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In the ruins of an ancient Mayan city, archaeologist Elizabeth Butler
confronts the shade of a long-dead priestess. And enters the twilight world of
Mayan magic and Mayan blood sacrifice.
~ ~ ~
“Murphy’s sharp behavioral observation, her rich Mayan background and
the revolving door of fantasy and reality honorably recall the novels of
Margaret Atwood.”
—Publishers
Weekly
“Pat Murphy has mixed fantasy, horror and contemporary realism in a
literate and absorbing tale.”
—Chicago Sun Times
“Murphy splendidly captures the atmosphere and spirit of the dig, and
adds a well-realized backdrop…Impressive archaeological fantasy in dramatic
Yucatán setting.”
—Kirkus
Reviews
PAT MURPHY
THE
Falling Woman
ATOM DOHERTY ASSOCIATES BOOK
This is a work of fiction. All the characters and events portrayed in this book are ficitional, and any resemblance to real people or incidents is purely coincidental.
THE FALLING WOMAN Copyright © 1986 by Pat Murphy
All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof in any form.
First printing: November 1986
First mass market printing: September 1987
A TOR Book
Published by Tom Doherty Associates, Inc. 49 West 24 Street New York, N.Y. 10010
Cover art by Peter Scanlon
ISBN: 0-812-54620-2 CAN. ED.: 0-812-54621-0
Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 86-50322 Printed in the United States of America 0987654321
For my mother, a remarkable woman who
taught me many things,
and
For Richard, who swam with me in the sacred cenote at Dzibilchaltún
This is the true account, when all was vague, all was
silence, without motion and the sky was still empty. This is the first account,
the first narrative. There was neither man nor beast, no bird, fish nor crab,
no trees, rocks, caves nor canyons, no plants and no shrubs. Only the sky was
there.
—Popol Vuh of the Quiché Maya
Notes for City of Stones
by Elizabeth Butler
There are no rivers on Mexico's Yucatán
peninsula. The land is flat and dry and dusty. The soil is only a few feet
deep, a thin layer of arable land over a shelf of hard limestone. The jungle
that covers the land is made up of thin-leafed trees and thorny bushes that
turn yellow in the long summer.
There are no
rivers, but there is water hidden deep beneath the limestone. Here and there,
the stone has cracked and cool water from beneath the earth has reached the
surface and formed a pool.
The Maya called
such pools ts'not—an abrupt, angular sort of a word. The Spanish
conquerors who came to the Yucatan softened the word. Cenotes, they called
these ancient wells. Whatever the name, the water is cold; the pools are deep.
Hidden beneath the
water are fragments of the old Mayan civilization: broken pieces of pottery,
figurines, jade ornaments, and bits of bone—sometimes human bone. In the mythos
of the Maya, the cenotes were places of power belonging to the Chaacob, the
gods who come from the world's four corners to bring the rain.
Dzibilchaltún, the
oldest city on the Yucatán peninsula, was built around a cenote known as
Xlacah. By Mayan reckoning, people settled in this place in the ninth katun. By
the Christian calendar, that is about one thousand years before the death of
Christ. But Christian reckoning seems out of
place here. Despite the efforts of Spanish friars,
Christianity sits very lightly on the land.
The ruins of
Dzibilchaltún cover over twenty square miles. Only the central area has been
mapped. One structure, a box-shaped building on a high platform, has been
rebuilt. Archaeologists call this building the
Temple of the Seven Dolls because seven doll-sized ceramic figures were found
buried in its floor. Archaeologists do not know what the ancient Maya called
the building, nor what the Maya did in this temple.
The Temple of the
Seven Dolls offers the best view of the surrounding area—a monotonous expanse
of thirsty trees and scrubby bushes. Near the Temple of the Seven Dolls, the
jungle has been cleared away, and mounds of rock rise from the flat land.
Fragments of walls and sections of white limestone causeways are barely visible
through the grass and soil. The view would be bleak were it not for the
enormous sky, an unbroken expanse of relentless blue.
Do not look for revelations in the ancient ruins. You will find here only what you bring: bits of memory, wisps of the past as thin as clouds in the summer, fragments of stone that are carved with symbols that sometimes almost make sense.
“I dig
through ancient trash,” I told the elegantly groomed young woman who had been
sent by a popular women's magazine to write a short article on my work. "I
grub in the dirt, that's what I do. I dig up dead Indians. Archaeologists are
really no better than scavengers, sifting through the garbage that people left
behind when they died, moved on, built a new house, a new town, a new temple.
We're garbage collectors really. Is that clear?" The sleek young woman's smile
faltered, but she bravely continued the interview.
That was in Berkeley,
just after the publication of my last book, but the memory of the interview
lingered with me. I pitied the reporter and the photographer who accompanied
her. It was so obvious that they did not know what to do with me.
I am an old woman. My
hair is gray and brown—the color of the limestone monuments raised by the Maya
one thousand years ago. My face has
weathered through the years—the sun has etched wrinkles around the eyes, the
wind has carved lines. At age fifty-one, I am a troublesome old woman.
My name is Elizabeth
Butler; my friends and students call me Liz. The University of California at
Berkeley lists me as a lecturer and field archaeologist, but in actuality I am
a mole, a scavenger, a garbage collector. I find it somewhat surprising, though
gratifying, that I have managed to make my living in such a strange occupation.
Often, I argue with
other people who grub in the dirt. I have a reputation for asking too many
embarrassing questions at conferences where everyone presents their findings. I
have always enjoyed asking embarrassing questions.
Sometimes, much to
the dismay of my fellow academics, I write books about my activities and the
activities of my colleagues. In general, I believe that my fellow garbage
collectors regard my work as suspect because it has become quite popular.
Popularity is not the mark of a properly rigorous academic work. I believe that
their distrust of my work reflects a distrust of me. My work smacks of
speculation; I tell stories about the people who inhabited the ancient ruins—
and my colleagues do not care for my tales. In academic circles, I linger on
the fringes where the warmth of the fire never reaches, an irreverent outsider,
a loner who prefers fieldwork to the university and general readership to
academic journals.
But then, the
popularizers don't like me either. I gave that reporter trouble, I know. I
talked about dirt and potsherds when she wanted to hear about romance and
adventure. And the photographer—a young man who was more accustomed to
fashion-plate beauties than to weatherworn archaeologists— did not know how to
picture the crags and fissures of my face. He kept positioning me in one place,
then in another. In the end, he took photographs of my hands: pointing out the
pattern on a potsherd, holding a jade earring, demonstrating how to use a mano
and metate, the mortar and pestle with which the Maya grind corn.
My hands tell more
of my history than my face. They are tanned and wrinkled and I can trace the
paths of veins along their backs. The nails are short and hard, like the claws
of some digging animal, and the wrists are marked with vertical white scars, a
permanent record of my attempt to escape my former husband and the world in the
most drastic way possible. The magazine photographer was careful to position my
hands so that the scars did not show.
I believe that the
reporter who interviewed me expected tales of tombs, gold, and glory. I told
her about heat, disease, and insect bites. I described the time that my jeep
broke an axle fifty miles from anywhere, the time that all my graduate students
had diarrhea simultaneously, the time that the local municipality stole half my
workmen to work on a local road. "Picture postcards never show the
bugs," I told her. "Stinging ants, wasps, fleas, roaches the size of
your hand. Postcards never show the heat."
I don't think that
I told her what she wanted to hear, but I enjoyed myself. I don't think that
she believed all my stories. I think she still believes that archaeologists
wear white pith helmets and find treasure each day before breakfast. She asked
me why, if conditions were as horrible as I described, why I would ever go on
another dig. I remember that she smiled when she asked me, expecting me to talk
about the excitement of discovery, the thrill of uncovering lost civilizations.
Why do I do it?
"I'm
crazy," I said. I don't think she believed me.
It was three weeks
into the field season at Dzibilchaltún that Tony, Salvador, and I held a
council of war. We sat at a folding table at one edge of the central plaza, an
area of hard-packed dirt surrounded by mud-and-wattle huts. The plaza served as
dining hall, classroom, meeting place, and, at that moment, conference room.
Dinner was over and we lingered over coffee laced with aguardiente, a potent
local brandy.
The situation was
this. We had thirty men to do a job that would be difficult with twice that
number. Our budget was tight; our time was limited. We had been at work for
three weeks out of our allotted eight. So far our luck had been nonexistent.
And the municipality had just commandeered ten of our workmen to patch potholes
in the road between Mérida and Progreso. In the Yucatan,
the season for road building coincides with the season for excavation, a brief
period in the spring before the rains come. In five weeks— sooner if our luck
was bad—the rains would come and our work would end.
"Shall I go
talk to the commissioner of highways?" I said.
"I'll tell him
that we need those men. I'm sure I could convince him."
Salvador took a
drag on his cigarette, leaned back in his chair, and folded his arms. Salvador
had been working on excavations since he was a teenager in Piste helping with
the restoration of Chichén Itzá. He was a good foreman, an intelligent man who
was respectful of his employers, and he did not like to tell me I was wrong. He
stared past me.
I glanced at Tony.
"I think that means no."
Tony grinned.
Anthony Baker, my co-director on the excavation, was older than I was by just a
few years. We had met nearly thirty years before at a Hopi dig in Arizona. He
had been an affable, easygoing young man. He was still easygoing. His eyes were
a startling shade of blue. His curly hair—once blond, now white—was
sparse where it had been lush. His face was thin, grown thinner over the years,
and sunburned as always. Each season he burned and peeled and burned again,
despite all his efforts to block the sun. His voice was low and gravelly, a
soft rough whiskey voice with a deep rumble in the throat, like the voice of a
talking bear in a fairy tale.
"I'd guess you
were right," he said to me.
"That's too
bad," I said. "I was rather looking forward to barging into the
commissioner's office. I can be rude to young men." I sipped my coffee.
"It's one of the few compensations for growing old."
Salvador took
another long drag on his cigarette. "I will talk to my cousin," he
said at last. "My cousin will talk to the commissioner. He will reason
with the commissioner." He glanced at me but did not unfold his arms.
"It will cost some money."
I nodded. "We
budgeted for that."
"Good."
"If it doesn't
work, I can always go negotiate with the man," I said.
Salvador dropped
the stub of his cigarette to the ground and crushed it out with a sandaled
foot. No comment. Tony poured another shot of aguardiente into each cup.
The sun was
setting. The hollow wailing of conch shell trumpets blown by Mayan priests rose
over the trilling of the crickets and echoed across the plaza. I alone listened
to the sweet mournful sound—neither Tony nor Salvador could hear the echoes of
the past.
At a folding table
on the far side of the plaza, three of the five graduate students who were
working the dig this summer were playing cards. Occasionally, their laughter
drifted across the plaza.
"The students
are a good bunch this year," Tony commented. I shrugged. "They're
like every other bunch of students. Every year they seem to get younger. And
they want to find a jade mask and a gold bracelet under every rock or else they
want to have a mystical experience in the ruins when the full moon rises."
"Or
both," Tony said.
"Right. Some
hide it better than others, but they're all treasure hunters at heart."
"And we hide
it better than any of them," he said. "We've been at it longer."
I glanced at his
face, and could not continue pretending to be cynical when he was grinning like
that. "I suppose you're right. Do you think this is the year that we'll
find a tomb bigger than King Tut's and translate the hieroglyphics?"
"Why
not?" he said. "I think it's a good idea."
We sat in the
growing darkness and talked about the possibilities of the site. Tony, as
always, was optimistic despite our limited success to date.
From 1960 to 1966 a
research group from Tulane University surveyed just over half of the ceremonial
center at Dzibilchaltún, completed extensive excavations in a number of
structures, and dug test pits to sample some six hundred other structures.
Unlike the Tulane group, we were concentrating on outlying areas rather than on
the ceremonial center, expanding the surveyed and sampled area.
By the time the sun
was completely down and the moon was rising, Tony and I were well into planning
the third year of excavations. Salvador had wandered off, impatient with us for
being more interested in next year's plans than tomorrow's work. We quit with
the third year, and Tony wandered over to join the students for a time.
Tony always got
along well with the students, drinking with them, sharing their troubles and
laughing at their jokes. By the end of the summer, they would call him Tony and
treat him with affection. Even at the end of the summer, I would be a stranger
to them. I preferred it that way.
In the moonlight, I
went for a stroll down to the sacred cenote, the ancient well that had once
supplied water to the city. Along the way, I passed a woman returning from the
well. She walked gracefully, one hand lifted to steady the water jug on her
head. From the black and white pattern that decorated the rim of her jug, I
guessed that she had lived during the Classic Period, around about a.d. 800.
I do not live entirely
in the present. Sometimes, I think that the ghosts of the past haunt me.
Sometimes, I think that I haunt them. We come together in the uncertain hours
of dawn and dusk, when the world is on the edge between day and night.
When I wander
through the Berkeley campus at dawn I smell the thin smoke of cooking fires
that flared and died a thousand years ago. A shadow flits across the path
before me—no, two shadows—little girls playing a game involving a ball, a hoop,
a stick, and much laughter. For a moment, I hear them laughing, shrill as
birds, and then the laughter fades.
A tall awkward
young man in a dark green windbreaker, a student in my graduate seminar, hails
me. We stand and talk—something about the coming midterm exam, something about the
due date for a paper. I am distracted—an old Indian woman walks past, carrying
a basket of herbs. The design of the basket is unfamiliar to me, and I study it
as she trudges by.
"So, you think that would work?" the earnest young man
is saying. He has been talking about the topic he has chosen for his final
paper, but I have not been listening.
"Let's talk
about it during my office hours this afternoon," I say. Students sometimes
find me brusque, abrupt. I try to show interest in their concerns, but my
attention is continually drawn away from them by apparitions of the past.
I have grown used
to my ghosts. It's no worse, I suppose, than other disabilities: some people
are nearsighted, some are hard-of-hearing. I see and hear too much and that distracts
me from the business at hand.
Generally, the
phantoms ignore me, busy with their own affairs. For these shadows, as for my
students, the times are separate. The Indian village that I see is gone: past
tense. The campus through which I walk is now: present tense. For others, there
is no overlap between the two. I live on the border and see both sides.
The water of the
cenote was cold and clear. The air beside the pool carried the scent of water
lilies and wet mud. I stopped at the edge of the pool, sat down, and leaned
back against a squared-off stone that had once been part of a structure.
Here and there,
other stone temple blocks showed through the soil. Three thousand years ago,
the Maya had built a temple here. One thousand years ago, they had abandoned
the temple and retreated into the forest. No archaeologist knew why, and the
ancient Maya were not saying. Not yet.
The heavy rains of
a thousand springs had eroded the stones; the winds had blown dust over them.
Grasses had grown in the dust, covering the rocks and hiding their secrets.
Trees had grown on the crest of the mound, and their twisted roots had tumbled
and broken the stones. The jungle had reclaimed the land.
I liked this place.
By day, I could watch the shadows of women draw water from the pool, slaves and
peasants stooping to fill rounded jars with clear water, hoisting the full
vessels to their heads, and moving away with the stately grace required to
balance the heavy jars. They talked and laughed and joked among themselves and
I liked to listen.
The wind rippled
the water, and the moonlight laid a pale silver ribbon on the shining surface. Bats
swooped low to catch insects that hovered just above the pool. I saw a movement
on the path that led to the cenote and waited. Perhaps a slave sent to fetch
water. Perhaps a young woman meeting a lover.
I heard the soft
slapping of sandals against rock as a shadow crossed between me and the pool. The
figure walked with a slight limp. There was a bulkiness about the head that
suggested braided hair, a hint of feminine grace when the figure stooped to
touch the water. She turned, as if to continue along the path, then stopped,
staring in my direction.
I waited. Crickets
trilled all around me. A frog croaked, but no frog answered. For a moment, I
thought I had mistaken a woman of my own time for a shadow of the past. I
greeted her in Maya, a language I speak tolerably well after ten long years of
stammering and mispronunciation. My accent is not good—I struggle with
subtleties of tone and miss the point of puns and jokes—but I can usually
understand and make myself understood.
The person standing
motionless by the edge of the pool did not speak for a moment. Then she said,
"I see a living shadow. Why are you here?" By the sound of her voice,
I guessed her to be a woman about my age. She spoke Maya with an ancient
accent.
Shadows do not
speak to me. For a moment, I sat silent. Shadows come and go and I watch them,
but they do not speak, they do not watch me.
"Speak to me,
shadow," said the woman. "I have been alone so long. Why are you
here?"
The crickets filled the silence with shrill cries. I did not know
what to say. Shadows do not talk to me.
"I stopped to
rest," I said carefully. "It's peaceful here."
She was a shape in
the darkness, no more than that. I could make out no details. She laughed, a
soft low sound like water pouring from a jug, "Peace is not so easy to
find. You do not know this place if you find it peaceful."
"I know this place," I said sharply, resenting this
shadow for
claiming I did not know a place that I considered my own. "For me, it is
peaceful."
She stood
motionless for a moment, her head cocked a little to one side. "So you
think you belong here, shadow? Who are you?"
"They call me
Ix Zacbeliz." When I was overseeing a dig at Ikil; the workmen had
called me that; it meant "woman who walks the white road." The
nickname was as close as I came to a Mayan name.
"You speak
Maya," the woman said softly, "but do you speak the language of the
Zuyua?" Her voice held a challenge.
The language of the
Zuyua was an ancient riddling game. I had read the questions and answers in the
Books of Chilam Balam, Mayan holy books that had been transcribed into
European script and preserved when the original hieroglyphic books were
destroyed. The text surrounding the questions suggested that the riddles were
used to separate the true Maya from invaders, the nobility from the peasants.
If I spoke the language of the Zuyua, I belonged. If not, I was an outsider.
The woman at the
well spoke again, not waiting for my answer. "What holes does the
sugarcane sing through?"
That was easy.
"The holes in the flute."
"Who is the
girl with many teeth? Her hair is twisted in a tuft and she smells sweet."
I leaned back
against the temple stone, remembering the text from the ancient book. As I
recalled, many of the riddles dealt with food. "The girl is an ear of
corn, baked in a pit."
"If I tell you
to bring me the flower of the night, what will you do?"
That one, I did not
remember. I stared over her head and saw the first dim stars of evening. "There
is the flower of the night. A star in the sky."
"And what if I
ask you for the firefly of the night? Bring it to me with the beckoning tongue
of a jaguar."
That one was not in
the book. I considered the question, tapping a cigarette from my pack and
lighting it with a match. The woman laughed. "Ah, yes—you speak the
language of the Zuyua. The firefly is the smoking stick and the tongue of the jaguar is the
flame. We shall be friends. I have been lonely too long." She cocked her
head to one side but I could not see her expression in the darkness. "You
are looking for secrets and I will help you find them. Yes. The time has
come."
She turned away,
stepping toward the path that led to the southeast, away from the cenote.
"Wait," I
said. "What's your name? Who are you?"
"They call me
Zuhuy-kak," she said.
I had heard the name before, though it took me a moment to place it. Zuhuy-kak meant "fire virgin." A few books referred to her; she was said to be the deified daughter of a Mayan nobleman. So they said. I have found books to be completely unreliable when it comes to identifying the shadows that I meet in the ruins.
With half-closed
eyes, I leaned my head against the stone behind me and watched her go.
A modem
psychiatrist—that shaman sans rattle and incense— would say that Zuhuy-kak was
wish fulfillment and hallucination, brought on by stress, spicy food,
aguardiente. If pressed, he might say, with waving of hands, that Zuhuy-kak—
and the less talkative shadows that haunt me—are aspects of myself. My
subconscious mind speaks to me through visions of dead Indians.
Or he might just
say I'm mad.
In any case, I have
never made the test. I have never mentioned my shadows to anyone. I prefer my
shamans with all the window dressing. Give them rattles and incense and bones
to throw; take away their books. Let the white-coated shamans of the modem
world chase shadows in the darkness. I know my phantoms.
Generally. But my
phantoms do not speak to me and call me friend. My phantoms keep their
distance, going about their lives while I observe. This ancient Mayan woman
named Zuhuy-kak did not follow the rules that I knew. I wondered, in the
lily-scented night, if the rules were changing.
Back in the hut
that served as my home for the field season, I lay in my hammock and listened
to the steady beat of my own heart. The palm thatch rustled in the evening
breeze.
The hammock rocked
me to sleep and the sounds changed. The steady beat was a tunkul, a
hollow wooden gong that was beaten with a stick. The cricket's song grew harsh
and loud, like the buzzing of stones shaken in a gourd rattle. The whisper of
the palm thatch became the murmuring of voices: a crowd surrounded me and
pressed close on all sides. I felt the weight of braids on my head, a
cumbersome robe around me. When a hand on my arm tugged me forward, I opened my
eyes.
A precipice before
me, jade-green water far below, a drumbeat that quickened with my heart, and
suddenly I was falling.
I woke with a
start, my hands clutching the cotton threads of the hammock. The rising wind
stirred the palm thatch and sent a few thin leaves scurrying across the
hard-packed dirt floor of my hut.
In my brief glance
over the edge, I had recognized the steep limestone walls and green waters of
the sacred cenote at Chichén Itzá. The scent, I thought, had been copal
incense. The music—rattle and drum—was processional music.
I closed my eyes
and slept again, but my dreams were of more modern pasts: I dreamed of the long
ago time when I had been a wife and mother. I did not like such dreams and I
woke at dawn.
Dawn and dusk are
the best times for exploring ruins. When the sun is low, the shadows reveal the
faint images of ancient carvings on temple stones; they betray irregularities
that may hide the remains of stairways, plazas, walls, and roads. Shadows lend
an air of mystery to the tumble of rocks that was once a city, and they reveal
as many secrets as they hide.
I left my hut to go
walking through the ruins. It was Saturday and breakfast would be late. Alone,
I strolled through the sleeping camp. Chickens searched for insects among the
weeds. A lizard, catching early-morning sunlight on a rock, glanced at me and ran for
cover in the crack of a wall. In the monte, a bird called on two notes—one
high, one low, one high, one low—as repetitive as a small boy who had only
recently learned to whistle. The sun was just up and the air was still
relatively cool.
As I walked, 1
fingered the lucky piece that I carried in my pocket, a silver coin that Tony
had given me when we were both graduate students. The design was that of an
ancient Roman coin. Tony cast the silver himself in a
jewelry-making workshop, and gave the coin to me on the anniversary of the day
my divorce was final. I always carried it with me, and I knew I was nervous
when I caught myself running my finger along the milled edge.
I was nervous now,
restless, bothered by my dreams and my memory of the old woman named Zuhuy-kak.
I started when four small birds took flight from a nearby bush, jumped when a
lizard ran across my path. My encounter with Zuhuy-kak had left me feeling more
unsettled than I liked to admit, even to myself.
I followed the dirt
track to the cenote. On the horizon, I could see the remains of the old Spanish
church. In 1568, the Spanish had quarried stones from the old Mayan temples and
used them in a new church, building for the new gods on the bones of the old.
Their church had fared no better than the Mayan temples. All that remained of
it now was a broad archway and the crumbling fragment of a wall.
Each time I left
California arid returned to the ruins, I found them more disconcerting. In
Berkeley, buildings were set lightly on the land, a temporary addition—nothing
more. Here, history built upon history. Conquering Spaniards had taken the land
from the Toltec invaders who had taken the land from the Maya. With each
conquest, the faces of old gods were transformed to become the faces of gods
more acceptable to the new regime. Words of the Spanish Mass blended with the
words of ancient ritual: in one and the same prayer, the peasants called upon
the Virgin Mary and the Chaacob.
Here, it was common to build
structures upon structures,
pyramids over pyramids. Layers upon layers, secrets hiding secrets.
I lingered for a
time on the edge of camp. A stonecutter, working alone in the early hours, was
tapping a series of glyphs into a limestone slab. The clacking of stone chisel
on limestone beat a counterpoint to the monotonous call of the distant bird. 1
leaned close to see if I could identify the glyphs he carved, but a chicken
chose that moment to wander through the space occupied by the limestone slab.
The stoneworker and his tools faded into dust and sunlight, and I continued on
my way.
I walked past the
cenote, following the trail that the shadow called Zuhuy-kak had taken, winding
through the brush to the southeast plaza, where we had begun excavating a mound
designated as Structure 701, renamed Temple of the Moon by Tony. I strolled
slowly along the side of the mound, studying the slope for any regularities
that might betray what lay beneath the rubble.
About a thousand
years ago—give or take a hundred years— the open area beside the mound had been
a smooth plaza, coated with a layer of limestone plaster. Here and there,
traces of the original plaster remained, but most had been washed away by the
rains of the passing centuries.
Workmen had cleared
the brush and trees from the open area, exposing the flat limestone slabs that
had supported the plaster. Uprooted brush was heaped at the far end of the
mound in the shade of a large tree. I reached the brush heap, began to turn
away, then looked again.
A stone half
covered by the piled brush seemed to be at an angle, a little different from
the rest, as if it were collapsing into a hollow space beneath the plaza. I
stepped closer. It looked very much like the other stones: a square of uncarved
limestone unusual only for its reluctance to lie flat. But I have learned to
follow my instincts in these matters.
The thirsty trees
that set down roots in the sparse soil of the Yucatán are lean and wiry,
accustomed to hardship and drought. Even after they have been felled and left
to die, the trees fight back, reaching out with thorns and broken branches for the soft flesh of anyone
who raises a machete against them. When I tried to pull a branch from the
tilted stone so that I could take a better look, the tree clung willfully to
the rest of the heap; when I yanked harder, it twisted in my hand and gave way
so suddenly that I lost my balance. As I fell back, another branch raked the
tender skin on my inner wrist with half-inch thorns, leaving bloody claw marks.
The monte fights
back. My efforts had moved the branch slightly and the stone still looked
promising. I wrapped my kerchief around my wrist to stanch the blood and
decided to wait until the work crew could move the brush. I turned toward camp.
An old woman who
did not belong to my time stood in the shade of the tree. The air around me was
hot and still. A bird in the jungle called out on a rising note, as if asking a
piercing question.
The woman's dark
hair was coiled in braids on her head; strips of bright blue cloth decorated
with small white sea-shells were woven into the braids. Around her neck was a
string of jade beads—each one polished and round, as if worn smooth by the sea.
White discs carved of oyster shell dangled from her ears. Her robe, a deeper
shade of blue than the cloth in her hair, hung down to the leather sandals on
her feet. From her belt of woven leather strips hung a conch shell trumpet and
a pouch encrusted with snail shells.
She was not an
attractive woman. Her forehead slanted back at an unnatural angle, pressed flat
by a cradle board in her infancy. Dark blue spots tattooed on one cheek formed
a spiral pattern, marking her as a Mayan noblewoman. Her teeth were tumbled
like the stone blocks in an old wall. The front teeth were inset with jade
beads, another mark of nobility.
She squinted at me
as if the sun were too bright. "The shadow again," she said softly in
Maya. She watched me for a moment. "Speak to me, Ix
Zacbeliz."
"You see
me?" I asked her in Maya. "What do you see?"
She smiled, showing
her inlaid teeth. "I see a shadow who talks. It has been long since I have
spoken with anyone, even a shadow. I did not know how lonely I would be when I sent
the people away."
"What do you
mean?"
"You will
learn. We will be friends and I will teach you secrets." Her hands were
clasped before her and I noticed that her arms, from the inner elbow to the
wrist, were bandaged with strips of white cloth.
The sun was hot on
my shoulders and back. My heart seemed to be beating too quickly.
"You and I
have much in common. You are searching for secrets. I looked for secrets
once." She spoke quietly, as if talking to herself. "But in the end,
the h'menob of the new religion said I was mad. Wisdom is often mistaken for
madness. Is that not true?"
I did not speak.
"Lift this
stone and you will find secrets," she said. "I hid them there myself,
after I sent the people away. You can find them. It is time for them to come to
light. The cycle is turning."
"How did you
send the people away?" I asked.
The plaza shimmered in the sunlight and I stood alone. Zuhuy-kak had gone. The bird in the monte called again, asking a question that no living person could answer. I headed for camp, glancing over my shoulder only once.
