down river. They had chosen to settle on a small rise on the western bank. White Shell warriors had gone to drive the interlopers out of their territory. The Tall Cane Clan had been just as determined to hold their new home. Somewhere, back in the time of the Grandmothers, that feud had ended with a marriage, and so it had been since. Otter had taken the first opportunity to escape the festivities. He desperately needed time alone to nurse the aching wound in his heart. He had loved her so deeply, so passionately. Here he could look back at the ruins of that love. How many times had he made his way to this settlement? Those trips had been wondrous with the knowledge that she was waiting, anticipation in her eyes. All gone now. Sparkling fires honeyed the thatched roofs and pale walls of the clan house. The light danced and flashed at the incitement of the breeze. Here and there, despite the distance, he could make out the forms of people moving between the fires, casting shadows in his direction. Her marriage strengthened the bonds between the people, tying the clans closer together. Villages in the central valley didn't realize the frightening changes taking place in the world beyond. Otter had seen them. The number of canoes passing the clan territories had grown by tens of tens over the last year. Young men like himself sought the chance to feed the growing demand for goods above and below the central valley. We have entered an age of alliances--and, thereby, an age of great danger. He turned again to the rippling black water. Even now, in the dead of winter, the river whispered, calling to him, drawing at his soul the way it ate at the sandbars and muddy banks. "Otter?" The soft voice caught him by surprise. He wheeled to find his twin brother standing ghostly in the veiled moonlight. Four Kills looked dashingly handsome in his wedding garb of brightly dyed yellow, black, and red fabrics. A copper hairpiece had been tied into the thick bun at the base of his skull. Alternating layers of bone and shell beads lay thickly across his chest. The half-wash of moonlight gave his fine-featured face a pale delicacy--the eyes shadowed by the prominent brow ridge. Otter found his voice. "Sorry, brother. You startled me. The wind, I guess ... it covered your approach." He selfconsciously rubbed the tips of his wet fingers on his fox coat and glanced back longingly at the river. He shouldn't have been surprised. Four Kills would have known he'd come here. They had always shared a bit of soul. So alike, so different, but then, the Father Water had determined that long ago. Perhaps that faraway night on the river had led directly to this meeting. A man couldn't know the workings of Power--they just went on around him, throwing him this way and that, like a stick in the river's roiling brown current. Four Kills walked down the muddy slope, stopping beside Otter, staring out over the river with him, but seeing the dark bluff, where the White Shell clan house and earthworks stood on the other side. That difference marked them. For Otter, the river centered the soul; for Four Kills, it was the clan, and his obligations to Grandmother, that lay at the center. "I've been feeling your hurt," Four Kills said gently. Otter reached out to drop an arm around his brother's shoulders. "What would you do? Break the marriage? Defy the clans? Ruin your life, and happiness ... and hers as well?" Four Kills paused for a moment, his dark eyes searching Otter's in the moon glow. "If you wanted me to." Otter tightened his grip on his brother's shoulders, his heart warming. "Yes, you would, wouldn't you? You know, for a man as smart as you are, you can be a real fool sometimes." "I wouldn't hurt you for anything. Grandmother came to me saying that Red Moccasins had asked for me." He gestured the futility of it. "I haven't slept. I've been torn between happiness and anticipation ... and tortured by a horrible dread about what you'd say ... what you'd think. I didn't know what to do. Otter. Do you understand?" "I understand very well, brother. Twins have Power that way." Otter felt the tug on his soul--the river calling, reminding him of strange places and different peoples. He pried his thoughts away from the lure and added, "But you should also know that she loves you. I've seen it in her eyes ... the curious guilt and pain when she looks at me, the stubborn longing when she looks at you." "But, Otter, she--" "Wait! Hear me out. Listen to me, brother. Go to her and People of the Lakes 51 " love her. Sire her children. You're the man she needs, already listened to in the councils. A solid man who understands the changes in our world. The people here need you. She needs you." Four Kills nodded sadly to himself. "Yes, I know: duty, responsibility, honor. But, Otter, what about us ... you and me? I can't stand the thought of losing--" Otter pushed his brother back to face him. "You won't. Not ever. But your place is here, at her side. She's intelligent, brother. She's going to be a very shrewd leader. You're the right man for her." "But you and I ... Things will change between us." "Yes, they will. We will manage." "I had hoped you would say that," Four Kills paused, his head down. "I'm glad you came back when you did. It would have seemed like a betrayal if you'd come home after the marriage." "I'd never feel betrayed. It's our way, brother. Grandmother makes the alliances, negotiates the marriages. And besides, you really didn't want to refuse, did you?" Four Kills continued to stare at the damp ground. "No. You know as well as I that I've always loved her. I've always watched from your shadow. You were the great Trader, Otter, exotic and romantic with your stories of faraway places and wonderful things. Me? I was just a ... a ... " "A strong, capable man who would be there when she needed him," Otter finished. The river's current entwined itself in his soul like a lover's caress. The night pressed down upon him. Again the owl hooted into the darkness--the hollow notes like a dead man's flute. "That's why she initiated the negotiations, brother. Grandmother told me the day I arrived that Red Moccasins had asked for you--first choice." He nodded into the darkness. "She's smart. You'll always be there, while I ... well, she could just as soon count on the wind." Four Kills chuckled softly. "Couldn't you have stayed home for once? Built a house? Cleared a field? It's not so bad. I do it all the time." "I'd die, brother. My soul would wither like a plucked squash blossom in the sun." Otter used a thumbnail to scrape the drying mud from his hand. "I was changed that night I fell into the river. We both know it. Whatever I would have been was washed away. I belong to the Father Water." "It's calling you, isn't it?" Four Kills asked. "I can't sense the river's call, but I can feel your need to answer it. You'll be going away again, won't you?" "Yes, brother. Very soon." "And it's partly because of me and Red Moccasins. I can feel that, too. The pain it will cause you to be near us." "That will eventually heal, Four Kills. I've loved her with all of my heart--as have you. I need time to make my peace with the way things will be." His brother bent down, scooping up mud and packing it into a ball before he threw it out into the river. A satisfying splash sounded. "Sometimes it's not easy to share souls with a person." Otter kicked at the mud with a moccasined toe. "No, I guess it isn't. That's another good reason for me to go. It's not as bad when I'm gone. We don't haunt each other's dreams as much, don't sense each other's feelings." "I'll miss you ... again." "And I, you." Four Kills touched Otter on the shoulder. "You know that you always have my love ... and Red Moccasins' as well." "I know." Otter pulled loose, stepping to the side of his broad canoe. "Actually, I came down here to get something." He glanced up. "Judging by the laughter, it's about time for the exchange of gifts." Four Kills crossed his arms against the chill of the night wind. "Yes. In fact, I'd better be getting back." Otter bent over the gunwale of his canoe, fished around, and found what he was looking for: a heavy, flat slab wrapped in thick folds of sturdy brown fabric. "Here it is. Come on. You're supposed to be at your wife's side." Four Kills squinted in the darkness. "What is that?" "Your wedding gift from me. I think you'll like it." "Something useful?" "Hardly, but you'll have the wealthiest household in Tall Cane territory." And Otter would incur Grandmother's wrath by giving away such a fabulous prize to his brother's wife's clan. The copper plate he now fingered stretched as long as a man's arm, and half as wide. The heavy metal had been pounded to the thickness of a turtle's shell and polished to a bright luster. Otter would, avoid looking into Red Moccasins' eyes as he uncovered the plate and handed it to her. He would only allow himself to smile at her mother--and then politely step back. Otter tucked the heavy plate under one arm and gripped his brother's shoulder. "Come on, let's get you back before Grandmother comes raging down on us like a winter storm." And I'll enjoy watching the Tall Cane Clan's eyes go round at the sight of this much copper in one piece! Perhaps -it was an arrogant act--but it brought satisfaction. Giving a copper plate like this would bolster him enough to bear her presence and to smile as if this were the happiest night of his life. He glanced sideways at his brother, who watched him warily. Four Kills would understand--and forgive him this little bit of pride. That same night, many months' journey to the northeast, sunset had cast golden hues across the hilly, winter-gripped land of the Flat Pipe people and their allies, the High Heads. It was said that of all the peoples on earth, none were so influential as the Flat Pipe, and no ceremonial centers so grand as theirs. Of all the mighty works in the Flat Pipe world, few would argue that Starsky city wasn't the most spectacular of all. Starsky nestled among the rolling, forested hills in a west east-trending valley, bounded on the north by the ice-choked Flying Squirrel River and on the south by the smaller Duck River. Their channels joined on the eastern edge of the site, where the canoe landing was situated. A patchwork of fuzzy gray trees and irregular fields covered the slopes to the north and south of the rivers--the beginning of the farmsteads. Sunflower and goosefoot stalks protruded in enough places to give the snowy fields a tawny look. Starsky had gone quiet in the cold and growing darkness. Footprints crisscrossed pathways through the deep snow and onto the earthen monuments contained within the embankment of the great solar observatory with its huge Octagon. To the southeast, the Great Circle, with its eagle-shaped central mound and high gateway, lay empty this night, none of the Star Society astronomers braving the chill to use the huge lunar observatory. Clustered throughout the long, linear earthworks, mounds, circles and squares, were the clan houses, society houses, and charnel huts. Threads of smoke rose from the smoke holes, piercing bark-and-thatch roofs before spiraling into the night sky. One charnel house stood out. It was oblong, peak-roofed with bark, and black smoke curled out of the smoke holes. Such smoke poured out only when a cremation was underway. Blanket-wrapped people had gathered in knots around the doorway. The brightly colored blankets contrasted with the glaring world of white. Headdresses of copper, mica, and glistening beads offset rich black hair, carefully washed and, for the somber occasion, pulled into severe buns and pinned with conch shell-whorl pins. As the people stood silently in the new darkness, their frosty breaths intermingled, as did their grief.- One young woman stepped out of the smoky interior and into the cold. She pulled her blanket tight about her shoulders, as if seeking protection from something besides the cold. Many thought her the most beautiful woman in the world. Full lips balanced the proportions of the firm, straight nose and strong brow. Those eyes--large and dark--should have sparkled with laughter, but now they betrayed the deep sorrow of a bruised soul. Hands like hers were meant for holding, the fingers long and slender. Even as they clutched the blanket, they did so tenderly. Long black hair, shimmering in the fading light, was pulled back now, pinned tightly in mourning instead of billowing in raven waves down her back. One need only glance at her to know that the chill in her soul was colder than the frozen air she now breathed. Star Shell noted the sympathetic expressions cast her way by grieving relatives. She stopped, staring up at the fading sunset and hugging her blanket even more tightly around her. Her gaze shifted across the broad valley to the northwest, to the heights where the Flying Squirrel earthworks stood to mark the constellation for which the mound had been built. She knew this valley well. Had the charnel house not blocked the view, she could have seen the trail that led up to the famous chert quarries--placed there by First Man when the world was new. The surface on that high ridge was riddled with huge holes, for countless generations of men had dug the sacred chert from the rocky ground. Part of Starsky city's political strength came from controlling those chert deposits. Traders arrived from all over the world to obtain the large nodules to Trade up and down the river systems. According to the story, just after the Creation, First Man had battled a mighty monster. With lightning, he killed the beast, and its blood ran into the ground, becoming the multicolored chert. Because of the sacred nature of the stone, it was used only in special ceremonies. A person who petitioned the Spirit World might use the sacred chert to cut off a bit of flesh for an offering, or perhaps to pierce himself and offer the blood. Such offerings were made for the safe return of a relative or very close friend, for success in Trading, or sometimes in hopes of curing a loved one. Warriors flaked the stone into potent dart points. The secret societies made tools from it with which to carve pipes, atlatls, or mica effigies. In the Potters' Society, blades struck from sacred chert were used to incise the design zones of the ceramic jars and pots. Star Shell heard the approach of her father; his moccasins crunched in the packed snow as he came to stand beside her. Polished copper ear spools hung from his earlobes, and his tattooed face looked puckered from the cold. He had snugged a yellow-and-black blanket about his shoulders. For the first time, Star Shell noticed that those once broad shoulders had slumped. When had he aged so? But then, she too had aged. Not so much in the body, for she was still a young woman--just two tens and four years old. Despite the three children she'd borne Mica Bird, she retained her legendary beauty and her physical endurance. Only her soul had withered. "It's almost over," her father, Hollow Drill, told her. "When this last fire burns down, we'll collect the ashes. Then I'll build a tomb. When I'm dead, you can bury me there beside her." "I'll miss her." He bowed his head. "After all these many winters, it's hard to think of being away from her--even for the short time I have left." "Don't speak like that, Father, I can't bear to think of both of you gone." She shivered lightly. "I'll be back for Mother's burial. It will be hard for you. Especially at equinox and solstice. I won't leave you alone." "It's a long way." He paused. "And what will your husband say if you miss the rituals at Sun Mounds? You have other responsibilities, Star Shell." "He'll understand." How easily the lie came to her lips. "Will he?" She shrugged, defenseless against his penetrating gaze. Hollow Drill sighed. "I'm sorry, my daughter. I could have stopped it. Kept you here. Married you to someone else." "No, Father. He wears the Mask. Nothing can be denied to someone who wears the Mask. It was the same with his grandfather before him." She shook her head, hating the thoughts that clung to her like fungus on a rotting tree. She feared Mica Bird. Feared him so much it paralyzed her soul. In the past four years, he had used the Mask time and again. He donned it in heated clan meetings--and his opponents died within days. Tension had divided many of the lineages. Some people had packed up and left, moving to distant places where they had kin. Others stared at him adoringly, in awe of his Power, and did his bidding without question or hesitation. Since Star Shell's youngest daughter had died, matters had grown worse. Not just the beatings, but other things. He insisted on wearing the Mask before coupling with her. He said it gave Power to his seed. And then, as he covered her, the Mask would be propped beside the bedding--to watch. If she protested, he beat her into submission before spreading her legs and driving himself painfully inside. His ejaculation made her physically sick. Do I have to think of this now? She rubbed her cold face to clear her head. Hollow Drill said nothing. She caught a glimpse of the lines tightening around his broad mouth. She knew that expression---the one that marked deep and serious thought. "I'll be all right, Father. It's you I'm--" "Star Shell, I want you to do something for me. I want you to talk to someone. A man arrived here several days ago. His name is Tall Man--an Elder of the High Heads. Some call him 'the Magician.' " She just stared at Hollow Drill. Who hadn't heard of the Magician? Stories circulated everywhere about the High Heads' most famous and Powerful dwarf. If an infant in the womb was exposed to Power, a dwarf would result. Some said that the Magician was the most Powerful of all. Rumors claimed that he could change himself into an owl or a lizard. Others claimed-- often whispering behind shielding hands--that the Magician used the darker Powers of witchcraft to his own benefit. Mysterious deaths were attributed to his Power, as were miraculous cures. Women, So the story went, could not resist his advances. More than one angry husband had died mysteriously after seeking redress for such indiscretions. Hollow Drill placed a hand on Star Shell's back. "He says he came here to see you." Star Shell glanced sideways. "What would I want to talk to the Magician for? What does he want with me? I haven't done anything." "Daughter, the High Heads know all about the Mask. They are an older people than we are. They know about these things. The Mask ... it was theirs once. Tall Man knows the legends, knows the history of the Mask. Please ... see him." At the tone in her father's voice, she nodded. Hadn't she always done his bidding? The chill increased. "If I talk to the Magician, Mica Bird will know. The Mask will tell him. I'll suffer for it." "The Mask won't know." Hollow Drill sounded so sure of himself. "There are other Powers in the Spirit World besides the Mask." Hollow Drill hesitated. "The Magician, Tall Man, he arrived on the day your mother died. He's been waiting ever since." Star Shell shifted uneasily, aware of the distance her other relatives had been keeping. Aware of the oily smell of smoke hanging on the still air--smoke from the cremation fire that burned the last of her mother's bones into ash. Dread filled her, as if she had just stepped upon a dark forest trail. One fraught with peril. "All right, Father. I'll see him. But it won't do any good." "You don't know that. See Tall Man tonight. Then tomorrow we'll collect your mother's ashes and you can leave. Your brothers will accompany you down the Holy Road, back to Sun Mounds and the Moonshell valley." She followed in his footsteps as he picked his way along the slick path. Where so many moccasined feet had trod, the snow had been beaten into irregular humps of ice. Once this land had belonged to the High Heads, They had built the first Sacred Circle here, and buried their dead in the conical mounds. From this rich floodplain at the confluence of the Flying Squirrel River and the Duck River, they had charted the path of the stars and sent Traders out across the world. According to the legends, three clans had come down from the hills and united to drive the High Heads from the valley. They seized control of the Chen quarries. Great Star, the legendary clan leader, had forged a peace. After that, the High Heads married with the Flat Pipe and they lived together, sharing sacred sites, and slowly the people began to grow close. Words from both languages had flowed around each other, and many of the legends had mixed, along with the bloodlines. Tall Man--the Magician--wanted to see her? I haven't done anything wrong! Star Shell winced. Didn't she have enough to fear? Life with her husband had grown into a nightmare from which she never awoke. At night, in the darkness, she could feel his Power welling around her. He tossed and turned like a man possessed, tortured by dreams she could only guess at. Awake, he walked with his head cocked as if listening to something. At the slightest provocation, he flew into a violent rage. After hearing of her mother's death, he'd beaten her, a crazed look in his eyes--as though in guilt. The bruises on her body had healed, but those on her soul remained. Had he killed her mother? Why? How could he have done such a thing? What had become of the young man she'd loved? Only the memory of his handsome face remained. Now, when she looked at him, she saw a stranger. He'd grown thin, his muscles sinking into bone. When he looked into her eyes, she could see the strain in his glassy stare. Only her first daughter, Silver Water, coming up on her fifth year, had lived. The next two babies had died at birth; it was as if their souls had emerged, seen the horror that lived in that house, and fled. // only I could escape as well. For this journey, Star Shell had left Silver Water with her mother-in-law. The girl would be safe there, out of her father's way for the time being. Poor Silver Water ... the sweet days of carefree childhood had vanished like leaves from a winter-bare tree. Where giggling delight should have filled those large brown eyes, dread haunted that once-innocent face. Twilight had dwindled by the time they reached the High Head clan house. Although the High Heads no longer lived in the Flying Squirrel valley, they kept a clan house here. The old mound stood to one side of the clearing, a low, conical dome of earth. Beside it, pairs of posts, set out at angles, formed a Sacred Circle. Offerings hung from each of the posts: colored bits of cloth, strips of hide, bundles of herbs, and other precious objects. Hollow Drill muttered a greeting . the Spirits that dwelt here, and touched his forehead in respect. Star Shell followed his example, feeling the ancient Power of the place. She barely noticed the fluffy snow that crunched underfoot. The High Heads built perfectly round houses, lashing bark to a pole framework. A heavy fabric covering draped each doorway. »> "Greetings!" Hollow Drill sang out. "Hollow Drill and his daughter, Star Shell, have come to see the venerable Tall Man, respected Elder of the High Head peoples." A young man appeared at the doorway. "Greetings, Hollow Drill and Star Shell. I am to tell you that Tall Man offers you his welcome, and that he shares the terrible grief at the death of your gracious and kind wife and mother. Please, enter. Be welcome here." Star Shell hesitated as the young man held the hanging aside. Icicles had formed like silver lances on the thatch walls of the clan house. The cold had intensified, or was that only her imagination? Resigned, she ducked in after her father. The young man allowed the hanging to fall. After the biting cold, the warmth made her nose and cheeks tingle. The air smelled of mint and rose petals mixed with a pungent and soothing incense she couldn't quite place. What Star Shell had mistaken for a distant drum now betrayed itself as her pounding heart. She stood in a large, high-ceilinged room. A modest fire crackled in the central hearth and cast a rosy glow over the walls. Matting woven of blue-stem grass lined the walls; behind it, she knew, moss had been packed for added warmth. Decorated pottery lined the walls, and wooden backrests had been placed around the fire pit. Bedding, mostly deerhides and blankets, marked the sleeping area in the rear. A bear skull adorned the southern wall, and medicine bundles of unknown use hung from the soot-encrusted rafters. Tall Man, the feared High Head shaman, sat on the opposite side of the fire. He rose on stubby legs and spread his arms in greeting. The top of the Magician's head reached no higher than Star Shell's navel. His short legs bowed, as if they'd grown around a river cobble, and his face reminded her of a turtle's, the nose rounded, with the nostrils forward-facing. After his teeth had fallen out, the jaw had receded, which augmented the turtle-like wrinkles on his throat. His skull had been flattened by his having been bound into a cradleboard as an infant to mold the high, broad look for which his people had been named. His gray hair formed a bun at the back of his head, and stone ear spools hung from his earlobes. Only when she gazed into his faded eyes did she feel the man's Power, so shrouded in mysterious secrecy. And something else--something dark, hidden, and terrifying. Tall Man wore a magnificent blanket made of interwoven strips of fox fur, rabbit, and feathers. Copper bracelets jingled on his stick-thin arms. His small hands had curled with age, the long nails grown like talons. "I share your grief." The simple statement proved more eloquent than any long speech. Hollow Drill nodded. "Thank you, Wise One. It has been a trying moon since her soul passed from her body. The final fires have been lit." The Magician laced his fingers over his stomach. "We would offer a gift. Please, place this token of our respect with her ashes so that her ghost will know of our deep affection. The memory of the time she nursed Broken Dish has not faded." He glanced to one side as a gust of wind shivered the wall. He went slightly pale, then whispered, "No ... indeed it has not." Star Shell remembered. Broken Dish was one of the High Head clan Elders, a noted Trader who had developed a swelling of the face. Her mother had gone to care for him--and there, she had actually met the Magician. No one else had gone to help. Others feared that whatever horrible thing grew inside Broken Dish's head might also grow in theirs. The-youth, unbidden, stepped forward with an engraved stone tablet. The High Heads valued such tablets, using them to mix ritual body paints for sacred events. "Her Spirit is honored," Hollow Drill said reverently as he accepted the tablet. Star Shell gazed at the piece of worked slate. The artist's skill showed in the intricate flow of the engraving. She could make out images of a woman, a man, and a wolf, all linked together. On the back, strange symbols had been inscribed. Stains had permeated the slate, some having the rich blackness of old blood, others the crusted silver-white of dried semen. The piece drew her irresistibly, as if it sucked at the soul. The Magician explained, "It is the story of my clan, the Wolf People. It tells of the first days after the Creation of the world. Old Woman is there, along with First Man and his Spirit Helper." He smiled. "You probably know, Star Shell, that your mother's lineage came from the High Heads, long ago. Her ancestors married into Great Star's Clan. You, therefore, are a distant relative of mine." "I remember," Star Shell replied, fighting to pull her gaze away. She almost sighed when her father placed the tablet into his belt pouch. Didn't he sense the stone's draw? "Please, seat yourselves. Drink will be provided." Tall Man settled against his backrest and folded his short legs beneath him. Star Shell and her father seated themselves across the fire from the Elder, as was proper. The young man arrived again, bearing a large conch shell full "of steaming yaupon. Each in turn drank from the lustrous pink shell. As the bitter black drink settled in her stomach, a warm flush spread through Star Shell's cold body for the first time since she'd heard of her mother's death. Yaupon did that, renewed the body and sharpened the wits. "May all of your ancestors be praised," Tall Man began. "And may your descendants cherish your Spirits. May First Man shed his blessing upon you. May your fields be fertile, and hunger far from your door." "And yours," Hollow Drill returned. The Magician drank again from the shell cup and passed it around. The ritual of greetings continued