Notes for City of Stones
by Elizabeth Butler
A thousand years ago, centuries before the
Spanish conquistadors came, the Maya abandoned their ceremonial centers. After
about a.d. 900, they built no
more temples, carved no more stelae, the stone monuments etched with glyphs
commemorating important events. They fled from the ceremonial centers into the
jungle.
Why? No one knows,
but everyone is willing to speculate. Every archaeologist has a theory. Some
talk of famine caused by overpopulation and years of intensive agriculture.
Some claim there was a catastrophe: an earthquake, a drought, or a plague. Some
blame the invasion of the Toltecs, a militaristic group from the Valley of
Mexico, and still others suggest that the peasant class rebelled, rising up to
overthrow the elite class.
I enjoy pointing
out the holes in all the theories. I admit— freely and honestly—that I have no
idea why the Maya left their cities and scattered far and wide in the monte. My
favorite theory is one that a withered Mayan holy man who lived near Chichén
Itzá told me over a bottle of aguardiente. "The gods said that the people
must leave," he told me. "And so the people left."
Sometimes, I dream
of an abandoned city. I dream that each day the sun shines on the walls, fading
the bright paints that color the stucco, cracking the plaster that covers the
stone. When the evening wind blows, it tatters the cloth that once closed the rooms off
from the outside world, carrying leaves and dust in through the open doorways.
When the rains come, they flow down the stone steps, knocking loose fragments
of stucco, watering the small plants that have taken hold in the cracks. Deer
graze on the new grass that sprouts in the courtyard. Mice feast on maize,
forgotten in underground chambers, spilled by peasants in the haste of their
departure. The mice, rodents of short memories, do not fear the return of the
inhabitants. In a temple room, a jaguar makes her home, bearing kittens beneath
a statue of the Chaac amid a clutter of windblown leaves.
Sometimes, I dream
of quakes—the earth trembling as if it shivered in the cold. The wood beams
that support the roofs crack and the thick walls shift so that one stone no
longer rests on the other just so. The walls tumble down.
In my dreams, the
sun, the face of Ah Kinchil, the supreme god, shines on the temples of the
Maya. Small trees reach up to the sun from the cracks between the stones. The
rain falls and runs in a helter-skelter course amid blocks that twist this way
and that. Birds sing in the trees, and owls hunt here by night, feeding on the
arrogant mice that have come to regard this place as home.
Sometimes, very
rarely, I dream of a thin man in the white pants of the Yucatecán peasant or a
woman in a clean white huipil, the embroidered dress of the peasant
woman. The man or woman comes quietly to the ruins, cautious lest the gods of
the ancestors fail to approve of the visit. The people who return are more
fearful than the mice: the people remember the past and know its power.
Candlelight chases back the shadows for a time. The visitor burns incense, mutters
propitiations and prayers, sacrifices a turkey and leaves it for the gods, then
slips away into the night. The jaguar and her kittens eat the turkey, and the
shadows return to the ruins.
The city I dream is
not always the same. Sometimes it is Uxmal, and I watch swallows build nests in
the elaborately carved facades. Sometimes it is Tulúm, and I listen to waves
crash below the House of the Cenote and hear the humming of bees as they build a
nest in the guard tower on the northern corner of the city wall. Sometimes it
is Cobá, and I watch the trees take root amid the stones of the ball court,
shoving carved blocks aside. Spanish moss sways on the branches, and pajaritos.
laughing birds, fly in the branches. The city that I dream changes, but the
slow decay is always there. The shadows
linger.
I do not know why
the Maya left. I only know that the shadows stayed behind.
I pressed my forehead to the window of the
jetliner and watched the plane's shadow ripple over the brown land below. The
plane jerked a little, bucking like a car on a rough road. We were flying
through turbulence, and I felt sick to my stomach. My hands were shaking.
Still, I felt no worse than I had for the past two weeks. Not much better, but no worse. At least I was moving. I turned away from the window and rubbed my eyes. They felt gritty and sore from crying and lack of sleep. When was the last time I had slept? Three days ago, maybe. Something like that. I had tried to sleep but when I went to bed I lay awake, my eyes open and staring at nothing. I rubbed my eyes again and covered them with my hands for a moment, shutting out the light. Maybe I could get some sleep now. Maybe.
"Excuse
me," said a man's voice. "Are you all right?"
Someone touched my
arm and I jumped, moving my arm away.
I had not really
looked at the man when he had taken the seat beside me. He was Mexican, a few
years younger than I was—maybe in his mid-twenties. Dark hair, high cheekbones.
"Fine," I
said. My voice was hoarse and I cleared my throat. "Just tired." I
tried to smile to reassure him, but my face was stiff and uncooperative.
"I thought you
were sick." He was watching me with concern.
I knew I looked
pale. I felt pale. I felt half dead. "Fine," I said. I could think of
nothing more to say. My father is dead, I could say. I just broke off a bad
love affair and quit my job as a graphic artist. I could tell him that. I'm on
my way to meet a mother I have not seen in fifteen years. And I think I might
be going crazy. Then I would burst out crying and hide my face in the shoulder
of his sport coat and leave a big damp spot. He looked very earnest and very
sympathetic. "I'm fine," I said and turned back to the window.
"Are you going
to be spending much time in Mérida?" he asked. "If you are, I can
suggest some good restaurants."
I smiled politely,
a plastic smile, a Barbie doll smile, a curve of the lips with no intent behind
it. "Thanks, but I'll be on an archaeological dig outside Mérida. I don't
plan to spend much time in the city."
"You must be
going to Dzibilchaltún," he said and smiled when I nodded.
"How did you
know?"
He shrugged. "Mérida is not so big. That's the only archaeological dig nearby. I
have heard about Dr. Elizabeth Butler, the woman leading the excavation."
"What have you
heard?"
"She writes
books."
I smiled despite
myself. "That, I know." I had read all my mother's books, buying the
hardcover editions as soon as they came out.
"How long will
you be there?"
"Hard to
say."
I leaned back and
closed my eyes against further questions. For once, the world inside my head
was dark and quiet. The plane was taking me south and there was nothing I could
do to speed it up or slow it down. No action was required of me now. I could
not stop even if I had wanted to.
My memories of the past two weeks were hazy, but some moments stood out clearly. I remember the night before my father's funeral. I could not sleep, and at some point, around about midnight I think, I got the bottle of Scotch from my father's liquor cabinet, and I started drinking.
The liquor did not stop the noise in my
head, but the buzz of the alcohol helped drown out the nagging voices that told
me about how badly I was behaving, about how ashamed my father would be to see
me. I turned on the television and idly flipped from station to station, never
lingering beyond the first commercial, until only one station remained on the
air, playing old movies until dawn.
I sat in my
father's easy chair and watched a pretty blond actress argue with a
craggy-faced man. I knew, without seeing the rest of the movie, that the
argument would come to nothing. Sooner or later, the craggy-faced man would sweep
the blonde into his arms and she would allow herself to be swept, forgetting
all past disagreements. I knew that by the end of the movie they would kiss and
make up. They always kissed and made up in old movies.
My mother and
father had fought, but somehow they never got around to kissing and making up.
When they fought, they never shouted—but even when my mother kept her voice
down, her words had a bright sharp intensity, like the touch of alcohol on an
open cut. And my father was stubborn too—he would not give an inch. I remember
the time that he told me that my mother was crazy. There was a hard edge of
reproach in his tone, as if somehow her insanity had been her own fault.
A commercial came
on, and I downed the rest of my Scotch. I left the television talking to itself
and wandered out onto the balcony. My father's house was perched on the edge of
a hill, and the balcony offered a panoramic view of Los Angeles, a carpet of
twinkling lights, freeway interchanges glittering like distant mandalas, neons
flashing, streetlights, houselights, headlights. I
stood at the railing, looking down at the city and thinking about my mother. In
a moment of sudden dizziness, I closed my eyes.
I opened them to
darkness and silence. No lights, except for the pale crescent moon that hung
low over the dark valley. No freeways, no houses, no neon. The cool breeze that
fanned my face carried the scent of distant campfire smoke. I could hear an owl
hooting in the distance and the rapid beating of my own heart.
I clutched the
railing with both hands, fighting a wave of vertigo. Panic came over me: I
feared I would tumble over the railing and fall into the black void beyond the
balcony, plummeting forever in endless darkness. I closed my eyes against the vision
and when I opened them I saw the lights of Los Angeles, distant and cold, but
infinitely reassuring.
I quit drinking. I
did not sleep, but I quit drinking. And in the small hours before dawn, I
decided to find my mother. The need to find her seemed linked to my drunken
vision of falling and to the restlessness that had plagued me even before my
father's death.
I shifted uneasily
in my seat, listening to the reassuring hum of the jet's engines. I tried to
imagine my mother's face, building it out of the darkness. A thin face,
dominated by restless blue eyes. Short and unruly hair, brown with streaks of
gray, the color of an English sheepdog. A slight woman whose clothes were too
large for her, whose hands were always moving, whose eyes were bright and
curious. The picture of my mother that formed in my mind was static, frozen,
but I remembered my mother as being constantly in motion: walking, cleaning,
cooking.
When I was a child,
I had daydreamed about my mother constantly. I dreamed that she would come
home. How and why she came changed with each dream. She drove up in a jeep to
take me away to an archaeological dig. She roared up on a motorcycle and took
me to live with her in Berkeley. She rode into town on a black horse and we
galloped away into the sunset. Details changed: she wore khaki, jeans, Mexican
costume, ordinary dress. But always the dreams were bright and clear, and
always the ending was happy. Fifteen years ago I stopped dreaming.
It was
Christmastime. The air had been scented with burning pine; the wine had
sparkled in my mother's glass. I was fifteen years old, and 1 sat on the carpet
by the fireplace. Robert, my father, sat in an easy chair beside me. My mother
sat alone on the love seat, an ugly antique with
carved wooden arms and upholstery of heavy tapestry cloth. She had
flung her left arm carelessly across the back of the love seat and the sleeve
of her shirt, a baggy shirt that was a little too large for her, had fallen
back to show the white scars that marked her wrist. Her skin was tanned around
the scars.
Robert and my
mother were talking politely. "Are you staying in town?" Robert
asked.
"At the
Biltmore," she said. "I'll be heading back to Berkeley tomorrow. I've
been in Guatemala for two months now, and I have much too much to do."
At the time, I
wondered what my mother could possibly have to do. She seemed out of place in
my father's house, but I could not imagine where she would be in place. She
seemed a little nervous, glanced at the clock on the mantel often.
"Where were
you in Guatemala?" I asked.
"Near Lake
Izabal," my mother said. "Excavating a small site. A trading center.
We found some pottery from Teotihuacán, up by Mexico City, some from farther
north." She shrugged. "We'll be arguing for months about
how to interpret our findings." She grinned at me—a brilliant, open smile
very unlike the polite smile with which she had greeted Robert. "After
all, archaeologists need to do something in the winter."
"Would you
like some more wine?" Robert asked, cutting off my next question. He moved
quickly to refill her glass.
He changed the
subject then, talking about the house, his business, my schoolwork. When my
mother finished the glass of wine, we exchanged presents. Her package for me
was wrapped in brown paper, and she apologized for the wrappings. "The
Guatemalan market offers a limited choice in wrapping paper," she said in
a dry tone that seemed to imply that I had been to Guatemala and knew the
market quite well.
I unwrapped a shirt made of a heavy cloth woven of burgundy and
black thread. On the pockets and back, a stylized bird surrounded by an
intricate border was woven into the cloth. "You can watch
the women weaving these shirts in the market," my mother said. "That's a
quetzal bird, the symbol of Guatemala. It's called a quetzal shirt."
I pulled the shirt
on over my T-shirt. It was loose on my shoulders, but I pulled it tight around
me. "It's great," I said. "Just great."
"It's a little
large," Robert said from his seat by the fire.
"I'll grow
into it," I said, without looking at him. "I'm sure I will."
There was more
polite conversation—I couldn't remember it all. I remember Robert
congratulating her for her second book—just out and getting good reviews. My
father said good-bye at the door. I walked my mother to the car. It had rained
that day and the streets were still wet. A car passed, its tires hissing on the
pavement. The Christmas lights that my father had strung along the front porch
blinked on and off: red and blue and green and gold.
I stood beside my
mother's car. When she opened the front door, the interior light came on and I
caught a glimpse of the clutter on the backseat: two more packages wrapped in
brown paper and tied with ribbon, a dirty canvas duffel bag adorned with
baggage tags, a straw hat with a snakeskin band that held three brilliant blue
feathers. My mother sat in the front seat and closed the door.
"Where are you
going to spend Christmas?" I asked her. "I'll spend Christmas day
with friends," she said. "I'll be driving back to Berkeley the day
after." I heard the click of metal on metal as she slipped the key into
the ignition.
"Can I
come?" I asked quickly. "I won't be any trouble. I thought maybe
..." I stopped, caught in a tangle of words.
The colored lights
flashed on her face: red, blue, green, gold, red, blue. I have a clear memory
of her face, frozen like a snapshot. The air around us seemed cold.
"Come with me?
But your father ..." She stopped. "You'll be spending Christmas with
your father."
"I want to go
with you," I said quietly. "I need to."
I watched her face
in the changing light. She was no longer frozen: her eyes narrowed and her
mouth turned down, weary, unhappy, maybe frightened. Her hand clenched the
steering wheel and the lights flashed red, blue, green. "I'll be leaving
soon," she said. "Another dig. I can't ..."
The dream had gone
wrong. I stepped back from the car. "Never mind," I said.
"Forget it. Just forget it."
"Here,"
she said. She reached in the backseat and pulled a blue feather from the band
in the straw hat. "This is a quetzal feather. They bring good luck."
I stood in the
driveway, holding the blue feather as she backed the car away from the house. The
colored lights reflected from the wet pavement, and her tires hissed as she
drove away. I threw the feather down on the pavement. When I looked for it in
the morning, the wind had blown it away.
I woke to the
scratchy sound of a stewardess's voice over the loudspeakers. "Please
fasten your seat belts and return your seats to their upright position. We are
now landing at the Mérida airport. We hope you have a pleasant stay in Mérida,
and thank you for flying Mexicana." The voice repeated the message in
rapid Spanish. I understood a few phrases in the flow of words, vocabulary from
the high school Spanish I had taken long ago.
The man in the seat
beside me smiled at me and said, "Feeling better?"
I nodded, smiled
the mechanical smile, and turned to the window to avoid conversation. Through the window, I looked out on a dusty-green carpet
pockmarked with cigarette burns, streaks and patches of gray-white. As the
plane came in for a landing at Mérida, the carpet became trees and scrubby
bushes; the pockmarks, small fields and roads. I could see thin lines of black
slicing through the carpet: roads heading for the Gulf of Mexico or the
Caribbean coast. Then the plane was down and I could see only the runway and the
terminal.
I felt disoriented
and peculiar. The world outside the plane window looked flat and unreal, like
the image on a TV screen. The sun was too bright; I squinted, but it still hurt
my eyes. The plane pulled into the shade of the terminal and the other people on board were
stretching and talking and pushing into the aisles, eager to get somewhere. The
man who had been sitting beside me was standing already. He glanced at me.
"Can I help you with anything?"
"No," I
said. "No, thank you." I did not want help. I wanted to be left
alone. When he did not move away, I began rummaging beneath the seat for my
purse. By the time I found it, he had given up and was heading away down the
aisle. While the other passengers filed out, I took a small mirror from my
cosmetics case and looked at myself. I was pale. When I lifted my sunglasses, I
could see the dark circles below my eyes. I sat for a while, letting the rest
of the passengers crowd toward the doors. I followed the last one out.
As I stepped out
onto the boarding stairs at Mérida, I realized that no one was going to stop
me. I had flown away from home, from my job, from my former lover. No one had
stopped me. I hesitated, squinting into the bright sun. The boarding ramp
seemed very high; the terminal, far away. Remembering my vision of falling, I
clung to the handrail, unable to take the first step down the stairs.
"Is there a
problem, señorita?" asked the steward standing beside me.
"No," I
said quickly. "No problem." The metal stairs made tinny noises
beneath my feet. I could feel the heat rising from the asphalt as I walked to
the terminal.
I stepped into the
shade of the terminal, my head up, my smile in place. I waited for my suitcase
to roll by on the belt, letting the crowd surge around me. I tried to catch
familiar words in the babble of Spanish, but had no success. I grabbed my
suitcase when it rolled past and stepped outside the terminal.
"Taxi?"
asked an old man standing beside a dirty dark blue Chevrolet. I nodded and told
him in my best high school Spanish that I wanted to go to the ruins, but he
refused to understand. "Sí," he said. "To Mérida."
He wore a straw hat pushed back on his head, and when he smiled he showed
broken teeth stained with nicotine. "Downtown," he said.
"No," I
said. "To Dzibilchaltún." I stumbled over the name and the cabby
frowned.
The young man from
the plane appeared beside me and put a hand very lightly on my shoulder. "You
want to go to Dzibilchaltún?" he asked, then spoke to the cabby in rapid
Spanish. The two of them argued for a moment, then
the man from the plane said to me, "He'll take you there for seven hundred
pesos. OK? And if you are in town, you must promise to look me up. My name is
Marcos Ortega. You can usually find me in Parque Hidalgo. Look for a hammock
vendor named Emilio. He's my friend. He'll know if I'm around." His hand
was still on my shoulder. "Promise?"
I nodded and gave
him a smile that was almost real. As I drove off in the cab, I looked back to
see him standing at the curb, staring after me with a curious expression.
The streets of the
city of Mérida are narrow and winding, little better than alleys. The houses
and shops crowd tightly together, forming an unbroken wall of peeling facades painted
in colors that might have been brilliant once: turquoise, orange, yellow, red.
The sun fades the paints to muted shades, gentle pastels.
I saw the city in
glimpses from the backseat of the cab: a row of shopfronts, each painted a
different shade of blue, all peeling. A dim interior seen through an open
doorway and a hammock swaying within. A group of men lounging on a street
corner, smoking. A small park with a statue in the center. A fat woman leading
a small boy down the narrow sidewalk. A row of stone buildings with carved
stone facades bordering on the edge of a park. Trees crowned with red-orange
blossoms. My cab narrowly missed a motorbike carrying a man, a woman, a baby,
and a little girl, then swerved around a buggy drawn by a weary-looking horse.
Finally, we headed out of town along a wider road.
The highway ran
straight through a landscape of yellowing trees and scrub, broken now and then
by a cluster of small huts. We passed a crew of men who were repairing the
road; the cabby tooted his horn and passed them without slowing.
I thought about
telling the driver that I had changed my mind: he should turn around and go
back to Mérida. But I could not explain that in Spanish and he was already
turning off the highway onto a side road. My hands were in fists and I forced
them to relax. I tried to take deep breaths, tried to calm down.
I had screwed up
royally this time, and I knew it. I was arriving with no warning in a place
where I was not wanted. I had been stupid to think that I could do this. I felt
sick.
On one side of the
road, spiky plants grew in unbroken rows. On the other side, the trees and
scrub towered over the cab. The cabby did not slow for potholes; the cab jolted
and bumped over rocks and raised a cloud of dust. We passed a cluster of
battered stucco houses. The driver slowed to let chickens scatter before us,
then drove through an archway and down a dirt road to a cluster of
palm-thatched huts that looked even more dilapidated than the stucco houses.
The dust settled
slowly. The place seemed deserted. Washing—three T-shirts and a pair of
jeans—hung on a line by one hut. The tarp that shaded a group of folding tables
flapped lazily in a light breeze.
The cabdriver
opened the door and said something in Spanish. I hesitated, then climbed out to
stand beside the cab. "Where are the ruins?" I asked. "Las
ruinas?" He frowned and waved a hand at the huts.
I saw a
white-haired man duck through the curtained doorway of one of the huts, squint
at the cab, and start walking toward us. The sun burned on my face. I tried to
smile at the white-haired old man, but I was glad my sunglasses hid my eyes.
"You may want the cab to wait," the man said. He stood, his hands in
his pockets, in the scant shade of a tree. "Not much to see here and it's
a long walk back to the bus stop on the highway."
"Isn't there
an excavation here?" My voice was just a little unsteady.
The old man did not
take his hands from his pockets. "That's true," he said. "But
there's still not much to see."
"I'm looking
for Elizabeth Butler," I said. "I'm her daughter, Diane Butler. Is
she here?"
He took one hand
from his pocket to push his straw hat farther back on his head. His eyes were
blue and curious. "I see," he said. "Well." A pause.
"Then perhaps you'd better let the taxi go." Another pause. "Liz
didn't tell me that you were coming."
"She didn't
know."
"Ah." He
nodded.
"Is she
here?"
"She's
swimming. I'll send someone down to get her." He turned and looked toward
the huts. A man was strolling across the plaza toward us. "Hey,
John," the old man called. "Could you go get Liz? She has a
visitor."
Behind me, the
cabby was pulling my suitcase from the trunk. He set it in the dust beside me
and said something in Spanish. I fumbled for money, grateful to be able to look
away from the old man's eyes for a moment. The cab wheeled around in another
cloud of dust and left me there.
The man took my arm
in one hand and my suitcase in the other. "You must be hot and thirsty.
I'll fix you a drink while we wait for your mother."
"I guess
she'll be surprised to see me," I said. I tried to ignore the tears that
had started to spill over. I wasn't even sure why I had started crying.
He wrapped a warm, dusty
arm around my shoulders. "Take it easy now. It'll be okay."
I could not stop.
The tears seemed to come of their own volition, through no fault of mine, and
his voice seemed very far away. The bandanna he gave me smelled of dust.
"I'll make you
something to drink and you can tell me about all this." He turned me
around gently and started me walking.
"Sorry
..." The word caught in my throat and I couldn't say more.
"Nothing to be
sorry about," he said, and he kept his arm around my shoulders. He led me
across a central plaza and into one of the huts. The curtain that blocked the doorway
fell closed behind us.
His hut was a
single whitewashed room, furnished with two lawn chairs, a cooler, a
footlocker, a small folding table that served as a desk, and a hammock that was
looped over the hut's center beam and pushed to one side of the room. Half the
hut was filled with cardboard boxes, picks, jacks, and shovels.
He made me sit in
one of the lawn chairs, rummaged in a footlocker for plastic cups, and then in
the cooler for a bottle of gin. "I'm Anthony Baker," he told me.
"Call me Tony. If you're Liz's daughter, you'll drink gin and tonic."
I nodded and tried
to smile. I was having no more success now than I had had outside. The smile
kept twisting on my face and turning into something else.
Tony poured two
drinks and fished in the bottom of the cooler for ice cubes. I studied his face
when he handed me a glass. He looked like someone's favorite uncle. He sat in
the other lawn chair and rested his drink on one knee, his hand on the other.
"Do you get
many unexpected visitors?" I asked.
"Not
many."
I took a sip. The
drink was strong and tasted faintly of melted ice and plastic. "Sorry to
take up your time," I said.
"No problem.
I've got plenty of time," he said. "That's one thing archaeologists
come to understand. We've got time. The ruins have been here for thousands of
years; they'll wait a little longer." He studied my face over the rim of
his glass. "Being in the Yucatán for a while will change your view of
time. The people who live here think like archaeologists. Two thousand years
ago, their great-great-grandfathers burned over a plot of land in the monte and
planted corn with a digging stick. This spring, Salvador will burn over a plot
of land in the monte and plant com with a digging stick. People who work on
such a grand time scale don't worry so much about how long it takes to have a
drink with the daughter of an old friend." He shrugged. "You stay
here a while, and you learn that attitude. You learn to take your time."
I looked down at my
drink, turning the plastic glass in my hands. "I had to talk to my
mother," I said. "I know I should have written or called or
something, but ..." I shrugged. "It's pretty weird just showing up
here with no warning."
"Some people
say it's strange for a grown man to spend his summers digging in the dirt.
Personally, I try to avoid making value judgments."
"I should have
written first," I said.
"I don't see
that it's a real problem," he said. "We can always string another
hammock. You can learn to sleep in a hammock, can't you?"
I nodded.
He took the empty
glass from my hand and poured me another drink without asking if I wanted one.
I was taking my first sip when I heard footsteps outside the hut, a knock on
the wooden doorjamb. "Hey, Tony," a woman's voice said. "What's
this about a visitor?"
The blaze of light
when the curtain was lifted aside blinded me for a moment. I blinked, staring
toward the figure in the doorway.
My mother's hair
had more white in it than I remembered. Her hair was damp, the tendrils curling
on her neck as they dried. She carried a towel slung over her shoulder.
She was frowning. I
tried to smile, but once again, I had lost the knack. "Hello," I
said. "Surprise." I stood up, feeling awkward. I did not know what to
do with my hands. She looked worried, I thought, in that first moment. Startled
and worried, not angry.
"Diane?"
she said. "Are you all right? What the hell are you doing here?"
Tony was making
himself busy, pouring another drink.
"My father's
dead," I said. "He died two weeks ago." I did not cry and my
voice was steady. I waited for a reaction, but my mother's expression did not
change. She sat down on the edge of the footlocker.
"I see,"
she said.
"He died of a
heart attack." I was talking too fast, but I could not seem to stop. "I wanted to
talk to you. Dad never wanted me to talk to you. I thought 1 could come and
stay here for a while."
"Here?"
She still looked worried, a little puzzled. "For a while," she said.
"I suppose you could."
"She could
take the place of that student of mine who cancelled," Tony said, handing
her a gin and tonic. "Don't you think? We'll teach you to sort
potsherds," he said to me.
I was watching my
mother. She nodded cautiously and accepted the drink that Tony had mixed. Did
she look relieved? Annoyed? Concerned? I could not read her face.
"Do you want
to do that, Diane?"
"I'd like to
try it," I said. "I promise I won't be in the way. I'll be no trouble
at all. Really."
Tony sat in the
lawn chair and my mother sat on the footlocker and they talked about which hut
I would stay in, which work crew I would be assigned to, and other
inconsequentials. I held my glass and watched my mother's face and hands as she
talked. For the moment, I relaxed.
Before dinner, my
mother took me on a tour of the central part of the ruins. She walked at a
brisk pace, talking about people who had been dead for over a thousand years.
She seemed quite fond of these dead people. As she walked, she looked at the
rocks around us, at the trees, at the ground beneath our feet. She did not look
at my face—she did not seem to be avoiding my eyes; she just found the rocks
and trees and barren ground more interesting than me. Her straw hat shaded her
face. She wore khaki pants and a baggy long-sleeved shirt.
We walked past a
low wall and a crumbling fragment of an archway. "The old church," my
mother said. "The Spanish built it with Indian labor and the Mayan temple
stones."
She spoke in
fragments: short bursts of information, a verbal shorthand that eliminated the
little words that slow a sentence down. Her way of speaking seemed to match her
general attitude; she seemed to be overflowing with the willingness to act, to
start new projects, to finish up old ones, to clear jungles and build pyramids. She was a
head shorter than me, but I had to work to match her pace.
"Just found an
interesting possibility over there," she said, gesturing vaguely.
"Underground chamber, I think. We'll start working on that Monday."
The sun reflected
off the rocks and I was grateful for my sunglasses. The sky was an
uninterrupted blue; no clouds, no hope of shade. Even the jungle did not look
cool: the trees looked thirsty and worn. The path was flanked by mounds of
rubble from which trees sprouted.
"You'll need a
hat," my mother said, glancing at me. "Keep the sun off, or you'll
end up with a stroke. You can pick one up in the market."
I nodded quickly,
aware that this was the first time she had acknowledged that I would be staying
for a time. At the hut, Tony had made suggestions as to where I would stay,
what I could do. My mother had simply agreed.
"I didn't know
that it would be this hot," I said.
"Sometimes
it's not," she said. "Sometimes it's hotter." She flashed me a
quick smile, so quick that when it was gone I could scarcely believe I had seen
it at all. "When the rains come, it gets stickier, but stays just as
hot." She lifted off her hat and ran a hand back through her hair without
hesitating or breaking stride.