until the shell was emptied. At that point, Tall Man took a tubular stone pipe from his belt pouch. It had been carved into the shape of a dwarf, long of body, with a decorated sash at the waist. The hair had been parted in the middle and worked into two buns. Hollow ear spools filled the ears. Tall Man filled the pipe, his movements deliberate. Without spilling a single flake of tobacco, he tamped it with a blunt piece of bone. The youth arrived at just the right moment and offered a smoldering stick with which to light it. The pipe went around, each person inhaling deeply and blowing smoke out at the ceiling in four puffs. "May First Man hear our words. May the ghosts of my ancestors speak not of what passes here." Tall Man knocked the dottle from the pipe and reloaded it. Once again the pipe moved around the circle, until a blue haze filled the room. "Now then," the Magician began, turning his soft gaze on Star Shell, "you are worried. The Power of the Mask has begun to eat at . soul." . Star Shell glanced uneasily at the youth, who stood to one side, apparently oblivious. "You may talk, young Star Shell." Tall Man raised a thin eyebrow. "This place is safe." Star Shell sought to still her pounding heart. "How do you know about the Mask? About me?" "Power is like smoke." The Magician sucked on his pipe and exhaled a puff. Waving one hand, he set the smoke to swirling. "Stir a part of the smoke, and the other tendrils are affected. The Mask has been stirring Power for many generations of men. Now it is stirring again." , "Why did you come to see me? You did come here for that, didn't you?" Tall Man's expression sharpened, and as quickly resumed that veiled tranquillity. "It was not an easy journey for me at this time of year, but yes, I came because I knew you would. Remember, girl, we are of the same blood. I Dreamed one night last summer. I saw you huddling in fear as your husband donned the Mask and looked down at you. The baby girl you carried in your womb was stillborn three days later. Mica Bird wants a son--one with a piece of Raven Hunter's soul." "Who? Raven Hunter?" "The Dark Twin, First Man's brother. You know him as Many Colored Crow. It is he who caused the Mask to be made in the first place. Through it, his Spirit can act in this world. It does so by capturing the soul that looks through the Mask. That is why your husband wears the Mask just before he couples with you." "He has changed." Star Shell chewed at her lip. "He is not the man I knew. He has become a stranger. Brooding. Dark." "Mica Bird isn't strong enough to cope with the Mask." Tall Man clasped his hands. "His grandfather was stronger. Nevertheless, it destroyed him, too, in the end. Now, in addition to the Mask's influence, the grandfather's ghost is tormenting Mica Bird. Your husband should never have brought the body back and buried it in the clan grounds." "Is that what he hears? Is that why his Dreams are tortured?" "The old man knew that the Mask should not fall to his heirs, but the Mask understood what he planned. Before the old man could take the Mask back to the place where he found it, the Mask spoke to your husband, thereby ensuring it would be recovered. "But what can I do?" "For the moment, nothing. As long as Mica Bird wears the Mask, he is too Powerful. His time, however, is limited." Star Shell stiffened. "I don't understand." The Magician's expression of sympathy deepened. The compassion of the ages might have been staring at her through those gentle eyes. "Neither does your husband. He is caught in a struggle he can't comprehend. It is tearing him apart." "Yes, I--I know. But isn't there a way to stop it? To save Mica Bird?" She glanced at the honeyed color of the matting and the bundles hanging along the walls. The High Head designs on the large pots seemed to waver in the light. Tall Man sighed wearily. "Power discards people it no longer needs. When Power acts, young Star Shell, you must be ready." "Ready? For what?" Tall Man's eyes seemed to expand in the shrunken face. "Whether you like it or not, Power needs you to restore the balance." She shook her head slowly, a heaviness, like a cold rock, in her stomach. I just want my husband cured of this. Please, can't I have my husband back the way he was? "No ... no ... not me. I'm not the one you want." "There is only one solution, young Star Shell. The Mask must be taken away, placed where men can never retrieve it. First Man has told me of such a place." "I'll burn it!" The wise old eyes measured her. "You have just cremated your mother--to free her Spirit. Burning will only free the Mask's Spirit. No, First Man has given me a Vision, shown me a place. We must take the Mask there. You and I. Far to the north--at the Roaring Water. There the Mask will be safe, and balance restored." "Balance?" Her voice had gone faint. "The Mask is not evil, though its Power comes from Darkness. Young Star Shell, you must understand. At the time the Mask was created, it was necessary. It kept the world in balance. The Mask changed the High Heads, brought them into a new age. But then, you will learn these things in due time." Star Shell sat in misery, unable to think. "The problem is, young Star Shell, that Many Colored Crow knows we will seek to remove his Mask. As I told you, when Power is stirred, all the tendrils are affected. Many Colored Crow has chosen his champions, though they know not what they are called for. We are in a race, Star Shell--you to remove the Mask, they to keep it. I must ask you, are you strong enough to see this through?" Star Shell's lips parted, but she couldn't speak. "I will help you," Hollow Drill added. "No, old friend. First Man has taken a calculated gamble. Were he to increase the stakes, we could tear the world apart in much the same way Mica Bird is being driven to madness. I have seen the way it must be. This must be done in secrecy. The Mask has touched Star Shell, shown her the terror it holds for those unable to withstand its Power. You, my friend, and your clan, can have no part in this. Power has spoken. It has chosen Star Shell." As she watched, the fire sputtered, sending smoke twisting as it rose toward the dark roof. Three My gut tightens as I fall through dark nothingness. I spin, weightless, out of control. I am going to die ... "Hold on," a voice commands. "A man can't hold on to nothing!" "Try, just ... try." I throw my arms wide, feeling the rush of air as I plunge downward. Then I draw my arms together, embracing ... the wind. And I slowly tumble sideways, and catch myself by curling my toes. "But how can this happen? There is nothing here in this terrible darkness to hold to." "Things work differently here. Green Spider. You have crossed from the world of the living, brought here by Power." "Where am I?" "In the City of the Dead." "Then ... I am dead?" ' ' a while, Dreamer." "I don't want to be dead ... " "You won't be. Not for long." I tense the muscles in my arms, and I feel feathers bite into the air. Nerving myself, I stroke powerfully, and shoot forward. What wonder ... have I always shared the soul of a bird? "This being dead isn't so horrible. I thought it would be, well, a great deal different." ' ' are not finished with life. I have chosen you for a special task. And for that task, I will give you a special gift." "And what gift is that?" ' ' Spider, all of your life you have sought quiet, discipline,, and order, and the search has led you in the wrong direction. You must turn around and look through those things to find their beating hearts. I am going to give ' the chance. Your eyes are closed now, but when you open them, the patterned illusions of the many worlds of Creation will slip away, and the chaotic wasteland of reality will remain. Open your eyes, Green Spider. Do it now. See!" Fear clenches my stomach. I open my eyes, and the blinding darkness dies. I ... I don't ... my mouth falls open and I scream. The louder I scream, the more terrible the silence becomes, until I can no longer hear anything at all. And I feel ... I feel myself disappearing. It is as if my breath is my soul, and it is escaping into the scream ... becoming the scream. Old Yellow Reed sat hunched behind the carved fox head in the bow of the big canoe as it rose and fell on choppy waves. The leaden morning sky reflected off the river with a sullen brilliance. From the time she had been a little girl, sixty winters past, she'd loved sitting in the front of a boat. The way it lanced the water had delighted her, and despite the passing of years-- and numerous travels in canoes--it still did. The storm had unleashed its fury with the morning, sending down veils of frigid rain. The heavy canoe dipped and bucked as it bore Yellow Reed and her daughters across the river toward the White Shell clan house. Craning her neck, the old woman could look back and see Otter's pointed paddle flashing as it propelled them toward the east bank. She lifted a small, tightly woven reed mat to shield her right side; there the mat caught the brunt of the icy rain that fell from the sky in slushy silver drops. Her hold on it was tenuous. With any luck, a gust of wind wouldn't roar down and rip it right out of her aching fingers. She wore a heavy shawl about her shoulders, and a thick winter dress beneath that. Nevertheless, cold had seeped into Yellow Reed's bones, and for a woman her age, that meant utter misery. She sucked her lips over toothless gums and battled the need to shiver violently, wincing at the cold trickle of water that ran from Her mat, down her hand and forearm, and dripped persistently from her elbow onto her lap. "Mother?" Blue Jar asked. She leaned forward under her own mat.. "I'm fine. Just cold and wet, but that will pass as soon as we make shore and I can hobble up to the house. Spider Above knows, I hope that worthless husband of yours has the fires going." Blue Jar squinted against the storm. "After all these years, Many Turtles is wary of you. I imagine he'll have the house as hot as midsummer." Yellow Reed chuckled. Blue Jar had just passed four tens and two winters. Her broad face and nose gave her a moon faced look, and she'd always had heavy eyelids that hinted of sleepiness. Blue Jar, however, was anything but sleepy, lazy, or slow in the head. She had taken over many aspects of the administration of the White Shell Clan. Water slapped at the hull as the canoe sliced a path through the river, and Yellow Reed smiled at the white splashes of spray that disappeared in the choppy, greenish-brown patterns of wind-pushed wave. "You did well by your husband." Yellow Reed leaned to the side to hold her reed mat higher against a changing slant of rain. In doing so, she had a better view of Otter paddling in the stern. He seemed oblivious to the weather. Otter wasn't such a bad name for the boy--it fit him. "I hope Four Kills will be as happy with Red Moccasins as Many Turtles has been with me." Blue Jar hunched under her mat. Rain was dripping off the corner of the plaited grass and into the river, where the rings disappeared in the maze of pat68 Kathleen O'Neal Gear and W. Michael Gear terns cast by rain, wind, and wake; The breeze caught their mats, as if struggling to push the canoe sideways. In misery, Yellow Reed peered back at Otter. With his usual acumen, he corrected immediately, grinning and paddling. The light of challenge lit his eyes. "Yes," Yellow Reed answered, "he'll do fine. Red Moccasins is no one's fool. Neither is her mother, or grandmother. After all, the girl was smart enough to ask for Four Kills, not for his dashing brother." Yellow Reed squinted, more in thought than against the rain. And what was that silly stunt last night, Otter? She sucked at her lips the way she did when she was preoccupied. That copper plate had sparked gasps of amazement from the watching people. Red Moccasins had stood speechless, as if rooted. Four Kills, for his part, had simply nodded, that worshiping smile beaming love at his twin brother--as if he were handed a clan's ransom on a regular basis. Otter continued to paddle with the deliberate stroke of a master. The water had beaded on his foxhide coat and trickled down the broad planes of his face. He had a strong jaw, firm cheekbones, and the powerful nose of his family. At the moment, a faint smile hung on his generous mouth, and his hair was pulled back in a tight braid. Despite the layers of his clothing, Yellow Reed could sense the powerful muscles that rolled in those shoulders as he pushed the heavy canoe toward the nearing shore. Yellow Reed said, "Red Moccasins has that younger brother ... what's his name?" "Black Water." "Yes, Black Water. Perhaps we might want to give him a good look." Blue Jar cocked her head.'"Thinking about marrying him to Clay Bowl?" She paused for a moment, raising an eyebrow. "Or are you just hoping to get our copper plate back?" Yellow Reed gave her a sidelong look. That plate would rankle for a time yet. She flinched under a gust of driven rain. Would summer never come? A brittle chuckle came up her throat. Age must have, addled her. No one with sense longed for summer. All summer brought was hard work in the fields, heat, mosquitoes, chiggers, ticks, flies and ants, and centipedes. She turned her mind back to the problem at hand. Black Water and Clay Bowl? Or should she be thinking in other directions? "Do they like each other?" Blue Jar shrugged. "She let him into her blankets last night. I think it was her first time. They spent every spare moment staring at each-other afterward, so it must have been good between them." "Huh! What do young boys know about being good in the robes?" "I think they're planning on practicing." Blue Jar shrugged. "Many Turtles and I did--a lot." "A lot of good it did you! Twins! And you kept producing boys." "What about Black Water and Clay Bowl?" "What would it hurt? Tall Cane Clan has access to that ridge area to the north. Remember when it flooded so badly last year? That ridge was above the water. It might be a good place to plant squash. Not only that, but that backswamp out behind them is almost filled up with silt. In another four, maybe five years, that will be farmable. With the right marriage, we could benefit." "Unless they keep digging pottery clay out of that back swamp at the rate they are doing now." Blue Jar studied her mother with bland eyes. "Let them dig. They strain the clay through fabric to keep it fine ... and they make good pots from it. A person can't have too many pots. Not the way my granddaughters keep dropping them. Either way, we're ahead." Blue Jar remained pensive for a moment before she asked, "Do you think it's wise to link Clay Bowl to the Tall Canes? We might be better served with a marriage to the City of the Dead. Perhaps among the Black Clan." Yellow Reed worked her toothless jaw back and forth, her eyes slitting. "It's an idea. What prompted you to think of it?" Blue Jar leaned forward, gesturing to the rear of the canoe. "The story of that copper plate will travel. Not only that, I've listened to Otter. He's right about the changes on the river. More people are passing each year. The river can carry more than peaceful Traders. It can also carry warriors. The future ... it's an uncertainty. An alliance with the Black Clan might be worth a great deal. Raiders would think twice ... and if the worst came true, we'd have a place to go." Yellow Reed squinted at the muddy landing they approached. When she looked back at Blue Jar, she asked, "Worried about the rumors of war among the Serpent Clans up north?" . Blue Jar gave her a shrug. "Maybe. We need to talk to Otter. Perhaps he heard something on the river. Not all of the Traders stop here to tell the news. With the marriage and all the excitement, well, there hasn't been time to really hear what he has to say." Yellow Reed nodded. "As soon as we're home and I'm warm, let's talk to him." She grinned. "Assuming, of course, that my worthless son-in-law has the fire roaring." "I don't think my husband would let his mother-in-law suffer the chills if he could help it. He knows who his friends are." Yellow Reed jerked a stiff nod of approval. "You did well by him, girl." The canoe ' them all forward as it snubbed into the beach. Otter was already over the side, sloshing forward to help' Yellow Reed to her feet. Without even straining, he lifted her free, setting her on her feet on the muddy bank. "I need to see you," she said simply. "Wait until we get settled, then come." The thinly veiled delight that had possessed him on the river evaporated as he looked down at her, his face turned as gray and gloomy as the day. "Yes, Grandmother." She stared at the muddy path that led up the slope to the clan house. The thought of climbing all that brought bile to her gut, but Blue Jar offered a steadying arm. In the meantime, she would concentrate on Otter. He'd be wanting to leave soon, to travel north despite the season. Well, perhaps that would be for the best. Young men went crazy when the women they loved married others. Better to send him off than to have him around causing trouble between Red Moccasins and Four Kills. Several weeks' journey to the south, four slim war canoes traveled upriver. Powerful arms plied the paddles that bore the craft relentlessly northward, away from the crystal-blue gulf waters and the warm breezes. No one could mistake these men--four tens of them. These were Khota warriors, feared throughout the north. Tattooed, scarred, they wore their hair in tight buns, scowling out at the river with hard eyes. In the lead canoe sat a lo'the woman wrapped in a blanket The bow wake rippled out in silvered chevrons across the brown water as the slim Khota war canoe raced forward. From her seat in the bow, Pearl watched the smooth water with a detached indifference. Today, at least, she could be happy that the wind had stopped. To think any further, to attempt to understand the sudden change that had ripped her from her familiar world, was to realize the enormity of what had happened to her. Better to simply sit and watch with vacant eyes as the winter-brown vegetation passed. Yes, and pretend you are living a curious sort of dream. That life will return to the way it was. And the moon might rise in the west. She was only fooling herself. Pearl had learned to close her ears to the sound of the Khota warriors as they sang and rhythmically drove their pointed paddles into the river--a melody of swirling, sucking waters, punctuated by tinkling drips. The paddles rose and fell, endlessly lifted for yet another bite. Each stroke propelled her forward, upriver, toward a future she could scarcely imagine. Pearl sat straight-backed, staring at the wooded banks they passed. Cypress and tupelo waited patiently for summer, while the vines twined through their branches like bleached ropes. The world had dulled to winter shades in response to the cold storms that rolled down from the north. Perhaps it would work out satisfactorily. Women had traveled the length and breadth of the continent before--and even been happy with their marriages and families. The unsettling dread had to be homesickness. That was all. Her veins pulsed with the blood of the Anhinga Clan: the Snakebird people. With her marriage to the Khota leader, Wolf of the Dead, she would ensure her clan's wealth and prosperity. She lifted her head. Anhinga, yes, that's what she was. Proud, strong, cunning. A hunter. That knowledge had been instilled into her very bones. In the distant past, Anhinga--the hunter bird that swam with its body submerged--had mated with a beautiful human woman, and from her womb had sprung the people who would become the Anhinga Clan. Her people had always shared behavioral traits with their totemic ancestor. They hunted with serrated spears--like the bird's beak. As the bird spread its wings to the sun, so did the Anhinga spread their arms to its renewing warmth. The Anhinga Clan controlled the mouth of the Great River, known to northern peoples as "The Father Water." I am Anhinga. I must show these Khota what it means to have the snakebird's blood run in my veins. She felt better at the thought. Stories did that, strengthened people. The seventh daughter in a matrilineal clan, she should have had the right to choose a mate. Her fate, however, had been sealed when the Khota landed at her village. They called themselves Traders, who, despite their warlike appearance, had come down from the north. But most important of all, they had arrived bearing loads of copper plate, sheets of mica, and greenstone celts. The young Khota men had been looking for conch shell, mar ginella for beads, sharks' teeth, and stingray spines--all of them worth a great deal in the north. As they had become familiar with the Anhinga, their haughty manners began to creep past the initial unease of being in a strange land and among strange people. Bartering for the Trade goods had taken days, especially with the language difficulties--and Grandfather's penchant for long, drawn-out dickering. Despite the sound the strangers made--a sort of swallowing of their words--they'd picked up some of the river pidgin, the universal talk of the Traders, and could make themselves understood. Pearl had caught the eye of one of the young men, the apparent leader. He'd finally pointed at her and pushed forward all of their remaining copper: some plate, a few ear spools, a hairpiece, and some bracelets. To that they added several ground-stone adzes and made the sign indicating that a Trade was desired. Pearl could understand male interest. She had a heart-shaped face framed by long black hair that gleamed with bluish tints in the sunlight. Having passed eighteen summers, she'd filled out into a full-figured, lithe woman. She'd seen admiration gleaming in men's eyes as they appraised her high breasts, muscular waist, and smooth thighs. Were it not for her peculiar aversion to clan obligations, she would have been married long ago and surrounded by a squabbling brood of youngsters. Somehow, the role of dutiful wife had never carried any appeal; she preferred to spend her days standing in the prow of a dugout canoe--atlatl and dart in hand--as the boat prowled the swamps in search of alligator. Her thrill came from tying a bloody bait to a length of braided-hemp line and dropping it into the deep water to draw Snapping Turtle from his muddy lair. No one could stay underwater for as long as Pearl in search of freshwater clams, or of conchs out beyond the surf. Her cousins grudgingly admitted that she could outswim Old Man Catfish himself. Four moons ago, she'd returned from her most audacious achievement: accompanying some of her cousins on a Trading venture to the Island peoples across the sea. Not many Anhinga men, let alone women, could make such a claim. She'd heard the joke that no sane man would marry Pearl. After all, who wanted to marry a woman who was better at being a man than a man was? Nor had the Anhinga Clan cared much what she did. She helped keep the pots filled with crawfish, crab, and other delicacies from the swamplands and beaches. Besides, her older sisters had married successfully, and their daughters were now bringing new males and kinship alliances to the-clan. Until the day the stranger had pointed at her, Pearl had been considered eccentric, and was ignored. The sight of all that copper had unhinged something in Grandfather's soul. His eyes had gleamed in anticipation. By dint of extraordinary effort, he'd finally managed to impart that Pearl could he had--but only in marriage. By this means. Grandfather would establish a kinship relationship with the people in the far north. Thereafter, he could send his canoes full of oyster shell, smoked fish, conch shell, sharks' teeth, palmetto-frond matting, "swamp-tree moss, alligator skins, yaupon, colorful feathers, and other goods, to exchange for copper, chert, galena, steatite, obsidian, Knife River flint, quartz crystals, greenstone, effigy pipes, and other exotics. And all that without having to depend on unaligned Traders plying the river. Days of haggling ensued, much to Pearl's initial amusement. They wanted to marry her to a young man--an important warrior's son--in the far north. Surely this was just Grandfather's way of extending a lucrative Trading session. Only after the agreement had been struck, finalized by the ritual exchange of blood and gifts, did Pearl realize that the Anhinga Clan not only meant to stick with the deal, but hoped to reap substantial benefit from it. She'd gone to Grandmother, furious at being sold to a bunch of northern barbarians--only to find the old woman gleefully imagining the wealth that would accrue as a result of the union. "Go, child. You'll bring us fortune." "Go?" Pearl had demanded, flinging her arms out. "He should come here\" The old woman had shaken her head. "Up north, they trace descent through the man. A woman who marries goes to the man's village. To us, it was worth all that copper to send you there. Think, girl. With that copper, we can Trade all along the coast. For each piece of copper plate, the coastal people will fill a canoe with conch shell. Those loads of shell will be following you upriver as soon as we can get them." "But, Grandmotherv The old woman had studied her from under half-lowered lids. "But what? Pearl, who will you marry here? You've been of age for four years! Men smile at the mention of your name. They respect you, like you. But marry you? That's a different thing. What man wants to come here, sire a child in you, and have you leave him in the clan house to raise the infant by himself while you chase around wrestling alligators and teasing water moccasins?" "But to send me off into the north--" "You have a duty to the clan--and I wouldn't want to waste you on some backward swamp hunter. Who, after all, is about the only imaginable prospect for you." She'd shaken her head. "No, girl. This is better. We all serve the clan. That is the lot of women. Responsibility. The Mysterious One made men to be irresponsible, to play through life without a care. But a woman must carry out her duties to Jier people. Bearers and maintainers. When the Mysterious One made the world, that is how he fashioned us." A withered hand had risen, shooing Pearl away. "Now, I have spoken." As Pearl stood to leave, Grandmother absentmindedly fingered the new copper bracelet on her thin brown wrist. And a beautifully carved effigy pipe lay beside the fire among Grandmother's things--the ones that would be laid into her burial mound when she and Grandfather died. Pearl's anger had flared, and it continued to smolder like a buried ember. As she stared at the flat brown river ahead, she wondered: Would I have been so different? Wouldn't I want to take exotic items with me when I journey to the Land of the Ancestors? Within two tens of days, as soon as Trade goods, wedding gifts, and provisions had been collected, she had mustered all the dignity she possessed and settled herself in the Khota canoe. She'd considered running away; no one would have been able to catch her. But to have done so would have shamed her family and stained the reputation of her clan for the foreseeable future. With hollow eyes, she watched the muddy bank sliding past and stared at the huge oak trees that rose in spreading majesty beyond the waving grasses. Tumbled clouds, shot through with sunlight, patched the hazy sky. Pearl rubbed her face where the spray had dampened her smooth skin. This was going to be no good. Uncomfortably, she shifted on the coarse fabric bag upon which she sat and wished it were filled with anything but seed corn. Otter stood in the rain watching his grandmother, Yellow Reed, hobble up the path toward the clan house. The old woman clung to Blue Jar's arm, placing each step carefully on the slick mud. The cold wind gusted, driving waves onto the shore to slap against Wave Dancer as the big canoe lay canted on the bank. With the help of five of his cousins, Otter managed to haul the heavy Trading canoe up on the mud bank, and together they turned it over, leaving it to rest on logs embedded in the bank. Rain continued to fall in bitterly cold sheets from the galena smeared sky. Water had puddled on the silty sand, flecked here and there by charcoal from the bonfires they lit for night fishing. Angular fragments of pottery from the inevitable broken pot stuck out at odd angles, or had been mashed flat into the mud. The drying racks--spindly constructions of slim poles-- perched like skeletal storks just above the spring flood line. In fall, those racks had bowed under a burden of fish, turtles, ducks, and geese. Now they looked ghostly and forlorn, mocking