I had seen pictures
of the ruins at Chichén Itzá, Copán, and Palenque: great crumbling heaps of
blocky stones, nearly hidden beneath tropical bromeliads and drooping vines;
massive pyramids and sculpted facades; tremendous stone heads that glowered
from the lush vegetation. I had expected gloom and mystery, the promise of
secrets. Here, the sun was too bright for secrets. I could see no pyramids.
At the end of the
path we followed, a small building constructed of sand-colored stone stood atop
a low platform. The building was a box with a flat roof. On top of the box was
another smaller box. On top of that, a third box. Like a stack of three
building blocks: big, medium, and small. Except for the roof, the building
looked like a child's drawing of a house: a neat flat wall with a dark
rectangle for the door, two square windows.
"... Temple of
the Seven Dolls," my mother was saying. "Only building that's been
reconstructed. We're working on some of the outlying temples over that
way." Another vague wave of her hand toward the setting sun.
I followed her up
the steps of the Temple of the Seven Dolls. Two pigeons flew away as we
approached the top. "You'll see some bees," my mother said.
"They have a hive in one of the beams."
We reached the top.
My mother sat down on the top step on one side of the open door where the
building shaded her from the sun. "Take a rest," she suggested. I
hesitated for a moment, wondering if this were some kind of test. Maybe I
should want to explore the building before I rested. Maybe I should ask
questions, not just sit.
I sat on the other
side of the doorway and looked out in the direction of camp.
My mother lifted a
pack of cigarettes from her pocket, tapped one out, and offered me the pack. I
shook my head and she set it on the steps beside her.
"Bad habit, I
know," she said, lighting the cigarette and leaning back against the side
of the door. "Tony's been trying to get me to quit for the last five
years." She shrugged. "At my age, it doesn't seem worth it."
On the steps of the Temple of the Seven
Dolls, an elderly diviner was casting the mixes, the sacred red beans
that told the future. His customer was a merchant, a sharp-faced man whose arms
and face were tattooed with patterns of swirling lines. A woven bag filled with
cacao beans lay on the steps beside him. The old diviner pointed at the red
beans that lay on the cloth before him and spoke softly. I could not make out
the words.
I took a long drag
on my cigarette and wondered what I could say to this young woman who had
dropped into my life so unexpectedly. What did she want of me?
She sat with her
back to the open doorway; her knees were bent and her arms were wrapped around
them. She was prettier than any child of mine had a right to be: her red hair,
fair skin, and slim build marked her as Robert's daughter. She wore jeans and
an open-necked white shirt. Her eyes were hidden by dark glasses and her hair
was tied back in a single braid. "Is it what you expected?" I asked
her, waving the cigarette at the camp, the jungle, the overgrown mounds, the
diviner and his customer.
"I didn't
really know what to expect," she said cautiously.
Robert's daughter:
he had probably trained her to be careful, to admit to little. That had been
his style: he was careful; he always had to be the one in the know. He had kept
himself in check, always carefully controlled.
"Do you want
to tell me about how Robert died?" I asked. I tried to speak gently, but
the words sounded harsh. I am not good at these things; I deal with dead people
better than I do with live ones.
Diane was looking out toward the camp, her chin up, her jaw set. "He died of a heart attack ... his third one. He was playing tennis at the club."
It seemed an
appropriate way for Robert to die. I hadn't seen him for at least five years, but
I could imagine him at fifty: out on the court in his tennis whites, smiling
his pleasant professional smile, his hair touched with gray at the temples, but
nowhere else. I wondered who he had been playing: a colleague from the
hospital, a pretty young woman. It didn't matter. I could not manage much
sorrow over his death. During divorce proceedings, Robert and I had come to
treat each other with a hard-edged polished courtesy. Over the past twenty-five
years, that glossy politeness had marked all our infrequent contacts, until at
last it seemed like the natural relationship between us. He was a stranger, a
vague acquaintance I had once known better. I did not hate him, did not even
dislike him particularly, though I did find him dull and opinionated. I could
remember the distant times when arguments with him had made me furious, but the
fire had burned to ashes and the ashes had blown away on the evening wind. I
was indifferent toward him.
"The funeral
was two weeks ago," she said. "Aunt Alicia set it up. I guess she
didn't let you know."
I remembered
Alicia, Robert's older sister, a widow with a smooth, uncrackable personality.
I tapped the ash off the end of my cigarette and nodded. "Alicia and I
were never exactly friends."
"I know it must
be really strange, my turning up out of the blue like this. It's just that Dad
never wanted me to talk to you. He never wanted me to know anything about
you." She spoke quickly, as if she had to say this quickly or not at all.
Her voice had an edge of urgency. "I've read all your books." When
she said the last few words, her voice softened and took on a pleading note.
She wanted my approval; she wanted me to like her.
I could not look at
her. If Diane were crying, I did not want to know. Not now. The jungle was a
restful stretch of dirty green. On the steps, the merchant leaned toward the
diviner, questioning him closely on a particular point. "So what do you
think you'll find here?" I asked her. "What are you looking
for?"
"I don't
know." Her voice was hesitant. "I guess I just want to dig up the
past and figure out what's under all the rubble. That's all."
The diviner waved
his hand to the east, the direction governed by Ah Puch, the god of death.
Beneath the tattoos, the merchant's face looked mournful.
"You may just
find broken pots," I said to Diane. "Nothing interesting at
all."
"I'll take my
chances on that."
I glanced at her,
but I could not read her expression. Her sunglasses hid her eyes. Her back was
straight; her arms were still wrapped around her knees, her right hand gripping
her left wrist, perhaps just a little too tightly. But she spoke calmly enough.
"Right now, all I know is what I remember, and that's just bits and
pieces."
The sun was low,
and the Temple of the Seven Dolls cast a shadow that stretched away from the
camp. The lines of tumbled stones that marked the position of ancient walls
stood out in sharp relief. I felt comfortable in the ruins, in the company of
dead people and broken buildings. The light of the setting sun shone on my
face, warm and soothing. I belonged here among the fallen temples and
long-abandoned homes. I watched the merchant pay the diviner in cacao beans,
hoist his bag to his back, and trudge down the steps. The diviner faded as the
merchant strode into the distance.
I heard the rustle
of Diane's clothing when she moved, and I glanced at her again. She was gazing
into the distance, looking away from me. I did not know what to say to her.
"What do you remember?" I asked at last.
A pause. I took a
drag on my cigarette, waiting.
"I remember
waiting and waiting after nursery school. Everyone left and the teacher was all
ready to go home, but I was still waiting." Her voice was rough, as if she
were holding back old tears. Her expression did not change; she did not move.
"You were supposed to pick me up. The teacher went and called you, but you
weren't home. She called Dad and he came to get me, but he was really mad. We
went home and you weren't there. He asked me where you were, but I didn't
know." She stopped for a moment, and when she began again, her voice was
smooth, her feelings were back under control. "You were gone for a long
time. Maybe a month. Then you came back."
"I ran away to
New Mexico and enrolled in college," I said. "Supported myself by
typing, just as I had supported Robert through medical school by typing. Robert
hired a private detective to track me down. When the detective found me, Robert
convinced me to come back." I stubbed my cigarette against the step,
tapped another out of the pack, and lit it. "What else do you
remember?"
"You brought
me a Navaho blanket when you came back from New Mexico. You were home for a
while—I remember that. I had to be really quiet; Dad told me to be really
quiet. Then you left again." Her voice trailed off, but she did not sound
like she had finished.
"What
else?"
She hesitated.
"One night, when I was in bed, I heard you and Dad talking in the kitchen.
It was hot and I couldn't sleep. You kept talking louder and louder. I got out
of bed and I went down the hall, but I didn't want to go in the kitchen. I
stayed just outside the door, where I could see you and Dad. You were holding a
breadboard, an old breadboard with a handle on it, and your hand was wrapped
around the handle. I couldn't hear what Dad was saying, but all of a sudden you
started saying, 'I can't stand it. I can't stand it.' And you started slamming
the breadboard against the counter, harder and harder and harder. And you were
yelling, I can't stand it.' The breadboard broke on the counter and I ran back
to bed, I put a pillow over my head and I stayed there, even when I heard shouting. But
in the morning, you were gone, and Aunt Alicia was there, and Dad was really
upset."
In the long pause,
I could hear the pigeons on the roof of the temple.
"You didn't
come home for a long time, and then you came home and you left again. Dad said
you had gone away because you were crazy. That's all he would say about it.
Later on, he told me about the divorce and all that, but that was later."
I remembered the
feel of the board in my hand, the thump each time it struck the counter. "Robert was saying, 'You're crazy,' " I told Diane.
"That's what you couldn't hear. Other than that, you've got it
right." I tapped the ash from my cigarette. "While you were hiding in
bed, I locked myself in the bathroom and slashed my wrists. Robert broke down
the door, bandaged me, and took me to a private hospital. I was there for two days
before I woke up enough to realize that I couldn't go home. Robert had
committed me for my own protection."
I remembered being
wrapped in cold sheets by white-coated interns. Was that the first night I was
there? Hard to say. My memories of the year in the sanatorium were confused. I
remembered howling at the ceiling of a cold room, hating Robert and wanting
revenge. But I did not know whether that was the first night or many nights
later. I suppose it didn't matter. The nights on the ward blurred together; it
was a controlled environment, changing only as people came and went.
The spirits I saw
there were mad: a pale fat woman with dark smudges for eyes, like chunks of
coal in the face of a snowman; a frail old woman who spoke an unknown language,
her voice high and small as the chirping of sparrows on the eve of a winter
storm; a gaunt woman, thin and dried as a prophet just back from a desert
vigil, whose palms and bare feet were marked with bleeding wounds that never
seemed to heal.
"I was put in a
ward for the seriously disturbed," I told Diane. "I got along all
right there. I made friends with a woman who claimed to be Jesus Christ. A powerful old woman
with a face like a hatchet."
I took a drag on my
cigarette and exhaled, watching the smoke drift away. Strange memories: I had
spent many of my nights screaming at the ceiling that Robert was trying to kill
me, that the doctors were trying to kill me. I had been there for a month
before I decided to get out. I considered escape, but the bars at the window
were quite strong and the interns were muscular. So
I decided to behave, to stop screaming all night, to do as I was told, to end
my discussions of theology with Mrs. Jesus Christ. I decided to feign sanity,
to stop watching the spirits and calling to the moon through the barred
windows.
"I was on the ward for three months before I could convince them to move me to a better ward, one for less violent patients. It took me a year to convince them I was cured." I remembered the effort of feigning their kind of sanity. Smiling. Refraining from screaming obscenities even when obscenities were called for. "Robert came to visit me in the hospital. Every other week. Without fail. I was polite to him. I couldn't get out without his help." My voice was very dry, very matter-of-fact. "I wanted to be free of him. I wanted a divorce." I noticed that my hand was shaking as I lifted the cigarette to my mouth; my other hand was clenched in a fist. I forced it to relax.
"Finally, he
said we could divorce, but only if I would grant him custody of you. I had to
agree that I would never try to see you without his permission. I wouldn't try
to be your mother. I think that he was seeing someone else at the time and he
wanted me out of the way. I had to be free of him, so I promised." I hated
the apologetic tone that crept into my voice. I shrugged lightly. "He kept
his part of it. He let me out."
"You came back
for Christmas sometimes," Diane said.
"I came when
Robert wanted me to. On his terms. At one point, I think he was lonely and
wanted me back. When I told him that I wasn't interested, he cut off my
visiting privileges." I shrugged and smiled a small tight smile. "He
wasn't cruel about it. He sent me pictures of you."
"What did you
do?" Her voice was controlled and even. Her face was pinched, but she was
not crying.
"I went back
to New Mexico. For a while, I worked as a typist, then I enrolled in the state
university in archaeology. 1 managed to land a paid position as cook at a field
camp that first summer and I was on my way."
"You hated Dad
for saying you were crazy," Diane said.
"I hated
Robert for a number of things back then," I said. I crushed the
half-burned cigarette against the stone. "Locking me up was just one
offense among many." I reached for my cigarettes and tapped another from
the pack. "So," I said dryly, "you've found what you came to
find. You know why I left. What now?"
I looked at Diane.
Her arms were clutching her knees and she was rocking back and forth just a
little. I regretted my words, I regretted my tone. "Come on," I said
softly. "It's all ancient history." I reached out and
touched her shoulder, feeling awkward and foolish. She did not react. I wanted
her to give me a sign that things were all right between us, but she kept her
hands locked around her knees and she did not look at me. "Don't cry over
what's long past."
"Can I stay
for a while?" she asked.
I shrugged. "I
don't know what's here for you."
"Neither do
I."
I realized I was
still holding the unlit cigarette, and I slipped it into my shirt pocket.
"Fine. Stay if you like."
In the distance, I
heard the sound of the truck horn. "That's the dinner bell," I said.
"Let's go back."
We followed the same path the merchant had taken down the steps and into the light of the setting sun.
Dinner was served at a folding table set up
in the open area in the center of the cluster of huts. The
chairs were metal folding chairs. They looked as if they had traveled too far
in the back of a pickup truck, sat in the sun and the rain too long, and
generally lived a life unsuited to metal folding chairs. Once these chairs had
been painted a uniform gray; now they were marked with rust and dents.
Tony introduced me
to the other people at the dinner table. These people, like the chairs in which
they lounged, had been exposed to the weather too long. Dirt, broken
fingernails, sunburned and peeling faces, chapped lips, and under all that, a
lean look, a kind of toughness.
The men bore the stubbly
beginnings of beards.
Carlos, a tanned
Mexican in his late twenties, showed too many teeth when he smiled; he had the
look of a friendly barracuda. He wore a tank top and shorts that showed off a
deep tan.
John, a Canadian
with broad shoulders and what looked to be a habitual slouch, mumbled
"Pleased to meet you" and barely smiled at all. He wore a baseball
cap pushed back on his head, a kerchief tied around his neck, a long-sleeved
shirt, and long pants. He seemed to be fighting a losing battle with the sun.
His nose was peeling.
Maggie, a blonde
with a corn-fed American face, gave me a broad and meaningless smile. She
reminded me of all the girls on the cheerleading squad in my high school. Robin,
the woman beside Maggie, had hair a shade darker, a smile a shade less bright.
Robin seemed born to be a sidekick.
Barbara was the
only one to reach out and shake my hand. She was tanned and slender. Her dark
hair was cropped boyishly short, and her face was dwarfed by her sunglasses,
two great circles of dark glass framed with metal.
"Welcome to
camp," Carlos said. He showed me his teeth again. Definitely a predator.
"How long are you staying?"
"For a
while," I said awkwardly. Hard to admit that I had no idea. A moment of
silence as they waited for me to speak cheerful explanations of who I was and
why I was there. "I'm on vacation and I wanted to see what a dig was
like." My voice was a little hoarse.
"Great place to
vacation if you like dirt and bugs," Carlos said. "Have you toured
the site?"
"Some of
it." I looked to my mother for assistance.
"Have you been
down to the cenote?" he asked.
"That's the
well. A natural pool formed by a break in the limestone," my mother said.
"You haven't seen it yet."
"We use it as
a swimming hole," Carlos said cheerfully. "I was just telling Robin
about the bones that the Tulane group found at the bottom. Nubile young
maidens, cast to their deaths to placate the Chaacob."
"Just what I
like to talk about over dinner," Maggie said. "Human sacrifice."
"There was
actually more of that sort of thing over at Chichén Itzá than there was
here," commented John. He glanced at me. "Have you been to Chichén
Itzá? The water level in the cenote there is about eighty feet down. Most of
the folks they tossed in died when they hit the water.''
A Mexican woman
brought out the food—stewed chicken, tortillas, beans—and the conversation went
on while everyone ate.
"I'd really
rather not talk about this over dinner," Maggie said.
"Oh, come
on," Carlos was saying. "Everyone likes to talk about human sacrifice.
It's a great topic. All the tourist brochures talk about the young virgins who
died so horribly."
"I hadn't
realized that anyone had determined the victims were nubile young
virgins," Barbara said dryly. "I always thought it was difficult to
tell how virginal a person was from an old thighbone."
"Now,
Barbara," Tony said expansively. "You know we always assume that they
were nubile young virgins until someone proves otherwise. It makes much better
news copy. Who cares if they flung old men and women to the fishes?"
"The old women
probably cared," Barbara observed. "I won't speak for the old men."
"Personally,
I'd sooner be flung to the fishes than have my heart torn out with an obsidian
blade," Carlos was saying. "If I had my choice, I—"
"Can we talk
about something else?" Robin asked. Her request was ignored.
"So,"
Tony said. "Why would you toss someone in a sacred well?"
"I
wouldn't," Robin said. "I don't see why anyone would." I noticed
that my mother had stopped in the act of slicing off a bite of chicken. She
leaned forward. "Tell me, Robin, do you believe in ghosts?" Robin
shook her head.
"Then why does
it bother you that people have died in the cenote?"
Robin looked very
uncomfortable. My mother watched her, waiting patiently for an answer.
"It just makes
me uncomfortable."
"You're
uncomfortable because you believe in the power of the dead," my mother
said calmly. "If you didn't, the bones wouldn't bother you. The Maya who
lived here also believed in the power of the dead. They tried to use that power
to make rain, to placate the gods, to change evil prophecies to good. They felt
that those people who had passed near death were changed—they knew more than
ordinary people."
I watched my
mother's face as she talked of death. Her voice was low and earnest, the
confident tone of a person who knows her subject. One of her hands rubbed at a
bandage on her
wrist. I wondered what it would feel like to slash the thin skin of my wrists
and watch the blood flow. How would it change me?
"Have you read
the Books of Chilam Balam?” my mother was asking Robin. When Robin shook
her head, my mother continued, "When you do, you'll find a fairly
extensive description of the sacrifices at Chichén Itzá. Each year, a few
chosen people were thrown into the cenote. As John said, most of them died when
they hit the water. But some survived. The survivors were hauled out of the
well and treated as messengers who had returned from the world of the gods,
bringing the prophecy of the coming year. Those who had come near death and
survived had a new strength that set them apart from ordinary people." My
mother regarded Robin steadily across the table. "You should make an
effort to learn about the people you are digging up."
"I have a good
translation of that account," Tony said quickly. "You are welcome to
borrow it."
Robin nodded.
"Don't mind
all this talk of death and dying," Tony said to me. "We're a little
preoccupied with death around here. The dead teach us things."
"Speaking of
dead people," Barbara said to my mother, "Tony says you may have
found a burial site this morning."
"Looks
likely," my mother said. "Won't know what we've got for sure until we
get the brush cleared away. With any luck, we'll find a burial or two. We could
use a few good burials." She used a piece of tortilla to mop her plate.
"So far, our success has been severely limited."
"It's only the
third week," Tony said. "You're too impatient."
My mother shrugged.
"True enough."
Twilight faded to
darkness. Tony lit two Coleman lanterns, which cast bright white light, made
sharp-edged double shadows on the tables, and attracted moths and flying
insects. Carlos, Maggie, John, and Robin moved to another table to play cards.
1 declined Carlos's invitation to join them. Carlos brought a cassette player
from his hut and put on a tape of top ten pop music. I stayed at the dinner table with my
mother, Barbara, Liz, and Tony. Tony poured us each a gin and tonic.
"So what will
you be doing on Monday?" Barbara asked me softly. With the coming of
sunset, she had taken off her sunglasses. Her dark brown eyes were surrounded
with circles of pale skin where the sunglasses had blocked the sunlight.
Without the glasses, she seemed younger, more vulnerable. "Has Tony
assigned you a job?"
I shook my head.
"Want to come
on survey with me? We tramp through the monte and look for mounds. Fight with
the bugs and try to avoid heatstroke. Lots of fun."
"The
monte?"
"Second-growth
rain forest," Barbara said. "All this." She waved her hand at
the scrub beyond the huts. "The Maya divided the world into the col—the
cultivated fields— and the monte—the wild lands. In a week on survey, you'll
learn more about the monte than you ever wanted to know. I'll teach you how to
read a compass and follow a transect."
"Sure. That
sounds all right to me."
"Great."
She looked at Tony. "What do you think? She's on survey, all right?"
Tony grinned at me over his drink. "She didn't tell you that you'll have to get up at six A.M."
"That's
okay."
Tony lifted his
glass as if making a toast. "Barbara wins again. You're on survey."
At the other table,
Carlos turned up the volume on the cassette player, and a Mexican version of a
Beatles tune filled the plaza. Maggie made an inaudible comment, and Carlos reached
over to touch her hand. My mother was drinking a gin and tonic and staring off
into the darkness beyond the lantern light.
"You're in the
same hut I'm in," Barbara was saying to me. "Want help setting up
your hammock?"
"Sure."
We said good-night
to my mother and Tony, and headed toward the hut.
"I get tired
of watching the courtship rituals," Barbara said as we left the plaza.
The sound of
Carlos's cassette player was fading in the distance. Barbara snapped on her
flashlight and shone it on the path before us. "The first summer, it was
an interesting sociological phenomenon. But you watch it four years running,
and it gets tedious. The players change, but the moves never do. I steer clear
of it."
"You've come
here for the past four years?" I asked.
"Not this
site. Last year I was at a site up by Mexico City; year before, I was at an
Anasazi site in Arizona. Every site is a little different, but some things
don't change. You always feel filthy; there's always a graduate student like
Carlos who wants to play late-night games, and there's always someone like
Maggie who's willing to play. I got a chance to watch Carlos in action last
year. He's smooth, but callous as hell. When he makes a play for you, watch
out."
I glanced at her
face, but could not read her expression in the dim light. "Who says he
will?"
"You've got to
be kidding. You're pretty and you're the new kid in town. It isn't a question
of whether he will; it's only a question of when."
She stopped by a
large black rubber barrel equipped with a faucet attachment. On top of the
barrel was a battered metal dishpan. A grimy bar of soap sat in a makeshift
soap dish: an old temple stone with an oval indentation. Barbara set her
flashlight beside the soap. "Welcome to the washroom," she said.
"All the comforts of home. The outhouse is at the end of that path. It's
the best outhouse in this part of the country, though that doesn't say a hell
of a lot." She rinsed the dishpan, then filled it with water and washed
her face. "You can hang your towel in the tree right here," she said,
tugging her towel from a branch. "Like I said, all the comforts of home.
The showers are down that path, past the outhouse and upwind of it. They remove
very little of the dirt, but they do rearrange it a bit. You're better off
taking a swim in the cenote instead of a shower except when you want to wash
your hair."
I ran water in the
basin and splashed it on my face. The water was lukewarm and even after rinsing
I could feel soap on my skin. I guessed that Barbara was right; I never would
feel clean. My eyes still felt hot and dry from crying.
In the hut, Barbara
lit a tall white candle in a clear glass chimney. The flame cast a pool of
yellow light on the footlocker where she set it; shadows wavered in the corners
of the hut.
By the candlelight,
I found the shelf where Tony had set my bag earlier. I dug through the bag for
the oversized T-shirt I had brought to sleep in. Barbara undressed and,
casually naked, rubbed herself with insect repellent. She offered me the
repellent, advised me to use it, then instructed me on the best method for
sleeping in a hammock.
"There's a
knack to it," she said, laying one hand on her hammock. She took a sheet
from the shelf and tossed it to me, took another for herself. She wrapped the
sheet loosely around her, held one side of the hammock away from her, spreading
the webbing of cotton strings, then sat back in it, lying diagonally. She
arranged the sheet around her, tucked one arm under her head, and smiled at me.
"See. Comfortable as your own bed." She was rocking slightly.
"Could you hand me my cigarettes?"
I took the
cigarettes from the footlocker, used the candle to light one, and handed it to
her. She puffed and silently watched me attempt to duplicate her maneuver. My
own rocking motion was somewhat more frantic and the edges of the hammock tried
to close over me.
"Lie
crosswise," Barbara suggested.
I managed to squirm
around until the length of my body kept the webbing spread. I tucked the sheet
around me.
"Comfortable?"
she asked.
"As long as I
don't move."
"Want a
cigarette?"
"No
thanks." I felt more comfortable than I had felt for many months. I had seen my
mother and survived the meeting. "Hey, who's going to blow out the
candle?"
"I can get it
from here," she said. She leaned over and blew the candle out.
I propped up my
head on my arm and my hammock rocked furiously. "Seems like a tough place
to make love," I said, thinking of Carlos and Maggie.
"It can be
done," Barbara said. "Trust me."
"You sound
like an expert." I could see only the glowing tip of her cigarette,
rocking slowly in the darkness. For a moment, she was silent, and I thought
perhaps I had said too much.
"Stick around
here, and you can find out firsthand," she said slowly. "I'm sure
Carlos would be delighted to help you learn."
"That's all
right. I think I'll pass." I watched her cigarette glow brighter as she
took a puff.
"You
married?" she asked.
"No. I'm just
out of a bad breakup." I tried to sound casual. "That's one reason
I'm down here. He was the art director at the advertising agency where I
worked.'' I could visualize his face clearly: dark hair with a touch of gray,
blue eyes.
"He was
married?"
"Sure
enough." I managed to keep my voice light. I was glad the hut was dark.
"Aren't they
always," Barbara said. Her voice had softened. "I had an affair with
a professor of mine. He was married and had two kids. He finally said it was
over, cut me off, wouldn't have anything to do with me. When I was sure it was
all over, I changed schools. I couldn't stand seeing him, up there in front of
his classes, so very sure of himself."
"I quit and
left town." It felt good to tell someone about it. Especially someone who
did not know Brian, did not judge me to be a fool.
"I know how it
goes," Barbara said. "Well, if you're looking for a place to escape
and forget, this is a good one. They'll never find you here."
"Thanks for
helping me with everything," I said awkwardly.
"No
problem," she said. "Any time you need to talk, let me know."
I watched her
silhouette lean over and stub the cigarette out in the dirt on the hut floor. I
heard the sheet rustle as she turned over. "Better get to sleep now,"
she advised.
"Good-night,"
I said.
"
'Night."
I lay awake for a
long time, listening to unfamiliar sounds: footsteps, insects, rustling leaves,
the loud ticking of a clock inside the hut. It seemed strange to be able to lie
still, not to worry about what would happen when I reached my destination. It
seemed that I had spent the last few weeks in constant motion. Pacing up and
down the long corridor of the hospital, waiting for the doctor's verdict. Staring
out the window of the limousine as my father's funeral procession moved slowly
to the cemetery. Wandering in my father's house, confined by four white walls,
aimless, unable to settle. Moving slowly, but always moving. Thinking about my
mother, remembering my mother. She was shorter than I remembered. Her hair had
more gray than I remembered.
The hammock rocked
beneath me and I felt like I was still moving, traveling toward an unknown
destination. I was just drifting off to sleep when Robin stumbled in and
fumbled about in the dark. Finally, she was quiet. I slept.
Notes for City of Stones
by Elizabeth Butler
Robin, one of my students, is a reasonably
intelligent, well-educated, young woman. Yet she claims that she sees no reason
for human sacrifice. Her attitude, when she speaks of the ancient Maya and
their sacrifices to the gods, implies that we are civilized now, we have left
that nonsense far behind.
Robin forgets, I
think, that her own religion involved human sacrifice. She is a practicing
Christian. She partakes of Holy Communion, the body and blood of Jesus Christ,
the human son of God who died and rose from the dead to bring back the word of
his Father. She believes in the Resurrection, but only as something that
happened long ago in a distant land, far removed from her day-to-day life. She
believes in God, the Father Almighty. On the other hand, if her next-door
neighbor were to claim that God had spoken to him in a vision, she would think
him eccentric and possibly dangerous. Her God is a distant patriarch who
demands that she attend church and follow a set of ten rules, but he does not
deign to pass along new rules through common people. She
is accustomed to a God who keeps his distance.