those warm autumn days when people had laughed, fed the fires, and Sang while brightly colored leaves tumbled down from the bluffs above. Beneath the racks, long fire pits had been dug, where hickory and other hard woods were used to smoke the catch. Now the pits gaped like empty mouths that drooled black stains across the ground as the runoff carried ash down the slope. The last of the White Shell canoes had landed just downstream from Otter and his party. His cousins called and waved from where they pulled their canoe up onto the beach--then hurried up the path to the clan ground with its earthen mound, temples, and storehouses. "Let's go get warm!" Jay Bird cried, hugging muscular arms to his wet coat. He squinted against the pelting rain, his wide mouth pressed into a thin-lipped grimace that made his broad face look oddly flat. Droplets of water had beaded in his thick black hair, now pulled tightly into two braids. "Go on!" Otter pointed to the trail that led up past the drying racks. Shielding his eyes against the slushy rain, he could see that Grandmother's party had already reached the top. Otter hesitated, running fingers down Wave Dancer's curved hull. Too much moss. No wonder she'd felt sluggish on the way up from the Alligator villages. The swamps to the south tended to grow moss on anything-- even on the turtles and alligators. The only place worse was the Southern Ocean itself. There the Traders fought a constant battle with, barnacles, and with saltwater worms that ate holes in their vessels' wooden hulls. With the touch of a lover, Otter caressed the thinning bow. His soul had gone into building the big Trading canoe. For an entire summer, he and Uncle had searched the forests for the right bald cypress. Bald cypress was a durable wood that resisted rot and splitting; a well-made canoe crafted from the heartwood would last through a man's lifetime, provided that he cared for it. When they had found the right tree--a towering monster Otter had said the appropriate prayers and begun the arduous task of felling the swamp giant. To kill the tree, he'd ringed it, using a hafted adze to chip away the gray bark and expose the wood. Next, because the tree stood in a backwater swamp, he'd built a platform of mud and brush around the base of the tree to support his fires. Then he'd burned the ringed area, making sure the flames ate deeply into the green wood. He'd returned in late fall to find the huge tree dead and partially desiccated. For days, he'd alternately burned and chopped at the base of the trunk, working around it like a beaver. When the tree finally cracked with a thunderous roar and teetered in the breeze, he'd whooped and jumped. The giant seemed to hang for a moment, as if in disbelief that it could reach in any direction but the eternal sky. Slowly it had gathered speed, crashing down and smashing its lesser rivals before smacking the water so hard that it sent white breakers rolling. Then came the task of limbing the giant. Afterward, with help from his kin, he'd paddled the thick trunk out of the swamp, into the river channel, and onto White Shell territory. Through fall, winter, and spring, he worked, using fire, ground-stone adzes, and hafted chert bifaces to hollow out the interior of the canoe and shape the hull. Under his hands, she'd slimmed--a sort of oversized gar-- sleek, fast, and agile. Despite the extra effort, he shaped the high prow to withstand rough water and worked it into the shape of a fox's head so she could spot trouble and be clever enough to avoid it. To smooth the hull, he used blocks of coarse-grained sandstone. He kept the hull lines straight with cords for guidelines, and listened as Uncle advised him on the proper shape so the heavy canoe would plane the water just right when ten strong men were paddling against the current. Above the waterline, he'd carved the clan totems: faces of the ancestors and images of Spirit Animals like Many Colored Crow, Spider, Water Serpent, and Snapping Turtle. These he painted, using the brightest colors. With each stage of progress, he ritually poured river water over the wood to ensure that the Power of the Father Water soaked into the grain along with his own sweat, and yes, more than a little blood, too. His soul had joined with that of the wood. He'd felt the canoe's spirit taking form, growing under his hands. He'd sensed the essence of her spirit and named her Wave Dancer, from the way she took to the water, riding high and skipping across the chop. Finished, she lay pale and sleek, with a beam wide enough that two big men could sit side by side, and long enough that four men could lie head to toe. Fully loaded, she could carry as much as fifteen strong men could manage in the stoutest of packs. As the rain trickled down his face, he stroked the polished wood. Perhaps if he'd loved Wave Dancer less, Red Moccasins might have loved him more. He should have suffered a pang of guilt at that secret knowledge, and it did sadden him. But if only she could have experienced the splendor of the river, perhaps she would have learned to love Wave Dancer and the Father Water as he did. With a critical eye, he glanced down the keel, a strip of oak fastened to the centerline of the hull by means of wooden pegs that had swollen to fit tightly. That trick he'd learned from the saltwater Traders, who carried tobacco, colored feathers, and other goods up from the south. With such a keel, a canoe worked better against the wind and held a truer course. On the other hand, the keel made crabbing against a current considerably more difficult, and sometimes, in fast water, treacherous. "Tomorrow we'll see about this moss. Wave Dancer. We'll be gone soon, girl." He stared along the curving bank. "Northward, taking the shells and feathers upriver. Maybe we'll search out more copper this time ... or silver. Pan pipes are in demand in the south. They don't weigh much, and we can get many times their weight in conch shell, tobacco, and sharks' teeth." He gave the pointed bow one last pat, then wound his way through the other beached canoes before following the muddy path upward. The White Shell had placed their clan house on the high terrace overlooking the Father Water. According to the stories, Old White Shell had been the leader when the people traveled here from the east. It was here that Many Colored Crow appeared in the Elder's Dreams. White Shell had been both a valiant warrior and a pious member of the Star Society. As a result, he gave orders to his daughters that they bury him in a tomb--as Many Colored Crow decreed--and cover it with earth. Since that time, two layers of soil had been added to the burial mound, with Yellow Reed's grandmother and mother buried there along with their brothers. That mound looked somber in the slanting rain, the sloped sides tawny with flattened grass. Beyond the clan grounds, irregular fields had been cleared from the vine-thick tangle of oak, hickory, and beech. The fields waited, frozen and still; the stubble of last year's knotweed and goosefoot stalks canted this way and that, yellowed and broken. Nearly a third of the fields were grown over with weeds and grass, shot through with slim shoots of newly sprouted trees. These fallow lands would be burned after the next dry spell, and their soil hoed before being replanted in sunflower, amaranth, bottle gourd, and squash. The White Shell, like most of the farming peoples Otter knew, lived in isolated houses, dispersed over the clan territory. Each household tended its own fields and--after obtaining approval from the Elders--collected the forest bounty within the clan's territory. Large storage pits were excavated into the soil and lined with grass. Bark coverings kept them dry, and often half shelters were used to protect them from the elements. Down along the floodplains of the tributaries for a two-day canoe trip up and down the river, similar fields had been cleared for maygrass, tobacco, and little barley. In selected marshes, cane and cattail stands were groomed. Cane provided dart shafts, flooring, and drill stems. Cattail roots were eaten along with the pods, and the leaves were used for matting. Hickory, acorns, walnuts, wild grape, hackberry, sugarberry, wild plums, raspberries, and more, reflected the bounty of forest and river. Only important structures had been built here, near the mound: the clan house, a large, oblong building with a bowed roof of thatch; a charnel hut--empty for the moment--built of logs, then roofed with bark-and-cane matting, which was also hung inside for walls; and several storehouses, including the one that now sheltered Otter's Trade goods. Around the periphery lay the lineage houses, where cousins, or cousins' cousins, stayed during the ceremonies, crafting offerings and conducting family business. As Otter watched, smudges of smoke rose from the peaked roofs of these houses, indicating that fires burned within. Few would be venturing back to their farmsteads on this stormy day. To build the lineage houses, families had sunk digging sticks into the fertile soil to carve out holes before setting poles as thick as a man's arm. Green branches, stripped of leaves, had been woven between the poles to stiffen the walls, then shocks of grass had been carefully tied in place. Some roofs had been made from sections of bark stripped from ringed trees, while others used grass thatch collected from the flats around the creeks. Otter slogged his way through the mud toward an opening in the low wall--an earthen embankment as high as his chest-- that surrounded the clan grounds. Prior to construction, a peg had been driven into the ground immediately in front of the clan house. A strong cord, nearly a dart's cast in length, had been tied off from the peg. With it, a perfect circle had ' scribed around the entire complex. Breaks in the wall marked the locations where the sun could be seen rising and setting on the sacred days. He paused, looked back across the swollen river. From this height, the Tall Cane clan grounds were barely visible, only a dark swath situated in a wreath of blue smoke curtained by rain. Four Kills would be learning his new life now, familiarizing himself with one-time friends who had become relatives. From the moment of his marriage, his relationship with his mother in-law had changed forever. Gone was the old joking and sparring that had amused them by the hour. Now, Four Kills would studiously avoid her. He would refuse to meet her eyes, and never speak directly to her. Even her possessions would be shunned. Any communication between them would be accomplished through intermediaries. Such was the way of the people. By avoiding one's mother- in-law, domestic tranquillity could be maintained. And if a man really became fond of his wife's mother, he could work like a winter-wary squirrel and buy the right to talk directly to her. It would be like Four Kills to do exactly that. Otter muttered the ritual greeting to the ancestors who prowled the grounds, then let out a wavering whistle as he started forward. Catcher--his shaggy ., white, and tan dog--appeared, charging from the storeroom. Otter caught the animal in mid-jump and suffered through the exuberant greeting of wiggles, licks, and whines. "Did you guard the storehouse? Make sure the pack rats didn't get in and piss on the tobacco? No thieves stole our conch shell?" Catcher yipped and squirmed, pawing at him with muddy feet. The dog's thick coat was silky black over most of his body, the bib and collar white, with tan trim on the legs, muzzle, and eyebrows. A good Trader's dog knew his duty to the packs and goods that meant livelihood and prosperity. He would guard his packs to the death, making sure that no pests, four-footed, two footed, or winged, bothered the goods. Catcher was one of the finest dogs Otter had ever known. For six years now, he and Otter had traveled the length and breadth of the rivers, even going down among the sandy lagoons in the Land of the Manatees to Trade with the people who lived there. Otter scratched the floppy ears, until Catcher's wiggling nose sought out the strip of fried turtle meat Otter had hidden in his belt pouch. "What's this? Ah! Yes, a bit of feast from the wedding, isn't it?" He reached in and plucked the tidbit from the pouch. Catcher trembled with anticipation, his tail lashing the rain. Delighted brown eyes studied the bit of meat, and the ears pricked. "You sit. That's it. Now ... wait." Otter placed the brown strip of meat on the top of Catcher's pointed nose. The dog's tail wagged enthusiastically, swiping an arc through the mud. Catcher's eyes started to cross as he tried to focus on the treat tormenting his quivering nose. "Okay!" Otter clapped his hands. Catcher made a quick movement of his head, and the jaws snapped loudly in the blur. The turtle meat vanished. Catcher exploded into happy jumps and circled Otter with pattering feet. "Good work!" Otter praised as he wrestled with the dog. "You'd better be just as quick with a thief's fingers!" "Hey!" Jay Bird called from the doorway to the clan house. "Grandmother wants you to get in here. Everyone's waiting on you!" "I'll be right there! Let me check my packs." With Catcher dancing beside him. Otter hurried to the storehouse along the western curve of the embankment. The round building sat on raised posts. The walls had been made from split cane laced together with cordage. Shocks of grass thatch effectively shed the rain. The structure protected his goods from sun and storm, and the raised floor discouraged mildew and fungus. His packs remained in the carefully arranged pile he'd left them in. All appeared secure. Catcher watched with serious brown eyes, his tail slapping back and forth in slow arcs that slung mud this way and that. Otter smiled, knowing that expression: anticipation of the moment when Otter would begin carrying his packs back down to the river--a sign that they'd be off again. "Catcher? You guard the packs, now. All right?" Catcher made a grumbling sound and scampered up the pole ladder to settle himself on the packs in the doorway. He snorted a sigh, hee'dless of the water and mud that dripped on the brightly painted fabric of the packs. Otter raised an eyebrow, gave it up as a lost cause, and turned his steps toward the big clan house. The clan house served as a meeting place as well as sleeping quarters for visitors to the clan grounds. As leader of the clan, Yellow Reed did little in the way of manual labor. Her needs were supplied by her descendants. The structure was square but had rounded corners. The interior measured twenty paces long and fifteen across and had been divided into three rooms by cattail matting. A fabric hanging kept the storm from blowing in through the south-facing doorway. Otter paused, wishing he could simply slip away and nurse his heart. If only he could take some time to think about Red Moccasins and Four Kills. To think about himself. That practical side of his nature could wrap itself around the swelling sense of loss and slowly squeeze it back into nothingness. He could reorder his life the way a shaman ordered the bones before a ceremony. He could put his soul back in harmony. Resigned, Otter ducked through the low doorway. Foui From where I soar. I can look down on a green land that gives way to incredibly blue water. A crescent of white beach, the shoreline undercut by waves, lances off toward the horizon on the west. Clouds, a piled magnificence of fluff, fill the sky, dazzled by the high, blazing orb of the sun. "There," the voice tells me. "Just out from shore. Do you see. Green Spider?" I tuck my raven's wings and drop like a hunting falcon until I can make out the canoe, a beautiful craft with a fox-head prow rising above the water. Three men and a woman paddle the boat. "Those are my people!" I cry in delight. "Yes. And if you look to the east, across the land ... " I have to twist in the air to see, arching gracefully away from the huge lake, crossing endless forest. At this height, the leaf canopy billows like small green clouds. "I see," I answer. "The woman -and her daughter. Yes, and there's the sack on her back! So. It is as you said, Many Colored Crow. Yes, at last I understand. I know the way now and can--" Hard hands grab me from nothingness. Fingers work along my muscles, squeezing, prodding, massaging. I smell flower scented hickory oil. In terror, I flip over in the air and wheel around, choking out, "Who are you?" But the hands are so Powerful. They seize me, rip me from my journey through the vast blue sky and hurl me downward like a blazing meteor. And from somewhere, somewhere far below, I hear the faint voices of people I know ... "... time to lay him in his tomb.'Poor boy. How could Power have let him die so young?" I smell fire, hear the Songs my people Sing for the Dead ... The Holy Road had been built straight south from Starsky to the valley of the Moonshell. According to the legends, it had begun as a High Head Trading trail that climbed up over the divide from the Flying Squirrel valley and wound through the wooded hillocks before following one of the creeks to the Moonshell River. Over the years, the High Heads had refined the route as Trade in exotic goods increased. Despite the distance, the trip could still be made on foot in less time than it would take to paddle a canoe down the Flying Squirrel to the Serpent River, thence downstream to the mouth of the Moonshell and back up. Generations ago, as the Flat Pipe peoples migrated from their traditional grounds in the hills, they had absorbed the High Head obsession with stars and earthworks. Perhaps, as a young people, their vigor had led them to improve on things the High Heads taught them. Or perhaps the giant monuments resulted from the Sacred Societies, whose membership crossed clan lines. Within the secret walls of the societies, the Elders studied the path of the stars, the ways of the plants and animals, and the arts to which each society laid claim. A young person's vision, as well as his or her predisposition, would incline him or her to apply to one of the societies. After years of observing the rituals and studying at the feet of the Elders, the youth would memorize the ways of the masters. The Weavers' Society taught the arts of the loom, textiles, and dyes. The Potters' Society ingrained the ways of finding clay, mixing the right temper, incising designs, painting, and firing. Stoneworkers learned to drill, carve, and polish. Healers had their own very small society, where the Powers of plants, colors, and rituals were instilled and propagated. The influential Warriors' Society trained for the defense of various clan territories and imparted the techniques of warfare. But the greatest of all was the Star Society, which watched and charted the heavens, and next to it, the engineers, who recreated their observations on earth. The engineers coordinated the building of the great earthworks, each a reflection of the sacred patterns in the heavens. At Starsky, all of the major earthworks served specific functions in the grand master plan. The Great Circle, along with its central bird mound, charted the rising moon at its highest point on the northeastern horizon. The linear embankments charted the rising and setting of the solstice and equinox sun. The observatory, in the western end of the great Octagon, faced the point on the horizon where the summer-solstice sun rose. From the High Heads, the people had incorporated the Circle, often intermixing it with the square design of their own heritage. The Circle, so the legend said, represented the sky, and the Square the earth and its four corners. Employing sticks and strings, the alignments were laid out by engineers. Measurements were kept exact by using knots in the string to mark certain distances. Courses of stone would be placed to check the calculations, and if in error, could be adjusted before the societies directed the actual construction of the earthworks during the midsummer ceremonies. At that time, people from the surrounding clans would come, their harvest of maygrass and marsh elder finished. For the two weeks around the solstice, men, women, and children would excavate with digging sticks, loading fresh earth into baskets and piling it on the stone courses. Depending on the purpose of the earthwork, the society leaders insisted on certain kinds of soil, such as clay of the right color. Everything was planned to the last detail Year by year, the work proceeded, the knowledge passed from generation to generation within the society. Meanwhile, other societies managed the grounds, pruning back the ever eager forest saplings that rooted in the newly disturbed soil. The Holy Road had been laid out thus, by line of sight, from tautly stretched string to tautly stretched string. From the eastern entrance to the Octagon, the route ran south, curving around hillsides and leading to the major clan grounds at Sun Mounds. Star Shell puffed a cold breath, beating her arms against her sides to warm herself. Though similar roads connected the Flat Pipe Clans with each of the major population centers, none were as grand as the Holy Road. Behind her, the diminutive Tall Man followed in his odd, rolling gait. He carried two packs. The first, and the smaller of the two, was slung crossways to hang under his right arm. It was crafted of finely tanned leather and had been decorated with a wolf motif. From the way it bulged, it seemed to contain lots of odds and ends. The second pack mounded on the dwarf's back like a shapeless bundle--a soft thing that he used as a pillow when they stopped. This was made of fabric, beautifully dyed and woven with geometrical patterns. To Star Shell's surprise, the wizened Magician made good time, considering his age and the shortness of his bowed legs. But from the expression on his worn face, the journey was exacting a heavy toll. They had few cares for shelter, for a different clan occupied each little valley they entered. Travelers, especially Traders, were always welcome, given a hot meal and a place to stay in a warm clan house. "It's not far," Tall Man puffed as he looked up at the darkening sky. "We're in the Hackberry clan country. The clan house is at the bottom of the valley." Star Shell glanced up at the brooding sky. Flakes of snow fell, drifting idly to the white ground. "Why did you come?" she asked. "You will need me." "But you won't tell me why?" "Young Star Shell, there are times when a person shouldn't ask too many questions. I worry about these Flat Pipe people. They must measure and study everything. I've heard the ghosts whispering among themselves. They wonder and marvel at the things men are doing." "Maybe that's the beauty of being dead. You can watch without worrying." He made a snuffling sound. "And what makes you think ghosts are free from worry? Mica Bird's grandfather is harassing Mica Bird for just that reason. He knows the Power of the Mask. It wasn't until the Power abandoned him that he really understood its strength." "You sound as if you pity him." The Magician's little feet crunched in the snow. "I knew him. A bright and ambitious young man. He changed--and never realized it until he took the Mask back to the mountain." "I still have trouble understanding this. Why didn't the High Heads--why didn't you go and reclaim the Mask?" Tall Man walked in silence for a moment. "Sacred objects don't belong to a person. They belong to themselves. People only care for them. Power fills them. True, one of my ancestors made the Mask in the first place. Think of it not as an article of adornment, but rather as a house. Many Colored Crow's Spirit moved into it, that's all. Once that happened, it wasn't just wood and feathers anymore." She shook her head. "It makes no sense! You tell me that Many Colored Crow is really this Raven Hunter. Many Colored Crow did good things! He came into this world and told people how to care for their ancestors. He rid us of the ghosts that were haunting people. Now you tell me he's wicked." "Not wicked, young Star Shell. The world balances between opposites. Can you have life without death? Happiness without sorrow? Would you have appetite without starvation? Would you have mice without hawks? Deer without lions? No! It's all a balance. If night never fell, the fireflies would never shine. Were it not for winter, the fields would never replenish themselves. The stars would never gleam unless darkness cloaked the heavens." She trudged on, saying nothing. The Magician raised his short arms. "The world is locked together like fingers from both hands, always pulling and struggling. When the High Heads grew complacent and slothful, someone made the Mask. Humans, and the Spirits, too, need that element of competition. Unless you periodically burn an old forest, a new one never grows. Fire and shadow. Always shifting, changing." She shook her head in frustration. Tall Man lowered his arms. "The point of all this is that Raven Hunter's Mask is becoming too Powerful. I don't know why. Perhaps it sucks some of a person's Power into itself when it's worn--like a tick under the skin. Whatever it's done, it sows discord. Discord makes people uncomfortable. Once they are uncomfortable, they work to change the situation." "I don't see what's wrong with a little harmony." "Nothing. Nothing at all. But if all we did was sit around in harmony, what would get done? Think about the clans. They constantly bicker and compete. No matter how fertile a field is, it will grow goosefoot for only so long. Then it ceases to produce healthy plants. Balance is the key. You must have enough harmony to provide security, and enough trouble to keep things moving." Star Shell glanced up at the hillsides and the winter-bare trees above the pristine snow. Here and there, fields had been cleared, and she could see a lonely farmstead on one of the terraces. The place looked abandoned. The people had no doubt packed up what was left of their harvest and journeyed to a relative's holdings, where they could socialize the long winter nights away. That's what winter was for: telling stories, working on weavings, and gossiping with friends. She'd hoped for that once. Now, instead, she struggled along in the cold, her visions of happiness dashed. She hadn't even found time to mourn for her mother. How could things have turned so wretched? What had she done to deserve this? She gave the Magician a sidelong glance. "You talk a lot, but you haven't told me very much. About the future, I mean." "The future?" He clucked to himself. "Do you think knowing the future would make you feel better? What would you say if I told you that tomorrow you would fall through the ice on a river crossing? What if I told you that your body would never be found and that your ghost would spend forever down there in the mud, lost and alone? Would that make you feel better?" "I'd turn right around and head back to Starsky City and my father's house." "That's what I thought. You don't really want to know the future. No one does." "But you seem to know, and it doesn't slow you down. When we reach Sun Mounds and face Mica Bird and the Mask, it won't be pleasant for you." "No," he admitted heavily. "I won't enjoy any of it. But you must understand, I don't know how things will turn out in the end. I only know what appears probable. Nevertheless, I have accepted certain responsibilities in this matter." "But why, Tall Man? This is very dangerous. What business is it of yours?" "Suffering is the business of every human being, Star Shell. If one has the courage, one can save other people from a great deal of pain. That makes it worth the risk, doesn't it?" "I ... I don't Know." She blinked thoughtfully. "Can't you just give me a hint? What are we walking into? He isn't going to kill us, is he?" Tall Man sighed. "Very well, I'll let you know this. I promise that you won't die at his hands. But when we arrive at Sun Mounds, you will begin the most horrible days of your life." She could see the clan house now, a brown lump in the snowy flats on the terrace beside the small creek. Two more days and they would arrive at Sun Mounds. What did that mean for her? For her daughter? Would she ever again see a smile on Silver Water's face? Or was she condemning her daughter to a life of misery? "I just hope you're wrong, Tall Man." "So do I." But he didn't sound encouraging. Otter stepped into warm dampness as he entered the White Shell clan house. The humid air smelled of spiced food, wood smoke, and wet clothing; the sweet pungency of tobacco permeated the whole. A blazing fire crackled in the central hearth, and people had already settled on the benches that lined the walls, or found spots on the crowded floor. Two of Blue Jar's daughters, Clay Bowl and Tea) Wing, tended the earth oven, wrapping patties of goosefoot-and-knotweed flour in leaves before dropping them onto the glowing cooking clays. More cooking clays heated in the roaring flames of the central hearth and would be placed over the top of the patties. Water would be sprinkled onto the clay cubes to explode into steam. Layers of hot clays, patties, and more clays would be alternated until the oven was filled. The contents would then steam and roast for several hours, and the warm hearth would do double duty to heat the house. Otter took a quick inventory as he shrugged out of his soggy foxhide coat. Not much had changed since last fall. One of the cattail mats that divided the three rooms of the clan house was new. Clusters of gourds still hung from the roof. Most of them were full of seeds that Grandmother used in curing or cooking, or both. Others held leaves, flowers, pollen, and mineral powders for dying textiles in different colors. Net Sags of nuts, dried raspberries, sugarberries, and plums hung near the doorway. Strings of dried onions had been tied together with cordage and dangled like shrunken white beads. Soot had coated most of the thatch, roof poles, and cord bindings. The constant smoking of the ceiling kept rot and fungus to a minimum and reduced the number of spiders and insects that lived in the roofing. The cane walls had been painted in bright, geometric designs --the same as those the women wove into their fine fabrics. The lightning patterns, chevrons, and triangles identified the work of the White Shell Clan, just as other clans used designs peculiar to themselves. The clan leaders had settled themselves on the floor in the back of the room. Blue Jar, Otter's mother, rested on a reed mat beside the fabric cushion where Grandmother would sit. Round Seed and Red Dye, Otter's aunts, sat in their places to the right of Grandmother's cushion. Many Turtles, Otter's tall, muscular father, sat behind Blue Jar. The wind and sun had already begun to weather his face into walnut-brown leather. Those clear eyes had fastened themselves on Otter, probing, knowing. Heavy Rock, Otter's uncle, sat in his place behind Round Seed. A chubby man with a bland face, he had amusement lurking in his heavy-lidded eyes. He knew every hole where the fish settled and could track a wary puma across bare stone. Beside him sat cousin Jay Bird, Round Seed's son. Along with Aunt Red Dye and her husband, Banded Bird, these were the immediate family, the real power within the clan. More cousins, including Six Shell, Little Wart, and Three Herons, with their families, had jammed themselves in around the walls. People of the Ukes 91 "At last!" Grandmother cried as she stepped through the low fabric-hung doorway in the divider. "Satisfied with the rain, Grandson? You spent enough time standing out in it to sprout." Otter gave her a crooked grin that he hoped would hide his feelings. "I had to attend to my packs." She nodded, fully aware of his sham. On age-pained legs, she moved to the center of the room, stepping around respectful relatives. Taking Blue Jar's hand, she eased herself down onto the pillow stuffed with cattail down. Her bones crackled in competition with the fire. Grandmother looked around as her bony fingers smoothed the tightly woven fabric of her red-and-yellow dress into planes over her lap. As her bright eyes sought out each individual, she inclined her head slightly, her toothless mouth puckering in the wealth of wrinkles. The way her hands worked on the fabric of the dress reminded Otter of a crow's taloned feet, dark with the knowledge and essence of the Dead. Grandmother waited patiently as Clay Bowl and Teal Wing dropped the last of the leaf-wrapped fish into the earth oven. Steam rolled up from the pit, carrying the aroma of roasting patties. ' When the girls had finished, Grandmother sniffed loudly and rubbed her fleshy nose; the action pulled her wrinkles this way and that. "Well ... " she began. "May the ancestors and Spirits wish us health and peace. May our crops grow tall and green, and our nets return full when they are cast into the rich waters. May the deer breed and produce fat twins who answer our pleas for meat. May the ducks, geese, and turkeys return to our waters, forests, and fields. May the Great Sun bless our growing plants and ripen our squash. May the blessings of this life and the next fall upon us. First Man, guide us, and ancestors, hear our voices and protect us from evil." Then the old woman raised her voice in Song, the usual Blessing of the Clan that Many Colored Crow had taught back in the beginning times. That duty taken care of, Grandmother reached into her belt pouch and brought forth a beautifully crafted stone pipe that Otter had traded for far up the Serpent River. The piece was carved from reddish-brown slate. The flat stem bore the labo- riously sculpted image of a falcon's head. She tamped a small twist of tobacco into'the bowl and nodded as Teal Wing brought her a glowing ember. Puffing, she blew smoke at the ceiling, at the ground, and then to the cardinal directions. She made a gesture, and the pipe was taken to Otter, who puffed and inhaled the sweet tobacco that he'd brought up from the south. Carefully, he exhaled in the sacred directions, then handed the pipe back to Grandmother. "Very well," the old woman said. "We've had a good marriage ceremony. The feasts were wonderful, the celebration superb. Yaupon was drunk by all, and our hearts, souls, and Songs were pure. May the union be as blessed by luck as it was by the gifts showered upon the happy couple." Her obsidian gaze drilled into Otter. "No matter what they might have cost the giver." To avoid the awkward pause that might have followed, Grandmother quickly stated: "Now, however, we finally have time to hear Otter. He has just- recently returned from the Alligator clan villages near the mouth of the river. He brings us shell, sacred yaupon to boil and drink, dried fish, bright feathers, and many other things. Tell us what you have heard on the river, Grandson, and what you suggest that we do with these wonderful gifts you've brought." Otter stepped to a spot across the fire from his grandmother, glanced around at his relatives, and lowered himself to a sitting position where everyone could see him. The firelight danced on his brightly dyed clothing, the heat causing the soaked fabric to steam. He laced his fingers together before him, his elbows on his knees. He would start at the beginning, as was good manners. "I followed the river downstream for four tens of days. When I reached the Alligator clan villages, I made shore and asked for Swamp Bear, the chief there. He greeted me as he always has, with warm friendship, much food, and a dry place to sleep. "For the next couple of weeks, I Traded the copper plate, fine fabrics, galena, pottery, and other goods the White Shell Clan allowed me to carry down river. In return, I got many wonderful shells, tobacco, raw yaupon, sharks' teeth, and many mission, I will take those things north to trade to the people up in the Copper Lands." Grandmother glanced around, then shrugged. "The clan will consider this request." She cocked her head. "What did you hear in the south, Otter? What are your words for us? What have you learned? What advice do you have about the coming year?" Otter took a moment to collect his thoughts. He had expected immediate permission to continue Trading. The request was a formality, since the Trade goods. technically belonged to the clan. "Grandmother, nothing is going to be as it has been. The river Trade is changing. You yourself have seen the increase in the number of canoes passing each year. The demand for Trade is growing. We need to give this change careful thought, and to consider our role in it." The old woman nodded. "We have suspected as much. Go on." "Let me tell you about something I heard. Swamp Bear told me that the people living at the mouth of the river, the ones who call themselves the Anhinga, met some Traders, young men from the Khota villages. It seems that these young men decided to take four canoes to the mouth of the Father Water to see if they could Trade with the peoples there. They brought the usual things, of course, but while they were there, they noticed a young girl known as the Pearl. She is a granddaughter of the clan leader ... the Anhinga are matrilineal. The Khota asked to marry her into the Khota Clan." Blue Jar leaned forward. "Haven't you told us in the past that the Khota are patrilineal?" "They are. The rumor is that this girl will go there, to the Khota, to marry Wolf of the Dead, the young war leader." Otter added bitterly, "I hope she enjoys his company." "She can have him," Grandmother said sourly. "Do the Anhinga know what they've committed their daughter to?" "I doubt it." The Anhinga might not know about the Khota, but the White Shell did. Several years back, rumors had circulated that the Khota had been responsible for the death of Otter's uncle. No one would speak Uncle's name now. He had died in violence, and the corpse had not been recovered to be properly cleansed, purified, and placed among the ancestors in the City of the Dead. Instead, the angry ghost still roamed abroad somewhere, committing mischief and mayhem. Mentioning Uncle's name might draw it to White Shell territory. Should that happen, disease, bad luck, crop failures, and death would follow. News of the atrocity had been particularly difficult for Otter; Uncle had been more to him than just his mother's older brother. Among the White Shell, as with most matrilineal people, Uncle had been responsible for Otter and Four Kill's education. Uncle had raised the boys, taught them, rewarded good behavior and punished them for bad. Many Turtles might have sired Blue Jar's children, but he had no responsibility for raising them other than offering advice every now and then. Many Turtles had enough on his hands with his own sister's children. Recognizing Otter's obsession with the river, Uncle first took him upriver as. a little boy. A famed Trader, Uncle had taught Otter the ways of the river and the peoples who lived on its shores. At the old man's knee, Otter had absorbed the skills of a Trader the way dry moss sucks up water. Otter himself had paid a stiff price more than once when passing the Khota lands. The Khota were relatively new to the Ilini River, having moved down from the north within the last ten tens of winters. Originally fierce and warlike, they'd driven their predecessors from the country, taken the women, and adopted many of the ways of those they conquered. Of all peoples, the Khota consistently proved the most troublesome; once they'd stolen an entire canoe-load of greenstone, galena, and steatite that Otter had laboriously paddled upriver. Traders generally tried to slip past the Khota villages at night. Those who tried to pass the villages in daytime were accosted, threatened, sometimes beaten--and always lightened of their loads. Traders categorized the Khota along with mosquitoes, ticks, water moccasins, bad storms, rough water, and other hazards of doing business. After all, the Khota created many fine artifacts, including effigy pipes, gorgets, and other goods that would bring fair profits up- or down river--provided one could survive the Trading process. Many Turtles muttered: "Perhaps this Pearl will enjoy our Trade goods when she arrives there. At least someone will get some good out of them besides the sneaky Khota." Grandmother watched Otter through thoughtful eyes. "What do you think it means for us ... this marriage?" Otter took a deep breath. "Trade is going to change over the coming years. The Khota hope to bypass most of the river Traders. They are planning on Trading directly for coastal goods." "Is it because so many Traders try to avoid them?" Round Seed asked. "I think so," Otter replied. "Even Traders new to the area do their best to sneak their goods through Khota territory. When the Khota openly killed the Serpent City Trader a couple of years ago, they lost a lot of Trade. Tension ran high on the river that year, and the Ilini villages above them threatened war if they ever did it again." "They threatened you, didn't they?" Grandmother retorted. "Perhaps it would be worth paying Black Skull and some of his warriors to travel with you." Otter chuckled. "It might at that, but what good will that do? Trade is not a matter of war. Making it so would offend Power, maybe turn it against us forever. If the Khota just weren't crazy ... well, everyone would be happier." "We do have an option," Many Turtles said quietly. "We could wait, watch for their canoes, steal from them the way they've stolen from us. Tall Cane Clan would stand with us. So would most of the villages along the Father Water." Mutters of assent rose from around the room. Grandmother stilled them with a raised hand. She studiously avoided glancing toward her son-in-law. "Someone might think that a good idea. But what would that gain us in the long term?" She paused. "As Otter said, they're crazy. Robbing their canoes might bring a whole flotilla down river--one full of warriors. We'll all join the ancestors one day; let's not rush to do so." "It is worth considering," Heavy Rock said from his position behind Round Seed. "A little respect can go a long way toward keeping Trade stable on the river." Grandmother steepled her hands. "Perhaps my daughter's husband should give this some thought: Canoes travel faster than word of mouth. The Khota could land a war party here before anyone was the wiser.' They could do a great deal of damage to us. War--no matter what the reasons for it--wouldn't be in our interest." She lowered her voice, her eyes gone misty, perhaps in memory of her murdered son. "Even with the Khota." Otter rubbed his hands together. "I agree. That the Khota have mounted a Trading expedition demonstrates that the nun> her of Traders bypassing their villages has begun to worry them. With normal people, I would expect them to apologize and learn from their past mistakes. With the Khota ... well, they're just lunatics." Grandmother nodded in sage agreement. "Very well, Otter. You said that Trade on the river is going to change. What do you advise that we do about it?" "Nothing, Grandmother. Like a flood in spring, you can't stop it." He steepled his fingers. "However, knowing that the flood is coming, you can prepare for it, and use it to better your fields. More and more Traders are going to pass here. Perhaps the White Shell Clan should consider ways to capture part of that Trade?" "Buim a net across the river?" Round Seed asked. "I don't think you need to go that far." Otter made a simple gesture. "Part of your work is already done. Traders have always been welcome here. Uncle began that tradition. Make them even more welcome. Perhaps a shelter should be built down at the canoe landing?" Heavy Rock stirred where he sat behind Round Seed. "Won't things disappear? I mean, these are strangers, people we don't know. They could be ... well, you know, untrustworthy." "Some will be," Otter agreed. "But I want you to consider this, Uncle. Traders depend on good will. Those who steal, or cause trouble, soon find themselves unwelcome--like the Khota. An unwelcome Trader does little Trading. And the rumors about him soon circulate. After all, a good Trader, like me, doesn't want a bad Trader to prosper. I'll tell everyone that What's-His Name isn't reliable, and that people should be wary about Trading with him. What's-His-Name will find few villages open to him after a couple of seasons." Grandmother patted her knees. "Not all problems can be avoided, and more good than bad would come from having Traders here. Traders" bring luck; you've always heard that, haven't you? Perhaps we should let it be known that a warm stew is always cooking at the landing." "That's a lot of effort." Blue Jar looked pensive as she scratched behind her ear. "You have to keep it hot so it doesn't spoil. Sometimes it can be weeks between visits by Traders. That's a lot of wood to collect, and someone must tend the fire all the time." She glanced slyly at Grandmother. "And my husband already has enough to do." Many Turtles laughed, sneaking a glance at Grandmother from the corner of his eye. "But you could lay a stack of firewood in the shelter," Red Dye suggested. "And hang bags of precooked patties from the walls. Maybe smoke them so the mold doesn't grow on them." "I think that just a hut would be enough," Otter said. "Traders would be more than willing to walk up the hill in search of something to eat. Not only that, they'd want to talk, to hear the news, and to sit around a cheerful fire with other people. Make them feel good, and welcome, and they'll be more likely to give you gifts." Blue Jar looked at her sister. "It might be worth it to make some heavy bags ... the sturdy kind Traders like to carry. And we might keep some extra pottery jars handy. You know, things that wear out or get broken. Things Traders need." Grandmother cocked her head thoughtfully. "This will be good for us. As we get more visitors, we'll learn. See what they need ... and do our best to fill that need." "I agree, Grandmother." Otter looked around, meeting his relatives' eyes. "If this is done correctly, you could lure most of the Traders to stop here. We are located at the right place on the river. The Deena villages are a day's travel to the north. Yellow Cliffs is a day to the south. Because of the bluff, the White Shell clan grounds are close to the river--not a long walk from where a Trader would have to leave his goods. This is a good place to stop." "We shall consider it," Grandmother stated, making a sign with her hand that the subject was closed for the moment. "What is the news here?" Otter resettled himself so the fire would dry his left side. "Something-happened over at the City of the Dead," Grandmother told him soberly. All eyes immediately turned on the old woman. "We're not sure what. A young man from the Broken Mussel Clan--his name was Four Yellow Feathers--passed through the day before the marriage. It appears that the Dreamer, Green Spider, is dead. Killed during the solstice." "What?" Many Turtles gasped, propriety forgotten as he stared wide-eyed at Grandmother. Otter stiffened, his heart skipping a beat. "Why didn't you say something?" Blue Jar demanded. Grandmother sat stolidly, her expression neutral as she continued. ' ' Four Yellow Feathers arrived just before we were to cross the river for the marriage. He saw me here--alone. I, of course, took him for some well-wisher sent by old" Willow Thong. Thought he came bearing greetings, or a gift. Instead, he sat there where you are, Otter, lowered his eyes and said that Green Spider was dead." She smacked her leathery, palms together. "We had a marriage to attend to, so I said nothing." "I still don't understand why you didn't tell me." Blue Jar's eyes flashed. "Why say anything?" Grandmother responded reasonably. "If he's dead, do you think worrying about it would bring him back? If it's a rumor ... why stir everyone up with it? Apparently, Four Yellow Feathers didn't feel it important enough to paddle across and inform the Tall Cane Clan. Time will tell if it's true or not." "Mother, in the future--" Grandmother raised her hand, commanding as always. "Red Moccasins and Four Kills had a wonderful ceremony. Had I started spouting rumors, everyone would have spent the time muttering dire prediction's and doing their best to turn the occasion into the end of the world." Otter slowly shook his head as Grandmother's probing stare bored into him. Green Spider dead? What did it mean? Many Turtles' lips quivered for a moment. "How ... how did he die? Does anyone know?" Only the popping of the fire broke the silence. Grandmother sighed, and for a moment she stared vacantly, seeing something in her head. She seemed to come to herself again, properly addressing the answer to Blue . instead of to Many Turtles. "According to the rumor, it happened on the winter solstice ... just at the noontime beginning of the Feast of the Dead. As the food was being laid out, a bolt of lightning struck the temple. Green Spider and the Clan Elders were there. Apparently Green Spider was seeking some sort of Power. The Clan Elders were watching over him. They missed the ceremonies, as a matter of fact. "The whole temple was burned to the ground. The four old men were scorched as they dragged Green Spider from the flames. Green Spider sat up, eyes wide, but saw no one, heard no one. He is reported to have shouted, ' are so beautiful! Yes ... yes ... I'm coming. Fly ... fly to the Spiral ... ' And then he fell over dead." "What does that mean?" Round Seed wondered. She had placed a hand over her mouth, her frightened eyes fixed on a point over the door. Grandmother cleared her throat in the familiar growl she used to bring people back to their senses. "How do I know? I told you, this is just what Four Yellow Feathers said." A stirring of unease sucked at Otter's soul like dark water around a snag. Five The evening fire crackled and spit, sending dancing sparks upward into the darkening sky. Pearl sat silently on the weathered gray trunk of a cottonwood. The river had borne the fallen giant down the winding channel, scrubbing the bark away with the same brutal efficiency that had snapped off the tree's branches and limbs. The wiles of current and fate had grounded the giant here, on the crest of a long sand spit that curled out into the murky brown river from the downstream end of a wooded island. Pearl pulled her blanket tight about her as she gazed across the fire toward the distant eastern bank. In the fading twilight, the river had gone black, roiling and twining in the darkness. Freedom lay there, beyond that surging rush. She could see the high prows of the canoes in the flickering orange light of the fire; the boats were pulled up on the beach like four weird teeth rising from the damp mud. Water slapped at their sterns, the sound mixing with the bell-like splash of waves on the shore. Beyond the clotted blackness of the eastern uplands, a red wolf sent an eerie call through the trees, only to be mocked by the plaintive hoo boo hoooo of a great horned owl. Pearl leaned closer to the popping fire to gather more of its warmth. The smell of hickory and sweet gum mixed as the breeze changed and blew warm smoke around her. She leaned back and tilted her head to one side to avoid the worst of the fumes. The blackness of the night weighed on her. "You all right?" Grizzly Tooth asked in thickly accented Trader talk as he approached and settled on his haunches. He braced his muscular arms loosely on his knees, his fingers dangling. Pearl nodded, glancing at him from the corner of her eye. Grizzly Tooth couldn't have been more than twenty summers, yet he claimed to have killed ten enemies in battle and to have traveled to a barren land in the far west where he killed a great silver bear. He looked the part of a warrior, his keen eyes gleaming alertly in a broad-boned face, his nose flat. No trace of humor betrayed itself in his firm mouth. He wore a deerhide shirt that reached to mid-thigh. The leather had been decorated with teeth, most of them human incisors, but there were fangs from bobcat, badger, and fox as well. Large copper ear spools had stretched his earlobes and glinted in the light. He had pulled his long black hair into a bun above his forehead and pinned it with a stiletto crafted from a deer's ulna. The grizzly-bear teeth--from which he drew his name--alternated with long brown claws on his necklace. From what she'd learned, Grizzly Tooth and her promised husband, Wolf of the Dead, had undergone some sort of ceremony that made them brothers where nature had failed. She glanced around, hating the dull ache in her soul. The rest of Grizzly Tooth's companions, young, strong, and muscular, either squatted or stood before the other fires, roasting fish, ducks, and a heron they had killed during the day. They laughed, sharing jokes in their guttural language. Periodically, they glanced at her, their black eyes speculative in the firelight. The Khota were an attractive people, lithe, tall, with broad faces and thin, hooked noses. They covered themselves with ornaments of copper, mica, and shell. For dress, they tended toward tailored hides or coarsely woven textiles that seemed more like matting than the finely woven fabrics Pearl was used to. During cold weather, they draped blankets or fur cloaks over their shoulders. Many used long thongs to lace hide or cloth to their bare legs, twining the laces in a net weave. Each of the young men carried an atlatl strung to his belt. Thus armed, the Khota were a most formidable party as they moved upriver. Pearl wondered about that. Why did they need forty able-bodied warriors, bristling with darts, to travel the river? Other Traders made the trip by themselves, or at most, in parties of less than ten, depending on the size of the canoes they had to muscle upstream. Who did the Khota fear? And why? She'd never paid much attention to stories about far-distant peoples. The uneasy thought had settled within her that it might be a serious deficiency in her education. That morning they had passed the confluence of the Western River. She'd been that far north before. But from there on, she had been seeing country new to her. The journey had taken on a different feeling: one of inevitability. What would it be like? How would she live with these people? What would this strange northland be like? The canoes would beach on some strange northern river, and the oddly dressed Khota would crowd around her, nudging, peering, grunting to each other as their stares invaded her. She'd have to walk among them like a curious trophy. Despite the numbing fear, she must act with all the pride and bearing of the Anhinga. How can I do that if they start poking, prodding? The very thought brought a chill to her. Would they resent this woman of the south coming among them? Surely a man as great as this Wolf of the Dead would have women who wanted him, perhaps even loved him. How would they deal with her arrival? Teasing? Testing her courage? Outright hatred? Pearl knotted her fists. She knew none of their customs. What if she offended their beliefs? Would they understand--or would they shun her for an intruder? Glancing at the warriors around her, she could remember no moment of sympathy. Of all of them, only Grizzly Tooth regarded her as anything more than a prize. She could read nothing but desire in the eyes of the others--and then only when Grizzly Tooth's attention was elsewhere. As the fire crackled, she studied the war leader from the corner of her eye. She was the only woman among four tens of men. Could he keep his young men under control? Or would Wolf of the Dead even care if his warriors decided to sate themselves within her? If you don't think about it. Pearl, maybe it won't happen. Despite the predatory stare Grizzly Tooth gave her, she forced herself to remember quiet mornings in the backswamps as the mist curled off still water and around the swollen boles of tupelos. She could see the dewdrops, gleaming like crystals on the hanging moss. The lilt of birdsong carried as Alligator floated, only his eyes and nostrils breaking the placid surface of the silky water. As she stared into the fire, memories of other fires in happier times were kindled. Faces formed, so finely etched in her memory. Brown eyes sparkled, and echoes of laughter broke bright from the lips of friends and family, only to vanish in the emptiness of her soul. I'm never going to see my people again. I'm headed into the unknown ... and I'm going to die horribly among the barbarians Black Skull dug his decorated -paddle into the sluggish water, driving the dugout canoe through the thin sheet of ice that crackled and shattered under the force of their passage. As the boat passed, fragments of ice tinkled and whispered against the hull. The V'ed bow wake washed over the crust, clearing the ice to expose wobbling white bubbles trapped beneath. The Deer River was bleak at this time of year. The thin dusting of snow that had fallen the night before now vanished in the brightening daylight. Mottled yellow-brown mats of fall leaves carpeted the ground under naked trees half-strangled by ropy masses of dormant vines. In the shadowed hillside fringes of woodland, light-starved saplings cast a chaotic pattern on the forest floor. Overhead, clots of fluffy