The gods of the
ancient Maya are closer and more demanding. At the turning of the katun, the
time comes for fasting and drinking balche, for cleansing the sacred books, for
dancing on stilts and burning incense. At that time, the people gather at the
Sacred Well at Chichén Itzá, a city fifty
miles from Dzibilchaltún. The well is a place of
power, home of many gods. At the turning of the katun, priests fling jade
ornaments, gold bells, copper rings, painted bowls, and incense into the Sacred
Well.
With these gifts,
they send messengers to the gods. If the messengers do not wish to visit the
gods, they are sent— hurled over the edge by muscular priests who only wish to
do them honor. The messengers fall, bright feathers
fluttering in the sunlight, their voices smothered by the shouting of the
crowd, the processional music, the chanting of the priests. Far below, they
float, specks of silent color on the jade-green water.
At noon, when the
disc of the sun fills the well with light, only one messenger floats on the
water. The others are gone, taken down by the Chaacob to the submarine rooms
beneath the water's smooth surface. The priests draw out this survivor, who has
returned to tell the message of the gods, bringing the prophecy for the coming
year.
It is not a simple
thing, this human sacrifice, any more than the crucifixion of Jesus Christ was
a simple execution. The messengers who do not return are among the gods; the
one who does return is the oracle, the interpreter for the gods.
The archaeologist
Edward Thompson dredged human bones from the Sacred Well at Chichén Itzá. The
bones that Thompson found belonged to messengers who failed in their duty.
I tapped a cigarette out of the pack and
watched the bright point of Barbara's flashlight move across the plaza to the
women's hut. Barbara and Diane were shadows in the distance.
This daughter of
mine was as cool as if she were encased in glass, shielded from the world by an
invisible protective barrier. She was not unfriendly: during dinner she had
smiled and joked with the others. But she seemed cautious, wary, and even when
she removed her sunglasses, I could not begin to guess what she was thinking. I
lit my cigarette, cupping my hand to protect the flame from the evening breeze,
then shook the burning match to blow it out. Tony sat beside me, nursing a
drink. I think it was his fourth.
In the corner of
the plaza, not far from the table where the students played their interminable
game of cards, a loincloth-clad Toltec priest was scraping remnants of flesh
from the hide of a newly killed jaguar. A smoking torch cast red light on his
bare back and shoulders; at his side, incense burned in a pottery vessel shaped
like a jaguar. As he worked, he chanted incessantly, and his voice competed
with the rock-and-roll tapes playing on Carlos's cassette player.
"Your daughter
is a very nice young woman," Tony said. "I think she'll fit right
in."
I said nothing. The
priest chanted and the rock-and-roll band sang about love.
"Did you have
a nice chat when you took her around the site?"
"Curious,
aren't you?"
"Yes." He
leaned back in his chair. The hand holding his glass of gin was propped up on
one knee; the empty hand on the other. He was waiting. A moth was battering its
head against the glass chimney of the lantern. I dimmed the light and moved it
to the other end of the table, but the insect circled, found the lamp again,
and continued its efforts to die.
"I don't
understand what she wants from me," I said finally.
"Didn't you
ask her that?" Tony said.
"I did. She
said she wanted to dig up the past and see what was under the rubble."
He nodded.
For a moment we
listened to the slap of the cards, the low murmur of the students'
conversation, and the soft whir of the cassette player rewinding. The priest
had stopped his wailing and I could hear the scrape of the obsidian knife
against the hide. I realized that I was holding the burning cigarette, but not
smoking. I took a long drag and exhaled slowly.
"I don't
understand what she's doing here," I said abruptly. "It's all past
history. I left her. Why should she look to me for comfort now?"
"Is she
looking to you for comfort?"
"She's looking
for her mother. I'm nobody's mother."
"Then she'll figure that out," he said. "And then
she'll go. Is that what you want?"
I shrugged, unable
to say what I wanted. "That would be fine," I said. "Just
fine."
"All
right," Tony said. "Maybe that will happen."
We sat quietly for a
while. The priest resumed his chanting, but the card game seemed to be winding
down. Carlos had his arm around Maggie's shoulders and the two of them were
laughing a great deal.
"She seems to
have hit it off with Barbara," I said.
"True. And having
another person on survey isn't a bad idea."
"I
suppose." I frowned out at the darkness. "I wonder why she's so wary.
I suppose that's Robert's doing."
"Give the
woman a chance, Liz," he said. "Just give her a chance."
"She seems
bright enough," I said grudgingly.
"That's
something."
"All
right," I said. "It was brave of her to come down here by herself. Is
that what you're waiting for?"
He shrugged.
"I'm not waiting for anything. I was just thinking that arriving unannounced
seemed like the sort of thing that you would have done in her position."
"I suppose
you're right," I admitted reluctantly.
"I think I
am."
Carlos reached over
to the tape player and the music clicked off. Carlos and Maggie headed off, arm
in arm, on the path to the cenote, talking in loud whispers. John and Robin
headed toward their huts. Tony poured himself one more drink. "You ever
going to sleep?" he asked.
"Later,"
I said. "I'm not tired yet."
"It'll be all
right," he said.
I shrugged and
watched him walk away. I sat alone at the table.
In the dim lantern
light, I could see only the outlines of the huts. The trilling of the insects
in the monte seemed to match some internal rhythm, and I knew with a certainty
born of experience that if I went to my hut now, I would not sleep. I would
watch the shadows on the ceiling swaying as my hammock swayed, and wait until
the morning came. I had learned, at times like this, to wait it out. Alcohol
would put me out for a time, but when I drank myself to sleep I woke at five in
the morning, feeling stony-eyed and wide awake. Sleeping pills would put me
out—the university physician had prescribed some for my bouts with insomnia—but
I did not like to resort to drugs. A pill would shut the lights out, as surely
as a pillow forced down over my face, and there would be nothing I could do to
chase the darkness away.
The darkness seemed
to be pressing closer. The heat was oppressive. Diane's appearance made the
past come back too vividly.
I had walked for
miles in the two weeks before I ran away to New Mexico for the first time. Up
and down the narrow streets, past fenced yards filled with weeds, past barking
dogs and old men on porches and screaming children who always seemed to be
running or fighting. Each morning, as soon as Robert drove away to the
hospital, I would leave our small apartment. I always wore an oversized sun hat
and a loose tent dress. On the days that Diane did not go to nursery school,
she walked with me, her short legs working hard to keep up with my steady pace.
When she started to whimper and complain, I would carry her for a few blocks.
Then I would put her down and she would walk again.
I did not follow
any particular route; I had no destination. I just walked—wandering randomly
through the rundown section of Los Angeles where we rented our home. I had to
walk: when I stayed in the apartment, I had trouble breathing. The walls were
too close. I could not stay still.
My marriage to
Robert had become intolerable, a cage I had entered willingly, but could not
escape. Robert and I met in a chemistry class during my junior year of college.
I had been working my way through school—relying on a small scholarship from my
hometown Rotary Club and on the cash I could earn by typing papers for
professors and more prosperous students. It was a hard life, but no worse than
life in my parents' house had been.
I was an only
child. My father was a dour straight-backed man who earned his living as a
plumber and believed in a dour straight-backed Christian God. He did not
believe that women needed a college education. He disapproved of my passion for
collecting Indian arrowheads, stone tools, and fragments of pots. My mother,
like the female birds of many species, had developed a drab protective
coloration that let her blend into the background, invisible as long as she
remained silent. She counseled me to adopt the same strategy, to be quiet and
meek, but I could never manage it. I always felt like a fledgling cuckoo bird, hatched from
an egg laid in an alien nest, a chick too big, too loud, too rambunctious for
its adopted parents. When I graduated from high school, my father suggested
that I take a job clerking at the local drugstore. I packed my bags and left.
At college, people
left me alone. I could read what I pleased, do as I pleased. I led an isolated
life, having little in common with the women in my boardinghouse. I was
uninterested in mixers, boyfriends, and football games, and far too interested
in science classes and books.
Robert was a
scholarship student, an earnest young man who was careful in his studies. We
started by arguing over an experiment in chemistry class and ended up going to
a dance together. We got along. He thought I was clever; he
laughed at my jokes. I think, looking back on it, that I never realized I was
lonely until, with Robert, I was no longer alone. We went to dances, to movies
when we could scrape the money together; we shared ice cream sundaes in the
campus coffee shop. And I felt, for the first time, as if I belonged somewhere:
I belonged with Robert. I changed for him—softening my manner, becoming less
argumentative, paying more attention to how I looked, to the clothes I wore.
One night, after a
bottle of wine in the backseat of a borrowed Chevrolet, I lost my virginity. A
few weeks later, my period failed to arrive on schedule. We married, the only
solution that seemed reasonable at the time, and I dropped out of college,
still typing papers to earn a living but also carrying the tremendous weight of
a growing child within me. After Diane's birth, during Robert's years of
medical school, I typed while caring for the baby, doing laundry, and cooking
cauldrons of soup and pasta—soup because it was cheap and pasta because it was
filling.
I came to remember
with nostalgia the long nights alone in my small boardinghouse room, reading
until dawn, then rising to go to classes. In college, my time was limited, but
it was my own. As a mother, I had no time. I managed to read sometimes, but
only after Diane was asleep. I attended one archaeology lecture at the local
college, but Diane grew restless and disrupted the lecture by crying or asking me
loud unintelligible questions. The professor asked me not to bring the child
again, but we could not afford a babysitter.
I grew restless and
my dreams became vivid: I wandered through exotic jungles filled with bright
flowers, strange people, decaying ruins. I was impatient, angry with myself and
the world around me.
Robert and I argued
endlessly—about Diane, about money and the lack of it, about my housekeeping
and the lack of it. I remember one evening at home quite vividly. Diane was
asleep and I was darning Robert's socks and trying to watch a television documentary
about the Indians of the Brazilian rain forest. Robert was home and awake, a
rare combination. He was pacing, filled with nervous energy. At a party given
by one of Robert's colleagues, an arrogant man had been talking about the
limitations of what he called the "primitive" mind. He seemed to
regard all nonwhite races as primitive. I argued with him for a while, and
ended up calling him a stupid bigoted fool. Word of this had finally filtered
back to Robert.
"Couldn't you
have used a little tact?" he asked.
"You want me
to kowtow to that idiot?"
"I want you to
use a little sense. That idiot is head of surgery and he has a lot of pull at
the hospital," Robert said. "You should know better. You used to know
better."
I watched an Indian
slash a rubber tree with a machete and catch the flowing sap in a bucket.
"What's wrong
with you these days?" he asked. "Why are you always so touchy?"
I looked up from
the television. "I don't want to be here," I said sadly.
Robert stopped
pacing, suddenly sympathetic. "Neither do I." He sat beside me on the
couch, put a comforting arm around my shoulders. "Things will get
better," he said. "We won't always live here. When I have a good
position, we can move to a better neighborhood."
I thought about a
better neighborhood and imagined endless vistas of suburban lawns, white picket
fences, laughing children. "No," I said.
He squeezed my
shoulders gently. "We're almost there. Just one more year of residency
..."
One more year would
bring me one more year closer to a suburban home that I did not want. "No,"
I said again. "I want to go to the jungle."
"What?"
I gestured at the
television screen, where Indian women squatted by an open fire. "That's my
idea of a better neighborhood," I said.
He laughed.
"Right," he said.
My father had
laughed when I told him that I was going to college.
"I don't
belong here. I don't know where I belong, but it isn't here."
He shook his head,
still smiling. Unbelieving and amused by the whole idea. "For a smart
woman, you can be really silly. What the hell would you do there? Besides, one
week of the bugs and dirt and you'd be home."
I watched him
coolly, suddenly wondering if he had ever listened when I talked of
anthropology and archaeology. I could see him clearly, but he seemed very
distant, as if a wall of glass had been lowered between us at the moment that
he laughed. Diane called to me from her room—she needed a drink of water.
Without a word, I left to go to her.
Robert never really
understood the nature of my discontent, not even after I ran away from home,
not even after I slashed my wrists. He kept waiting for me to turn back into
the woman he married, never realizing that she was a sham; she never existed.
And so I strode
through the neighborhood, trying to burn off the energy that kept me awake at
night, energy that made it impossible to rest at all. It was on those walks
that I first started seeing the shadows of the past. A group of Indian men
setting forth on a hunt. Four women carrying woven baskets filled with
unidentifiable roots. I remember seeing a Spanish friar, mounted on a tired
burro, crossing my path on his way to somewhere important. A troop of mounted
soldiers raised dust as they trotted down the paved street, disappearing when
they continued straight through a building that blocked their way.
I clearly
remembered the day that I did not go walking. Diane was five and sick with the
flu. I stayed home to nurse her, pacing within the apartment. It was August and
the temperature was holding steady at over 100 degrees, a heat wave that the TV
weatherman kept promising would end. After hours of fussing and complaining,
Diane was asleep. Robert was working a late shift at the hospital. I sat at the
kitchen table on a wooden chair that wobbled. It was hot, too hot, and I had
been drinking beer all afternoon with a neighbor, a slatternly woman who had
nothing good to say about anyone. I had been drinking with her only because I could
not stand being alone. I was twenty-six years old, and it seemed wrong to sit
alone drinking beer after beer. But at six, when the neighbor left, I kept
drinking cold beer and staring at the walls.
In that old
apartment, the water heater grumbled, the refrigerator hummed, the floor
creaked for no discernible reason. When I listened closely to the refrigerator,
I could hear voices, like distant cocktail-party conversation.
After the neighbor
left, I became aware that I was not alone. Very slowly, I became conscious of
the woman who sat across the table in the seat that the neighbor had vacated.
She was watching me. The light in the kitchen was dim—I had not turned on the
overhead lamp and the orange light of the setting sun was filtered through smears
of dirt on the kitchen window. The woman's face was in the shadows; I could not
make it out.
I returned her
stare for a moment, wondering vaguely how she had come to be there. "Want
a beer?" I asked her.
She shook her head.
"So what do
you think I should do? Run away? Or stay here and take care of the child?"
I had told the
neighbor woman that I was thinking about leaving Robert. She had laughed at me
and said that after a few months out on my own I would come running home.
The woman whose
face I could not see did not laugh.
"Run
away."
Did she speak or
was it the rumble of the water heater? The shadows had never spoken to me
before.
There was a
coldness in my stomach. I felt ill from the beer, dizzy with the heat. "I
can't leave the child."
I strained to see
the woman's face, but she was hidden in the shadows. "Why are you
hiding?" I asked her. "Talk to me. What can I do?"
"Run
away." There again, I heard the whisper.
"I can't
leave. There must be something else I can do. There must be."
She looked down at
her hands and lifted them above the edge of the table to show me what she held.
Across her open palms, laid like an offering on an altar, was a knife, a sharp
blade chipped from obsidian and glinting in the dim light.
Somewhere in the
distance, far away, I heard a child cry out, and I started. I recognized
Diane's voice. She was awake after a long nap and calling for me. I looked
toward the shadows and the woman was gone.
I sat alone in the
plaza and a large moth—maybe the brother of the moth that had tried so hard to
reach the light and die—flew out of the darkness, hurled itself at the dim
flame of the Coleman lantern, bounced off the glass, and returned to the night.
I stood up, unwilling to sit still any longer. I did not want to remember. I
walked out toward the Temple of the Seven Dolls, looking for Zuhuy-kak.
The monte was never
silent. As I walked, the brush rustled around me with the soft careful
movements of small animals. Insects sang and I could sometimes hear the
chittering of bats overhead. Harmless sounds—I was accustomed to the monte at
night. I passed Salvador's hut and followed the trail that wound through the
ancient ruins.
I heard a rustling
sound, like skirts against the grass, and looked behind me. Just the wind.
A pompous young doctor at the nuthouse had explained to me that I was having difficulty distinguishing my fantasies from reality. "You just object because I won't recognize your reality,"
I said to him. "I have no problems recognizing my own
reality."
The doctor was a
little older than I was at the time, maybe twenty-nine or thirty years old. He
was crew-cut, clean shaven, well-scrubbed, and his office smelled of shaving
soap. "I don't see the difference. There's only one reality."
"That's your
opinion." My wrists were still wrapped with white surgical gauze from
wrist to elbow. The gashes had almost healed, but my arms were still stiff and
sore. I crossed my arms across my chest defiantly. "I don't like your
reality. I don't like my husband's reality either, but he won't let me change
it."
The young doctor
frowned. "You must cooperate, Betty," he said, looking genuinely
concerned. "I want to help."
"My name is
Elizabeth."
"Your husband
calls you Betty."
"My husband is
a fool. He doesn't know my name. My husband wants to kill me."
The young doctor
protested that my husband cared very much for me, my husband wanted to protect
me. The young doctor did not understand that there are shades of reality.
Metaphor is reality once removed. I said that Robert wanted to kill me. Really,
he wanted me to be quiet and compliant, as good as dead. He was not evil, but
he did not understand what I needed to live. He wanted me to be dead to the
world. When I saw the walls of the ward closing in, that was a kind of truth
too. The world I lived in was small and getting smaller.
The young doctor
believed in only one reality, the one in which young doctors are in charge and
patients are very grateful. He would never admit to a reality in which spirits
of the past prowl the streets of Los Angeles. That would not fit; that would
not do. The doctor was a young fool then; probably an old fool now.
By the Spanish
church I smoked a cigarette and listened for the sound of footsteps on the
path. Nothing. I was alone. I fingered the bandage that covered the claw marks
where the tree branch had raked my skin. My wrist ached, and the feeling brought back
memories. My daughter slept nearby and that brought back memories too.
Sometimes, memories
of my attempt at suicide return to me, unbidden and unwelcome. The scent of the
aftershave that Robert favored, the wet warmth of steam rising from a newly
drawn bath, the touch of cold glass to the skin of my inner wrist—these things
recall the time that I locked the flimsy door to the bathroom, turned on the
hot water so that it thundered into the tub. The rumble of the
water covered the crash of breaking glass when I shattered a drinking tumbler
in the sink. I did not like the thought of slicing my skin with a razor blade,
cold metal against my skin. I held a long thin shard of sharp-edged glass in my
hand and smiled; this was better, more appropriate.
It hurt, I remember
that, but mixed with the pain was a sense of anticipation. I stood on the edge
of something enormous, like the feeling just before orgasm when the body burns
with a new intensity and every nerve is alive, so alive that each movement
carries with it joy and pain. There are sensations so great that the body
cannot contain them. We label these feelings pain for lack of a better word. I
felt more than pain as I drew the glass edge along my wrist, more than the cold
edge of the glass and the thin line of pain and the warm flow of blood down my
arm. I could see the blood pump in time with the beating of my heart and I let
it flow into the tub, where it mingled with the rushing water.
I was nearly
unconscious when Robert broke the lock on the flimsy door and found me sprawled
over the tub, my arms hooked over the porcelain lip, my wrists submerged in the
hot water that overflowed the tub, pouring onto the floor, onto my naked body.
I would have fought him, but my energy was gone. I had passed beyond fighting
into a large empty place that roared with the sound of the sea. I was ready to
go on, but Robert pulled me back.
Sometimes, I
remember. I try not to.
Just after my father died, during the two weeks when I
could not sleep and could not eat, my friend Marcia suggested I visit a
psychologist. I went to see Marcia’s counselor, a square-shouldered woman with
soft gray eyes that looked out of place in a face composed of angles and harsh
planes. On the wood-paneled walls of her office hung watercolors in black
frames—an odd combination of
softness and severity. She sat in a rocking chair. I sat in an easy chair that
was too soft.
She asked me to talk about myself. I
considered, for a moment, telling her about the night before my father’s
funeral. The memory had haunted me. For three nights running, I had dreamed of
the great dark valley spreading beneath my father’s balcony. I remembered the
dreams only vaguely, waking each time to a feeling of panic and a memory of
falling. While awake, I avoided the balcony, especially at night.
I spent my days sorting through my
father’s things—deciding what clothes would
be donated to charity, what papers might be of interest to my father’s
colleagues at the hospital. Aunt Alicia
kept asking me when I had to be back to work. I had not told her that I had
quit work and given up my apartment. By night, I drank, watched television, and
tried to sleep. But whenever I managed to doze off, I woke from strange dreams,
restless and unhappy.
I told the
counselor that my father was dead, that I could not eat and I had trouble
sleeping, that I was very nervous and upset. She asked me about my father and
my relationship with him, and I told her that my father and I had had a good
relationship, a very good relationship.
She asked about my mother and I told her that my mother did not
enter into this at all. I told her that I had not seen my mother in fifteen
years.
"How do you
feel when you think about your mother?" she asked. Her voice matched her
eyes—pale gray and gentle.
I shrugged. "I
don't know. Sad, I guess. Sad that she left."
She waited,
studying me. "What are your hands doing?"
My hands were
clenched in fists. I did not speak.
"Can you give
your hands a voice and let them tell me how they feel?"
I shook my head
quickly and forced my hands to relax. "Holding on," I said in a thick
voice that did not sound like my own. "I guess they were holding on. I
didn't want her to go"
The gray eyes
studied me dispassionately and I thought that she did not believe me.
On my first morning
in camp I woke to the sound of a blaring car horn. The clock on the footlocker
said it was 8:00. Already the air was hot. Barbara's and Robin's hammocks were
empty. Maggie was still asleep, curled up with the sheet pulled over her head.
I felt more relaxed than I had in months, and I resolved, lying in my hammock,
to adopt Tony's easygoing attitude and take things as they came.
I slipped out of my
hammock and dressed quickly. Barbara was at the water barrel, washing her face.
I wished her a good morning and hung my towel in the tree.
"I wish you
wouldn't be so cheerful before I have my coffee," she grumbled, but she
waited for me to wash up. On the way to the plaza, we passed the kitchen, a
small hut constructed of slats.
Through the open door, I
could see a thin
woman in a white dress tending a small fire and cooking tortillas on a flat
black pan.
"That's
Maria," Barbara said. "She's married to Salvador, the foreman."
A small girl with large dark eyes stood by Maria and watched me solemnly. In
one hand, she held a tortilla. When I smiled at her, she hid behind her mother.
Maria looked over her shoulder to see what the child was watching.
I smiled but Maria
did not smile back. She studied me seriously, suspiciously I thought. After a
moment, she turned back to the fire and the tortillas. The little girl smiled
at me, then hid her face behind her mother's skirt.
Tony and my mother
were already at the table. Breakfast was huevos rancheros with
tortillas, strong coffee, and fresh orange juice. My mother looked tired, but
seemed filled with nervous energy. She greeted me and waved me to a chair, then
went on making out a shopping list. "Yes, yes, pineapples, I'll get fresh
fruit. What else? I know I've forgotten something important."
My mother finished
checking over her list, then glanced at me. "I'll be going to the market
in the afternoon," she said. "If you'd like to come along, we can get
you a hat."
"Sure," I said. "I'd like that."
Tony's eyes were
red-rimmed. His voice, when he spoke, was hoarse, rough as wool cloth against
the skin. "I'll be going for a swim right after breakfast," Tony said
softly. "Do you and Barbara want to join me? You have time."
Barbara and I
agreed.
The other students
were just wandering down to breakfast when Tony, Barbara, and I finished our
coffee. Barbara and I returned to our hut to change into swimsuits, then
followed Tony down the path.
At the crest of a
small rise, I stopped to look around. In the distance, the Temple of the Seven
Dolls stood above the barren ground. "According to the guidebook I read,
this is one of the largest sites in the Yucatán," I said. I looked at the
jungle that surrounded us and shook my head. "Am I missing something?
Where are all the buildings?"
Tony stamped his
foot lightly on the ground. "Underneath you," he said. "All
around you." He waved a hand in the direction of the temple. "You
have to learn how to look. Don't the mounds look a little more regular than
hills should look? And you see how they're arranged so that they make a nice
path from here to there." He drew a line in the air with his hand.
"And look at the rocks that are scattered around. They aren't your average
rocks."
"I suppose
so," I said doubtfully.
"We're
standing right on top of an old temple," he said.
"How do you
know it's a temple?"
Barbara broke in.
"Everything's a temple until someone proves otherwise," she said in a
mildly derisive tone. "We could even give it a name: Temple of the Sun,
say. Or Temple of the Jaguar—that sounds good. The names are arbitrary
anyway."
"Careful,"
Tony said, smiling faintly. "You're giving away professional
secrets."
"She'll keep
it in the family," Barbara said. "She's trustworthy."
She started down
the trail and we followed. I studied the rocks around us as we walked. Occasionally,
I saw one that bore the remnants of carving, but most just looked like rocks.
The cenote was a
pool of clear blue water, set in the limestone rock. Right beside the path, the
rock sloped gently down to the water. On the far side, the rocks rose out of
the water in a sheer face that leveled off several feet above the water's
surface. I could not see the bottom of the pool. Water lilies floated at the
far end.
We left our towels
in the sun on the sloping rock. Barbara and I climbed in slowly. The water was
cold, a shock after the heat of the morning. I swam a dozen laps, down to the
water lilies at the far end and back. I could see tiny fish, each no longer
than my finger, hovering just under the water lilies. When I swam toward them,
they scattered, heading down into the darkness.
Tony sat on the
sloping rocks, basking in the sun like an ancient reptile trying to absorb the
warmth. He had leaned back on his hands and tilted his face to the sun. Now that
he had taken off his shirt, I could see how thin he was. His skin, tanned to
the color of old leather, seemed to fit him badly, like a shirt handed down
from a larger man.
I climbed out on
the rocks beside him. Barbara was still in the water, floating contentedly on
her back. I spread my towel beside his and he acknowledged my presence with a
nod.
"How deep is
this pool?" I asked him.
He shrugged without
opening his eyes. "Deeper than you think. According to the team from
Tulane University, it goes straight down to a hundred and fifty feet. Keeps
going at an angle from there. They did quite a bit of underwater work."
"Will you be
diving this summer?" I asked.
Tony shook his
head. "No budget for it. The university doesn't think this is a glamorous
enough site for the big money."
I could understand
that attitude. So far, I had seen nothing that looked particularly impressive.
"It's an
important site," Tony was saying. "The oldest continuously occupied
ceremonial center. But to convince the university to let us come back next
year, we need to find something spectacular."
"Like
what?"
"Jade masks,
gold, pottery painted with pictures of important rituals. Or maybe a set of
murals like the ones at Bonampak in Chiapas." He lay back, setting himself
down gently as if his bones might shatter. "Something flashy—a tomb filled
with treasure would be ideal. Something that can double as a tourist
attraction."
"You think the
chances are good?" I asked.
His eyes were still
closed against the sun. He shrugged without opening them. "Hard to say.
We're gambling. We always have to gamble. Liz likes gambling, I think. But
then, she's never lost big. She has luck. The academics don't like her. But she
has luck."
"I hope I
won't be in the way here," I said. My voice sounded thin and weak. "I
don't want to get in her way."
He opened his eyes
halfway and squinted at me. "What do
you expect to find here?" he asked. His
voice was a low rumble, like the thunder of ocean waves on a warm beach or like
rain on a tin roof on a winter morning. "Some come looking for secret
knowledge; some, for adventure. What do you want here?"
I shrugged. "I
don't really know."
"You'll find
something, that's certain. But it's never what you expect."
"What do you
want here?" I asked him, closing my eyes against the sun.
"Warmth and
peace," he said. "I used to want more, but the years have changed
that."
"What should I
do?" I asked lazily, my eyes still closed. "Expect nothing and see
what comes?"
He was silent for a
moment. "That might work." He hesitated. "Your mother doesn't
know what to do with you—I can tell you that. That's why she's a little stiff.
She doesn't know what role to play."
I opened my eyes
and wrapped my arms around my knees. The sun had dried my skin and the rock was
warm beneath me. "Neither do I," I said.
"You've been
doing okay," he said. "Just keep on the way you're going."
I did not look at
him. I watched Barbara dive beneath the water and pop up like a cork.
"I think that
having you here will be good for Liz," he said. "I think she needs
people more than she is willing to admit."
I heard him shift
position, but I still did not look at him.
"Someone once
told me that archaeologists are anthropologists who don't like live people.
They dig up dead ones because dead ones can't talk back. That's not quite true.