white cloud scudded off to the northeast, driven by the relentless south wind. On the north-facing slopes, crusted snow lay blue-white in the shadows. Spears of ice clung to the shadowed limestone outcrops that peered through leaf mold and patchy, reddish-yellow sands. They've all lost their minds.1 Black Skull groused at himself. We're on a fool's errand! He craned his neck, studying the next bend. From his position in the war canoe's stem, he had to peer around three men. Two of them were Clan Elders, each dressed in their clan colors. And finally, up in the bow, he sat, bolt upright, head erect--facing, of all things, backwards! In spite of his irritation, a sudden need to shiver settled. in Black Skull's flesh--and it wasn't incited by the bracing morning air. Black Skull thrived on discipline and order; he had little time for foolishness. Foolishness in a warrior was a weakness, and no one could accuse Black Skull of weakness. As a child, he'd lived in weakness, and in fear. But Granduncle had shown him the way: the warrior's path. Through discipline and duty, Black Skull had destroyed his tormentor and overcome his weakness. As a warrior, he organized each day, conducted himself with honor and propriety as befitted one of his rank, observed the rituals and taboos of his War Spirits, and obsessed himself with training. And then lightning struck the temple and Black Skull's ordered life began to dissolve. I'm cursed with a lunatic ... on a lunatic's mission. To emphasize his wrath, he used his pointed war paddle to send the canoe flying forward. From the moment Green Spider had returned from the Dead, he'd been someone, something, different. The sober-eyed, quiet young man Black Skull had known--and moderately detested-- had been replaced by this curiously possessed caricature of that other Green Spider. What had happened to him while he'd been dead? What--or who--had he become? Black Skull's muscles locked for the briefest of instants as he remembered the horrified face of his mother, her glazed eyes glaring wide at him from the edge of death. Wet, hot blood had leaked down her face in web-like tracery. He tossed his head the way he would to fling water from his face and hair ... Or blood ... blood like hers ... tracing across the numbing skin. Snails left tracks like that blood ... tracks, the pathways of death ... and murder. He drove the memory away violently, like scattering a covey of quail. The fool had brought all this on--he and his insane babbling. Black Skull gazed around uneasily, peering into the silent maze of dark tree trunks, hearing the crystal sounds of water and ice. Power seemed" to hover in the air around them like an invisible haze--as it had from that fateful moment on the solstice when lightning speared from the sullen sky to destroy the temple. His mother's memory rarely intruded into Black Skull's dreams, let alone his waking hours. And now she'd returned to haunt him. The raving maniac in the bow had something to do with that. Supposedly, he'd been in the Land of the Dead. Talked to her perhaps? I ought to crack the idiot's head open. Black Skull unleashed all the strength in his muscular body, driving the paddle deep into the still water as he battered the canoe through another patch of ice. Imagine, dragging the Clan Elders, the most important people in the world, out into danger like this. It was all insanity! » Behind him, the second canoe, powered by the great warrior, Three Eagles, followed. It carried the other two Clan Elders. They sat like wooden stumps, wrapped in thick blankets woven of feather and cord. I warned them not to do this thing. They didn't listen to me. Dedication to duty had its failings. If anything happened to the Clan Elders, it would be Black Skull's fault. Yet this demented idiot with the sense of a raving jay had placed them all at risk. Black Skull cast a suspicious glance at Green Spider. The fool's vacant brown eyes rolled around in their sockets as if People of tfic Lakes 105 they were unhooked. He looked unkempt, his triangular face pale. That couldn't be Power. Black Skull remembered everything that had happened, and he used the memory to cover any trace of his mother--used it the way the clan used a new layer of earth to cover the bones of the Dead in a burial mound. Just before the lightning struck, Black Skull had been walking toward the temple. He'd felt the hair on his head begin to prickle, and his nerves had crackled like rubbed fox fur. The bolt had flashed brightly across the cloud-wrapped winter sky, cracking the bones of the world with its thunder. Frying white light -had split eerily, touching the flat-topped mound with one fork and splintering the roof of the temple with the other. For one incredulous moment, Black Skull had stood as firmly rooted as one of the old oaks. Then he'd run as he'd never run before. As he'd charged up, Black Skull had found the Clan Elders dragging Green Spider from the roaring nightmare. The look in their eyes would haunt him forever: sheer glassy-eyed terror. \with his callused hands, Black Skull had beaten the flames from the disoriented old men, shaking them one by one to return them to this world, demanding to know if they were all right. Somewhere in the horror of the moment, one of the Elders had bent down over Green Spider wailing, "He's dead!" An ominous silence had settled over the City of the Dead, to be broken only by the popping and snapping of the flames. The rest of that day had passed like a dream. Scattered images still swirled in Black Skull's memory: worried people running . in all directions; frantic pleas from cowering individuals with tear-streaked faces; others, mute, who stared up toward the heavens; a little girl lost in the panic, crying past the knotted fist she'd stuffed into her mouth as she ran through the forest of legs, searching for her mother; the wretched expression on Green Spider's dead face as they carried him to the Blood Clan charnel house. People began to slip away, many leaving their belongings on the ground as if tainted by the horrible event. More followed, until by nightfall, the City of the Dead had been all but abandoned. The Clan Elders remained, silent, their gazes fixed on Visions that lay outside this world. In spite of the remonstrations of friends, Healers, and concerned relatives, they'd barely responded, choosing to stay in the charnel hut with Green Spider's corpse. For three days, the grisly vigil continued as Green Spider's relatives trickled back to wash his body, paint it, and begin the ceremonies that would start him on the path to join his ancestors. What did one do with a man killed by Power? Normal people could lie around in the charnel house until the flesh fell off the body; then the bones could be painted before burial or cremation. Given the bizarre nature of Green Spider's death, his relatives --with the concurrence of the Clan Elders--had prepared a tomb. They'd dug out a grave and lined it with red clay. Logs were procured from the forest to lay across the tomb. This would be capped with a shallow covering of earth. It would do until a decision could be made on the final disposition of Green Spider's corpse. On the fourth day, as the morning sun broke the tree-covered horizon into a crystal-cold sky, they'd carried Green Spider to his tomb and laid him on the frozen red clay. When the logs were being placed across the top, Green Spider had suddenly sat bolt upright. Cries of amazement brought Black Skull on a dead run. He'd arrived as Green Spider took a deep breath and opened his eyes. It took several heartbeats before Green Spider focused and looked around at the shocked faces of the people. Then he smiled lazily and climbed out of the grave. I should have killed him then, Black Skull thought. I'd have saved us all a lot of trouble. Old woman Many Flowers had gone ashen, her eyes sliding back in her head before she tottered and fell over like a slab of bark. From that moment on,'Green Spider had acted strangely. He did things nonsensically--like a maniac. After he'd eaten, he'd claim he was hungry. When he was hungry, he'd say he was full. If a person told him to sit down, he'd stand up. Ask him to come, and he'd walk away. Tell him to go away, and he'd walk right up. When asked about it, he simply stated, "I'm fine. The rest of - you are going crazy." " Only the Clan Elders seemed to understand. They nodded knowingly and whispered among themselves. Then Green Spider had lifted a pointed finger and announced: "The time has come to stay here!" He'd looked around, his animated eyes going from face to face, marking each of the Clan Elders and finally pinning Black Skull with a look that nearly curled the warrior's hair. Green Spider cleared his throat. "Stay away from me, you cowardly Clan Elders. Black Skull, don't you dare come with me. Three Eagles, I don't want you either." Black Skull glanced over at his friend and sometimes rival. Three Eagles' eyes had gone round. Black Skull slowly took a step backward, his heart pounding like a ceremonial drum. He took another before Old Man Sun clamped a withered hand on his arm and muttered: "Stay where you are! He wants you for something." "But he just said--" "Shut up!" Black Skull froze, glaring hate at the imbecile everyone seemed to take so seriously. Green Spider pirouetted around in a little dance. "The last place I would want to go is to the White Shell Clan. There's nothing there for me! But then, you didn't hear that from my lips." To Black Skull's continued confusion, Old Man Sky nodded. "We will get the canoes ready." Black Skull shot a look at the old man. Had his senses gone the way of Green Spider's? The Dreamer had said he didn't want to go anywhere--and then denied it! The Elders made immediate preparations. Canoes were provisioned in great haste. "What are we doing?" Black Skull demanded with unaccustomed assertiveness when he caught Old Man North to one side. "He said he didn't want to go anywhere, let alone to White Shell territory." Old Man North looked at Black Skull through pitying eyes. "That's just where he wants to go." "That's insane! He's sick, addled, like a warrior hit in the head. He's not seeing things clearly." The look of pity intensified in the old man's eyes. "He's anything but crazy, warrior. He sees more clearly than all the rest of us." "But he's--" "Hush, warrior." The Clan Elder placed wrinkled fingers to Black Skull's lips. "I don't know what Green Spider is doing, but you, of all people, know your duty to the clan. You must do it now." Old Man North had hesitated, peering at Black Skull with unsettling intent. "To live at this time, to see this thing happen, is a marvelous gift. I have known you since you were a little boy. I can't tell you how to see, Black Skull. I'm not sure that you can. Will you bind yourself to your duty?.Will you do as your clan asks of you?1' "I know my duty. Upon my soul, I will do anything you order. But this is dangerous! You can't place yourselves at risk! If anything--" "Black Skull, you and Three Eagles will take me and the rest of the Clan Elders to the White Shell clan house. And you will do anything Green Spider asks of you. Obey, Black Skull, and perhaps you shall learn to see in the miraculous way he does." At that, the old man had walked away, his white breath hanging in the air behind him. And here they were, paddling down the half-frozen channel of the Deer River, headed for the Father Water, and then downstream toward the White Shell clan house. They were taking a terrible chance, exposing the Clan Elders this way. A sudden winter storm could freeze them; a canoe could capsize and one of the Elders could drown. Raiders might capture them. The dangers were too numerous to count. Black Skull winced. Why would Power hover around an idiot? And what had happened to Green Spider's soul while he'd been dead? Had the ghosts perpetrated some evil? Twisted him to some malignant purpose? If being dead made you into a fool. Black Skull wasn't sure he wanted any part of it. Even a brave man like Black Skull had to fear when the Dead rose from their tombs to walk this world again. But Green Spider had come back changed, so different. And I am bound to him? At least he would be until they arrived at the White Shell clan house. Then he'd be quit of this madness Green Spider had called down on the Clan Elders. And if Green Spider continued to place the Elders at risk, well, a warrior knew ways to do his duty. Black Skull looked down at the deadly war club that lay within easy reach of his strong right hand. Beneath the pointed stone war head, the copper spikes glowed eerily in the subdued light. The morning turned out a great deal more pleasant than Otter expected. Troubled dreams had marred his sleep. He'd dreamed that Red Moccasins had been his--a loving wife who accompanied him as he traveled the river. She had been at his side, dickering for a wealth of copper. He could still see her in the dream, a subtle intimacy in her eyes as she gave him that secret smile of conspiracy. In dreams, the woman you love is always perfect. He stood beside his overturned canoe, mindful of the sun beating down. Beyond the brown shoreline, the Father Water glinted a wondrous blue. The smell of the river seemed richer this morning, beckoning him to distant places. Otter inhaled; the aroma of mud, musky vegetation, and water seeped through his lungs and into his blood. He refused to focus his gaze across the river to where the gray haze of swamp cottonwood and the slight blue fog of smoke mixed over the Tall Cane clan grounds. Red Moccasins would be sitting happily beside Four Kills. Otter's imagination produced the laughter breaking from their lips, the sparkle of love reflected in their eyes. He could see their hands clasping warmly, memories circling around the passion they'd come to share as their bodies locked together under the sleeping robes and-- "Otter?" Grandmother's voice destroyed the tormenting thoughts. He blinked. Grandmother was tottering down from the drying racks, one hand gripping her gnarled, wooden walking stick. In the sunlight, her white hair gleamed with the purity of newly fallen snow. She wore a yellow-and-red dress decorated with black diamond shapes and lightning zigzags. The clear morning light accented the antiquity of her shriveled face. She stepped around Wave Dancer's, polished prow and thrust her head forward like a hunting heron as she ran thin fingers over the gleaming hull. "Waxing it?" she asked, squinting at the wood. "Yes, Grandmother. Too much moss had grown on her. I used chert flakes to scrape the moss off. After that, I used sandstone blocks to scrub her down." "Why wax? Some magic from the bees?" Otter rubbed his fingers together, feeling the film that caked them, slick and heavy on his skin. "No, Grandmother. Wax helps to preserve the wood. Feel how smooth she is? Some of the saltwater Traders say the boat will move better through the water. I can't swear it, but it seems to feel that way. Wave Dancer likes it. I can sense her approval." Grandmother walked past him and stopped at the shoreline. She made a grunting sound as she stabbed her walking stick into the lapping waves. They curled over the skid logs set into the landing and ignored her provocation. Then she balanced on her walking stick: an old heron peering over the sun-silvered waters. The breeze flapped the hem of her dress in slow rhythms. She looked timeless. Otter shifted from foot to foot, waiting. With a long exhalation, he released the tension and turned back to the boat. A white chunk of beeswax rested on the curve of hull next to the keel. Powered by a vigor he hadn't felt earlier, he rubbed the wax furiously across the wood, friction leaving pale smears on the hull. "She wasn't for you, you know," Grandmother called, still staring out at the river. "Your destiny was changed, Grandson. The river claimed you. The Water Spirit took you ... and then sent you back to us." Otter continued to wax the hull with powerful strokes. He couldn't even remember the event that had changed his life. According to the stories, it had been only a few moons after his birth. "That night," Grandmother continued as she stared across the river and back into time, "the storm blew up from the south. We were coming down from Deer River, from the City of the Dead after the summer solstice. How terrible it was. We were out on the river in the dark. Thunderbird flashed sticks of lightning across the sky and shook the whole world with his roaring. The waves rose high on the river, higher than a man stands on dry land." "That's when I fell overboard," Otter muttered. "Yes." Grandmother sighed, turning. She approached him with careful steps, her head slightly cocked as she studied him with bird-bright eyes. "We didn't know you'd fallen into the water. When Blue Jar realized what had happened, she screamed in terror, half crazy. Practically had to tie her up to keep her from jumping overboard herself." Otter braced himself on Wave Dancer and stared stupidly at his hand where his strong brown fingers had gouged holes in the wax. Grandmother sucked lined brown lips over pink gums as she nodded. "The rest of that trip, Blue Jar huddled in the canoe, clutching your brother to her chest. Yes, I remember so well. She had a vacant stare on her face. You would have thought she'd lost both of her boys instead of just one." "Is that why she always preferred Four Kills?" Grandmother stood silently, head down, darting the damp mud with her walking stick, perhaps ritually killing something in the past. "I think you've always frightened her. Everyone went out looking for your body, of course. No one expected to find an infant alive. No sooner had she come to accept the fact that you were dead than Uncle discovered you, your cradleboard caught in the driftwood just above the clan grounds." She let her gaze slip to the river. "Now, Grandson, do you wonder that she was afraid?" "No, I guess not. Who knew what sort of changeling I might have become." "You never could keep away from the river after that. Your brother would stay in the clan grounds, doing what boys do. But you ... if you vanished, your mother would panic, and Uncle would find you down here, fooling around in the water. Scold you, she might, but Blue Jar could never break you of your fascination with the river." "It's in my soul." The walking stick stabbed out its emphasis. "Of course it is. Only a fool would think otherwise." A light glinted in those black eyes. "And Red Moccasins is no fool." "Four Kills is better for her. A brave warrior, smart ... wise for his age. During that raid three years ago, he killed four of the enemy and earned his name. People already listen to him in councils." "I'm glad to hear those words from you. I'd half feared you'd grown jealous of your brother. Twins ... they make a person nervous. And you know the stories." "About First Man and his twin brother? If you'll recall, Many Colored Crow was that brother." "He was indeed." She appraised him from the corner of her eye. "The brother of the Dead, of the Darkness. How does it work out between you and Four Kills? Opposites crossed? If so, which of you is Light ... and which Dark?" Otter chuckled. "He is Light, Grandmother. And yes, I am the Dark one. Lost in the storm, bathed by lightning and thunder. Cast to the dark waves, I still float. But jealous?" He shook his head wistfully. "Not of my brother. I feel him--" he pressed his hand to his breast "--here, inside. He loves her with all of his heart, Grandmother. And she loves him." Her eyebrow lifted skeptically. "You must understand, Grandmother. He is me, what I might have been. No woman could turn me against Four Kills. A woman would have to turn me against myself first." "That's been known to happen," she said and raised a hand to shade her brow as she studied the rolling river. "Look at you. You can't wait to push your canoe back into the river, load her up, and paddle like a frantic rodent for the north. You'd think you had more in common with those strangers than you do with your own relatives." "You know better than that." Otter relinquished the wax and bent to pick up the thick folded square of nettle-and-milkweed 'fabric. Doubling it, he began the arduous job of buffing this last section. With powerful strokes, he worked the wax into the wood, seeing the pale streaks become clear, the rich grain of the wood leaping out at him. "But you can't stay, can you?" she insisted. "The thought of him and her ... just over there--" she pointed with her walking stick "--eats at you." "He is her husband. I have no part in it." "And that copper plate you gave them?" She snorted loudly. "Quite the gift. The clan forgives you such generosity with its wealth." Here it came. Menially girded for war, Otter bent his head to the side to meet those glinting eyes. "Not all of what I accumulate belongs to the clan!" "Indeed?" she asked mildly. "You belong to the clan--and, therefore, so does anything you own. Just as a woman's children, and her children's children, belong to the clan." A pause, then her voice dropped to emphasize the point. "And I told you the clan forgave you." Otter remained silent, continuing to wax his boat. "Besides," Grandmother granted, "the story of that gift will travel up and down the river. Such stories serve a purpose." "Are you always so crafty? Always seeking some advantage?" "Absolutely. I'm a Trader ... just like you. Ah, you see, Otter, we're not so different, you and I. Each of us seeks an advantage. You in your barter for goods, I in the accumulation of obligations, good will, and alliances for my clan and territory." "It's all Trade?" "What else would it be? Just because you're young, Otter, you're no wide-eyed innocent. You've seen more of people and places than most old men who've died and been burned to ashes. You know a great deal more than you ever let on." She made a twirling gesture with her bony hand. "So why don't you and I make a bargain--a Trade, if you will?" "And what would that be, Grandmother?" "If you give me honesty, I'll give you freedom." "I already have it, or are you threatening to take Wave Dancer away from me, along with all my copper plate?" "Yes, you have your precious freedom, or whatever it is that you think freedom is." She pointed the walking stick northward. "You could go up there. I'm sure there are clans along the Serpent River that would leap at the chance to adopt you into their ranks. Hmm? Give you your choice of wives, of fine houses and honors." She paused. "They'd be fools not to." "Yes, Grandmother, I suppose there are people who would take me." "Good." She bowed her head, frowning at the holes she'd poked into the mud with the walking stick. "I don't think the others understand what you've been trying to tell them. Our world is about to change. That thought worries me." "Don't judge them too harshly." Otter fingered a nick in the wood. "Not even the Traders really understand. They look at the rise in demand and think it's just good luck--or their own special Power." Grandmother finally said, "I'm an old woman. I need you, Otter. More than that, the clan needs you. Your mother will need you even more. You heard that silly talk about raiding Khota canoes that might come down river?" "Mother wouldn't allow it. She's smarter than that." "Ah, she might know that instinctively, but does she have the experience to argue against it? That's the question. She's a bright woman, I know. She makes most of the decisions these days; but leadership is more than wisdom. You need to understand what's happening beyond your territory. Events upriver are going to affect your people. Like it or not, she's going to need your eyes, ears ... and experience." Otter buffed the wood with circular swipes of the cloth. "Are you really that worried that I might run away?" He flinched when her hand settled on his arm. "Yes, Grandson. What's to stop you? The woman you have loved since you were a child just married your brother. You're not one of us, Otter. Not in the sense that the other men are. You could not care less about clearing new fields. Hanging snares for deer in the forest runs and collecting nuts aren't in your soul. Sitting beside a warm fire, watching your children play on the floor while you carve a new steatite pipe and gossip about your sister in-law's relatives--none of that suits you." She made a wistful sound. "The big ceremonial centers along the Serpent River, the Moon River, and the Ilini, they're exciting ... more so than this little squalid clan ground on the riverbank." "And your Trade?" "I give you the goods, your canoe, anything you want. Go where you will, Trade what you want ... but come back with what you learn." "I'll be back," he promised, and at that moment, he heard the shout from above and looked up. Many Turtles hollered again, pointing out across the river. "What is it?" Grandmother hopped from one foot to the other, trying to see across the sun-bright water. Otter shaded his eyes, making out the silhouettes paralleling the far bank. ' ' Khota, I think. Four canoes, each with ten ... no, the lead canoe has eleven in it. Yes, the Khota, bearing the Anhinga woman, Pearl, northward to her betrothed." He made a clicking with his tongue.' ' girl." Grandmother had spotted them, her expression grim as the long, deadly canoes passed. "So she's on her way to Wolf of the Dead? His father is Blood Wolf. His grandfather was Killer Wolf, as I recall ... and wasn't the great-grandfather Man Eating Wolf, or something like that?" "Something like that." "They do seem to enjoy colorful names, don't they?" Otter clenched his fist, squeezing the rag. "I guess they do. But then, if you're nothing more than two-legged vermin, maybe that's how you entertain yourself." "Wolf of the Dead," Grandmother mused, eyes half-closed. "He's the one who claims he turns himself into a wolf, isn't he?" "That's him. But I don't think he can. If he did, the wolves would come from miles around to hunt him down. No self respecting wolf would allow him into their midst." "It is said," Grandmother added softly, "that Blood Wolf killed your Uncle." "More than that is said. Uncle wouldn't let them rob him. He had the nerve to stand up to them. They killed him, all right. Filthy animals. All of them." "I remember hearing when I was a young girl about how the Khota moved into the Ilini valley. About the way they killed ... and the fate of the women they enslaved. I hope this Pearl knows what she'sin for." "One of the times I was Trading with the Anhinga, I saw her. She's a beautiful girl, but half-wild herself. Swims, dives. Uses an atlatl better than most men. Her clan decided that she would never be of any use to them. They let her run wild. Said that no man would want her." The canoes were moving fast, flying upriver to the cadence of paddles that flashed as they caught the sun. Otter watched them, the simmering hatred burning within. "You should see the expression on your face," the old woman said. "You look like something's made you sick to your stomach." "I always feel that way when I have to think about the Khota." He stood, feet braced, watching the war canoes as they passed safely out of sight. ' ' girl. No matter if she is wild, she deserves better than she's going to get at their hands." Otter remembered Wolf of the Dead. At times, a bestial gleam lit the Khota warrior's eyes, as if he really was filled with violent Power. Sometimes he lost all sense, screaming, slashing the air with his war club. Perhaps he couldn't turn himself into a wolf, but something possessed him on those occasions. Something brutal and wicked. If Pearl were smart, she'd drown herself in the river before she ever saw that gleam grow in her future husband's eyes. I clamp my hands over my ears to keep the terrible Silence out. Still, it grows louder, louder, until I can't stand it. I sit up in my blankets, gasping in pain ... and suddenly the pain is gone. So ... it wanted to wake me. Why? I look up at the night sky, so bright. Thousands of the Star People gaze down at me through twinkling eyes. Faint voices echo inside my head. Ghosts. Only ghosts shout so loudly. They grow clearer. Along with the crackling of the fire, shouts rise in horror. That fool young man must have the Mask on again. Otherwise, I wouldn't be able to hear the voices of the ghosts from this distance. I shake my head, lie down once more and pull up my blankets. There is nothing worse than an angry bunch of dead people tormenting the living, and demanding that everyone within earshot listen. I close my eyes and try to sleep. The storm that had been threatening for days finally broke on Star Shell and Tall Man. They had left the Salamander clan house, where they had spent the night, but had made scant progress before the sullen gray skies opened and fluffy snow fell. Rather than brave the storm, they cut off from the Holy Road to Blue Duck territory. Shuffling through knee-deep snow, they entered the earthen embankment marking the clan grounds. Star Shell chanted the ritual blessing to the ghosts that inhabited the place. Was it just the storm, or did she sense the brooding disapproval of the Spirits? Wreaths of snow twisted down from the dismal sky, shrouding the grounds. They could barely see the charnel house as they trudged past, and the burial mound had become a shapeless mass. Fatigue sapped the strength from Star Shell's legs as she led the way to the clan house and stopped before the door flap. Snow capped the high, rounded roof. "Greetings!" Star Shell called out, numb and shivering. Snow had matted her blanket and melted on her exposed face to trickle down and drip from her chin. A head poked out past the deerhide hanging over the doorway. "Who's there?" "Star Shell, from the Shining Bird Clan of the Sun Mounds, and Tall Man, Elder of the High Heads. We ask your permission to enter." The head ducked back inside, much to Star Shell's surprise. "It's snowing!" To Tall Man, she added, "Perhaps they're conducting clan business." The dwarf stood in silence, the mounded snow on his blanket making him look more like a stump than a person. A thickly built man ducked through the flap, tucking a blanket around himself. He walked forward through the dimpled snow, head cocked. "Star Shell? What brings you here?" At the cold tone, Star Shell gaped. "It's snowing too hard to travel any farther!" She blinked through the fast-falling flakes. "Robin? What's the matter?" He studied her cautiously as his blanket began to whiten. He had a thin-lipped mouth under wide cheekbones. His broad nose looked mashed onto his face, and those hard eyes were slitted, hostile. "Mica Bird sent you?" "No. I've been away ... at Starsky. My mother died. I had to attend to the rituals. Are you conducting clan business? Did we come at a bad time?" He watched her in stony silence. Tall Man spoke up suddenly. "Indeed, I think we did come at a bad time." He stepped forward. "Robin, of the Blue Duck Clan, I am Tall Man, an Elder of the High Head peoples. What has happened? Why do you act as if we come bringing trouble instead of as weary and cold travelers seeking a warm fire and shelter from the storm?" "Forgive me, Elder. I didn't recognize you. Blue Duck welcomes you to our territories and we offer our warmest welcome." "I thank Robin for his kind words, and the Blue Duck for their welcome." Robin fastened on Star Shell. "But you, woman, are a different story. Perhaps the Elder is unaware of who he travels with." "What's happened?" Star Shell asked. "How long have you been away?" "More than a moon." She stiffened. "It's Mica Bird, isn't it? He's done something. He ... or the Mask." Robin hesitated, licked his lips nervously and stamped a foot in the snow. "You're ' wife. Of his clan. You're no friend of ours. Leave this place." He glanced at Tall Man. "Honored Elder, please enter and share our fire. We have heard of the great Magician." He paused, his gaze straying back to Star Shell. "Although you travel in strange company." "Wait," Tall Man lifted a shivering hand. "Tell us what has happened. Star Shell is not your enemy. Grant me this, Robin. Let us at least warm ourselves, and tell us what has happened. Hear Star Shell out, and then if you still believe her harmful, we will leave." Robin squinted for a moment, then jerked a nod. "Out of respect for you, Elder, we will listen. Otherwise, she could freeze to death in the snow for all the Blue Duck care." "May your ancestors be blessed," Tall Man replied. Star Shell's dread grew as the old man followed Robin into the clan house. She shook snow off of her blanket before she ducked through the hanging, miserably wet and chilled. The clan house had been built along lines similar to those in the rest of the Moonshell valley. The structure consisted of two oblong rooms connected by a covered walkway. The first of these rooms--the one she now stood in--served for entertaining visitors and for clan business discussions. She could cross it in ten paces lengthwise and seven crossways. The rear section, equally large, was reserved for rituals and the storage of sacred objects. The room contained two fires that crackled and smoked; the smell of goosefoot cakes and venison added a rich aroma to the smoke-heavy air. Trophies hung from the ribbed interior wall, including war clubs, textiles, and dusty bags. Star Shell's gaze passed over what looked like pottery at first, and only on second glance did she notice that painted skulls had been hung with the other trophies. Skulls, ' of the War Society--why would they bring them here? She turned her attention to the people. To her surprise, no less than four tens of people, including the clan leaders, were present. They lined the wall benches and sat on blankets on the floor, their backs oddly stiff. Had their arrival halted a heated debate in mid-utterance? The old women studied her with open sourness, the young men with the fierce anger of stinging insult in their eyes. Robin had removed the wet blanket and stood illuminated by the fire. His crossed arms emphasized their slabs of muscle. The thick fabric shin didn't disguise his deep chest and broad shoulders. Copper ear spools gleamed, and he wore his hair in a tight bun at the back of his head. Thick wraps of fabric covered his legs above high moccasins. His only other ornamentation was a breastplate made of split human jawbones that created chevrons on either side of a gray slate gorget. . Star Shell could see no sympathy in those reptilian eyes. He'd been different once, years ago, when he made the journey to Starsky specifically to court her. At the time, she wouldn't consider his suit. He'd been little more than a farmer's son, and she, the beautiful Star Shell. How arrogant I was then. He is right to hate me. But the man who watched her with such seething anger was driven by more than a once-spurned courtship. Tall Man tottered forward on his short legs, the exertion of the journey plain on his weary face. "Winter is not the time for an old man like me to be floundering. about in hip-deep snow." He smiled at the fire as people cleared a path for him. In obvious relief, the dwarf extended his hands toward the blaze and sighed. For her part, Star Shell stood stupidly, desperately unsure of what to do next. "Come," Robin beckoned. "We don't have to like having you here, but if so respected an Elder as Tall Man speaks for you, we will hear you out." Torn between a desire to run and a yearning for the fire, Star Shell inched forward. For long moments, no one spoke. The Magician, looking like a happy child, grinned into the fire. Star Shell couldn't help but be aware of the snow melting and dripping off of her. What she must look like! A miserable camp dog, soaked to the skin. Tall Man turned around to warm his backside, oddly oblivious to the pulsing animosity that radiated from the Blue Duck people. They stared woodenly--as hard as the sooty posts that supported the clan house. The only sound came from the snapping of the fires. Star Shell managed to find her voice as she cataloged the implacable faces. "Where is Catfish? And Woodpecker? And Broken Pipe? I don't see Old Tree, or Warm Soil." "Catfish is dead," Robin said curtly. "Ask your husband why." "Ah," Tall Man said evenly. "And the others whom Star Shell notes are missing ... they have no doubt gone to talk to the other clans. Am I correct?" Smoldering glares provided the answer. Star Shell closed her eyes; a new sense of desolation invaded the pit of her stomach. Woodpecker, Broken Pipe, and Warm Soil were members of the Warrior Society. They would be the ones sent to formulate alliances with the other clans. The Blue Duck must have been discussing warfare when she and Tall Man arrived, unbidden and unwelcome, out of the storm. "Don't do this," she whispered. "No." At a gesture from Robin, two of the young men moved to block the doorway. They stood with arms crossed, anger on their faces. "Going to war would do more harm than good," Tall Man said, apparently unaware of the growing danger. "You will need to organize yourselves, call in the warriors from the outlying farmsteads in the foothills up and down your territory. The other clans, those who would join you, must do the same. You can't strike for another moon yet, and by that time, Mica Bird will have rallied the Shining Bird Clan. Not only that, but you must consider that some clans won't join you and that others will side with Mica Bird." "Honorable Elder, Mica Bird isn't going to find out," Robin asserted, his eyes gone to slits as he studied Star Shell. Her heart had risen, pounding. Involuntarily, her hand rose to her throat, as if she could ward away fear's suffocation. Blessed Spirits, would she be the first to pay for Catfish's death? "He already knows." The Magician cocked his head, his eyes thoughtful as he looked up at Robin. ' ', or he will as soon as he dons the Mask. It will tell him." "That's how he killed Catfish!" Robin roared. "And we're going to make sure it will never happen again! Don't you understand, Elder? Mica Bird has gone too far! And this isn't the only clan he has enraged! People up and down the valley are thirsting for his blood! We want to stop this madness! Blood can only be repaid with blood!" Star Shell's voice caught in her throat. "What happened?" Loathing soured Robin's face as he stared at her. "Your husband beat Catfish's son. Used a digging stick to gouge one of his eyes out. Then he tried to castrate the boy. He would have done it, too, if Old Slate hadn't heard the boy's shrieks and stopped it. And why? Because the boy was caught coupling with Mica Bird's sister. "Catfish, quite naturally, flew into a rage and stormed down to Sun Mounds to exact a fair retribution. Mica Bird offered to meet him in the clan house--alone. Except it would seem that when Catfish entered, your husband was wearing the Mask. "Hear this, woman. Two of your clansmen dumped the body out in the snow, where Woodpecker found it, half chewed by wolves." "You don't want to go to war," Tall Man insisted.- "Pardon me, respected Elder, but why not?" Robin demanded. "Do the High Heads expect us to live like this? To be treated like camp dogs? Kicked around and murdered at Mica Bird's pleasure?" "Indeed not." Tall Man rotated to dry his front again. Steam was rising off his backside. The effect made the little Elder appear as magical as his name. "However, members of the venerable Blue Duck Clan, consider what you will start. This is not some border skirmish between one clan and another over pilfered storage pits, or slighted pride. You seek a blood vengeance that will rip the valley apart. And then what? This cannot be brought to a conclusion before midsummer at the earliest. What will you do? Retreat to the hilltops? Live behind the clan fortifications? Do you have enough provisions to see you through? How long, can you live in the snow up there? When will you plant your fields? As this drags out, the Traders will avoid you." "Then what do you counsel, respected Elder?" Robin asked, raising an uncompromising, eyebrow. "I will deal with Mica Bird." Incredulous stares centered on Tall Man. "You?" Robin smiled at the absurdity. "Honorable Magician, we know your reputation, but in all seriousness ... " The Magician's expression changed for the first time as he fastened a gleaming stare on Robin. Perhaps it was a trick of the firelight, but he seemed to grow, his eyes expanding into great, luminous orbs. "Do you always judge a man by his size, young Robin?" The burly man stepped back a pace, his flat features losing some of their color. "No, Elder." Then he took a deep breath. "But let us say that you do punish Mica Bird. That still doesn't solve our problem. Someone else from the Shining Bird Clan will pick up the Mask and look through it. It will all begin again. We've dealt with Mica Bird, and before that, his grandfather. Now it's our turn." Tall Man fingered his shriveled chin as he pondered the warrior's words. "I see. And I suppose the other clans would like the Mask, too?" "I cannot speak for the other clans." Robin's answer was plain enough. All of the clans along the Moonshell had seen the Power granted by the Mask. Everyone would be entertaining the same thoughts as Robin. Tall Man smiled easily. "Yes, young Robin, I think we're in agreement. The Shining Bird Clan has had the Mask long enough for one people. Let us see what we can do about that." "And her?" Robin pointed a finger at Star Shell. "Oh, she's on our side. Believe me." Robin spun on the ball of his foot, his fist clenched at Star Shell. "What about your clan obligations? What about your responsibility to your husband? How do you answer that, woman?" Star Shell forced herself to stiffen. "I was born of the Starsky Clan, man of the Blue Duck. As you well know, I was Starsky before I married Mica Bird. Catfish's son wasn't the first person Mica Bird beat and degraded. My husband practiced on me. I have my own reasons to hate him." Robin's stare pierced her, measuring. From deep inside, she forced herself to remember the empty eyes of the Mask-- watching as Mica Bird ripped away the blanket and beat her naked body until she gasped in surrender. She could feel his hard hands as he rolled her over, driving a knee between her legs. Then the pain as he drove himself mercilessly inside, grunting as he took her. Her anger rose in response. Yes, the time had come for her to do something about Mica Bird--and that accursed Mask. Robin nodded, a reluctant acceptance in his eyes. "Very well, Star Shell of the Starsky Clan. We take your word ... for the moment. But remember, the time for retribution has come. If you betray us, if you won't help us get the Mask, we'll remember. And if that happens, you'll wish I'd ordered your death here, tonight. I promise you that." Black Skull couldn't shake the sense of impending disaster-- and it was all Green Spider's fault. Sunlight flickered in dazzling silver beams from the wind choppy water as Black Skull continued to throw his weight into the paddle. His canoe shot forward with the speed of a thrown dart, while in the canoe following him, Three Eagles struggled at the end of his endurance to match the pace. Black Skull refused to let up, especially now. At sight of those four strange war canoes--paddles flashing in stroke after measured stroke--a lance of icy dread had shot through his soul. He was responsible for the four most important men in the world, and he had only himself and Three Eagles to protect them. He shot a glance over his shoulder, checking. Those strange canoes should be far upriver by now. Still, he couldn't rest until the Clan Elders were safe. Foolishness! This whole silly journey is the work of insanity! Only a complete idiot would place his faith in the Power of the Spirit World to protect him, A wise man backed up his beliefs with five tens of seasoned warriors and their atlatls and darts. Green Spider ... it all came back to Green Spider. The gibbering idiot was the cause of all this craziness. Possessed, that was it. Something evil had taken over the silly young man's soul. Some malignant ghost had sneaked into the City of the Dead, undetected by the Ancestor Spirits, and fastened on the boy. Everything he does is contrary to any kind of sense. Contrary to the simplest rules of behavior that even a child knows. Contrary to the way the world is supposed to work. Contrary to--. Black Skull's hair prickled across his scalp. He'd heard of Contraries--but they were beings of legend, half amusing, a curiosity of Power when it interacted with the world of men. Was that what Old Man North had wanted him to discover for himself? Black Skull shook his head, refusing to believe. More likely, the lightning had fried all the sense out of Green Spider's soul when it hit. Black Skull understood the world and the things in it to be orderly. Everything in its place. A man planned his objective, then pursued it through discipline and hard work. Life was like war. You could be dealt unexpected blows, but the prepared warrior applied a counterstrategy and sought to regain the initiative. The more desperate the situation, the more dogged the response, until tenacity brought victory. The approach was simple. Now, as he glared at Green Spider through slitted eyes, he thought of another simple solution to his problem. This madness would end if he could get his fingers around the fool's skinny throat when the Clan Elders weren't watching. Or will I incur the wrath of Power? And that presented a problem. Was Green Spider truly a Contrary? Had he been touched by Power? Or just made into an idiot? As a child, Black Skull had believed in the Power of the Spirit World. He'd prayed to it to come and save him from Mother, from her sneering dislike and the way she looked at him with such loathing. She'd told him how disgusting he was. He'd been a lonely boy, unable to fit into the rough-and tumble society of other children. As a result of his shy ways, he'd always ended up as the butt of the cruel, practical jokes children play. That, coupled with general snubbing by his peers, drove him farther into himself, and ever closer to his only friend and benefactor: Granduncle. Granduncle, not Power, had shown Black Skull how to save himself. Granduncle had taught him relentless discipline, practice, and unflinching obedience. No one sneered at Black Skull these days. In the end, he had triumphed--even over Mother. What would Granduncle say if he could see Black Skull now, responsible for a fool's venture--the four Clan Elders at perilous risk from the simplest of calamities? He could still see the old man, as thin and brittle as last summer's goosefoot stalks. Granduncle sat with his bad leg out straight, his rheumy black eyes staring into the past, seeing other days, other times. The firelight flickered across the grass shock walls of his house and sent the wavering shadows of roof poles across the soot-thick thatch above. Net bags were tied up there in the rafters, each with a trophy--a dead warrior's skull--staring hollowly out through the confining cordage. The old man's atlatl hung from a thong on the wall behind him. Long, deadly darts, tipped by crudely chipped stone points, leaned against the cane room divider, their polished wooden shafts gleaming blood-red in the firelight. Granduncle understood Black Skull's humiliation at the hands of the children that day. And that other humiliation inflicted by his mother as she beat and spit upon him, and then shamed him with her probing fingers. The old man had waited, squinting as they sat in silence. Black Skull had been staring raptly at the scar on Granduncle's wounded knee when the old man spoke: "Boy, everything in the world, the rocks, the trees, the creatures, and men--all are different. No two things are exactly alike. Not even two seeds from the same pod are the same. Power sorts them." The old man nodded as he affirmed some internal thought. "Human beings are the same as the seeds. All different. And just as no two plants grow up to be identical, neither do human beings. Some, like Dreamers, have old souls, souls that are trained through time and allowed to see things ordinary people can't. Some souls are women, others are men. Some are meant to be Traders, and others to be warriors." A twinkle grew in his eye. "And some, of course, are meant to be just stupid." "Which am I, Granduncle?" Black Skull had reached down to pull on the old man's big toe with anxious fingers. The answer was particularly important to him. Earlier that day, the other children had called him stupid after they tricked him into falling into the mud. To make matters worse, he was wearing his best ceremonial clothing. At sight of him, his mother had called him stupid, too. Then the odd light had come to her eyes. Her broad mouth had hardened, her voice sharpening as she berated him. Louder, always louder, until everyone could hear. As her rage built, she pushed him, then hit him. When he began to whimper, she kicked him. That day she'd driven him, cowering, out the door. He'd tripped, falling into the mud again. There, as he was wallowing and pleading, she'd kicked him one last time. "Stupid boy! Stupid! Live in mud, for all I care!" He'd lain there--calling on Power to come and save him-- motionless, trembling at the expectation of another blow. With eyes closed and mud cold on his hot skin, he'd heard her stalk away, still ranting. Stupid. ' thought of being stupid for the rest of his life horrified him. If he weren't stupid, maybe Mother wouldn't beat him. Granduncle considered, his lips pressed into a serious line. "I've watched you, boy. I've seen your soul. You're meant to be a warrior. It's in the way you walk, in the set of your head and how you see things. You watch the world the way a warrior does. That's your gift, boy.'What you do with it is up to you. Your mother has tried to beat it out of you. Power gave you the soul of a warrior, but it's up to you to become one ... no matter what your mother does." "A warrior?" Not stupid! His mother, his friends, they were all wrong--and Granduncle was right! "How?" "You must train your muscle and bone. Pain can be controlled, fatigue denied. Skill and balance must be honed, just like a ground-stone ax, lest it grow dull and awkward." The old man's eyes had gleamed in the firelight. "Duty, boy. Discipline, order, respect!" He knotted a fist and shook it. "Those things rule a warrior's life!" That night had changed Black Skull's life. As he paddled, he could still see the old man's face just as it had been that night long ago. The firelight had turned his weathered skin golden, accenting both the shadowed wrinkles and the tight crow's-feet around the eyes. The leathery hands had knuckles like walnut burls as Granduncle rested them on his swollen knee--the one the Copena war dart had maimed. The dart had driven in between the knee bones, just back of the kneecap, and lodged there, leaving the leg forever pinned in that position. The words had eaten into Black Skull's soul like termites into a log. "Practice, boy. Be what you are ... and let other people be what they must be. To do otherwise is to act against Power. Follow your way as a warrior, boy. But remember, you must follow it better than any other man. Dedicate yourself. Learn." Fire had burned in the old man's eyes. Fire, yes. Fire as bright as the day Granduncle had called Black Skull to that last final test. "She's possessed, boy. The lineage Elders have spoken. Kill her. Are you a warrior ... or a boy?" The words echoed hollowly over the years of memory. War had become his Dance; when he fought, his soul floated free of the darkness of the flesh and surrounded him like smoke. To be a warrior, however, was more than simply cracking heads and ripping out throats. The true warrior used his ability to think, to win without risking body and limb. The best warrior could defeat his enemies without shedding blood. That ethic of the true warrior goaded Black Skull now, pricking his soul with poisoned barbs for allowing himself to be lured out of the City of the Dead with the most important men in the world--and only two warriors to guard them. Those four canoes full of strange warriors had knotted his guts with fear. How easy it would have been for them to turn, to capture the soul of the Four Clans, and the lunatic Green Spider--without more than a minor scuffle. I couldn't have stopped them! The thought twisted Black Skull's soul around the way a young girl spins cordage from nettle and milkweed. The warrior redoubled his efforts at the paddle, making the canoe literally skip across the waves. When it became apparent that Three Eagles couldn't equal his effort, Black Skull swallowed a curse and slowed, using his paddle to steer with as the second boat closed the distance. How much farther could it be to the White Shell clan house? Black Skull studied the tree-lined banks with a practiced eye, keeping their craft at least a dart's throw from the screen of brush and trees. Recesses in the bank could conceal war canoes with ranks of fresh paddlers; therefore, he steered closer to the center of the river when passing such dangers. At other times, he followed the fastest current downstream. I should have brought four more boats, each loaded with armed men. The Elders, however, had told him otherwise-- and part of a warrior's duty depended on obedience to his Elders. It was all Green Spider's fault. Before his return from death, he'd been nothing more than an inoffensive--if skinny--young man with unfocused eyes. He was known to forget where he was and frequently he lost what he was saying halfway through a sentence. He also had a habit of seeing things that eluded even the keen eyes of a warrior like Black Skull. Granduncle had defined it nicely that night long ago: People are different. But Green Spider's gaze now chilled Black Skull to the bone, and he had to wonder. If Green Spider would involve him today in something as silly as traveling under-strength through uncertain territory, what would he do in the future? "Dreamers," Black Skull whispered to himself. "Trouble." At that exact moment, Green Spider grabbed the gunwales of the canoe and craned his skinny body to stare back into Black Skull's worried eyes. The Contrary's pupils seemed to expand, enlarging his eyes. "Salvation, warrior," Green Spider announced in his absent voice. "The Mask ... that's all that counts." "What? What Mask?" > But by that time, Green Spider's eyes had lost their focus, and he bent over the side of the canoe to stare at the water passing so rapidly past the hull. "There!" Old Man Blood cried, pointing at the eastern bluffs. Relief washed through Black Skull. A plume of blue smoke rose from the forest, marking White Shell territory. Clearing a new field, no doubt. Tawny-walled houses, some thatched, others bark-roofed, dotted the high bluff. At the river, a canoe landing could be seen, with the usual drying racks, beached canoes, and fire pits. A cry carried faintly to them as someone spied their approach. Squinting against the sun, Black Skull could make out people-- like colored dots--running to the lip of the bluff. 