But I think live people are too fast for most archaeologists. We're a
slow-moving lot. We look at a change in pottery technology that took a hundred
years and say that that's pretty quick. We're used to taking our
time. You'll have to give Liz some time to get used to the idea that she has a
daughter.''
"All
right," I said slowly. "I will." I lay back on my towel and let
the sun warm me.
After a time,
Barbara left the water and lay down beside us. Tony left after about fifteen
minutes of sunbathing, saying he had some reading to do back at the camp.
Barbara propped her head up to watch him go. He waved from the crest of the
hill, then vanished from our sight.
"Ten to one
he'll be on his third gin and tonic by the time we get back," Barbara said
in a matter-of-fact tone.
I looked at her
sharply.
"Don't get me
wrong," she said. "I like Tony. Everyone likes Tony. And we all see
that he drinks too much." She rolled over and lay on her back, her head
pillowed on one arm. Her dark hair was slicked back and still glistening with
water from the cenote. "It hasn't interfered with his work so far. He's
still a brilliant teacher, from what I've heard. It's just in the field that he
lets himself go."
I remembered what
he had said about warmth and peace. Barbara glanced up at my face and shrugged.
"Sorry. I suppose I shouldn't have mentioned it. After a while, there's
not much to do in camp except gossip about the other people. Dead people,
fascinating though they may be, are not nearly as interesting as the live
ones." She turned her head and opened one eye to squint at me. "Don't
you agree?"
"I suppose
you're right."
"Of
course," she said. "Now—what do you suppose Carlos and Maggie and
Robin are saying about us?"
"What makes
you think they are talking about us?"
"I thought we
just went through that. They're talking about us because live people are more
interesting than dead ones. You don't think that archaeologists talk about
archaeology all the time, do you? No, they talk about other archaeologists. So
what do you think they're saying about us?"
"Ten to one,
Maggie thinks that I'm stuck up," I said, adopting her tone.
"Probably thinks you are too."
"No bet
there," Barbara said. "And Robin will go along with that, because
Robin goes along with anything Maggie says. She has the mark of the eternal
sidekick. What about Carlos?"
"If Carlos has
any brains, he'll stay out of it."
"Ah, your
first error of judgment. Carlos has no brains. I'd bet that he will try to
defend us—at least he'll defend you. Carlos and I aren't the best of
friends."
"So I'd
noticed," I said dryly.
Barbara shook her
head. "I can hear those wheels turning," she said. "And you can
just stop. No, I never slept with Carlos. But I watched him sleep with four
different women last summer—courting each one with equal energy and passion—and
dropping each one just the same." She shrugged. "The first of the
women was a very good friend of mine. She had to hang around the rest of the
summer and watch Carlos make his moves on numbers two, three, and four. All of
them were very nice women. All of them were burned." She shrugged again.
"I don't know why he does it, but I think he likes trouble. Be
careful."
"Thanks for
the warning. I'd figured that out already."
"John, on the
other hand, is a workaholic. I doubt if he even realizes women exist." She
closed her eyes against the bright sun overhead. "So, do you want to place
a bet on whether Maggie and Robin will wear mascara on survey tomorrow?"
We lay in the sun
and chatted. Barbara had a sharp eye and a sharper tongue and she was quite
amusing at the expense of the others.
After an hour or
so, we heard shouting and laughter on the trail. A group of Mexican boys, ranging
in age from five to fifteen, came scrambling down to the cenote. Barbara and I
watched them swim for a time, but packed up to leave when the older boys
started a contest to see who could make the biggest splash by leaping into the
water from the sheer rock face. The rock where we were lying was right on the
edge of the splash zone and retreat seemed the wisest course.
"It belongs to
them the rest of the year," Barbara said as we headed back. "We only
borrow it."
"Do they live
near here?"
"Up at the
hacienda, I think. You know, the ranch out by the highway. In the middle of the
henequen fields."
"Long walk
down here," I said.
She shrugged.
"When there's only one place to swim, I suppose it doesn't matter much how
long the walk is."
The camp was quiet.
Tony sat in the shade by his hut, a drink balanced carefully on the arm of his
lawn chair. My mother was apparently working on her book—I could hear the
tapping of her typewriter. Barbara declared that the only thing worth doing was
taking a nap. I borrowed a book from her, took a seat in the shade at one of
the tables, and settled down to read.
Chickens scratched
in the dirt around me, clucking bemusedly to themselves. A small black pig lay
by the wall near the kitchen, taking a prolonged siesta. I could hear the
cook's daughter singing to herself. She was just on the other side of the wall,
scratching in the dirt with a stick. I could not understand the words of the
song. They could have been nonsense or they could have been Maya. When she
peeked over the edge of the wall, I smiled and said, "Buenos
días." She ducked back behind the wall and was silent for a few
minutes. Then I heard the scratching of her stick in the dirt and she returned
to her song.
The first chapter of
Barbara's book gave a general history of the Mayan empire, profusely
illustrated with photos of Chichén Itzá and Uxmal. Dzibilchaltún was mentioned
as the oldest continuously occupied site, but the text included no photos. I
understood why.
The Maya had
occupied the Yucatán peninsula since 3000 B.C. They absorbed several invasions
from Mexico. From the book, I got the impression that the Maya's strength was
not in their military prowess, but in their ability to absorb invaders, adopt
some of the new customs, retain some of their own. For the most part, they held
their own until the Spanish came along. The Spanish conquistadors overcame the
Mayan armies; the Catholic Church subdued the survivors. The
friars seemed, from the book's account, to be concerned with saving the
heathens' souls even if that meant ending their lives.
I took a break and
drank a glass of water from the barrel in the shade. I considered going back to
the cenote for another swim, but the prospect of the long, hot walk discouraged
me. The plaza was hot, even in the shade. Tony had gone into his hut for a nap
or another drink, I supposed.
The second chapter
described the Mayan view of time, saying that the philosophy of time was an
essential part of their way of thinking. The book failed to make it seem at all
essential. I had read the first paragraph over three times and was considering
a stroll through the ruins, when the jeep drove up in a cloud of dust. Carlos
and Robin were sitting in the front seat; Maggie was alone in the back.
"Hey, Robin," I heard Maggie say, "let's take this stuff to the
hut and go for a swim."
The two women
headed off together with their laundry bags, never looking back at Carlos. I
suppressed a grin and looked back down at my book, considering the comments
that Barbara might have on this particular sequence in the courtship rites.
I tried to
concentrate on the book, but the description of the Mayan calendar was as dry
as my throat. I had moved on to the second paragraph, but it was little better
than the first. Cycles of twenty days made a month; eighteen months made a
year. Each day had a name and the Maya believed that each day was the
responsibility of the god of that name. There seemed to be an inordinate number
of names and gods and cycles.
"Would you like a beer?" I looked up. Carlos was holding out an open bottle. The brown glass was beaded with condensation and a wisp of cold vapor curled from the open neck. Carlos set it on the table in front of me without waiting for my answer. He sat in the chair across from me and took a long drink from his own bottle.
I put the book down
and took a long drink. The bottle was cold in my hand and the beer was cold
running down my throat. "Thanks," I said. "That was a quick trip
to town."
He nodded and
grinned. He was tanned and handsome, and he knew it. He wore white shorts and
an air of confidence. He pushed his chair back away from the table and propped his feet up on
another chair. "Just long enough to do laundry and have an argument."
"An argument?
What about?"
He seemed at ease,
sleek and content as a well-fed cat. "I got myself in trouble with Maggie
by commenting on how pretty you are."
"Barbara
mentioned that you liked trouble," I said.
He glanced at me,
then threw back his head and laughed. "I suppose I do," he said.
"I seem to find it often enough."
"Are you sure
you don't go looking for it?" I asked.
He shrugged, still
grinning. "Could be. You are pretty, though. You're from Los Angeles, aren't
you?"
"That's
right."
"I spent about
five years in Los Angeles. I'm from Mexico originally, Mexico City. L.A.'s a
nice town. Why the hell did you decide to spend your vacation in this
godforsaken spot?"
I did not look at
his face; I considered the condensation on the beer bottle. One drop traced a
path through the other drops and reached the table. I shrugged. "I really
just wanted to spend time with my mother."
"I see."
He turned the book, which I had set down on the table, and read the title.
"I would have thought you knew all this already. Being Liz's
daughter."
"I don't know
much at all," I said. "This is my first dig." On the wall by the
kitchen, a small blue lizard marked with yellow stripes was sunning itself. The
black pig shifted its position, sighed, and continued its nap. I could still
hear the little girl singing softly. The chickens were scratching in the dirt.
I watched the chickens and regretted having accepted the beer. I did not want
to talk about my reasons for coming here.
"Why don't you
tell me something interesting about the ancient Maya?" I asked.
I could see him
weighing possible comments. "Your eyes are the most beautiful shade of
green I've ever seen," he said at last.
I raised my
eyebrows. "That has nothing to do with the ancient Maya."
"That's
true." He paused, and when he spoke again, he spoke slowly, as if choosing
each word with care. "The ancient Maya carved elaborate ornaments of jade
using nothing but stone tools. The jade that they carved was just the color of
your eyes."
I couldn't help
smiling a little. "A little better. Try one more time, and leave my eyes
out of it."
He tapped a
cigarette from his pack and lit it, studying my face as he did so. Then he
said, "The people who have put their minds to translating
the Mayan hieroglyphics have come to the conclusion that many of the symbols
are puns and puzzles. 'Xoc,' for example, means 'to count.' It is also
the name of a mythical fish that lives in the heavens. So the Maya used the
head of the fish to represent counting. But since the fish was difficult to
carve, they substituted the symbol for water, since that's where fish live. The
symbol for water is a jade bead, since both are green and precious. So jade
means water means fish means to count." Carlos paused, took a drag on his
cigarette, and blew out a cloud of smoke. "And as confusing as all that
sounds, it is simplicity itself compared to the mind of a woman." He
tapped the ash from his cigarette and looked at my face. "Is that
better?"
"I don't think
so," I said, but I couldn't help smiling. He worked so hard at being
charming. "Somehow, I think that I'll learn
more about the Maya by reading a book."
"Could be. But
I'm much more amusing than a book. You did smile there for a minute."
"You got me
there." I studied his smiling face. Clever and dishonest and charming.
"How many times have you used that line before?"
He shrugged.
"I never use the same line twice."
"Was all that
about the hieroglyphics true?"
"It may not be
true, but I didn't make it up. I leave that to the professors. When I get to
those exalted ranks, I'll make up my own outlandish theories." He leaned
back in his chair, his arms locked behind his head, his legs outstretched.
I believed him when
he said he never used the same line twice. He was a fisherman, choosing his
bait carefully with a certain fish in mind.
A moment of
silence. The lizard suddenly lifted its head and ran away across the wall. The
little girl's singing had stopped. As I watched, she peeked over the wall at
us.
"What's the
little girl's name?" I asked Carlos. "She won't talk to me."
"That's
Teresa. Qué tal, Teresa?"
She smiled at him
and muttered something in Spanish. He said something else to her, but the only
words I caught were "la señorita." Teresa shook her head and
said something quickly that I could not begin to understand. She turned and ran
away to the kitchen hut.
Carlos looked at
me. "I asked her why she wouldn't talk to you. She said that her mother
told her not to."
"I wonder
why."
Carlos shrugged.
"Maybe she's worried that getting to know loose American women will
corrupt her little girl."
"What makes
her think we're loose?" 1 said.
He raised his
eyebrows and grinned. "All American women are loose," he said.
"Ask any Mexican man."
"Somehow, I
wouldn't trust you as an expert on American women." I leaned back in my
chair and noticed my mother watching us from the door of her hut. I waved to
her and she strolled out into the plaza.
"I'll be
leaving for town in fifteen minutes or so," she said.
I finished my beer
and stood up. "I'll be ready."
She glanced at
Carlos, and turned away without saying anything. "You know," he said
when she was out of earshot, "I don't think your mother likes me."
The ride to town
was hot. The truck hit the potholes in the road hard and the seats were poorly
padded. The roar of the engine made polite conversation impossible. Now and
then, my mother would shout over the engine to point out a landmark—the road to
a small village, the henequen-processing plant, a local high school.
The market in
Mérida was housed in a corrugated-steel building: a place of noise, low
ceilings, strong smells, and confusion. A beggar woman wrapped in a fringed
shawl huddled beside the doorway. My mother dropped a coin in her hand and
started into the crowd. I followed a few steps behind.
A woman in a white
dress, embroidered with flowers at the neck and hem, carried a plastic basin
filled with strange yellow fruits. She balanced it on her head, steadying it
with one hand and making her way purposefully through the crowd.
A man shouted
behind me and I stepped aside. He carried three crates in a stack on his back,
secured with a rope wrapped around his forehead. I let him pass, then hurried
after my mother.
An old peasant woman held out a plastic bowl filled with peppers,
calling out the price. A younger woman, her daughter I think, squatted beside
her, carefully arranging glossy peppers in a neat pile on a square of white
cloth.
My mother stopped
by a stall in which a wizened old man stood, surrounded by burlap sacks filled
with beans. Each sack was open to display its contents—red beans, black beans,
rice, dried corn. My mother fingered the black beans and exchanged a few words
with the man. He shoveled several scoops of black beans into the metal dish of
a scale and poured them into a smaller sack.
My mother glanced
to make sure I was with her, beckoned me to follow, and continued through the
crowd. "Maria does most of the shopping," she commented. "She's
better at bargaining. I'm just picking up a few things."
Another stop—this
one for chickens. My mother bargained and the chickens watched her nervously
from between the wooden slats of their crates. Chicks peeped from the back of
the stall, and three large turkeys, exhausted in the heat, lay in the dust of
the aisle. The three black hens that my mother bought pecked at the hands of
the boy who carried them, still crated, to the truck.
My mother made her
way through the crowd with confidence, not stopping to glance at the butcher's
stall, where vacant eyes stared from the face of a butchered pig. She seemed undisturbed by the
warm sweet scent of overripe fruit and the underlying aroma of decay. She
stepped around the squatting women who haggled over the price of tomatoes. She
sidestepped to avoid the small dog licking at a crushed mango on the pavement.
Now and then, she nodded to a shopkeeper, stopped to buy something—a plastic
bag packed with ground pepper the color of blood, a bunch of bananas, a bag of
small yellow squash.
I followed her,
carrying her packages, stopping when she stopped. I was out of place here—I did
not understand a word of the rapid transactions that were taking place all
around me. But as long as I followed my mother, I felt protected. She obviously
belonged here. I stayed close to her.
"Are you doing
all right?" she asked just as we were about to plunge down another aisle
of stalls, through the dim light and tropical heat. Without waiting for a
reply, she said, "We'll stop for a drink soon." She bought two
pineapples, a bunch of radishes, and two heads of wilted lettuce.
We left the food in
the truck with the squawking chickens and she bought me a Coke—too sweet but at
least it was wet. We sat at a counter and the crowd surged past us.
"It's
confusing," I said.
She shook her head,
smiling. "At first, I suppose. You get used to it."
"I'd like
to." And that was good. Maybe I would have the chance to get used to it.
When we finished
our drinks, my mother led me to another area of the market: a line of stalls
filled with dresses, hammocks, shawls, sandals, blankets, tourist trinkets. She
stopped at a hat-seller's stall and chatted with the man behind the counter.
Something in her manner had changed.
She had slowed down, relaxed
a little. She lit a cigarette and laughed at something the man said. I stood to
one side, fingering the brim of a hat, grateful for the breeze that blew in
from the street, fanning away the heavy scent of decay.
The man held out a
broad-brimmed hat with a high crown. "Try it on," my mother said. The
man nodded and smiled and said something in rapid Spanish that made my mother laugh again. When
she replied, he shrugged and spread his hands in a gesture of denial.
"He says that you look very pretty," my mother told me. "And he says that you look like me." She smiled and leaned against the counter. "I told him that he was just trying to make a sale." She looked younger when she laughed, her blue eyes caught in a net of wrinkles, her face shaded beneath the broad brim of a straw hat similar to the one I wore. "What do you think?"
I glanced in the mirror
that the man held out. "Great."
Bargaining for the
hat took longer than bargaining for food, proceeding at a more leisurely pace,
with more smiles and laughter. Final sale and my mother dropped the stub of her
cigarette, ground it into the asphalt at her feet, and used both hands to
adjust the hat on my head. She eyed it critically and nodded. "Looks good.
Wear it on survey."
That was it. We drove back with our produce, and the chickens squawked each time we hit a bump.
Notes for City of Stones
by Elizabeth Butler
Why do we come here to dig in the dirt,
living in huts and going without showers, battling insects and trudging through
the afternoon heat? Some people think that archaeologists look for
treasure—jade masks, delicate shell jewelry, beaten-gold ornaments. In truth,
we search the gray stone past for something much more elusive.
We are looking for
patterns. We search for pieces of the past and try to reassemble them. Who
lived here? How did they live? Who ruled them and how was that determined? Who
were their gods and how did they worship them? Did the people of this place
trade salt and carved shell from the gulf for pots from Tikal, obsidian tools
from Colha, molded figurines from Isla de Jaina? What
news traveled with the merchants who journeyed along the sacbeob, the
limestone roads that connected the cities? Did merchants talk of the rise of
new rulers, the festivals held to honor gods, the failure of the cacao-bean
crop, the overabundance of quetzal feathers this year, the new fashions in
Uxmal, the rumors of war in the north?
Each of us looks for patterns in his own way. Anthony
Baker, my co-director, is a good man with a trowel and a brush, possessed of
awesome patience and the dexterous hands of a grease monkey. In his youth, Tony
dismantled and reassembled clocks, electric motors, gas-powered engines,
mechanical toys, and, on one hot summer day, the fiendishly intricate
planetary-gear-shifting mechanism hidden in the hub of a three-speed bicycle, a
device constructed of gears within gears and wheels within wheels.
These days, Tony
deals with intricate constructions of a different kind. Tony studies pots. Or,
to be more accurate, he studies pieces of pots—potsherds, broken fragments of
bowls and pitchers and vases and incense burners and little pipes and
ceremonial vessels. Long ago, the vessels broke and the shattered pieces were
tossed in the trash heap, thrown into the fill for a new building, kicked
aside, cast off, ignored. Tony gathers these fragments and considers them with
affection.
When Tony finds a
potsherd, chances are he'll pop it in his mouth to clean it with spit. Archaeologists
get used to the taste of dirt and Tony claims he learns about a sherd by its
taste and its texture. Each sherd carries its history with it. What kind of
clay did the potter use? What was added to the clay to temper it? How was the
pot shaped, decorated, burnished, fired? Tony concerns himself with these
things, and sometimes I think that he would be quite at home chatting with the
artisans of a.d. 800 about the
merits of organic paint over mineral paints, sand-tempered clay over untempered
clay. Behind his home in Albuquerque he has a studio where he turns and fires
pots.
Fashions in pottery
changed steadily over the years, and potsherds are durable records of changing
times. The presence of certain types marks the passage of certain eras. Finding
a broken bowl in the fill of a palace lets us date the structure.
John, one of Tony's
most trusted graduate students, has a different preoccupation. Though I have
never asked, I believe that his father was a bricklayer or a carpenter, a
builder of some sort. John admires a well-built wall. He will talk for hours
about arches—noting the difference in construction methods used in a.d. 400 and 800. I think he would be
happiest if he were funded to rebuild a temple or two, mortaring temple stones
in their rightful places. He draws elegant reconstruction sketches,
extrapolating from the tumbled stones of the structure back to the plans from
which it could
have been built. In his sketches, he realigns the walls, returns the roof combs
to their lofty position, carefully sets each stone of the arches back in its
place, canting them inward to make a smooth line. His drawings are black and
white—fine ink lines on smooth white paper. John knows that the Maya painted
their stucco and stone—traces of red and black paint still cling to sheltered
stones. But his imagination stops short of color. He likes the stones—solid, massive,
and gray—and does not embellish upon them.
And what do I like?
I like asking impossible questions about remnants less tangible, but no less
durable, than pots and walls. Ancient gods, myths, legends, modes of worship,
belief systems—these are my concern. What motivated the potter to shape an
incense burner, a mason to build a wall? When a small child woke crying in the
dead of the night, what frightened him and to whom did he pray for comfort?
When a woman was dying in childbirth, what god did the h'men call on for power?
The questions are
impossible; the answers, elusive. I have fewer clues than Tony or John: ancient
texts in unreadable glyphs, unreliable records kept by Franciscan friars on the
pagan religion they sought to destroy, ceremonial objects cast in cenotes and
sealed in tombs, fragments of knowledge retained by the current h'menob. And
the embellishments of my own imagination. In my dreams of the
ancient past, the buildings are always painted in vivid colors. I people them
with ghosts.
Tony makes pots;
John builds walls; and I construct castles in the air.
“Who are your
gods?'' The old woman smelled sour. Her costume was constructed like a Mayan
temple: layers rested on layers upon layers. An orange turtleneck showed
through the ragged holes in a thick brown fisherman-knit cardigan. The hem of a
wine-colored skirt dangled beneath her green dress. She was dressed for a
colder climate than Berkeley in the spring, bundled to withstand arctic winds.
She had singled me out of the crowd of browsers in the used bookstore,
recognizing me as a fellow outcast.
"Who are your
gods?" Her voice was cracked, a parody of a confidential whisper. She
stepped closer and the smell of unwashed clothes enveloped me.
I had been a
lecturer on the Berkeley campus for one year and I had gained a reputation for
being hard-nosed, unyielding, uncompromising. But when I looked into the bag
lady's eyes—innocent blue eyes with the color and luminance of cracked antique
glass—I backed away. "I don't know," I muttered before fleeing down
another aisle of books.
She pursued me,
waving her finger with greater energy. They know me, these strange ones with
crystalline eyes that see what others do not.
"Sorry," mumbled
the clerk who had followed us both. He was talking to us and to himself. He was
sorry that he was the one who had to throw the woman out. "Sorry, but you
are disturbing the other customers." He was looking at the bag lady, but somehow I
felt that he included me as a troublemaker. "I'll have to ask you to
leave."
"She's not
hurting anyone," I said in a feeble voice that no student of mine would
have recognized.
Too late. The old
woman was shuffling toward the street, mumbling and clutching her sweaters
about her. The clerk cast me a doubtful look, and I knew that I was tagged as a
strange one, a woman who talked to the human flotsam that drifted down
Telegraph Avenue. I left the store soon after.
John, Tony's
favorite student at the dig, always looked at me with an air of faint doubt
that reminded me of the bookstore clerk. I did not trust John and he did not
trust me.
After breakfast,
Tony and I lingered over our coffee. Diane had left with the survey crew,
wearing her new broad-brimmed hat and a liberal coating of Barbara's sunscreen.
Barbara seemed to be taking care of my daughter, making sure she was properly
dressed, instructing her in the use of a compass. Diane was smiling when she
left. In the light of day, memories of my personal past were less urgent than
they had seemed at night. My daughter seemed happy enough; we would talk to
each other and the uneasiness between us would dissolve. My immediate concern
was a past of considerably greater antiquity.
Tony had assigned
John to supervise the workmen who were moving the brush heap away from the
broken stone that might hide an underground chamber. I had wanted to supervise
the work myself, but Tony had insisted that we let a student oversee the
operation. "You have to let them have some fun," he had said.
John was fired with
a fierce dedication that was uncomplicated by imagination or eagerness to
speculate. He was meticulous, given to caution and obsessed by details. His
field reports were noteworthy for the amount of information he packed into a
page of small careful printing.
Tony poured me a
second cup of coffee. He would not let me leave for the site right after
breakfast. "You'll just pace around, getting in the way and doing your
best to get heatstroke."
The morning was really too warm for hot coffee, but I ignored the
heat and drank the coffee, sweetening it with unrefined sugar that was the
color and consistency of California beach sand. The condensed milk that
substituted for cream added a slight tang of metal.
"When have I
ever been in the way?" I asked.
He grinned and
leaned back in his chair. "Save your energy," he advised. Even as a
young man, Tony had been slow-moving. Not lazy—he would work hard if the
situation called for that. But he was always careful to ascertain exactly what
work was needed and what work could be avoided. He considered each problem
carefully before he acted, never wasting a movement. My own inclination was to
attack a problem at once, trying various approaches in succession until one
seemed most productive. "You chase problems like a city dog chases
rabbits," Tony had observed once. Tony waited until the rabbits came to
him.
We gave John an
hour's head start. Maybe a little more— Tony insisted on strolling to the
southeast site at an irritatingly leisurely pace. We arrived just as the
workmen were hauling away the last branch. John was directing the work, his
baseball cap pushed back on his head and a bandanna tied around his neck. His
face was red with exertion and yesterday's sunburn. Beneath his arms, his
T-shirt was already dark with sweat. His arms were laced with red scratches
from the thorns.
I squatted beside
the tilted stone. It measured about three feet by three feet; one edge was
about three inches out of flush with the plaza, cracking the plaster that
covered it. Dirt had filled the depression where the stone tilted down.
"Maybe a
chultun," Tony said and grinned. The underground storage chambers called
chultuns often contain unbroken pots, a rarity at this site.
"Maybe a
burial," I said. "A high-ranking individual, perhaps, buried just
outside a major temple." The tools and artifacts found in tombs are a rich
source of information on the Mayan view of the afterlife.
John deals in the actuality,
not in speculation. "I don't understand how you happened to notice it," he said.
"Can't say I would have given it a second glance."
I shrugged.
"Go for a walk at dawn sometime," I suggested. "The shadows are
better then." But even as I made the suggestion, I doubted that John would
profit by it. Even at dawn, his imagination was limited. I doubted that he
would notice a Mayan woman who stood in the shadows. I glanced at the spot
where Zuhuy-kak had stood, but there was no sign of her. In the jungle, a bird
called on a rising note of interrogation, but I had no answers.
"It's cemented
in place pretty well," John said. "It'll take all day to work it
loose, I'd guess. And I'll need to take two workers from the crew on the house
mounds to do it."
Tony frowned. The
house mounds were his favorite site; he was hoping to find vast quantities of
sherds and he begrudged any attempts on my part to shift workers away from that
project. "Think it's worth it?" he asked.
"It's only a day,
Tony."
He shook his head,
but did not argue further.
We checked in on
the investigation of house mounds near the plaza, an operation that was also
under John's supervision. Four men were digging a test trench across one mound.
The de facto leader of the crew, an older man who went by the nickname of Pich,
grinned at me and climbed from the trench when I greeted him in Maya. He pushed
his straw hat back on his head, wiped his hands on his white pants, already
marked with smears of powdery soil, shook my hand, and bemoaned their lack of
luck so far. Removing wheelbarrow after wheelbarrow filled with dirt had
revealed only fragments of plainware—potsherds with no markings—and assorted
tools for grinding corn. I patted Pich on the shoulder, suggested that the crew
take a short break to smoke, handed around cigarettes, and offered a few words
of encouragement.
On the far side of
the clearing, the shadow of a woman who had died long ago was grinding maize,
rubbing the kernels between two stones and leaning into each stroke. Nearby, a
naked little boy played with a small dog. I suspected that no matter how much dirt we
moved in this area, we would find only broken plainware and grinding tools. At
this spot, I had seen only the shadows of peasants going about their daily
chores. But I could not tell that to Tony.
We left John, Pich,
and the crew and followed the winding path around the mound to the far side,
where Salvador was supervising a group of men. The sun was high. The shadows
were sharp-edged patches on the barren earth. We climbed the mound in the
afternoon heat, following the path worn by the workmen. For the past two weeks,
the men had been stripping away the dirt that covered the top of the mound. It
still didn't look like much: a heap of rubble with a recently flattened top; a
jumble of flat-sided boulders. The work had exposed one wall of the temple on
the crest, and we were using that as a guide to establish the orientation of
the building.
Mayan buildings
were constructed using tremendous quantities of stone and limestone cement. They
used corbeled arches, building up a curved opening by placing each block
farther in than the block on which it rested. Sometimes, they used beams
of sapodilla, a local hardwood, as supports. When the beams collapsed and the
roofs caved in, the rooms filled with stone rubble and the building became a
mound.
"Good thing I
trust your judgment, Liz," Tony said from behind me. He had stopped in the
trail, resting in the scant shade of a tree. He had been trailing a few steps
behind me as we walked up the mound. "If anyone else had insisted on
excavating that area at the expense of the house mounds, I might have
argued."
"Good
thing," I said. I waited for him to move from the shade.
"Come now,
Liz," he said, pushing back the straw hat he wore to keep the sun out of
his eyes. "Tell me why you think we should take
two men from the house mounds to loosen that block."
'' Looks
promising.''
"A better
reason."
"A
hunch," I said. "I just don't think we'll find much more than we
already have at the house mounds."
"Son of a
bitch," he said. "I wish your hunches weren't right so often. All
right. I give up."
I smelled
Salvador's cigarette before I saw him waiting for us at the top of the path.
"How goes it?" I called to him in Spanish.
He squatted to
crush his cigarette against the ground and dropped the stub in the pocket of
his loose-fitting white pants. "We have found something," he said in
Spanish and gestured for us to follow him around the crest of the mound.
The test pit was a
two-meter square, sunk in the rubble on the far side of the mound. Since the
last time I visited this site, the crew had taken the pit down to a depth of
more than a meter. Tony crouched on the edge of the pit and began fanning
himself with his broad-brimmed hat.
I stood over him
and peered into the pit. The men grinned up at me. The floor of the unit was a
jumble of large stones that could well have been part of a roof. On one, I
could see the traces of worn decoration. Others had obviously been shaped.
"Over
there," Salvador said, pointing to the far corner of the pit, which was
slightly higher than the others. The workman—I recognized him as Salvador's
nephew—stood aside to give me a clear view. Between two stone slabs, a great
stone head lay wedged in the floor of the pit.
I told the men to
take a break and climbed down into the pit carefully. It was pleasantly cool
after the sunshine of the mound. I used a stiff brush to clear the loose dirt
away from the face. The head was about three times life size. It was not
actually stone; it had been sculpted in the durable stucco that the Maya had
manufactured using local limestone. I recognized the spiraling tattoos that decorated
one cheek. Zuhuy-kak, the ghost who haunted me, had been a woman of power in
her time. Carved shells decorated her carved braids. Below the headdress, the
forehead was flattened. Long ago, the tip of the nose had been chipped. A crack
ran through the forehead, through the left eye and the left cheek.
I ran one finger
along the crack, but could not tell if it was only on the surface or if it went
all the way through. Offhand, I would have guessed that it had been at least a
thousand years since those staring eyes had last seen the sky.
"Looks like it
could have been part of the roof comb or a decorative facade," I said to
Tony, trying to suppress my excitement. "If that's so, there should be
others. Would you say ninth century or eighth?"
He shrugged and grinned at me and I found myself grinning back.
"Doesn't much matter, does it?" he said.
"It's too late
to do much now. Looks like it will take a few days to get it free. Tomorrow,
let's start by getting this out of the way," I said, tapping on the
smaller of the two slabs beside the head. "And maybe we can get her out
intact."
I reached up for Tony's hand, and he helped me climb back into the sun. Salvador was standing by. "Good find," I said. Salvador shrugged and smiled. "We'll work on it tomorrow." We left the head where it lay, staring up at the sky from the rubble of an ancient roof.
"A ruin is never going to speak, except if one's mind gives it magnetic
power, gives it force. For this reason, we should not confuse ourselves
that the spirit, that the evil shadows, frighten us, kill us. One frightens
oneself; it is not the shadow that frightens us."
—Eduardo el Curandero,
the Words of a Peruvian Healer
Even at six in the morning the air was warm. Lizards basked on the
rocks, running a few feet as we approached, then stopping to watch us.
Barbara led the way
and I walked beside her, wearing the hat my mother had given me. Carlos,
Maggie, and Robin trailed behind.
"We're walking
on history," Barbara told me, stamping one boot on the ground beneath our
feet. "This is a limestone causeway, built by the Maya. They built miles
of them all over the place. God knows why. Trade, religious ceremonies ..."
She shrugged. Her mannerisms and speech reminded me of someone, but for a
moment I could not place them. Then I remembered walking with my mother to the
Temple of the
Seven Dolls. Barbara had adopted the same staccato style: abbreviated and to
the point. "They called the roads sacbeob. The singular form of the
word is sacbe. Plural is sacbeob. We're using this one as a
reference line for the survey."
Trees crowded close on
either side. Grasses and scrub had grown underfoot, but the way was clear
compared to the monte around us.
Like my mother,
Barbara did not wait for questions. She assumed that I was interested.
"Aerial surveys are just about useless here," she said. "They
give you a great view of trees, but that's it. The only way to map a site is to
walk it and get personally acquainted with every tree, rock, stinging bug, and
thorn. This causeway runs east. We'll be mapping the quadrant between here and
a line due south. That means we've got to walk over every square foot and note
every ruin, mound, and monument. Maybe we sample some of the ones that look
promising."
"Then
what?"
"Then I figure
out a theory based on what we find, get my Ph.D., and you call me Dr.
Barbara." She stopped beside a tree marked with a blaze and waited for the
others to catch up. When they did, she turned into the monte,
following what looked like a deer trail to another blazed tree.
The concept of the
survey, as Barbara described it, was simple enough. The survey team spread out,
leaving about twenty paces between people. Carlos was on one end of the line
and Barbara was on the other. Carlos made a blaze On trees as he passed them;
Barbara followed the line of blazes from the previous day. We were to follow a
compass course due east. Barbara instructed me on the use of the compass and
put me in the middle of the line.
It was hot work,
sticky work, boring work—trudging through the monte, ducking branches, climbing
over rocks, shouting out when I stumbled over something of interest, and then
waiting while Barbara carefully noted its location on her map. The first three
mounds we found had already been noted by the Tulane University crew several
years before, but Barbara methodically checked location and noted minor
corrections.
Flies hovered just
in front of my eyes, dancing and buzzing, a constant irritation. I trudged
through the heat, listening to the shrill cries of insects, the rustling of
small animals and birds, the sound of footsteps, the occasional crash when
someone blundered into a low-slung branch and the curses that followed. At
regular intervals, the sounds of the monte were punctuated by the solid impact
of Carlos's machete against the innocent trees. I stabbed myself several times
before I learned to watch for thorns. It took a great deal of effort to keep
looking for the lines of rocks that Barbara said marked where walls had once
been, the overgrown low mounds that had once been huts or temples.
Conversations grew
shorter as the day grew hotter. Even when we were waiting for Barbara to complete
corrections on her map, we maintained our positions in line, unwilling to move
together just to move apart again. Early morning was hot; midmorning was
hotter. At about eleven, beside the largest mound we had yet encountered,
Barbara called a lunch break.
We sat in the thin
shade of a ceiba tree, saying little, drinking water, and eating the tortillas
and cheese that Maria had packed. Maggie was still pissed off at Carlos, I
think. She and Robin sat a little way apart from us, sharing food and laughing
at private jokes. Carlos tried to start up a conversation with me and Barbara,
but Barbara ignored him and I was too tired to be drawn into talk.
I leaned back
against the solid trunk of a tree and, drowsy from the heat, let my eyes droop
closed. Such a peaceful place, I thought. I was still tired from my sleepless
nights in Los Angeles, and I was at peace for the first time in weeks. I
relaxed.
The bark of the
tree at my back had a strong sweet aroma, like the smoke of incense carried on
the breeze. In the distance, a bird called with a long low breathy note, like
the sound of a child blowing across the top of a bottle. The call ended, then
came again, a hollow tone that rose in pitch. The buzz of the insects seemed to
grow louder and harsher, as if in response to the bird's call. A warm breeze fanned my
face, and the sweet smell was stronger.
I dreamed that I
heard voices, unfamiliar voices. In the private darkness behind my closed eyes,
I listened, but I could not understand the language that the voices spoke.
I opened my eyes,
but I was still dreaming. Across from me, a temple built of carved limestone
blocks glistened in the afternoon sun. I squinted against the reflected light.
The voices
continued, muttering softly in a foreign tongue. I could see two men, standing
in the bright sunlight and looking down at a carved slab of stone. They were
dressed in white loincloths and their bare chests were decorated with intricate
tattoos in great swirling patterns, like the waves of a turbulent sea. At their
feet was an incense burner in the shape of a crouching cat. Smoke escaped from
the cat's mouth, white tendrils curling past sharp teeth and dissipating in the
breeze.
I knew somehow,
with the certainty of a dreamer, that the men were a threat to me. I did not
like them. There was something cruel about their faces. They did not smile and
their voices were harsh, hard-edged.
I sat very still,
not even moving to wipe away the sweat from my forehead. If I did not move, perhaps
they would not notice me, perhaps I could get away. I felt the same panic that
had touched me on my father's balcony.
A drop of sweat
trickled down my forehead and dripped into my eyes. I blinked and the men were
gone. The voices were gone. The temple was gone. I sat alone beneath a tree,
staring out at the sunlight that filtered through the thin leaves. A twisted
tree grew where the men had been standing. At its base was a fallen log,
overgrown by creeping vines and thornbushes.
Disoriented, I
stood and went to where the men had been standing. The air was as warm and
stuffy as the air in an attic. The flies droned, flickering like spots before
my eyes. Sweat trickled down my back, making my shirt cling to my skin. A
vagrant branch, lined with thorns and eager to make mischief, grabbed at my
shirt as I squatted beside the fallen shape beneath the tree.
It was not a fallen
log. Thorny creepers had overrun a large block of limestone, covering the
surface completely. I gingerly pulled one aside and caught a glimpse of the
carved surface underneath. I looked around and saw Barbara, poking in the
bushes on one side of the mound.
"I've found something
here," I called to her.
She picked her way
slowly through the brush to reach my side. She knelt beside the limestone block
and used the trowel that she carried at her belt to scrape away more vines. She
cut away the branch of one bush with the edge of her trowel and held back
another, careless of the thorns and of the black bugs that ran away from the
sudden light. I could see the weathered surface of a carved slab of stone, half
buried in dirt and debris.
"It's a
stelae," she said. I must have looked at her blankly. "A
monument," she said. "They put them up to commemorate certain dates:
religious festivals, historic events, astronomical happenings. Usually, they're
carved with glyphs. Some sites—like Chichén Itzá or Copán—had dozens of
them. They've only found a few around here."
The stone was worn
by centuries of rain. I could make out the profile of a face, outlined by dark
fragments of decayed leaves. Here and there, I could see the remnants of other
carvings.
"We'll get a
crew to raise it," Barbara said. "Maybe the other side is better
preserved." She was grinning. "Good work. I was hoping to find
something that can help date the outlying sites so I'd know whether they were
inhabited at the same time as the main area. That'd help us get an idea of the
population that this center supported." She stood up and looked around as
if she expected to find more. "You're as lucky as Liz at this game."
We searched the
rest of the area and found no more monuments. Maggie discovered a tree filled
with stinging ants. I found a tree loaded with thorns and managed to forget
about the two men in the dream. Nothing else of note. On our way back, we
laid a transect line adjacent to the line we had laid going in.
At dinner that night, Maggie sat beside
John and kept up an animated conversation over the chicken and stewed tomatoes.
I assumed that she had quarreled with Carlos and wondered how long it would
take for them to make up. Diane and Barbara were talking quietly about the book
that Diane was reading.
"I read about
the Mayan calendar today," Diane said to me. "It seems confusing:
twenty days to a month, eighteen months to a year, twenty years to a ..."
She stopped. "I've forgotten."
"A
katun," I said. "It gets worse. From the sound of it, you were
reading about the Long Count. There's also the haab, a cycle of three hundred
and sixty-five days divided into eighteen months, with five days at the end for
bad luck. There's the tzolkin, a cycle of two hundred and sixty days divided
into thirteen months. And then there's the cycle of the katuns, which repeats
every two hundred and fifty-six years. But you don't have to worry about the
names and numbers. You just need to understand the intent. The calendar let the
Maya follow the cycles of time and predict the future by knowing the past.
Whatever happens at a particular time will recur when that time returns. If the
last Katun 8 was a katun of upheaval and discord, this one will be too. A h'men,
a Mayan priest, can determine which gods influence a certain day—and
because he knows the gods, he can predict what will happen at that time. He can advise you
on whether you should expect a particular day to be lucky or unlucky, good for
planting corn or for hunting or for burning incense. The Maya looked for
patterns."
Diane nodded and
smiled in a strange sort of way. We were in a little island of quiet: Tony was
talking with Robin; Carlos was watching Maggie flirt, his face expressionless;
Barbara was listening without comment. "It makes a sort of sense,"
Diane said. "They believed you must know and understand your past to
understand your future."
"Yes," I
said slowly. "I suppose so."
She nodded again
and said no more about it.
I stayed in the
plaza to drink coffee after dinner. Barbara was discussing her survey plans
with Tony. Tony nodded sagely and smoked his pipe. Diane had moved to the edge
of the plaza. She sat in a folding chair in the fading light of the setting
sun. She was reading a hardcover book—one of Barbara's texts on the Maya.
I found myself
watching my daughter. She had been swimming in the cenote before dinner and she
had combed her hair out to dry. It flowed down around her shoulders. Her hands,
holding the book open before her, were soft and slender, each nail perfectly
shaped. She was leaning forward, and the collar of her loose shirt had fallen
open to show the strong muscles of her neck. She lifted one hand to her head to
push back the tide of hair, and I watched the muscles of her arm flex and
shift.
She glanced in my
direction and caught me watching her. Her eyes widened and a look of doubt
crossed her face, but she smiled. I believe that she smiled in self-defense,
using the open vulnerability of her smile as a shield, the way a puppy bares
its neck to a stronger dog. The smile was a peace offering, made before the
conflict began.
The inevitable card
game had begun at the other table. Maggie, Robin, and John were playing. Carlos
had not joined them. He was still at the dinner table, smoking a cigarette and
looking pensive. A calculated pose, I was sure. He held the cigarette loosely
in one hand and leaned back in his chair,
his white shirt open at the collar and his head back
to look at the sky.
I listened to the
slap of the cards on the table, the soft mutter of conversation, and I watched
as Carlos strolled across the plaza to where Diane was sitting. He stopped
beside her and laid a hand on her shoulder. I could not hear what he said.
Diane tilted her head a little to one side and leaned back in her chair. I did
not like the way Carlos smiled at my daughter. I had never liked Carlos much.
"Tony," I
said quietly across the table. He had been listening to Barbara, but now he
looked to me. "What would you think of shifting a few assignments? John
could use Carlos's help on the southeast site for a few days. The house mounds
are a bit far from the other excavation. And I'd imagine that with Diane on
survey, Barbara has enough help."
Barbara gave me a
considering look, then nodded. "I wouldn't miss him."
Tony followed my
gaze to Diane and Carlos. "You want to keep Diane on survey?"
I nodded.
He rattled the ice
in his glass and nodded. "I'm surprised I didn't notice the need
myself."
Carlos laughed and
touched Diane's shoulder again. Tony stood, taking his drink with him.
"I'll mention it to Carlos," he said, and headed toward the couple. I
watched him join them, pulling up a chair and settling down as if he planned to
stay a while. Tony would handle it well. He was very good with people. I
watched for a moment as Tony spoke to Carlos. Carlos frowned, but nodded. I
could not see Diane's face.
That evening, I
worked on notes for my next book. My hut was oppressively hot even though I had
opened the door wide to let the evening breeze blow through. I worked by the
light of a small candle lantern that was too dim to draw many moths. As I typed
on my travel typewriter, a compact Olivetti that had served me well for the
past five years, the wooden table wobbled and the candle wavered. I had completed a
description of Zuhuy-kak when I noticed the figure that stood in the shadows
just beyond the lantern light. I turned in my chair to face her. In the
darkness, I could see the white shells on her belt and in her hair. I lit a
cigarette from the stub of the one I had just finished and greeted her softly
in Maya. She did not speak. She remained in the shadows. I could smell incense,
a warm resinous smell like burning pitch.
"I dreamed of
you," I said. "I dreamed of the day that they threw you into the
cenote at Chichén Itzá."
"I did not
know that shadows dreamed," she said. She took a step toward me and
stopped at the edge of the lantern light. Though she stared in my direction, I
do not think she saw me clearly. She lifted one hand, as if to shade her eyes.
"I
dream," I said.
She shook her head,
as if to clear it. "I had enemies," she said in a soft voice, like a
woman who is muttering to herself. "After the ah-nunob came, I had many
enemies. I knew too much, you understand. I was too strong. The h'menob of the
new religion did not approve of a woman who knew too much." Her hands
fingered the conch shell at her belt, as if for comfort.
That dated her: I
recognized the word "ah-nunob" from the Books of Chilam Balam. It
meant "those who speak our language brokenly" and referred to the
Toltecs from northern Mexico, who had invaded the Yucatan in about a.d. 900. As near as we could tell from
the archaeological record, the invaders had displaced the Mayan nobility and
modified the religion by adding Kukulcán, the feathered serpent, and other gods
to the Mayan pantheon. The invaders had taken Chichén Itzá as their stronghold.
"I served Ix
Chebel Yax, goddess of the moon and the sea, the protector of women in labor
and madmen, she who weaves the rainbow and brings the floods." One of
Zuhuy-kak's hands stroked the smooth inner surface of the conch shell.
"When the ah-nunob came, they took my temple. They tore down the facades
that honored the goddess and replaced them with serpents that twisted and
curled around the
arches." One hand gripped the conch shell as if to use it as a club. She
remained silent for so long that I thought she might be fading into darkness
again.
"How did you
come to be given to the gods?" I asked, trying to catch her attention, to
keep her talking.
She held her head
proudly and straightened her shoulders like an aged general reminded of past
battles. "The h'menob could not kill me. They feared bad luck. But they
said I was one of the chosen messengers to the gods. Twelve were chosen by the
gods to visit the well; one would survive. One would return with the prophecy
for the coming katun, Katun 10."
She was gazing into
the distance as if unaware of my presence. "It was a long journey, seven
days on foot to Chichén Itzá. On the day named Cimi, the women prepared me:
anointing my skin with blue paint, dressing me in a feather robe, lacing
quetzal feathers in my hair.
"I walked from
the women's quarters to the mouth of the well. Priests of the ah-nunob walked
on either side of me, their hands hot on my arms. The crowd parted before us;
smoke from the incense burners followed. The sound of the tunkul led us on.
"Some of the
chosen ones were weeping. A slave from Palenque cried with a constant wearying
whimper. The daughter of a nobleman who had fallen from power wept with short
gasping sobs that rose and fell, almost stopped, then started again. There was
a beautiful young boy, I remember, also a slave. He had drunk the balche that
the h'menob offered us. He leaned on the priest beside him as he walked and
sang a childish song that kept time with the tortoise shell rattles. I walked
just behind him, listening to his song, saying nothing. The h'menob led us to
the edge of the well and threw us in."
She stopped
speaking, as if she were remembering the howling of the crowd. Outside, I could
hear the soft voice of the palm leaves, rubbing one against the other.
"I fell for a
long time." She was cradling the conch shell in both hands and running her
finger along the smooth lip of the shell, stroking the polished edge. The
shell's interior was as smooth and pink as the skin of a baby. "The murmur
of the crowd became the rush of the wind past me, dragging on my robes, tugging
the quetzal feathers free of my hair and scattering them in the sky. Then
the cold water slapped me. I remember rising to the surface like a bubble. And
I remember that one leg ached with a fierce pain." She shifted her
position, as if the remembered pain affected her now. Her voice had taken on a
singsong rhythm. "For a time, I floated on the surface among the
reflections of the clouds. For a time, I heard someone crying—one of the
slaves, I think— but the whimpering grew weaker and weaker, then stopped at
last. My leg was numbed by the cold water, and I floated in the sky among the
clouds, considering the prophecy for the coming year. I could hear the tunkul
and the rattles and the shouting of the crowd, coming to me from the earth far
below.
"The h'menob
did not expect me to survive. They would have been glad to pull out one of the
others—the slave, the noblewoman, the beautiful boy. But the others had not
enjoyed floating in the sky. They were done with their crying and only I
remained. At noon, when the sun rose over the lip of the well, I lifted my hands
and welcomed it. The h'menob pulled me from the water, reluctantly, I thought,
and roughly, considering how holy I had become.
"I knew the
prophecy for the coming year. I smiled when I told them. 'Give yourselves up,
my younger brothers, my older brothers. Submit to the unhappy destiny of the
katun that is to come. You must leave the cities and scatter in
the forests. You must cast down the monuments and raise no more. That is the
word of the katun that is to come.' " Her voice had grown louder and more
powerful, like a strong wind driving the rain before it. "I said to them,
'Submit to the unhappy destiny. If you do not submit, you shall be moved from
where your feet are rooted. If you do not submit, you shall gnaw the trunks of
trees and the leaves of herbs. There shall come such a pestilence that the
vultures will enter the houses. There shall be an earthquake over the land.
There will be thunder from a dry sky. Dust will possess the earth, a blight will be
on the face of the land, the tender leaf will be destroyed, and the people will
scatter afar in the. forest.' "
She smiled when she
turned to look at me. "I spoke loudly so that the crowd could hear. And
the h'menob wrapped me in soft cloths and rushed me away to the palace where
the holy women lived. I think I fainted from the pain in my leg, and I don't
remember the journey to the women's quarters. I woke on a soft pallet, tended
by a frightened young woman who was sweet and attentive but told me nothing.
The h'menob came and spoke to me, and I told them the prophecy again."
She straightened
her shoulders, still smiling. "It took some time for my words to be heard
by all. The h'menob softened the prophecy, but they could not deny it or
destroy me, for either of those would have meant bad luck. So the people began
leaving the city, slipping away into the forest. Stoneworkers toppled the
monuments that they had carved, workmen threw down their tools and left temples
half finished. After the farmers left, the fields were poorly tended and there
was famine. There was pestilence. It takes time for a city to crumble. But it
happened, here and in the other cities. My enemies were destroyed because they
had tried to destroy me. That was the order of the katun. That was what Ix
Chebel Yax said would be."
She laughed and the
sound was like branches rattling against one another in a high wind. "The
h'menob said I was mad. I was mad because I said words they did not wish to
hear, because they could not control me, they could not drag me along like a
tethered dog. And so they said I was mad."
zThe Mayan empire
was overthrown and the cities abandoned because of an angry prophecy from a
vengeful goddess.
"You know that
I am not mad," she said. "You and I understand each other. We have
much in common."
Someone knocked on
the lintel of the door to my hut.
"I had
enemies," Zuhuy-kak said softly.
"Liz?" I
recognized the questioning tone as my daughter's.
"Yes."
Zuhuy-kak was gone, vanished back into the shadows. "Come in."
Diane stopped just
inside the door, as if unsure of her welcome. Her hair was still down around
her shoulders, and her eyes were large in the candlelight. She had the look of
a lost child wandering in the night.
"What's
wrong?" I asked her.
"Couldn't
sleep," she said, "I saw your light." She shrugged, then sniffed
the air. "What's that smell?"
I sniffed, smelling
the lingering aroma of incense. "Candle wax," 1 said. "And a
hint of insect repellent." I tapped a cigarette from my pack and lit it.
She kept standing
in the doorway, looking uncomfortable.
"Sit
down," I said.
She perched
awkwardly on the corner of my footlocker. "I'm just feeling restless. It
happens sometimes. If I sleep when I'm feeling like this, I have nightmares."
She shrugged. "So I stay up.
Why are you still up?"
"I was
planning to go to bed soon. After this cigarette."
"I didn't mean
to interrupt. I mean, if you were working on something ..." She slurred
the words ever so slightly. She had been drinking with Tony—that explained why
she was brave enough to come visit me, yet still feeling awkward enough to
require an invitation to sit down.
"It's all
right. Has Barbara already gone to sleep?"
"A while ago.
The whole camp seems to be asleep."
"You never
liked being in new places when you were a baby," I said, surprising myself
a little by remembering. "You cried whenever we traveled. And when you
were little, you had bad dreams."
She would walk at
night, a diminutive child dwarfed by her flannel nightgown. I would tuck her
back in, rock her to sleep, curl up beside her, and listen to the whisper of
her breath coming and going.
Diane shrugged a
little, leaning forward. "I still have bad dreams. I always have trouble
sleeping in a new bed. When I went to college, I was insomniac for a month. I
told Dad about it and he prescribed sleeping pills. I don't use them
much."
"Robert always
did prefer external remedies," I said dryly.
"He always
treated the symptom, not the cause." A pause. I took a puff on my
cigarette and watched Diane's face.
"What's the
cause?" she asked.
I shrugged.
"If I knew that, I'd sleep better myself."
She nodded, staring
into the darkness, avoiding my eyes. "Tell me ..." she began, then
stopped and started again. "Tell me what it was like when you started to
go crazy."
The hut was very
quiet, a crystalline silence that seemed ready to shatter. A pool of darkness
had gathered at her feet. "Robert called me crazy," I said softly.
"I never agreed."
"You don't
think you were?"
"I think that
a great many people we call insane are just in the wrong place at the wrong
time." I shrugged. "I opposed the societal norms, so I was crazy by
Robert's definition. Out here, no one calls me crazy." I studied her in
the dim light. Her head was bowed and her hair hid her face. "Why do you
ask?" I wanted to go to her, to touch her on the shoulder and stroke her
hair, but I could not make myself move.
"I think ... I
thought before I left that I might be going crazy. I thought coming here was
crazy." Her voice was low. "After Dad died and I quit my job, I
didn't know what to do. I kept walking and walking—pacing from one room of the
house to another, moving a knicknack from a shelf to a side table and back.
Just walking and walking, with no purpose." One of her hands rubbed the
other, scratching a mosquito bite and raising a red welt. "I thought about
killing myself, just so I could rest."
I took a long drag
on the cigarette. "When Robert had me committed, the doctors at the
nuthouse had to tend to my feet. I had infected blisters, all over the bottoms
and sides of both feet. The doctors asked me why I hadn't stopped
walking when my feet hurt." I shrugged. "I wanted to leave and I
couldn't. Walking seemed like a reasonable reaction."
She was looking at
me now. "Was coming here a reasonable reaction for me?"
"I suppose it
was," I said.
Her smile was
tentative. "Last night was the first time I slept a night through in weeks. I had
dreams, but I slept the night through."
I glanced at the
clock on the shelf. The luminous dial showed midnight. "I'll walk you to
your hut," I said. "Survey comes early tomorrow."
She nodded slowly
but did not move. "You and Tony took Carlos off survey."
"Yes," I
said. "We thought that Barbara had a large enough crew and John needed a
little help."
Her expression did
not change. "I wanted to tell you: I've been taking care of myself for a
long time now. I'm not stupid."
"I know that. I—"
"It's not that
I don't appreciate your concern. But you made me feel like a fool." She
was watching my face.
"I didn't
intend that."
I could not read
the expression in her eyes. "All right."
"I'll walk you
to your hut," I said.
"Never
mind," she said. "I'll be fine." She ducked through the door and
left me alone with the shadows.
Tony and I walked
out to the plaza by Structure 701 on Tuesday morning. We walked slowly, and the
shadows of Mayan women passed us on the path. They carried gifts to the temple:
baskets filled with maize, pots of freshly brewed balche, woven cloth, cured
deer skins. Preparations for a festival, no doubt. I tried to eavesdrop on two
old women who were chatting about the misbehavior of their neighbors—
particularly about the bad housekeeping of one woman. But the women spoke
quickly, and Tony kept interrupting with comments about the weather and the
dig, and I could not follow their conversation.
The shadows faded
before we reached the plaza. The sun was hot. The three workmen who had levered
the stone from its place stood in the shade, smoking and sharing water from a
gourd, while Tony and I squatted by the upturned slab, brushing away the loose
dry dirt that clung to the stone surface. On its underside, the slab was carved with a
series of glyphs.