130 « Kathleen O'Neal Gear and W. Michael Gear Raising his hand, Black Skull signaled to the following canoe and used his paddle to heel his craft shoreward. With a final burst of energy, he powered the boat toward the landing. Here, at least, he could commandeer several canoe-loads of warriors--protection for the return journey. And if the White Shell Clan couldn't provide enough bodies and atlatls, he'd levy some from the Tall Cane Clan, across the river. The Elders and the Dreamer would travel in safety this time-- and the Elders could rot before he'd let them talk him out of it. The dugout canoe jolted--almost tumbling Green Spider backward over the bow--as it hit the shore arid plowed mud for a full third of its length up the beach. The Contrary jumped out and looked around owlishly, while the Elders grunted. Old Man North had slid off his seat, and he cast an angry look Black Skull's way. Before the old man could open his mouth, however, Black Skull had leaped lightly into the water, picked up his atlatl and darts, and secured his war club to his belt. He waded ashore warily, searching the beached canoes and the surrounding brush, ensuring the safety of the landing. "Warriors!" Old Man Blood" was muttering as he glared at Black Skull. "He's in your clan, do something with him!" "What do you expect," Old Man North cried. "He's doing what warriors do! Keeping us safe!" "Safe? I think he broke my back when he drove the canoe ashore! What was he trying to do? Paddle us up the bluff and into the clan grounds? What do we have to worry about, any, way? Green Spider would have seen any danger in his Dream!" Green Spider's voice rattled Black Skull to his bones. "We'll all be murdered here. Five tens of warriors are charging down to kill us even now!" He screamed and scrambled back into the canoe, where he covered his head with his arms. Black Skull's heart jumped like a bullfrog in glowing coals. He crouched, a dart nocked. Warily, he pivoted on the balls of his feet. "Get back in the canoe! Warn the others! I'll cover your escape!" "He's a Contrary," Old Man Blood reminded sourly. "We're perfectly safe." "But he ... " Black Skull straightened. The danger charging down upon them consisted of two little girls: one about eight, the other perhaps ten. They skipped down the steep slope, shouting and laughing. "Who's here?" the older girl called as she perched on-a limestone rock above them. Black Skull drew himself up, filling his lungs. "The four Clan Elders of the City of the Dead, their warrior, the Black Skull, and ... and Green Spider." The girl cocked her head, giggling. "Sure you are. And I'm Many Colored Crow! Who should I tell Grandmother is really here to see her?" The eight-year-old had slid to a stop several paces in front of Black Skull. She frowned as she inspected him. Turning, she shouted: "He's ugly enough to be the Black Skull!" The older girl laughed again, her eyes sparkling with mischief. Black Skull exhaled wearily, aware of the amusement in Old Man Blood's eyes. Old Man North, his bony hands clasped behind his back, stared out at the river to keep Black Skull from seeing his stifled laughter. Green Spider had climbed out of the canoe again, and now he thoughtfully studied a big Trading vessel that rested upside down on skids. The wood shone, lustrous and polished. Brightly colored carvings lined the- hull above the waterline. Black Skull lifted his war club, shaking it. "Tell your grandmother that the Black Skull is here to eat little girlsl" He thrust the club toward the path to the clan grounds. "Now, go announce our arrival!" The eight-year-old backed up, her eyes suddenly large. She spun on her heel and shot up the trail, even passing her sister on the way. "How do these people raise their children? Don't they teach them anything? What do they expect? That I'm not who I say I am?" Green Spider's absent gaze shifted from the canoe to Black Skull. "We are never who we say we are." Black Skull felt his face begin to twitch, and he struggled for control. Ever since the Copena war club had crushed his cheekbone, he'd had trouble with the muscles. "It's a long way up." Old Man North studied the path that led to the clan grounds. "I suppose we should start. Black Skull, go find this Otter. He's supposed to be a Trader here." Black Skull stamped his foot to settle his crawling nerves, then charged up the rutted way, his dart still nocked in his atlatl. The second canoe had beached. Three Eagles had wilted in the stern, exhausted, his paddle across the gunwales. Black Skull bounded clear of the top of the bluff to find the two girls chattering excitedly to a group of women who stood before the opening to the clan grounds. They stopped short, staring at him with wide eyes. He dropped to a defensive crouch and gave the curving earthworks a careful inspection for any ftint of danger. All that worry and frustration on the river had fed the desire to kill something--and all that awaited him here was a covey of wide-eyed women! Taking a deep breath, he threw his head back, withdrawing the dart from his atlatl. The women stood frozen. And he realized what a sight he must have been as he vaulted over the crest, ready to cast. "I am called the Black Skull! I announce the arrival of the Four Clan Elders of the City of the Dead. And with them comes Green Spider. He seeks a man of the White Shell Clan, known as Otter!" "You are Black Skull! I saw you once." A middle-aged woman stepped forward, peering up at him. "But we heard that Green Spider died ... on the solstice." "Green Spider returned from the Dead. I have escorted him here!" A shrunken old woman, growling and muttering to herself, pushed through the clot of women. "It's him\" She wet her lips nervously. "What ... what do you want here?" "The Trader, Otter. The Four Clan Elders and Green Spider would speak with him." The old woman placed a hand on the arm of the first woman who had spoken--as if for support. "Blue Jar? What's happening?" She looked back at Plack Skull, then saw Green Spider as he topped the rise. He was walking backward, pulling Old Man North up the slope by his withered hands. "I am ... I am Yellow Reed, White Shell Clan Elder--grandmother to Otter. What ... what do you want from us?" "I have told you, Grandmother," Black Skull growled, hating this whole silly charade. They looked as if ghosts had just stepped into their world. Were these outlying clans s» simple after all? Didn't they know anything? "W-Welcome," the old woman stuttered, openly staring as the fool stumbled around backwards. "This way. Come. Tea will be made. Food brought. And ... and Otter will be fetched. Immediately." But she stood rooted in place as the rest of the Elders arrived, out of breath, to stand behind Black Skull. Green Spider circled the group, running backwards now, like a demented antelope, until he came to old Yellow Reed. His gaze wobbled as he blithely announced: "May all your children drop dead, and may you suffer horribly forever, Yellow Reed. I hate having to meet your son. He and I will become great enemies." The old woman gaped, a strangled sound issuing from her throat. "Wh--what?" A moan rose from the other women. Seeing them about to break and run, Black Skull leaped forward. "No! You don't understand! It's all right!" "It's all wrong!" Green Spider shrieked in his high-pitched voice. "Everything is wrong. Nothing is right. Wrong, wrong, wrong--" "It's all rightl" Black Skull bellowed, grabbing Blue Jar, who seemed the most likely to keep her head. "He's Dreamed, you see. Become a Contrary! Do you understand]" "That is the truth," Old Man Blood said as he smiled and cuddled his pink conch shell to his chest. "We've come here to find young Otter. I think we need him very badly." "I don't need him at all," Green Spider said, making faces at the horror-struck little girls. "I hope he stays away all day." Black Skull rubbed his flushed face with a nervous hand. "A Contrary?" old Yellow Reed asked, as if from far away. "A Contrary," Black Skull assured her. "He does every134 Kathleen O'Neal Gear and W. Michael Gear thing in reverse. Something about his Vision while he was dead." "Oh. Well, come to the clan house and we'll ... we'll talk," the old woman whispered, seeming to gather her wits. "This just doesn't ... doesn't ... " "... happen to us every day," Blue Jar finished. My thoughts exactly. Black Skull shot a scathing look at the oblivious Green Spider. And as soon as I'm free of this maniac, I swear it ... I'm going to kill something! Seven Otter knew a great deal about stone axes. For example, greenstone from the mountains south of the bend of the Guardian River was highly prized by all peoples. When ground to shape and polished, the stone took on a gemlike luster. Basalt, too, made good ax heads and adzes. To begin with, it could be formed by flaking and, if in a hurry, could be used in such condition. Better, however, to grind it into the final shape, since the edge angle could be controlled for a sharp, yet durable cutting tool. The one thing Otter really knew was that he'd much rather Trade ax heads than use them. For the moment, he had a use polished handle clamped in his knotted hands. The thing was raising blisters on his palms. The paddles had left their share of calluses, of course, but the adze he now used had rubbed the skin raw. Besides which, his back felt like it had been hammered by mad Khota tribesmen swinging mauls. Nevertheless, he persevered, crouched over, close to his work as the adze thwock-thwocked to the steady rhythm of his aching attack on the base of the basswood tree. Sweat beaded to trickle down from his armpits and across his ribs, where the shirt soaked it up. An odor of smoke lingered pungent and heavy in the cool air. "Need a break?" Four Kills asked as he walked up, a clamshell hoe in one hand. Charcoal-stained clumps of dirt clung to the white shell, and soot had smudged the fabric leggings tied with nettle-fiber cord around Four Kills' calves. "Are you absolutely positive you don't want to burn this one down like all the rest?" Otter made a pained face as he straightened and tossed the adze from hand to hand. Blood began to rush through cramped places, bringing new life. Four Kills had that pleasant smile on his face, the reassuring one that made the recipient feel that everything would be fine in the end. Charcoal had smeared down the side of his nose. "This tree--" Four Kills patted the bark tenderly "--will give us many wonderful things. We'll peel off the brown outer bark and strip the white inner layer. Once we boil that down, I will have enough fiber to twist and braid one of my ropes. Maybe even better than the last one I made. You know how much people will Trade for One of my ropes. No one on the river makes a stronger rope." "No, no one makes a stronger rope." Otter rapped the bark with the adze. "And the rest of the tree will be dried, and the soft white wood will be used to make bowls, loom shuttles, fish traps, net floats, statues, masks. Anything that needs to be lightweight or takes lots of carving." Four Kills continued to smile blandly. "The basswood is one of our most treasured trees. I make my strongest ropes from them." He shook his head. "But they seem to be getting rare. And you want to burn it down?" "You're on the edge of their range here." Otter looked out over the smoking rubble of the new field. Last winter, the women had chosen this section of the forest, with its rich, loamy soil, to prepare for fields. That decision made, the men had begun work. Using adzes, they'd ringed the giant trees, cutting away the bark and building fires at the bases to kill the forest giants. The basswood had been left, however, its value well worth the effort to chop it down rather than burn it through, in order to save the precious bark. With the trees dead, weeds had grown under the skeletal branches, and new saplings had started up. Now the burning had begun again--as soon as the ground had dried after the rains. The weeds and winter-dry grasses had been set afire, charring the ancient leaf mat and clearing the land for tilling. Even as Otter looked around the new field, a gang of children were carrying wood to the fires that ringed the bases of ancient elms, oaks, and hickories. Day after day, the fires would burn and the blue pall of smoke would rise to drift over the canopy of endless forest. As the flames died down, the charcoal would be chipped away to expose virgin wood. Then the fires would be lit again to eat their way into the heart of the tree. One by one, the trees would topple. The branches, vines, and finally the trunks, would be rendered to ash to fertilize the soil. By midsummer, only squash, goosefoot, and sunflowers would be growing here. "When are you leaving?" Four Kills asked in the stretching silence. "I can feel your soul chafing, brother." Otter ran his fingers down the hickory handle to the place where the original branch had Y'ed. There, offset at an angle, the stone adze had been hafted, glued in place by gumweed sap, and bound by deer tendon that had shrunk-dried in the sun. "Within the week." "Or maybe as soon as you cut this tree down?" Four Kills joked, a wry smile on his lips. My smile, Otter realized. The one he wore when he was on the river, feeling the Power of the Water Spirits that coiled and surged in the main channel. The same smile he used when Trading: slightly chiding, mocking without malice, as if he shared a grand irony with the entire world. That smile always broke down the resistance, overcame distrust, and made his opponent feel at ease. Can I smile that way anymore? Maybe just not here. "You're wrong," Otter answered, jabbing the adze, handle first, at the tree. "I might leave before I cut it down. Leave it for you. Something to remember me by." Four Kills slapped him on the shoulder. "May the Dead bless you, brother--and may all your relatives be as ugly as you are." Otter squinted, curling his mouth into an expression of distaste. "Don't you wish." He sucked at his lips, a bitter taste of thirst in his mouth. "Are you sure you don't want to go with me? Maybe paddle up and steal Pearl from the Khota?" Four Kills slowly shook his head. "I have enough to worry about here, let alone losing my head like they say Uncle did. Besides, you remember how I did that one time when I went with you." The grin returned. "It's the one thing different between us, brother." "I could use you. It's a tough trip--just one man paddling that big canoe clear up to the Copper Lands." They paused, listening to the children squealing as they charged back and forth, making a game of the search for firewood. Four Kills shielded his eyes with his hand as he glanced up at the forest canopy. "She wants you to come to the house before you leave. She says that if you will, she'll make a grand feast. Fill you full the way a man ought to be before he has to paddle a big canoe clear up north." A flying squirrel, disturbed by the smoke swirling up around its tree, glided silently to the forest. With the grace of its kind, it cupped its body to brake on the air, dropped onto the bark of a living tree, and vanished into the forest. Four Kills wondered, "How do they do that?" "Magical." Otter chewed at his lip. "I might come. I don't know, I ... " , A warm hand settled on his shoulder. "It's all right, brother. I was just told to ask you. She feels, well, sad. She's worried that you'll avoid us forever." "I'll be around." "I told her that. You're me, and I'm you. I know how it will be. She just doesn't understand that it will take time." Four Kills shrugged. "I'll tell her that you've got clan business. Something about ... I don't know, how about the Trading? Whether you should go to the Copper Lands or up the Serpent River to the clans up there." "I've heard that trouble is brewing among the Serpent Clans," Otter grunted. "Trouble?" Four Kills raised an eyebrow. "Really?" "Rumor. You know how it is. A Trader stopped last night for a meal and to dicker for some hickory oil for his lamps. He said that he heard it from a Trader who came down Serpent River. Mica Bird, one of the leaders of Sun Mounds, was causing trouble. The other clans are either jealous or anxious over the growth of Sun Mounds' Power. Mica Bird is a strange character. I've met him. Moody, obsessed with authority. According to the story, he uses some sort of dangerous Spirit Power to gain his ends. Something about a Mask that turns him into some kind of sorcerer." "Very well, I'll tell Red Moccasins that's come up. It isn't serious, is it? I don't sense that you're terribly worried about it." "Worry? About two chiefs squabbling over clan prestige? That's clear up on the Moonshell River. To even get there, you have to travel way up the Serpent River. Why should I worry? I'm going the other way--up to the lakes at the source of the Father Water." Four Kills shifted uneasily, arms crossed. "I ' where the Copper Lands are. That route will take you past the Ilini River. The Khota will be trying to get you ... just like they did Uncle." He paused, bit his lip. "That's always worried me. We didn't carry Uncle's ashes to the City of the Dead. His ghost is up there somewhere, wandering around, causing trouble." "I'm not going near the Khota, either. They're a half-day's journey up the Ilini River. I'm heading straight up the Father Water--and right to the Copper Lands. Maybe I'll get some of those pan pipes. And some silver. The Trade for them in the south is very good now." "So, even if it comes to war among the Serpent Clans, it won't make any difference?" Otter shook his head as he ran a toughened finger down the smooth wood of the adze shaft. "I've heard them squabble before. If Mica Bird doesn't make an overture to his rivals, some raiding parties will be sent out. A couple of fights will be fought. Honor will be upheld, and one of the other clans that's getting irritated by it all will broker a peace through one of the societies." Four Kills gave Otter a shy grin and propped his hands on his hips. "You amaze me. You talk of strange clans and far-off wars---and you're so confident about it all. You know these men who seem like something out of a story, and can guess what they will do so far away." "Ah, Four Kills, my warrior brother, people are people, whether they are arguing about who took whose hickory nuts in the storage house or debating the boundaries of great clans far up the Serpent River. Personalities, be they chieftains or fishermen, are the same. Only the degree of importance differs." Four Kills continued to stare up at the tops of the skeletal trees to where the flying squirrel had fled. "This time ... I wish you wouldn't go." Otter's voice dropped. "You know I have to. You know why." Four Kills sighed, his gaze locked on the sky. "Maybe it's the talk of war." In that instant, Otter could feel it, the unease that he'd assumed was tied to Red Moccasins and the invitation to eat with them. "What is it, brother?" Four Kills shivered, then shrugged it off. "I had a Dream last night. Water, falling in endless cascades that turned from crystal-clear to a white as bright as snow. Thunder ... everywhere, roaring and booming, drowning all the sound in the land as the earth shook beneath it. The water fell and fell, like a river running over a cliff and hammering the rock. Spray rose from the roar, catching the sunlight to splinter into ten tens of rainbows as the mist was carried out of the gorge." "Sounds like quite a place." Otter thunked his adze against the tree trunk, bruising the outer bark of the bass wood. "Did you see ghosts, too?" Four Kills pursed his lips and narrowed his eyes, looking back into the Dream. "I didn't see a ghost, brother. Just the body. It came rolling out of the thundering rush of water that pounded the whirlpool under the falls. There, amid the foam, the body whirled and twirled, played with by the Water Spirits as if they were making it Dance in a playful way all their own. Like a stick in a flood." "Go on." Four Kills scuffed the ground with his soot-packed moccasins. "The body came spinning in the water, the arms out wide, the head bobbing like a net float with black hair spreading around it like stream moss. So delicate. "I was standing there on a black rock, with the foamy waves lapping at my feet. Cold, Otter. I was shivering in the drenching spray as the body came whirling about in the sucking whirlpools. A ray of sunlight pierced the sky then, shimmering through the dancing spray and silvering the droplets and striking gold from them as it lit your face. You were dead, brother, and your soul was still Dancing in the water." Otter had been entranced by Four Kills' voice. Now he shook himself of the horrible image. Clearing his thoughts, he chuckled to lighten Four Kills' melancholy. "You've always feared the river, brother." Otter reached out, mimicking his brother's grip on his shoulder. "I know of no such waterfall in the Copper Lands." "Don't go." Four Kills met his sober stare. "It's the Power of Twins, brother. I can feel it. Maybe you've covered it with sorrow over Red Moccasins, but I don't want you going. Not now, not until we can divine the meaning of this. Perhaps it was Uncle's ghost that whispered in my Dreams last night. A message, from the Dead." Otter was framing his reply when the sharp cry scattered his thoughts. "Uncle Otter!" The childish voice belonged to Tiny Turtle, Red Dye's youngest daughter, a chubby girl of about eight summers. She came trotting doggedly across the smoking field, ash churning up about her moccasined feet. "Uncle Otter! You gotta come quick!" Otter and Four Kills bent down, each reaching out instinctively. Tiny Turtle panted to a confused stop, searching their identical faces. "Uncle Otter?" Four Kills chuckled and dropped his arms. "That's me," Otter confided. "You must have run all the way from the clan grounds to be this winded." "I did!" She nodded as she ran into his arms. He could feel the heat of her exertions through the thin fabric dress she wore. The skirt had been decorated with circles of clamshell drilled through the center and bound by hemp thread. "You've got to come immediately. Grandmother sent me to find you. It's mer gentcy." People of the Lakes I'll "Emergency? What's happened?" He glanced up, noting Four Kills' paling expression. The revelation of trte Dream was bad enough. Now this? "Two canoes--war canoes--arrived from the City of the Dead. Some old men ... important men. Clan Elders. They brought Green Spider to see you." Otter squinted suspiciously. "I thought Green Spider was dead." "He was!" Tiny Turtle asserted, wide-eyed with the gravity of the whole situation. "But he's come alive again! And he wants to see you! He brought the Black Skull with him! The Four Old Men came, too! Just to see you, Uncle Otter! You gotta hurry!" "The Black Skull?" Four Kills mumbled disbelievingly. "To see Otter?" Otter gave Tiny Turtle his best grin. "You're sure you've got this right? Maybe the names you heard were--" "No!" Tiny Turtle squirmed, breaking free to wave her arms up and down like frantic wings. "Grandmother told me the names. And, Uncle Otter, I've never seen her like this. She looked scared. You know, with her eyes gone funny and her mouth hanging loose. She barely looked at me. I mean, she didn't even recognize me when she ordered me to find you! And I'm her favoritel She's told me so!" "I believe you. We'd better hurry then. Can you run all the way back with me?" "I can!" Tiny Turtle asserted, jerking her chin in a nod. Otter straightened, dropping the adze. "Let's go. Come on, brother. If it's Green Spider and Black Skull, something's really wrong." "It started with that Dream," Four Kills growled. "Ghosts ... blowing across my face all night. And you ... floating dead in the water." "The only time I Dance is on land," Otter quipped in return as he led the run across the smoldering field. H2 Kathleen O'Neal Gear and W. Michael Gear When Star Shell had finally stepped out of the Blue Duck clan house that morning, it was into a pristine world. The virgin mantle of snow had blanketed the clan grounds with a delicate purity. The sky seemed bluer, the air crisp and invigorating. Sunlight had sparkled off snow crystals, while the charnel hut, clan house, society houses, and storehouses were capped by fluffy whiteness. The ridge-shaped lump of the burial mound had looked soft in the morning light. The only tracks to mar the freshness had been those of the Star shaman who had climbed the platform mound to Sing his welcome to the new day. Once Star Shell would have gasped and marveled at the sight. But, for her, the morning had been a lie, an illusion of peace and beauty following a night of horrid Dreams of death, blood, and war. Now, as she trudged down the Holy Road ahead of Tall Man, she could recall that beauty and try to place it into her soul. Maybe she could draw on that to assure herself that all was not misery and fear. Perhaps, as she walked the familiar way into the Sun Mounds, she could find courage to look forward to another morning like that. One now obscured by the uncertainties of the future. She glanced back to where the Magician followed in her tracks, his white breath fogging in the afternoon sunlight. His small size confused her, the intuitive urge always nagging at her to act protectively. She had to remind herself that this was a capable Elder, not a child. Tonight it would be deadly cold when the sun went down. If things went wrong at Sun Mounds, it might be the cold chill of death she would feel instead of that of the night. Tall Man swung along in his rolling walk, his stumpy legs shuffling snow. The two packs bobbed with each step he took. His wizened expression reflected nothing more than an amused contentment. Did he feel nothing? Was his soul unaffected by the tremors and terrors that ate at hers? "How can you remain so calm?" He glanced up at her, his eyes as bright as a chipmunk's, then stared out over the wide valley. Most of the trees had been cut down here, leaving only a patchwork of forest intermingled with the stubbly fields of farmsteads. Rounded houses stood at the sides of the fields, some with people near at hand dragging in firewood or attending to various tasks. His thoughtful gaze looked beyond, to the dark gray mat of trees that marked the uplands to either side. "I suppose it's because I understand too much," he finally answered. "It's a good day, young Star Shell. The sun has been bright enough to hurt the eyes as it shines off of the new snow. Clean, don't you think? Even the works of humans are muffled by the freshness of the snow." This was Goosefoot Clan territory, theoretically friends of the Shining Bird Clan. But as they had passed people, no one had raised a hand to wave or to call out a greeting. A dark shadow might have fallen over the souls here, despite the brightness of the day. They followed the Holy Road down to the broad expanse of the Moonshell, then turned as the river meandered next to the road. The channel was obscured by snow, the location of the ice marked only by the rushes and river grasses that humped the shoreline. She could remember the way the river looked in summer, broad, lazy, the current slowed by silt. Out there in the brown waters, young men would be diving from canoes, swimming down to finger the mud for shellfish, and percfiance, for the added bonus of a pearl. On those hazy days of summer, the banks would be green with growth, the clouds floating serenely. She'd marveled at the Moonshell the first time she'd seen it. Now it only reminded her of the present, of the ordeai to come. The upright post that marked the transition into Shining Bird territory stood like a sentinel with a lopsided cap of snow. On reluctant legs, she plodded onward, hating the thought of what it meant. "We're here. In another hand's time, we'll be at the mounds." And she could see them, the earthworks glistening with fresh snow. Even at this distance, the faint smear of smoke could be seen rising from the clan grounds. Too much smoke for an ordinary winter's day. A lot of people had congregated at Sun Mounds for something, and she could pretty well guess the reason. "It can't come to war," Tall Man stated simply. "The results would be disastrous." "Why do you care so much? Do the High Heads really mind if the Flat Pipe destroy themselves?" One corner of his mouth turned up wryly. "And who, exactly, are the High Heads? Where do the distinctions lie between our peoples? Think about it, Star Shell. Our peoples have run together like the waters of two different rivers running down the same channel. Can you separate the waters? Over east of here, across the hills and down south of the Serpent River, a lot of High Head clans still exist--but we've got Flat Pipe clans in some drainages just as you have a couple of High Head clans here. We marry people back and forth, some following the rituals of High Heads, others of Flat Pipes. In another five or ten generations, will we still be able to tell the difference? Even our languages have grown together." She mulled that for a moment. "So if it comes to fighting, High Heads will be drawn into it." "You're part High Head--and you've been drawn into it." He grunted his disgust. "No, it's more than that. Think about the way we live. All the clans have their territories, but we still depend upon each other. Sure, sometimes a squabble breaks out--like the time that deer headdress got stolen. The affected clans retreated to their hilltop forts, and raiding parties crossed back and forth, but it was all brought to a stop because it caused too many problems for the rest of the clans." He puffed a weary sigh. "This is different. Or it could be. What would happen to us if everyone went to war? The Trade would be cut off, that's what. We need each other. If a harvest fails among the Blue Duck, the Rattlesnake send their excess to make up the difference. When that happens, the Blue Duck Clan sends some of their blankets in return for the favor, or perhaps they volunteer labor on some of the earthworks. "And consider another of the ramifications we face. True, we're very good at the way we farm the land. We use the rich bottomlands for fields, but to do this, we must have little farms scattered out all over. If serious warfare broke out, what would happclh? Easy pickings for war parties, don't you think? What People of the Lakes H5 would the consequences be if we spent a summer raiding each other's isolated farms? Do you think any fields would be planted?" "No, they'd be left to the weeds." , "Ah, indeed, young Star Shell. That's right. And next winter, people would starve. Bad things happen when a man sees his family starving to death in front of his eyes. He picks up his atlatl and darts and strikes out to take the food he needs from others. Generally, that means he goes down the trail to the next farm to get it." "The societies wouldn't allow that to happen. The engineers would stop it. So would the Star Society, and the Pipemakers. If they didn't, they'd have members killing each other." "When it comes to keeping your children alive, Star Shell, that might not be a consideration." He snorted to himself. "No, young friend, we'd tear ourselves apart. Like an old blanket gone suddenly rotten, we'd pull the weave into strands that could never be put back together again." That image stuck in her mind. If anger got too far out of hand, how would the summer ceremonies be conducted? If no one cared about anything but killing, who would organize the labor details to work on the clan grounds? If the Traders avoided the country, who would bring in pipestone? Mica? Copper? . would carry out sacred chert from the quarries around Starsky? Who would coordinate the rituals to care for the ancestors? And if people stopped caring for the ghosts, would the ghosts extract their revenge? Would they ruin the relationship with the Spirit World? And I thought a ghost didn't need to worry! Worse, would the Spirit World react angrily if the proper ceremonies weren't carried out? "But Many Colored Crow started this whole mess!" she growled to herself. "I caught only a bit of that, but I think you're starting to understand." His voice sounded too cheerful. "Like fingers woven together, always pulling. First Man for harmony and the Dream of the One. Raven Hunter for struggle and conflict. The balance must be achieved ... in the Spirit World as well as in the world of men." He paused. "That, young Star Shell, is why I'm so calm. You, too, must learn to balance. Pain lies ahead, but we'll face it when we get there. For the moment, enjoy the beauty. Sniff the air. Listen for the cries of the hawk on the wind. Suffer when you must; enjoy when you can." She gave him a weary grin. "You know, I'm starting to like you." "Indeed, alas, poor Star Shell, more's the pity, reality being what it is. Were you anyone else, I should revel in that admission." "I don't understand." His eyes had taken on a snake-like, hypnotic depth. "I don't suppose you would. Forget it, girl. Concentrate on finding your balance." She did. But try as she might, she couldn't coax anything but dread from her soul. As they closed the distance to Sun Mounds, Star Shell imagined the scene as she confronted Mica Bird. What would she say? "All right, this is it. I'm leaving you. And taking the Mask with me." Indeed? The crazed gleam would light his eyes. He'd beat her half to death and rape her in front of that hideous Mask. So what could she do? Walk in, pick up a war club, and crack his skull open? Over her shoulder, she said, "This is going to be a great deal more difficult than I thought." "I'm glad you've begun to realize that. Robin isn't the only person in the Moonshell valley who is thinking about the Mask and the Power it would give him. They're all going to want it. Our task isn't an easy one." "I was thinking about how to face Mica Bird. What's he going to do?" "What he must." She searched herself, grappling with the image of fighting him. "I don't think lean kill him, Tall Man. I just ... well, it's not in me. He's my husband. The father of my daughter. I mean, I ... What am I going to do?" "Were I you, I'd be thinking of where I would go." "Do you know something I don't?" "Yes. And don't ask me more. I won't tell you what I've seen. Where will you go? What will you do? You must get the Mask away from here. Men like Robin and the other clan warriors want that Mask, girl. You will have no friends." His voice lowered. "Everyone will be searching for you." She could make out the familiar lines of Sun Mounds now, see the individual roofs where they poked up over the earthen enclosure. Children should have been playing in the snow, sliding down the ' on deerhides. People should be out and about, but here, too, the outlying houses were silent, only tendrils of smoke rising from the bark roofs. "Something's not right." The Magician remained silent. And her daughter? Would Silver Water still be safe at Mica Bird's mother's farmstead? Yes, she would. Old Gray Deer wouldn't let anything happen to her granddaughter. What do I do? What am I walking into? She turned off the Holy Road, following a beaten track that led to the eastern equinox opening in the earthen perimeter. At least people had walked this today. It wasn't as if the clan grounds had been abandoned. The sick feeling in her stomach grew worse as she covered that final distance. The sun had begun to slant into the southwestern sky, ready to dip behind the far bluffs that marked the uplands on the other side of Many Colors Creek. At the entrance, Star Shell muttered the ritual greetings to the ancestral ghosts ... and felt the chill within her soul, as if the ghosts were trying to warn her about something terrible. It's going to hurt me. No, don't think that. After all, Tall Man still accompanied her. Despite his small size and great age, he'd shown himself more than a match for the troubles they'd already encountered. Her heart in her throat, she entered the clan grounds, noting the familiar structures, the charnel hut, the burial mound with its-- Star Shell caught her breath. A gaping hole had been dug into the side of the humped earthen mound that marked Mica Bird's grandfather's tomb. The hole gaped blackly in the sloped side, like a mortal wound in an otherworldly beast. Clods of dirt had been scattered about wildly; they spattered the dimple-trodden snow like day-old blood, coagulated and black. Who would have dared to ... She closed her eyes, a dizzy horror eating at her. No. Not even he would have the nerve for that! She swallowed hard, sensing the wrath of the ghosts. A frantic horror spurred her to run forward, past the defiled mound, around the charnel house. "No! Wait!" Tall Man cried from behind her. "Wait!" She ignored him, dashing with all her might for the clan house. People stood in a mass before the humped structure, silent, gazing uneasily at the door flap. They seemed paralyzed, unaware of the cold. Terror flowed bright with her blood as Star Shell ran panting to the knot of people. "What's happened?" she demanded. "What's going on? Have you all lost your minds?" "Mama!" Silver Water cried out, breaking free from her grandmother's arms and flinging herself at Star Shell. For the briefest of instants, Star Shell bent down, hugging her daughter to her. Endless tears had streaked Silver Water's face; a wretched fear lay in those wide, dark eyes. "I'm home, baby. It's going to be all right." Taking her daughter's hand in hers, she stood to face Gray Deer, her mother-in-law. "What's gone wrong here?" The old woman had a distant stare, one of panicked horror. "He wasn't strong enough. He ... he's mad. Possessed!" Star Shell fought the trembling fear that threatened to betray her. "Where?" But she knew. A few eyes had turned in her direction before they fixed again on the clan house doorway. "Silver Water, stay with your grandmother." "No!" Gray Deer insisted, clawing at Star Shell's blanket. "Don't go in there! He's wearing the Mask. Crazy! Mad, I tell you. He's been running around screaming, digging into graves. He'll kill you! Just like the others!" Star Shell thrust her daughter into Gray Deer's arms and turned for the door flap just as Tall Man came puffing and wheezing through the stunned crowd. Worry glittered in the High Head Elder's eyes as he glanced around uneasily. He was muttering something under his breath in a language she couldn't understand. It sounded a great deal like a warding spell. Star Shell could sense the evil, heavy brooding--a malignancy twisting around them like polluted smoke. Taking a deep breath, she strode purposely for the door flap on the silent clan house. She must face him. In there. Now. Tall Man scuttled up to her, reaching out. "Wait!" "If you've got Power, now's the time to use it." "The danger isn't with Mica Bird! It's the Mask! Be careful. Leave it to me!" He twisted then, sliding out of his backpack and fumbling with the straps. She barely heard him, finding a fire-hardened hickory digging stick thrust into the snow before the doorway. No doubt the one Mica Bird had used to desecrate his grandfather's grave with. She had to tug to free it from the frozen ground, but the weight reassured her. Thus armed, she took a deep breath and ducked through the door flap. Like most of the big clan houses, this one had been built in two sections, joined by a narrow passage in the middle. The outer--the one she was now in--was reserved for visitors, general clan meetings, and secular activities. The interior of the clan house was dark, eerie. The feeling of malicious Power hovering in the cold air strengthened. In the sudden silence, Star Shell could hear the frantic beating of her heart. Unseen things moved, stirring the air. "Mica Bird? Where are you?" Silence. The door hanging shifted, and in her fear, Star Shell whirled, bringing up the digging stick. She stopped a split instant before she brained Tall Man. He looked about warily. A rolled bundle of wolfhide filled his stunted arms. "Careful," the Magician warned. It took a moment before she realized that he didn't refer to the fact that she'd almost killed him. "Mica Bird?" she called again, stepping into the center of the dark room. A creaking sound came from down the dark passage that led into the rear. She blinked, trying to clear her vision. Why did it have to be so dark? Did something move back there in the shadows? " Mica Bird? It's Star Shell. I'm back. Where are you?" The faint creak sounded again. Her eyes were adapting to the low light. She took another step, noticing the faint glow of embers in the main fire hearth. Familiar benches lined the far wall. Ceramic pots lay scattered about, most of them broken. Spilled goosefoot seeds grated underfoot. What if he was wearing the Mask? What if he used it on her? She had no defense. She kicked something that rolled hollowly, unevenly, to one side. Glancing down, she gasped and backed a step. The broken skull lay on its side like a cracked egg, its empty eye sockets staring vacantly. Peering closely, she could see broken bones strewn all over the floor--splintered as if they'd been smacked by a hammerstone. His grandfather! A sob caught in her throat; the urge to vomit tickled her stomach. In horror, she whispered, "Oh, Mica Bird, what have you done?" She crept forward, glancing into the passage that led to the rear section. Shattered pottery crunched under her wet moccasins as she entered the narrow passage. The place smelled of seasoned wood, smoke, and leather. Blessed Spirits, will this never end? She tightened her grip on the digging stick, painfully aware of the Magician's footsteps scuffing the floor behind her. The darkness pressed down, suffocating despite the cold air that stirred. A somber presence seemed to linger in the murk, drifting over her, threatening, measuring. Grandfather's ghost. It had to be. She ceased to battle the trembling in her legs and stepped into the rear section. The creaking was louder now, the sound like straining wood. Yes, something moved in the rear of the room. Something in the air, floating, .. Her mouth had gone dry; the digging stick shook as she lifted it, ready to strike. In a bare whisper, she asked, "Mica Bird?" She could see it now, dangling, spinning slowly in time to the creaking of the wood. No! It couldn't be! The Magician stepped around her warily, angling off to one side. He made a clucking sound, like a scolding grouse, and picked something up from the floor; then, as if burned, he let out a cry and hastily dropped it, muttering to himself as he wrestled with the wolfhide. She knew the shape of the Mask. Star Shell stood rooted, barely aware of Tall Man's movements. Her eyes had fixed'on the body of her husband where it spun in the air. He hung naked, his head oddly cocked to one side. In the dim light, she could see the tongue, swollen and protruding, the glassy eyes bulged out in terror. And yes, there it was: a thick twist of rope that suspended him from the heavy rafter. The harsh fiber had cut deeply into the puffy flesh of Mica Bird's neck. "I've got it," the Magician groaned. "It's covered, girl. Don't--whatever you do--don't take the Mask out of this sack." She barely heard. Mica Bird's body slowed to a stop--that glassy stare drilling into her--then began rotating slowly in the other direction. The rafter creaked again. Eight For the life of him, Otter couldn't understand. Why had the Clan Elders come for him? What could he give them that they couldn't find in the City of the Dead? Nagging worry ate at his gut as he hurried from the forest path and across the clearing into the outskirts of the White Shell clan grounds. When Otter strode through the summer solstice opening and into view of the clan house, he found a knot of excited people gathered. Otter shot Four Kills a wary look and pushed his way forward. Grandmother appeared to have everything in order. From the way she looked, she seemed to have overcome her shock; her eyes had taken on that obsidian-sharp edge of cunning. The four Clan Elders sat on a long bench in the sunlight outside Grandmother's house. Everyone who had been within the clan grounds and all the people from the nearest farmsteads were clustered about. Anxious to see and hear everything, they were nevertheless cowed wide-eyed by the august presence of the visitors. Otter and Pour Kills found people backing away, leaving an opening for them, while Tiny Turtle walked shyly beside them, eager to maintain her importance despite wobbling legs and the finger she suddenly needed to chew on. Otter knew the Black Skull on sight.'No one else looked like that. The crisscrossing scars only seemed to accent the crushed cheek and offset jaw. The warrior's eyes, however, burned with an intensity Otter had rarely seen. The man seemed to smolder, and that fearsome face twitched like a nest of mice under thin fabric. One powerful fist clutched the atlatl handle, while the other had clamped to the war club. Sunlight flashed on the polished copper spikes set so wickedly into the wood. Stories circulated about this man. It was said that he'd killed his own mother, struck her down on orders from his family. In one fight with the Copena, he had killed six of their warriors, chased down the remaining five who fled and dispatched them one by one as they collapsed from exhaustion along the trial. When Otter met the warrior's eyes, he gazed on Death. He had to force his attention to the others. Grandmother stood to one side, that thoughtful look on her face as she tried to absorb the meaning of this encounter, and, no doubt, to determine how the White Shell Clan could prosper from it. Otter bowed politely to the seated Elders in the order of the directions: Blood, Sun, Sky, and Winter. One by one, white heads bobbed in reply. No more hallowed men could be found throughout the world. What were they doing here? Finally, Otter faced a skinny, thin-nosed man, little older than himself. A Dreamer--especially one just returned from the Dead--should appear Powerful. Something about him should instill that sense of reverence and awe. By looking at him, a man should understand that here was a human being who had looked upon the face of the Great Mystery. Instead, Green Spider grinned sheepishly, his expression somehow slack,. his gaze sliding this way and that, as if he had problems- with focusing his attention on any one thing. A turkey-feather cape hung over his bony shoulders, and every rib on the man's body stuck out like skin stretched over a coil of rope. A thick twist of brown fabric wrapped his waist. Two legs, like warped spindles of cedar, ended in big, sandal-clad feet. On his first trip south with Uncle, Otter had been introduced to the noted Anhinga shaman, Fell Through the Sky. At the time, the old Dreamer had been alive for over eight tens of years. No more than withered flesh on bone, that frail Elder could have been blown away by a child's fan. Nevertheless, he'd radiated Power. One could feel it like heat from a fire pit. In contrast, Green Spider had squatted down and now used his finger to trace circles in the dirt around a broken potsherd that had been pressed into the tan earth by a careless heel. Blue Jar stood just behind Grandmother's shoulder, a hand to her mouth, anxiety bright in her eyes. Four Kills bowed to the Clan Elders, tense, missing nothing as he instinctively positioned himself between Black Skull and Grandmother. Otter placed his hand to his breast. "I am Otter, son of Blue Jar and grandson of Yellow Reed of the White Shell Clan. I understand the Clan Elders of the City of the Dead wished to speak with me." He shouldn't be this nervous. How many times had he landed at a strange clan ground, walked up the bank to the opening in the earthworks and faced suspicious eyes and nocked darts? He'd always maintained some sense of serenity, even while distrustful dogs barked, growled, and snapped at his heels. Steeling himself, Otter forced that disarming' smile to his lips and tried to quiet the frantic pounding of his heart. Old Man Blood inclined his head as he fingered his pink conch shell. "We are pleased to meet you, Otter. May your life be long and may you enjoy good health. May your sisters have many children and may they all grow to old age." "Thank you, Elder. The White Shell Clan is honored with your presence. All that we have is at your disposal. Feel free to remain with us for as long as you like. We hope we may be of service." "Well said," Old Man Sky told him, looking around." "I'm afraid our arrival shocked many here." Otter shifted uneasily, glancing at Grandmother. She immediately seized the opportunity to speak: "The effect was somewhat like having First Man walk into your camp, Respected Elder. You caught us by surprise." She jabbed Blue Jar, amusement in her eyes. "As soon as some of us find our tongues, we'll be a great deal more hospitable!" Chuckles came from the Elders; the tension began to recede ... for everyone, that is, except the Black Skull, who continued to seethe. Four Kills--ever attentive to such things--remained wary. "We are all potsherds," Green Spider mumbled, frowning at the sherd he'd encircled. When he looked up, scanning the faces around him, most had turned uneasy again. "Did you realize that? You can see your lives copied in the potsherds. From mud and water we're made. Once born, we're molded by a great many fingers, dried in our childhood, fired in the passions of our youth. As adults, we're vessels, doing our work, carrying our goods, storing things for the Spirit World. Then, one day, we're dropped to smash on the ground. What's left? Fragments. Some return to the earth. Other pieces, like those of the soul, are ground up for grog and used in new pots." Black Skull growled, "I'll never see a crushed pot the same way again." And Otter realized where the warrior's smoldering hostility centered. Green Spider stared up absently., then pushed himself to his feet. With uncertain steps, he approached Otter; but those vacant eyes seemed to stare right through him to something on the other side of the world. Green Spider reached out and placed cold hands on the Trader's shoulders. Smudges of mud rubbed off on the fabric. "Are you ready, Otter? It's a long way to the Roaring Water." "Roaring Water?" Otter glanced uneasily at the Clan Elders. "First three ... then four," Green Spider went on. "And ... and finally, six less one. Who will the one be? Do you know? Can you guess?" He paused, frowning as his attention wandered. "Yes. That's what we must do. Time means everything ... especially if you're at the wrong place. It means nothing when you arrive where you need to be at the right moment. And for what? Will the world cease if a young girl dies? Will Power cease to pulse if a sacred Mask is drowned?" "Drowned?" Otter tore his gaze away to glance anxiously at Four Kills. Images of his corpse Dancing in the current lingered. "It doesn't have to happen that way," Green Spider insisted. "Four. Kills Dreamed only one of many outcomes." Frost settled on Otter's soul. "How ... how do you know about my brother's Dream?" Green Spider's eyes seemed to expand, sharpening with a terrible intensity. "The Power of water pumps with your blood. The Water Spirits took you and gave you your life. They can take you back just as easily--as Four Kills Dreamed. A hero must be tested." "Tested? A hero? Me? " Green Spider reached up, pressing his fingers against Otter's face, feeling about as if to learn the shape of the bones beneath the flesh. Otter endured. "Do you know the single greatest truth, Otter?" "I don't-- Well, it depends, doesn't it? Which great truth are we talking about?" Green Spider grabbed the soft part of Otter's nose, bending it back and forth. "The single greatest truth is that you must lose yourself to find yourself. It sounds so very simple, but it's so very hard to do. Not just for Dreamers, but for everyone. You can't be a hero, Otter, unless you're willing to give up what you want the most." "How about you, Green Spider? Have you lost yourself?" He nodded, a dreamy indolence in his eyes. "Yes, Trader. I wanted order. I was desperate for it. I needed to understand the way Power worked, and the why of everything in the world. Many Colored Crow showed me. Did you know that nothing is ordered, Otter?" "I have often feared that might be the case." Green Spider tugged at one of Otter's braids, then leaned close, placing a conspiratorial hand over his mouth. Otter hunched over to listen intently--and jerked back in alarm when Green Spider shouted at the top of his lungs: "All of the worlds of Creation were made as a jumble!" f Otter clapped a hand to his assaulted ear. "Are you crazy] You didn't need to shout!" "Of course I did," Green Spider said simply as he turned around and paced away in steps that stretched his skinny legs to the limit. There, in the center of the crowd, he whirled like a stork in a pond and cocked his head. Cupping both hands to his mouth and filling his lungs until his ribs looked as if they would pop, he whispered in a voice Otter could barely hear, "You wouldn't have heard me otherwise." Black Skull sighed audibly, Ms. batrle-scarred hands clenching the war club so tight that his fingers whitened. "What is all this?" Four Kills asked, stepping close to Black Skull. My question exactly. Otter thought. He glanced nervously at the Clan Elders. They sat--each like a lump of wood--with faint smiles on their faces. Looking closely, Otter could see places where their hair was singed. The temple had supposedly been hit by lightning. Perhaps it had addled Green Spider's soul? Too much Spirit Power? Could it singe a man's Spirit the way it did hair? Burn away the ability to think clearly? Black Skull had leaned closer to Four Kills. "The fool says he's a Contrary. Does everything backwards--and he's proud of it!" "Not proud!" Green Spider corrected, prancing over to face the warrior. He looked very puny beside Black Skull. "I'm free, Killer of Men. Free because I know what the snare looks like! To be free, you must live and breathe inside the rope. That's the only way to keep from stepping in it and getting caught!" Black Skull's jaw clenched. "You want a rope? I'll give you rope, just the size of your neck. I--" "A Contrary!" Otter cried, and clapped his hands. Grandmother stepped forward, a glint in her eyes as she stared at Green Spider. "Why didn't I see it? It's been so long ... " Four Kills turned, as if sensing Otter's understanding. "Do you know what this means?" Otter studied Green Spider with new interest. "I've met Contraries. Most people guard them like the last sack of squash seeds in a famine. They're good luck. Powerful." "Bad luck! Bad luck!" Green Spider insisted, and he oegan spinning around with his arms outstretched. "No Power! I'm so weak I couldn't even poke a hole in water!" By this time, Green Spider was whirling around so wildly that people were diving out of the way of his whipping arms. Finally, he staggered and stopped, weaving on his feet as his head continued to jerk spastically to the side. He stumbled forward dizzily, reeling and careening until he smacked into the wall of Grandmother's house, exclaiming, "Thank the blessed Spirits! I can still walk straight!" Grandmother asked suddenly, "Why did you come here? What do you want with Otter?" She'd addressed her question to the Clan Elders, but Green Spider spoke as he fingered the walls, then began chipping at the tightly bundled grass with a thumbnail. "I don't want Otter. I hope I never see him again." Then he wheeled, clapping his right hand over his eyes, pointing with his left at Otter and crying, "I see you!" From where they watched along the peripheries, the rest of the clanspeople stood wide-eyed and dumbfounded. Many had pulled blankets over their heads, and mothers had grabbed up their children. Even Red Dye had snagged Tiny Turtle away. Old Man Blood cleared his throat. "Yellow Reed, we have come to ask your permission to have your grandson, Otter, carry Green Spider to a place he has seen in his Vision. We--the four of us---believe it to be so important that we came ourselves to ask you to grant this favor." "We would be most honored," Old Mflfr Sun added. "We understand that you might have other obligations that Otter needs to fulfill, but we can only stress that you would be granting us--and the clans--a great boon." "We will be happy to compensate you for the use of your grandson," Old Man Sky continued. "Perhaps you have some needs that the clans could attend to? A house to be built? A field to be cleared? A soft you would like to marry to some158 Kathleen O'Neal Gear and W. Michael Gear one? We will be happy to discuss anything you would like." "And I would add," Old Man North stated, "that a great deal of status will accrue to the White Shell Clan for undertaking such a journey. People will be talking about your grandson throughout the territories. One never knows the ramifications of fame. I'm sure that Otter's reputation as a Trader would be greatly enhanced. This could be very beneficial for you and your clan." "But why Otter?" Blue Jar demanded, finding her tongue and stepping forward. "Why did you choose my son?" "We didn't," Old Man Blood replied, hooking a thumb toward Green Spider. "He did." "Not me!" cried Green Spider as he shook his head furiously. "I don't even like Otter." Grandmother jabbed her walking stick at the ground, her head bowed. "I imagine the White. Shell Clan won't object." She cocked her head. "But the final decision will be Otter's." People whispered back and forth, wondering why Grandmother didn't simply order him to go. The old woman's black eyes fixed on him, gleaming. He could read her thoughts. I gave you my word. "He won't go! He won't go!" Green Spider began chanting in a singsong voice. "He doesn't like me, either." "Where am I supposed to take him?" Otter turned to Green Spider. "Do you know the way?" "Downstream to the Fresh Water Sea, then eastward to the Roaring Water." Otter licked his lips and placed his hands on Green Spider's bony shoulders. "I know a little about Contrary Power. But you must understand that I'm like a child ... without your wisdom. Can you talk to me as an adult to a child? Can you tell me the way?" Green Spider's Expression pinched, as though thought took great effort. "I've only flown over it--it's not the same as being there. My feathers got awfully cold, though. I can tell you that. And I'll know places when I see them. We must follow the Father Water north." "Oh, that's a big help!" Black Skull grumbled. "He's flown over it! Good luck, Trader, you're going to need it." Green Spider whooped and flapped his arms like a crane soaring up from a pond. "But you don't need to call on luck, do you, warrior? You won't need luck to survive, will you?" Black Skull crossed his thick arms, tossed his head back. "My path isn't yours. Green Spider." The Contrary clucked like a crow. "No two paths are alike, warrior. Not even in the same boat. I can tell right now, you will enjoy this trip. It won't challenge a man like you ... not at all." Black Skull's abused face darkened. "What are you talking about? The only place I'm going is back to the City of the Dead!" What were the Contrary's words? First three, then four, then six, less one? Otter spun on his heel, looking at the Clan Elders. "I take it that I'm supposed to pack for three?"