The stones on all
four sides of the area that the slab had covered looked like they could have
been walls. The center was a tumble of boulders and fill. I sat back on my
heels. "A corridor, I'd guess. Intentionally filled." I looked at
Tony. "Leading to a burial filled with pottery, jade, and obsidian
artifacts."
"I suppose
that you want to take some men from the house mounds to continue the
excavation," he said.
"I suppose so."
He frowned.
"Jade
masks," I said. "Discs of beaten gold. Pottery in a known
context."
"An empty
chamber and a lot of wasted time," he said gloomily.
I reached in my
pocket for my lucky piece. "I'll flip you for it," I said.
"Heads, I get two men from the house mounds and two from Salvador's crew.
Tails—"
"Forget
it," he said, shaking his head. "I always lose when we flip. If I
hadn't made that coin myself, I'd swear it was rigged." He shrugged.
"Take the men and see what you find."
I grinned at him.
"That sounds like a fine idea."
In the afternoon, I
hiked out to the fallen stela and made plans to raise it, a project that would
require additional equipment and workmen who were currently excavating the
house mounds. Tony would complain, but I would convince him.
That evening, I
worked with Tony on deciphering the glyphs that I had copied from the face of
the stone that had covered what I insisted on calling the tomb. The glyphs gave
a date in the Mayan Long Count corresponding to a.d. 948, around the time that the Maya had abandoned the
cities. That fit with Zuhuy-kak's story.
The men began the excavation and I sat back and did the thing I found most difficult: waiting to see what we would find.
Notes for City of Stones
by Elizabeth Butler
A society defines what is normal and what is crazy—and then says
anyone who challenges the definition is crazy. In our society, for instance,
self-destructive acts—self-mutilation or suicide—are considered mad. If you
slash your wrists, you are locked up as a crazy person.
In Mayan society, suicide was a perfectly respectable act. The patron goddess of suicide was Ixtab. She is generally pictured as a woman dangling over emptiness, supported only by the noose around her neck. Her eyes are closed, her hands are relaxed, and her expression is calm, as if she were raptly contemplating an inner vision. Ixtab escorts people who die by suicide or sacrifice directly to paradise. Self-mutilation was also an essential part of many rituals: piercing the ear-lobes, lips, and tongue so that they bled profusely was an act of worship.
The gods of the
Maya were demanding, much more demanding than the distant patriarch of a God
that most Christians worship. Mayan gods governed each day's activities, and
each day a different set had to be praised and propitiated. And a Mayan who
ignored the dictates of the gods and decided to behave as he pleased would be
as mad, relative to his society, as a resident of Los Angeles who ignored the
traffic regulations and decided to drive as he pleased.
You may consider
the comparison a frivolous one. Maybe you believe that traffic laws are for
your protection and ignoring them would be dangerous. If you asked an ancient
Mayan, he would explain that the rules for behavior laid down by the gods are
for your protection. Ignoring them would be very dangerous. It would be
dangerous, for example, not to offer a share of the honey to Bacab Hobnil, god
of the bees; foolish to offend the Yuntzilob by hunting on the wrong day.
We find the Mayan
pantheon peculiar. By our standards, suicide and human sacrifice are
unacceptable. We tend not to notice the peculiarities of our own culture. We
accept the thousands of children who wear braces to correct their teeth, yet we
consider the Maya odd for filing teeth to beautify them. Each culture defines
its own idiosyncracies and then forgets that it has done so.
"The twilight is the crack between
the worlds."
—Carlos Castaneda,
The Teachings of Don Juan
When I went to my hut, I crawled into my
hammock, bone-tired after the long day of hiking. I remember scratching a few
mosquito bites, thinking about getting up to get a drink of water, then falling
into a darkness as quiet and deep as the bottom of the cenote. I woke to the
blare of a horn. In the warm bright dawn, I did not remember my dreams.
The second day on
survey was much the same as the first. We searched a new transect on the way
out to the site where we found the stela. We were hot and sticky, plagued by
flies, set upon by stinging ants. Dutifully, we mapped the site where we had
found the stela. Using a rope line and small wire flags for markers, we divided
the area into squares and Barbara designated certain squares to be searched for
potsherds and worked stone: a random surface sample. I had the bad luck to draw
a square that was covered with thornbushes that fought me at every turn. By the
time I finished the search, my arms were laced with bright scratches.
We were resting in
the shade when my mother arrived at the site, tramping cheerfully through the monte, knocking
aside thorny branches with her walking staff, fanning away her escort of flies
with the other hand. A workman followed her and they were chatting in Maya
about something as they walked. "Hello," she called out.
Barbara opened one
eye and peered out from under her hat. "It's too hot to be so
cheerful," she said.
"I came out
along the sacbe," my mother said. "It's much easier going."
Barbara grunted.
"I know. But we have to go back through the monte. So I don't really
care."
"I take it you
haven't made any wonderful finds today," my mother said.
"We decided to
limit ourselves to one wonderful find every other day," Barbara said.
"We didn't want to overdo it." Barbara opened the other eye and went
to show my mother the stela. Through eyes half-closed against the
brightness of the day, I watched them. I could not hear the words of their
conversation, only the sound of their voices rising and falling in the
distance. My mother used her staff to hold back the branches and stooped beside
the fallen monument. I wanted to get up and join them, but I felt as if I would
be intruding. Barbara and my mother seemed to get along well. They did not need
my help.
I heard them
laughing about something, high laughter like exotic birds in the trees, and I
closed my eyes against the sun, jealous of Barbara's ease with my mother,
jealous of her knowledge of archaeology. She was my mother's daughter, and I
was a city dweller who was misplaced here among the flies and the thorns.
A shadow fell over
my face and I opened my eyes. My mother stood beside me. "How are you
doing?" she asked hesitantly.
I opened my eyes
and propped myself up on one elbow. "Fine. Just fine."
"You'll want
to put some antiseptic on those scratches when you get back to camp," she
suggested.
I glanced down at
my lacerated arms. "It's not so bad."
Barbara was still
out by the stela, taking several pictures with the camera that my mother had
carried with her. Maggie was giving her advice that she did not want. Robin was
napping on the other side of the clearing.
"You're doing
very well for someone who has never been on a dig before," my mother said
quietly. She was not looking at me. She seemed to be watching something on the
far side of the clearing, but when I followed her gaze I saw only sunshine and
trees. "Don't compare yourself to Barbara. She's been doing this for
years."
"I know."
"That's good," she said. "Remember that." She
touched my shoulder lightly. "Come to my hut for the first-aid kit when
you get back to camp."
Several hot and
dusty hours later, with new bug bites and lacerations, I went to my mother's
hut. She was alone, sitting at the table that served as her desk, examining a
few typewritten pages.
"I came for
the first-aid kit," I said. "Sorry to bother you."
"That's all
right," she said and pointed to the shelf that held a metal box painted
with a bright red cross. "Wash those cuts with peroxide. You've got to
take care of yourself out here."
Half of the cool
interior was crowded with supplies and equipment: a bundle of burlap sacks
bound with twine; a stack of folded cardboard boxes; a box filled with folded
paper bags; another box filled with a jumble of paper bags that had been marked
with numbers and letters.
I was swabbing my
cuts when my mother spoke again. "I wanted to apologize for taking Carlos
off survey."
"That's all
right."
"I'm not very good at dealing with people."
I looked up at her.
Her face was unnaturally still; her hands held a pencil that she rolled between
her fingers, a senseless incessant motion.
"It really is
all right," I said, with sincerity this time. "It was just a mistake.
It's OK."
She nodded, set the
pencil down on her desk, and smiled tentatively. "Have you seen the latest
find?" She gestured toward the stone head that stared from the shadows at the
far end of the hut.
Leaving the first-aid
kit open on the shelf, I went to examine the head more closely. It lay on a
burlap wrapping and stared up at the ceiling. I did not like the look of the
face. It sneered at me, the lips drawn back, the eyes wide open and hostile.
I squatted beside
the face and laid my hand on the elaborately carved headdress. It was cool to
the touch. With one finger, I traced the crack that ran through the face. For
no particular reason, I shivered.
"They brought
her down from the site today," my mother said from behind me. "I'm a
little surprised she survived the trip with that crack."
"Was it part of a sculpture?"
"More likely
part of a building facade. It's made of limestone stucco," my mother said.
I nodded and sat
back on my heels. "Who was she?"
My mother shrugged.
"Hard to say. There has been evidence, here and there, of a few women
rulers. But I think more likely she was a priestess. Out on the Caribbean
coast—on Cozumel and Isla Mujeres—there were shrines for a goddess named Ix
Chebel Yax, goddess of the moon. I would like to think that the structure we're
excavating was a temple for the goddess. If it is, it's the first evidence of
such a cult on this coast." She squatted on her heels beside me and ran a
finger along the spiral on the cheek. "Ritual tattooing," she said
softly. "Very common among priests and nobility." She touched a long
barbed needle that was woven with the shells into the woman's hair.
"Stingray spine," she said. "Usually used in bloodletting
ceremonies. The devout would run spines or needles through their earlobes or
tongues and offer the blood to the gods."
"Seems like a
cruel way to live. Human sacrifice, offering blood to the gods."
She sat back on her
heels. "Ah, now you are starting to sound as provincial as Robin. Don't
tell me that you're afraid of the bones in the cenote too?"
I shrugged. "I
didn't say that. It just seems like a cruel way to live."
"People always
talk about human sacrifice as if it were an unusual and aberrant
activity," she said thoughtfully. "Over the centuries, it's really
been fairly common in a number of societies. Think about it. There're a number
of religions in the United States whose worship centers on a particular human
sacrifice." She glanced at me.
"Jesus Christ
on the cross," I said slowly.
"Certainly.
Thousands of people consume Christ's body and blood each Sunday."
"That's
different."
She shrugged.
"Not really. Christ died long ago in a faraway place, and that might make
it seem different. His worshipers claimed he was God incarnate, but the Aztecs
claimed the same for the god-king they sacrificed. It happened only once, and
that speaks for moderation on the part of the Christians, but that's not a
fundamental difference, just one of degree." She smiled at me, obviously
enjoying herself. "Besides, I suspect that people overestimate the number
of human sacrifices made by the Maya. One sometimes gets the impression that
Mayan priests spent most of their time beating their fellows over the head and
tossing them willy-nilly into the nearest well. And that's not so. It was a
rare and important occasion. And you must be careful about applying your
standards to another culture. They have rules of their own. This woman may have
participated in human sacrifices— but by her standards, that was good. The
sacrificial victims went to a sort of paradise, and all was well."
She stood up and
went to her desk for a cigarette. She tapped it out of the pack and held it
without lighting it, still looking at me. "The fundamental bloodiness of
the act is the same—whether it's the Roman soldiers hammering the nails into
Christ's hands or the h'menob slicing out the heart of a captive soldier. Blood
has a power to it, a strength and a magic." She had rolled up the long
sleeves of her shirt and I could see the scars on the pale skin of her wrists.
She lit the cigarette, inhaled deeply, and blew out a cloud of smoke.
Then she grinned at
me. "Sorry. I get carried away sometimes. Occupational hazard of being a
professor."
"You sound
almost like you prefer the Maya to the Christians."
She laughed.
"Understand them better, anyway." She put her cigarette in a jar top
that served as an ashtray and walked over to the first-aid kit. "Maybe you
should let me bandage those cuts," she said, and I heard no more about the
ancient Maya that afternoon.
The daily rigors of
survey left me tired, but the restlessness that had kept me pacing to and fro
in my father's house had not deserted me. Here, I had more room to pace. When I
woke in the morning before the blast of the truck horn or when I was restless
after dinner, I went walking—past the kitchen where the air was always touched
with woodsmoke, past the cenote and out to the tomb site, past the arch of the
Spanish chapel and out to the Temple of the Seven Dolls, where I could look
down on the green-brown trees of the monte. Often, I met my mother on these
walks. I found her by the Spanish chapel, sitting on a fragment of wall and
staring out toward the Temple of the Seven Dolls. I found her alone by the
cenote, dangling her legs over the water and watching the birds swoop low over
the surface. I met her by the tomb site, muttering to herself as she inspected
the excavation. When we met, she seemed genuinely glad to see me.
The air was cooler
at dawn and dusk, and my mother seemed slower, more contemplative. We walked
together when we met. I told her little about myself—life in Los Angeles seemed
distant and unimportant, a faded snapshot where the colors were muted and the
figures blurred. My mother's world was painted in vivid colors with crisp lines
and edges. As we walked together, she talked slowly and carefully, as if she
pieced together the ideas as she spoke them, groping for the next fragment and
slipping it in place. Her sentences had the feel of written text—scripted
thoughtfully, but as yet unedited.
She told me about
the Maya and their gods. "For each yield that the Maya took from the monte, a return was due
the gods. A turkey, a bowl of balche beer, a jicara of atole, a kind of
corn gruel sweetened with wild honey. The offering to the gods was given freely
in a spirit of goodwill. Wise men did not haggle with the gods. A mean man who
gave grudgingly would suffer bad health, his crops would fail. The Maya
recognized that what they made, they made with the permission and protection of
the gods. It was only temporarily theirs. In the end, it belonged to the gods.
Our society tends to regard the monte, the wilderness, as an enemy. Christians
battled and subdued the wilderness. The Maya have a much saner way of looking
at the world, I think."
She was a strange
woman, my mother. When I was fifteen and she came to visit my father's house at
Christmastime, I recognized that she did not belong there. But I did not
realize then that she did not really belong anywhere. She walked with me, but
she did not belong in the world I knew. She did not look at me as we walked
together. She was always staring off into the monte, peering into the mounds as
if something fascinating were out there.
We sat by ruins of
the Spanish chapel and I asked about her books. "In the last chapter of
your first book, you said, 'There's more to be seen in the world than most will
admit.' What did you mean?" I asked.
She stared into the
distance, where the light of the rising sun already shimmered on the sparse
grass and barren ground. "Over there, on the edge of the plaza, a
stoneworker once sat and shaped irregular lumps of obsidian into sharp
sacrificial blades for priests, into spearheads for hunters. He
squatted on the ground, shaded by an awning of bright blue cloth. His skin
glistened with sweat as he bent over his work. He was a well-fed man, fattened
by the venison and wild turkey with which the hunters paid him, unusually stout
for a Mayan." My mother leaned forward, as if to get a better view of the
stoneworker. "Do you see him there, sitting in the sun and patiently
chipping an edge on an obsidian blade? I see him. He's a very careful workman.
You can choose to see him. Or you can choose to see the bare earth." She glanced at
my face. "That's what I meant. Do you see him?" Her tone was light
and casual.
I felt
uncomfortable, staring at the bare place in the earth. I remembered the dream
that had led me to discover the stela. But that had been a dream—I was awake
now. I shrugged. "I see the sunlight on the rocks, that's all."
She nodded.
"Nothing wrong with that. I sometimes think that to see the past clearly
you must give up a good deal of the present." She shrugged. "It's a
choice I made long ago. A sacrifice of sorts."
"Do you mean
you really see him? In the same way that you see me?"
She was silent for
so long that I thought she had decided not to answer. When she spoke, she spoke
softly. "Sometimes, I think I see the shadows of the past more clearly
than I see any living person." She shrugged, as if to rid herself of the
thought, then quickly stood to return to camp.
I did not follow
all that she said to me. I was reluctant to ask questions, because questions
seemed to disturb the spell, to break some unspoken rule. If I asked too many
questions, my mother would shrug and fall silent, or suggest immediately that
we return to camp. Sometimes, it seemed like our morning walks were waking dreams,
unsettling, subtly disturbing. Thoughts and feelings that I could not pinpoint
were tapping at the back of my skull. I liked my mother, but I did not
understand her. I did not understand her at all.
In the heat of the
day, my mother was a different person-— brisk, fast-moving, impatient that the
excavation went so slowly. She argued with Tony about where the crew should be
digging, about the significance of the stone head, about the likelihood that
the underground chamber would really turn out to be a tomb.
By the fourth day,
I felt at home at the dig. It seemed that I had always washed my face in gritty
lukewarm water from a black barrel that smelled faintly of plastic, had always
blundered to a pungent outhouse in the darkness each night.
Barbara asked me if I wanted to go to Mérida with her that
weekend. She knew a cheap hotel with a pool. We could take hot showers, maybe see a
movie and eat popcorn in an air-conditioned theater. I asked my mother if she
thought that a trip to Mérida would be worthwhile, and she said I should go.
On Saturday
morning, I woke early. Barbara had not set her alarm: we had planned to sleep
late and leave camp sometime in the middle of the morning. When I woke, I
glanced at Barbara, who was just rolling over to look at the clock.
"What time is
it?" I whispered. Maggie and Robin were still asleep.
"Seven-thirty,"
she whispered back. She leaned back in the hammock, one hand tucked under her
head. She was frowning. "I can't even sleep late anymore," she
grumbled. "This is ridiculous."
We dressed quietly,
packed clean clothes, and slipped out of the hut. We stopped at the water
barrel to wash, and the splash of water into the metal basin was loud in the
hot morning air. The camp was still asleep; the only sign of life was the small
curl of smoke rising from Maria's kitchen.
"Ah,"
Barbara said. "Perhaps we can convince Maria to spare us a cup of
coffee."
I hung back when
Barbara went to the door of the kitchen. The look that Maria gave us was far
from friendly. Teresa hid behind Maria's skirts. Barbara stepped away from the
kitchen, frowning. "I guess we'll get coffee in Mérida.
Maria says she hasn't made any this morning."
I followed Barbara
to the car. When I glanced back over my shoulder, I caught a glimpse of Teresa,
peering out the kitchen door after us. "I don't think Maria likes me
much," I said to Barbara.
"Of course
not. She doesn't like me either. You and I are young women, but we dress in
pants and spend all our time with men." Barbara shook her head. "We
don't behave properly. She doesn't approve."
"She talks to
Liz."
"She doesn't
like Liz either. She doesn't approve of any of us."
I nodded, relieved
at Barbara's certainty that I was not alone in Maria's disapproval.
Barbara's battered
Volkswagen bug jounced over every bump and rut in the road out of camp, finding
every pothole, dropping into it, and emerging triumphant on the other side.
Barbara drove with gleeful enthusiasm and unnecessary speed, tramping on the
gas whenever the road looked clear for a stretch, only touching the brakes for
an instant when the car hit a bump. "What's the hurry?" I shouted
over the roar of the engine.
"I'm tired of
moving slow, that's all," she shouted back. She swerved to avoid one
pothole, struck another one dead-on, gunned the engine, and kept moving.
"I'm tired of dirt and flies." She hit another pothole. "I want
a hot shower, coffee, breakfast, bright lights, and men who want to talk about
something besides potsherds." She looked away from the road to grin at me
with bright-eyed malice. "I want to look for trouble." We hit another
pothole.
"I know one
person in Mérida who might know where to find trouble," I shouted.
"Someone I met on the plane."
"Man or
woman?"
"Man."
"Of course.
Fast worker." I didn't know whether she meant that I was a fast worker or
the man was a fast worker. It didn't seem to matter. "Cute?"
I thought for a
moment. My memory of Marcos was rather vague, but I thought he had been
presentable enough. "Not bad."
"Good. He'll
have a friend. They always do."
We reached the main
highway, the road that had seemed so narrow on my way to camp. It felt like a
freeway now. The car picked up speed, and we rolled down the windows to let the
wind blow through. We passed a truck filled with workmen on their way to
somewhere, and we waved and honked the horn like high school kids who had
escaped the campus for a field trip. We roared by a cluster of huts and waved to a woman who was
hanging out the clothes and to a troop of children who were playing by the
road.
"We'll have
hot showers first, then breakfast," Barbara shouted.
"Great,"
I said. Everything was great. The wind, the road, the promise of breakfast.
The hotel was an old establishment, a few blocks from Mérida's
main square and right beside Parque Hidalgo, the park that Marcos had
mentioned. A little shabby. The desk clerk spoke bad English. A thin black cat
seemed to live in the lobby. The banister on the curving stairs leading down to
the lobby was ornately carved, but in need of polish. The blue and gold tiles
of the lobby floor needed sweeping; dust hid behind the potted palms. But the
sun streamed in through the open arch that led to Parque Hidalgo and there were
fresh flowers on the check-in counter.
We registered and
took hot showers before breakfast. I sat on one of the two twin beds while Barbara
showered, rubbing lotion on my legs, working around the mosquito bites and
scratches. For the first time in a week, I was wearing a skirt and sandals
rather than jeans and sneakers, and my hair felt clean. Overhead, the ceiling
fan turned with a steady rattle. Barbara was singing in the shower.
Parque Hidalgo was
a small brick-paved plaza. Tall broad-leaved trees shaded the plaza and dropped
small yellow blossoms on the men who spent the day idling on the park benches.
In the center of the square a tall bronze man stood on a white stone pillar
atop a stone platform. I never did learn his name.
We ate breakfast at
a sidewalk café beside the hotel and on one side of the park. Ornate metal
tables, fringed umbrellas, red-and-white tablecloths, and a matronly waitress
who seemed harried.
"Hamacas?"
asked a stout man in a
yellow baseball cap. On one shoulder he carried a bundle of plastic-wrapped
hammocks. Over the other shoulder, he had slung a loose hammock, which he held
out for our inspection.
"Is your name
Emilio?" I asked. "I'm
looking for a hammock
vendor named Emilio." He shook his head heavily and went to the next
table, where there were tourists with simpler needs.
Barbara flipped
through the pages of a tourist guide to Merida, which she had picked up from
the hotel lobby. It told the way to the zoo, to the market, to the ruins at
Chichén Itzá, to the best places for lunch and for dancing. She read aloud bits
of information that she found interesting.
"The main
square is called the zocalo," she told me.
I nodded, watching
the people strolling by on the street. The coffee was good and I was content. I
had not realized that I was nervous about being at the dig until now, when I
had relaxed.
"You
interested in a tour of Chichén Itzá?" she asked me. "It's only about
an hour's drive from here."
"Maybe tomorrow," I said.
"We could tour
Casa Montejo, the mansion built by the Spanish back in 1549," she said.
"Or we could visit the cathedral. Or we could go to the market."
"Whatever you
like."
We decided to go to
the market, figuring that we would have time to stop in the cathedral on our
way back and still have time for a siesta before dinner.
We were finishing
breakfast and drinking coffee when I spotted Marcos at the far end of the cafe.
I nudged Barbara. "He's better-looking than I remembered," I said. He
was a thin, small-boned young man with dark brown eyes, white teeth, high dark
cheekbones. He was grinning as he watched a hammock salesman—I assumed it was
Emilio—display a hammock to an American couple: a woman in a sundress and a man
in a Hawaiian shirt. Emilio had looped one end of a hammock around the arm of
one of the wrought-iron chairs. He hesitated for a moment, holding the hammock
in a bundle, then he flipped it open with an elegant flourish—the way a waiter
uncorks a bottle of wine. The gesture conveyed the importance of the act and
the value of the product. The hammock was a rich shade of purple that caught
the sunlight and held it.
Marcos saw us then
and joined us at the table. "Hello," he said to me. "How are you?"
He pulled out a chair. We watched Emilio close his sale; the American couple
walked away with two hammocks, and Emilio stuffed a handful of paper money into
his pocket.
He came to the
table and dropped his bundle of hammocks by a chair. "It's going to be a
good day," he said. "I have luck today." He was a head shorter
than I, compact and broad-shouldered. Dark eyes, dark skin, and a smile like an
all-American boy except for the gold filling that showed around the edges of
one front tooth. "You are Marcos's friends." The easy charm of a born
salesman. "You want to buy a hammock? I'll give you a good price."
"We've got
hammocks," Barbara said. "In fact, we're sick to death of
hammocks."
"How could you
be sick of hammocks?" Emilio asked, and Barbara went on at length on how
she could be sick of hammocks, so very sick of hammocks.
"Buy one for a
present," Emilio suggested and then bought a round of coffee with the same
sort of flourish with which he displayed a hammock. We talked about tourists
and the weather while the morning wore on. Emilio and Marcos seemed quite at
home in the café, familiar with the waitress. A line was forming outside the
nearby movie theater. The smell of popcorn hung in the warm air.
After a time,
Emilio was trying to talk Barbara into visiting an isolated cave at a place
called Homún. An underground river in a limestone cave with stalactites.
"Beautiful," he said. "Really beautiful."
Marcos was watching
me. "Qué piensas?" he asked. "What are you thinking?"
I shrugged.
"Not much."
"You looked
like you were thinking about something."
I shrugged again.
Emilio was using both hands to describe the stalactites in the cave. Barbara
looked unconvinced.
"On the plane,
you looked sad. What was wrong?" Marcos asked.
I said nothing.
Shrugged.
He glanced at
Emilio, who was growing more eloquent in his attempts to persuade Barbara that
a visit to the lonely cavern at Homún was the perfect thing for any young
American's summer vacation. "I am tired of sitting here," Marcos
said. "Come on. We'll walk and come back here." We
left Barbara and Emilio talking about underground rivers.
They walk, in
Mérida. Out in the small parks, where the breezes are a little cooler than the
air pushed about by the ubiquitous ceiling fans. We wandered through the main
square. "What were you doing in Los Angeles?" I asked Marcos.
"I went to
visit my uncle." He shrugged. "But there was no work, so I came home.
There is no work here, but I have friends."
He led the way
through the square, past small horse-drawn carriages in which tourists rode.
"What made you
sad?" Marcos asked. "You can tell me."
I shrugged and told
him about coming to the dig to find my mother, about how I had not seen my
mother in many years.
He listened and
nodded. "So, what do you want from your mother?" he asked.
I shrugged.
"You don't
know what you want."
"I guess
not."
"Tonight,"
he said, "I play basketball for the university. You want to come?"
"Basketball?
Let me see what Barbara thinks."
He took my hand.
"Even if Barbara does not want to come, you come and watch me play,
OK?"
"All
right."
Back at the café,
Emilio was asking Barbara what we were planning to do that day.
"Go to the
market," she said. "Wander around Mérida."
"And
tomorrow?" he said. "What are you going to do tomorrow?"
"We talked
about going to Chichén Itzá," she said. "But it's a long drive."
"I'll help
drive," Emilio said. "No problem. I'll bring hammocks to sell. All
right?" Barbara was laughing, but Emilio did not let up. "I'll tell
you what. If you want to go to Chichén Itzá, you meet me here tomorrow in the
morning. I'll help drive. It'll be good." He grinned, showing his gold-rimmed
tooth.
We finished our
coffee, and Emilio and Marcos went to the zocalo to sell hammocks. Barbara and
I went to the market, heading away from the zocalo on Calle 60, a narrow street
with narrow sidewalks. All the streets were narrow. The houses and shops
pressed close to the street and stood shoulder to shoulder, presenting a solid
front to the world.
We passed the open
door of a room filled with the smell of beer and the sound of men talking. A
young man standing in the doorway smiled at us, but we did not smile back. We
smiled at children, dogs, and women. The children smiled back; the dogs and
women did not.
A middle-aged man
was selling coconuts from a pushcart. We watched him skillfully chop the husk
from a nut, break the shell away, pierce the round white fruit, and insert a
straw. We each bought a coconut and sipped the sweet milk as we walked.
I recognized the
market but could not begin to remember the way through the maze of tiny stalls.
We peered down long corridors that led into darkness. In the dimness beyond
where the sunlight reached, I could see boxes of fruit and vegetables, crates
of chickens, hanging meat. Barbara consulted her guidebook and
dragged me to the corridor where clothing was sold. It was on the edge of the
market and the sun shone in. Every stall was bright with hanging shawls,
dresses, shirts, skirts.
"I like that
one," I said to Barbara, pointing out a very pretty burgundy-colored shawl
with a painted floral border. The woman who sat in the stall called to us,
smiling and beckoning. She had gold earrings that matched her gold tooth and
she seemed fascinated by my hair and determined to sell me the shawl. I
bargained in bad Spanish and, I think, ended up paying too much for the shawl.
Barbara bought a white dress that was embroidered with a pattern of dark blue
squares. It was just past three when we headed back to the hotel.
"Time for a
nap," I said.
"Let's stop at
the cathedral," Barbara said. "It's on the way and it'll be cool
inside."
I put a coin in the
hand of the beggar woman who sat just outside the arched door. She blessed me
with the sign of the cross.
The interior was
cool and dark. Light filtered down from high octagonal windows. White columns
rose to a high vaulted ceiling, crisscrossed with stonework that was lost in
the shadows. An emaciated Christ hung wearily on his
cross at the far end of the hall. Old women knelt in the front pew. A young boy
sat in the back, doing sums in a school notebook.
A few other
tourists were wandering around the hall. I hesitated just inside the door. I
felt uncomfortable—more than just awkward about entering an unfamiliar church,
but somehow reluctant to move closer to the figure of Christ. But Barbara had
already started up one of the side aisles, and so I followed her.
Plaques on the
white stone walls depicted Christ's suffering and death. I did not linger to
look at them. I remembered my mother's contention that Christianity was a
religion of human sacrifice and I was inclined to agree. Halfway up the aisle,
I paused to look at an elaborately carved statue of the Virgin Mary. Candles
burned on a small table before the statue, and the warm air was thick with the
scent of incense and burning wax. The candlelight flickered on the Virgin
Mary's carved wooden robes.
Mary's hands were
spread in acceptance; her mouth was curved in a half smile. But something about
her expression seemed wrong to me. The artist who painted her features had
tinted her skin several shades darker than the usual anemic white. Her eyes
were dark; they caught the shadows.
She lacked the delicacy that
I had seen in other depictions of the Madonna; her features seemed more Indian
than Spanish. She seemed older than the usual pale maiden Mary. Older and
wiser. Her smile was knowing.
The candlelight on
her cheeks cast spiraling shadows and her forehead seemed strangely flattened.
I could smell incense more strongly now, a sharp resinous smell, like burning
pine. The same smell had filled my mother's hut. The Madonna was watching me
from the shadows. She had gathered the shadows around her, and the burning
candles shed just enough light to let me see her clearly. I recognized her
then: her face matched that of the stone head in my mother's hut.
I felt dizzy and
sick to my stomach. I looked away from her face, stepped back and put one hand
on the edge of a pew for support. I closed my eyes and waited for the wave of
dizziness to pass.
I opened my eyes
when the stone floor felt steady beneath my feet once again. The Madonna was
staring over my head, her features set in a benign expression of acceptance.
She was not watching me. This corner of the cathedral was as well lit as any
other.
I hurried to join
Barbara on the far side of the hall. She was strolling toward the door. When we
stepped out into the sunshine, I immediately felt better. I put another coin in
the beggar woman's hand and received her blessing once again.
"You look
pale," Barbara said. "You all right?"
"I felt a
little sick in there," I said. "Just for a minute."
"Touch of the
touristas?"
"Could be. I
feel better now."
"You'll be
better after a siesta."
Our hotel room was
stuffy, but cooler than the outside. Barbara turned the ceiling fan to a faster
speed, stripped to her underwear, and flung herself on one bed.
"Siesta," she said, turned her back on me, and fell asleep
immediately. I lay awake for a long time, watching the ceiling fan turn,
listening to Barbara's steady breathing.
Notes for City of Stones
by Elizabeth Butler
Today is Saturday, March 17, 1984, by our
reckoning of time. A simple set of numbers and names, designating the day but
granting it no particular power, no special value.
In the Mayan system
of dating, this day would be assigned a number and a day name in the tzolkin,
or sacred almanac, a different number and a different day name in the haab, or
vague year. In the Long Count, the system of dating used on stelae, this date
would be written as 12 baktuns, 18 katuns, 10 tuns, 13 uinals, and 15 kins,
designating this day as being 1,861,475 days since the starting point from
which the Maya count time. By Mayan reckoning, each of these numbers and names
has a meaning and an importance.
The tzolkin and the
haab are part of a system of interlocking cycles, known to modern Mayanists as
the Calendar Round. The haab is a cycle of 365 days: eighteen months of twenty
days and one month of five evil days at the end of it all. The tzolkin is a
cycle of 260 days: thirteen months of twenty days. The two cycles are
interlocked: one can think of them as two great cogs—one with 260 teeth and one
with 365. As one wheel turns, so turns the other. Every fifty-two vague years,
both cycles begin a new year at the same time.
That's one system
for counting the passage of time. The other is the Long Count, a system for
counting from an established date long ago. Our notation of the year 1984
indicates the number of years that have passed since the birth of Christ: one period of
one thousand years, nine centuries of one hundred years, eight decades of ten
years, and four years of 365 days. A Long Count inscription indicates how many
days have passed since the beginning of the Mayan time count by noting the
passage of baktuns, or periods of 144,000 days; katuns, or periods of 7,200
days; tuns, or years of 360 days; uinals, or periods of 20 days; and kins, or
days.
All this is
important, but the heart of the matter lies in the power of the days, not the
methods used to calculate or record them. Many years ago, I learned of the
importance of these numbers and names from a shriveled woman with a clubfoot,
who, for reasons I never ascertained, had moved from a mountain village to the
city of Mérida.
She was bargaining
for herbs in the market when I met her; she glanced at me with bright sharp
eyes and commented to the shopkeeper on my poor selection of produce, saying
that gringas did not know how to shop. She spoke in Maya and I, hot and tired
from a long day of shopping, spoke up in the same tongue, saying that I would
gladly take lessons on how to shop if anyone would offer to teach me. She
grinned and beckoned to me.
For the next hour I
followed her as she trudged from stall to stall. She taught me to shake my finger
to indicate disinterest, told me when to push for a better price, when to give
a little, when to walk away, when to joke. The shopkeepers stared at us—an
American and a Mayan crone—but no one commented. I thanked her at the hour's
end and bought her a Coke, which she drank with great enthusiasm.
A week after my
tour of the market, I met her again, this time in the zocalo in the early
evening. She sat alone on a green bench at the west corner of the square and
she hailed me, beckoning. She had been drinking aguardiente—to stop the pain,
she said. I do not know what caused her pain; she would not talk about that.
She asked me the hour and the day, and when I told her, she gripped my wrist so
tightly that her nails cut into my skin. I asked her what was wrong, but her
answers made no sense. She wanted to talk about time.
She said that this
was the last day of an evil year; she was distraught, but I could not make out
the reason for her agitation.
I bought her
another bottle of aguardiente—her pain seemed real and that was the only help
she would allow me to offer. Over the bottle, she began rambling, reciting
something. "Imix, he is the first one: earth monster, dragon head, root of
it all. He rules the corn; a very good day for planting. Ik, he is the second,
and he brings the wind, a very good day. Akbal is dark, a prowling jaguar who
devours the sun. He lives in the west, where he drinks the dark water, and the
rain he brings is not good. He kills the corn. Offer him bebida and do not plant
this day."
I realized, as she
continued, that the names she called, praising this one and warning against
that, were the names of the days in the tzolkin. "Ben is lord of the
maize, a good day for planting. Offer him atole, made of the best maize. Oc wears
the head of a dog; he brings the sad rain that makes the maize rot in the
ground and gives the children sickness. Cauac wears the head of a dragon; he
brings thunder and violent rain." She shook her head, let her breath out
in a great gasp, and gripped my hand more tightly. She was staring at me
wildly, but I did not think that she saw me. She recited the almanac of days
for an apprentice, a daughter, a son, a person who would learn and benefit from
this knowledge. "You know them, do you not?"
"Yes,
grandmother," 1 said to calm her. "I know them."
"There is
Lamat, the lord of the great star that rises with the sun. There is Muluc: give
him jade and the rain that comes will favor the corn. You must remember these
things!"
She gripped my hand
with both of hers and breathed warm brandy-scented breath in my face. Around
us, the square was quiet. The lovers and loiterers who strolled here favored
the far side, closer to the café that sold sweet fruit ices.
"You must know
them all: Etz'nab is the lord of the sacrifice; he carries a blade of sharp
obsidian. Behead a turkey in his name; feast for him."
The moon had risen.
Its pale light filtered through the leaves of the shade trees to dapple the
cement paths that crisscrossed the square. Somewhere across the square a guitarist played
a ballad, doubtlessly for lovers who would rather have been left in peace. The
old woman stared up at the moon as if she had never seen it before.
"And you must
know the day named Men, governed by the old woman moon goddess, Ix Chebel Yax.
She is a trickster, that one, bringing rainbows and floods, healing and
destruction. She gives children stomach pains, helps women in childbirth,
teases madmen, brings sleep to the weary, snarls the thread of weaving women.
On her day, you can divine the future, but you cannot trust her."
"Rest,
grandmother," I said to the woman, laying one hand on hers. "I will
remember this. But now you must go home. Let me take you there."
"That does not
matter," she said. Her voice was softer now. "Today is the last day
of the five unlucky days. Cimi is dark and deadly; he knows Ah Puch. When he
flies to you, you never hear him coming; his feathers make no sound. On this
day, you must burn the blood of a turkey with incense."
"Yes,
grandmother. But now I will take you home."
"I will die
this night," she said, standing like an obedient child as I tugged on her
arm. "It is the end of the old year: the cycles have returned to the place
that they were when I was born. The year is out and Cimi has come for me."
She followed me to
the curb and I hailed a taxi. Apparently she had finished the recitation of the
days; she was quiet, acquiescent. She told me her address and I told the cabby
to take her there, paid him in advance, paid him extra to help her inside. I
stood under the full moon, listening to the distant guitar serenade. The hag's
fingernails had left marks beside the old scars on my right wrist. I rubbed
them idly and watched the taxi drive away.
On the next day,
which I called Sunday for lack of a better name, I took a taxi to the address
that the old woman had given the cabby, a shabby house in a row of shabby
houses. The woman who answered the door frowned when I asked after the old
woman and said in Spanish, "She is dead now. What do you want here?"
I backed away,
unable to tell her of the strange evening under the moon, unwilling to describe
the feelings that had pulled me here. I needed to ask the old woman what day
this was and what that day meant, but I said nothing. I caught the same taxi—he
had waited for me at the corner—and went home to my hotel.
Today—the day I
write this—is Saturday. I do not know its Mayan name and number. I do not know
the gods that influence this day. I know very little.
Gods that are dead are simply those that
no longer speak to the science
or the moral order of the day …. every god
that is dead can be conjured
again to life. —Joseph Campbell,
The Way of the Animal Powers
On Saturday morning, before I woke, Diane
and Barbara left for Mérida. Having Diane leave was a relief in a way. In the
one week that she had been in camp, she had managed to interrupt my moments of
solitude more than I could have imagined possible.
Every morning, at
dawn and dusk, I wandered the site. I watched a potter—a young woman with
glossy black hair that glistened in the morning sun—molding a vessel in the
shape of a pot-bellied dog. I stood in the shade and listened to the scraping
of an obsidian chisel on cedarwood: a withered old man was carving the statue
of a god. I did not see Zuhuy-kak. At the times that I most expected to see the
old woman, my daughter would wander by instead.
At dawn, as I sat
on a fragment of wall by the Spanish chapel watching a stonecutter, Diane
strolled toward me on the path from the cenote. At dusk, as I lingered by
Structure 701, watching the shadows gather, I heard the sound of Diane's boots
on the path from camp and the shadows fled.
In the early
evening, I stood on the edge of the cenote, watching the bats skim low over the
water. Diane waved cheerfully as she walked along the path from the camp.
She was willing and
eager to walk with me and listen to me talk about the site. I talked a great
deal. Sometimes, in the bright light of day, I thought that I talked too much.
During the week,
excavation had continued on the house mounds, the Temple of the Moon, and the
tomb site. Work went slowly; the dirt had to be cleared away from each boulder
before it could be moved, and each bucket of dirt had to be sifted for
potsherds and flakes of worked stone. Hot, tedious, and dusty work.
At the tomb site,
the workmen had uncovered eight stone steps leading downward to the beginning
of an underground passageway. The rubble they removed from the stairway had
yielded little of interest: a few plainware potsherds, a few carved stones with
glyphs too badly battered to decipher.
Early Saturday
morning, I walked alone to the tomb site. As I crossed the open plaza, I saw a
flash of blue by the excavation. Zuhuy-kak was standing beside the tarps that
covered the open pit. Her eyes followed me as I walked toward her. She stood in
the sunlight and cast a shadow of her own. I greeted her in Maya, sat in the
shade by the excavation, and lit a cigarette. Zuhuy-kak remained standing,
staring out toward the mound.
"You
see," she said, pointing to the mound. "You see how the ah-nunob have
desecrated the temple. But soon their time will be over. Soon, the cycles will
turn."
I followed her gaze
but saw only the rubble-strewn mound, the path worn by workmen snaking around
it. An iguana stared back at me from its perch on a weathered temple stone.
"What day is
it, Ix Zacbeliz?" she asked.
I knew that she
wanted to know the day in the Mayan calendar. "I don't know," I said.
"We use a different calendar now."
She frowned.
"You don't know? Then how do you know what to do each day?" She
seemed more confident than she had when she first appeared. She stood straight, with her
hand resting lightly on the conch shell at her belt. "Don't you know the
cycles of time, Ix Zacbeliz? You know that what has passed will come again,
repeating endlessly. You must learn what day this is, so that I can advise you.
The time is near for Ix Chebel Yax to return to power.''
"I'll try
to figure it out."
"You must."
She was watching me with a disconcertingly direct gaze.
"Yes, I
will," I said, a little sharply. "But right now I am concerned with
this excavation. Can you tell me how much further we will have to dig here? And
what will we find in the end?"
But she was not
there. The wind hissed like snakes in the dry blades at my feet, rattling the
tarps and sending dust devils scurrying about the mound.
At dinner that
night, I missed having Diane and Barbara there. Only John and Tony had remained
in camp; all the others had run away to Mérida, to sleep in clean beds and take
hot showers. The three of us sat together in the plaza, drinking coffee and
aguardiente while the sun set. John and Tony talked while I stared out into the
dusk beyond the plaza. The moon was just above the trees—a thin crescent with
the horns pointing aloft. For once the shadows were quiet: the priest had
finished scraping the jaguar skin; no wood-carvers worked by moonlight.
"What do you
think, Liz?" Tony asked.
"What? I wasn't
listening."
"John was
talking about problems at your favorite site."
I looked at John,
suddenly attentive. He hunched his broad shoulders forward slightly, as if to
protect himself against me. "What sort of problems?" I asked.
John wrapped both
big hands around his coffee cup. "Work's going slowly. I leave to check on
Carlos's crew, and when I come back, the men have always been delayed. The
sifter is torn. The head of a pickax has come loose. A man is stung by a
scorpion. Someone saw a rattlesnake. Always something."
"You put Pich
in charge of that crew, didn't you? He's usually very hard-working."
John shrugged.
"Not this time."
"I'll ask
Salvador what he thinks," I said to Tony. "Maybe we need to shift the
crews around."
"Sounds like
it," he said.
After a time, I
excused myself and wandered by Salvador's hut. I could see the silhouette of a
man standing in the yard, having a smoke. I called to Salvador and he came to
the albarrada, the wall of limestone fragments that surrounded the
solar, the yard around the house. Lighting a cigarette, I leaned against the
wall beside him.
Here, the air
smelled of greenery. Within the solar, the growth was lush. Maria kept a
careful garden: an avocado tree shaded the doorway to the house; chili plants
and herbs grew beside the albarrada. I could smell the sweet oranges that hung
from the tree on the far side of the yard.
"How goes
it?" I asked.
"Well
enough." I watched the red tip of his cigarette glow brightly for a
moment, then fade to dull red. I could not see his face.
"It's quiet
with the others gone," I said.
"Yes. It is
always quiet here."
"John tells me
that the work goes slowly at his site," I said. "He says that there
always seems to be a problem."
He ground his
cigarette out on the limestone wall, and red sparks scattered on the rough
stone. "This is not a lucky time of year.
And that is not a lucky place," he said. "The work goes slowly
because the luck is bad."
I offered him
another cigarette and lit it for him. By the brief flame of my lighter, I saw
his face: calm, considering, steady. When the cigarette was burning, he spoke
again. "When we had cattle here, the animals would always spook near that
place. It is unlucky."
"You did not
speak of this before."
The cigarette
hesitated halfway to his mouth. "You would not have listened before,"
he said. He was invisible in the darkness, and he
knew that.
"We have to
dig there," I said. "It's the most promising site we've found."
A pause. The tip of his cigarette glowed brightly as he drew in the smoke.
"Can we use more men there? Would that help?"
"It is a
narrow passage," he said. "Only three can work there at a time: one
to move rocks, one to move dirt, one to sift."
"Perhaps a
different three workmen," I said. "Men who do not know or care that
it is an unlucky place."
"Perhaps."
His tone was noncommittal. "I will assign a different three."
That evening I sat
in my hut, consulted my reference books, and calculated the date according to
the Mayan calendar. It wasn't an easy task. Sylvanus Morley, a noted Mayanist
active in the early 1900s, had derived a formula for the conversion of Mayan
dates to dates in the modern calendar, but apparently it had not occurred to
him that someone might want to convert from the modern calendar to the Mayan.
After much
calculation, checking, and rechecking, I decided that today was Oc in the
tzolkin or sacred almanac, the fourth day of Cumku, the last month in the haab
or vague year. The Mayan year was almost over. The year's end, a period of five
days of bad luck, would be upon us in sixteen days. I wondered if the proximity
of the year's end was the reason for Salvador's fear of bad luck. We were also,
according to the Long Count, about to reach the end of a katun, a time of
change.
In any case, the
day Oc was not too bad a day. In the glyphs, it is portrayed by the head of the
dog that guides the sun in its nighttime journey through the underworld. I
suppose, if I were writing a newspaper horoscope based on Mayan days, I could
interpret it as something like "A day to receive guidance."
That night I
dreamed clearly. I dreamed of Los Angeles, the tacky battered crackerbox of a
city that I left so long ago.
The sun was just up
and the morning light was pale. The world had no hard edges: a soft blur of
gray-green formed the shrubs in a neighbor's yard; a slash of dark brown was a
broken fence that marked the property line between two pale brown lawns,
splashed with dark green where crabgrass grew. An old Volkswagen bug—dull blue
flecked with rust—rested on its wheel rims in a weed-filled drive. The tires
were flat; they had been flat for many years. The city was silent. No
dogs barked; no birds sang; no cars drove past. The people were gone.
Diane walked beside
me, a round-faced five-year-old with solemn green eyes. Her small soft hand was
in mine and she trudged beside me without complaint though we had been walking
for a long time.
Under our feet, the sidewalk was cracked and buckled. Diane
tripped at a place where one cement square was higher than another and I caught
her as she fell. When she looked up at me, her eyes were filled with tears.
"What's
wrong?" I asked her. "Did you hurt yourself?" She shook her
head, but the tears started to spill over. I was caught by the strange
restlessness that forced me to keep walking despite the blisters on my feet.
"Come on," I said. "We have to keep going." She did not
move, even when I took her hand and tugged on it. "If you won't
come," I said, "I'll have to leave you here."
The tears were
rolling down her round cheeks and falling to make dark spots on the cement. I
swung her into my arms, arching my back to lift her. "Don't cry," I
said. In that moment, I heard the coughing roar behind us. I glanced back to
see a jaguar slip from behind the Volkswagen and begin to pace us, following
without haste, as if confident of his prey. I started to run, but I ran at
dream speed: my feet moved slowly; my steps took me nowhere. Diane had locked
her arms around my neck; she was a burden that I could not drop. My foot caught
on the edge of a sidewalk stone, and I fell heavily to one knee. Diane lost her
grip around my neck and fell away from me. I heard the coughing roar of the
jaguar behind me and knew that I did not have the time or the strength to save
the child.
I woke in my
hammock. The thunder sounded again, a rumble like a jaguar's roar, like the
hoofbeats of the horses that the Chaacob were reputed to ride. No rain yet,
just thunder. Thunder from a rabbit sky, the Maya called it. A bad sign. The
Chaacob rode, but they brought no rain. A particularly unlucky sign for us if
it presaged the end of the dry season. When the rains began, excavation would
have to end.
I stood in the
doorway of my hut, looking out across the plaza. Though my watch said quarter
past one, a burning lantern still hung from the corrugated tin roof that
sheltered a small area just in front of Tony's hut. I pulled on my clothes,
knowing it would be hours before I could sleep again, and crossed the plaza.
Tony sat in one of
his two lawn chairs. His old plaid robe—the same robe he brought to camp each
year—was belted tightly around him. He wore scuffed leather slippers. Above
them his legs were painfully thin and marked with the red swellings of mosquito
bites. A wooden crate served as a side table, holding Tony's pipe, a box of
wooden matches, a glass, a bottle of gin, and a bottle of tonic water. Tony was
reading a thick blue book that I recognized as a reference on Mayan pottery
types.
He looked up when
he heard my footsteps, smiled, and set the book aside. "You're still
up," I said. "The thunder woke me. Do you think the rains are
starting early?"
"Not a chance," he said. "It's just a summer
shower. Come have a drink with me. It'll help you sleep."
When he ducked into
his hut to get me a glass, he seemed a little uncertain of his footing, a
trifle unsteady. I had never worried about Tony's drinking until his wife,
Hilde, died two years ago. Before that, I knew he drank in the field, but
assumed that Hilde kept him from drunken excesses at home. Now he lived alone
in Las Cruces, and I suspected he drank heavily throughout the year. I had
noticed that the circles under his eyes were darker this year than last. He seemed
thinner, paler, a bit more battered and scuffed.
The drink that he
poured for me was warm and the tonic was flat, but I did not mind. The lawn
chair creaked beneath me when I sat down and stretched my legs out in front of
me. The air was muggy and still. The thunder rolled across the sky like the
stones of falling empires.
My first dig was a
Hopi site located in Arizona's Mogollan Mountains. For two months, I lived in
the motley village of leaky tents that New Mexico State University called a
field camp. On my first night, I woke to the sound of thunder, to the trickling
of running water, and to a feeling of dampness. I snapped on my flashlight and
the beam glinted on the shifting surface of a minor waterfall that cascaded
down the side of the tent—a foul-smelling army surplus model supplied by the
university. A puddle had soaked my shoes and was creeping toward the tent flap.
Outside, the rain whipped against the side of the tent, shaking the poles. The
wet khaki-colored canvas shifted uneasily around me.
I had crawled out
of my wet sleeping bag and was pulling on my clothes when I heard the creaking
of poles shifting position, the sharp crack of a rope giving way, and the soft
sigh of wet canvas released from tension. One side of the tent gave way and the
rest followed, soddenly collapsing into itself, relaxing into its natural
folded state.
I abandoned my
possessions and groped my way to the door, cursing with a passion, swearing
exotic oaths I had learned from the madwomen in the nuthouse, kicking at the
dripping canvas and beating at it with my fists and flashlight, flinging the
tent flap aside and escaping into the downpour. The tent lay like a dying
animal, twitching sporadically in the wind.
The rain beat on my head, hammering my hair to my skull, soaking my clothes. I was barefoot in the mud. I heard someone chuckling. He stood in the open doorway of another tent, his hands in the pockets of his flannel robe. He was dry, clean, and amused, and I started over to kill him.
He stopped laughing
when he saw me coming. "Stop grinning or I'll kill
you," I said. I had not been out of the nuthouse long, and I
managed to remain socially acceptable only through a conscious effort. Without
that effort, I slid easily back into a more primitive state.
"Sorry,"
he said. "Want to come in and dry off?"
I think it was his
voice that won me. Even at thirty, Tony had a husky comforting voice with a
soft rasping quality, like a fine wool blanket against bare skin or the warm
coat of a friendly dog. He offered me a towel, loaned me dry
clothes that did not fit, made hot chocolate over a camp stove, and, in the
morning, helped me resurrect my fallen tent.
We were never
lovers, Tony and I. We were good friends, best friends for a while, but we
never slept together. I thought it better that way.
I can remember
Tony's wedding more clearly than I can my own. Thinking about my wedding to
Robert is like seeing stones at the bottom of a clear running stream. I can see
them, but I know that their shapes are distorted by the water's
movement, that the colors I see are not their true colors. I know that the
stones are not as smooth as they look, but I can't touch them to be sure. The
water is too cold and too treacherous; I cannot venture closer to investigate.
I must keep my distance. I think, as I recall that time, that I married Robert
in an effort to become a person I wasn't. An ordinary normal person.
Thinking of my wedding, I imagine Robert and me, dressed neatly
and uncomfortably in our best clothes, standing before a justice of the peace
in an office that smelled of dying flowers. I feel cold, thinking of it now. I
cannot remember if I felt cold then.
Tony's wedding was
in a church filled with flowers and well-wishers. I stood in the back, having
declined a place in the bridesmaid lineup. Hilde had asked me, but I would have
felt strange and awkward in a lacy gown. I remember watching Tony stride toward
the altar, fumble for the ring, lift the white lace veil and kiss the
tow-headed bride. I can even remember what I was thinking. I was wondering why
I did not hurt. I was considering how curiously empty I felt. I felt like the shell of a
half-constructed house or like a broken pot. The hollowness was centered in the
pit of my stomach and I wondered if I might be catching the flu.
After the wedding I
wished them well and drank champagne. The bubbles rose and burst in the great
void inside me, but failed to fill it. I danced badly with men I did not like.
A little after
midnight, I returned to my home. Sitting at my desk in the cramped
ill-furnished one-bedroom apartment, looking at the flowered wallpaper and the
ugly green rug, I worked on my thesis project, reading and taking meticulous
notes. At dawn I went to the campus library so that I would be there when it
opened, and I passed an Indian hunting party on my way. When Tony
returned from his honeymoon, I welcomed him back and we picked up our
friendship without a hitch.
Now we had come to
this: old friends drinking warm gin and tonic and listening to thunder.
"I like your
daughter," Tony said easily. "She's a lot like you were on that first
dig."
"Yes? And how
was I?"
"Careful,"
he said. "Very cautious. She's friendly, but she never lets her guard down
completely. Something's going on under all that calm, but I don't know what it
is."
"Neither do
I."
The thunder rumbled
and Tony waited for it to pass. The wind was blowing harder and our shadows
rocked as the lantern was buffeted by wayward gusts. "I don't think you
need to worry about Carlos. Diane's too smart for him."
'' You' re probably
right.''
The rain began with
large drops. Each one made a wet spot the size of a dime on the hard-packed
dirt of the plaza. The wind blew behind us, sweeping the rain over the tin roof
and away from us.
"What about
you?" he asked. "How are you getting along with your daughter?"
I shrugged, staring
out at the rain. The memory of the dream was still with me. My world was filled with
uncertainties that I could not explain. "All right, I suppose."
"I've been
wondering—it seems like you've been worried about something. Anything you want
to talk about?" He was leaning forward, holding his glass in both hands.
I do not like it
when friends lean forward and ask me what is wrong, particularly when they are
asking about worries that I have not yet admitted to myself. I had a vague
feeling, still less than a hunch, that a balance somewhere was shifting and I
was losing control.
"That first
summer in Arizona you held everything tight, sealed up, smooth like
glass," Tony said. "But I knew there was something explosive inside.
If anything nicked the surface, you would blow up. You're like that
again."
My arms were folded
across my chest. I shook my head. Somewhere in the darkness beyond the swaying
circle of lantern light, the shadows were gathering. The world was out of
balance.
"What's wrong?"
"I just feel
like ..."I made a quick helpless gesture with my hands. Empty. Open.
Vulnerable. "I don't know."
He leaned back in
his chair. "I've always wondered which of us has it worse. You keep
everyone at a distance, shut them out so they can't hurt you. I drag people in
so close that they can't help but hurt me." His voice was slow and steady,
only slightly blurred by gin. "Neither of us can find the middle
ground." He reached out and took one of my hands in both of his, holding
it carefully and gently. I liked the feel of his hands on mine. His voice was
warm and comforting. His hands were rough from the acid bath he
used to clean lime deposits from potsherds.
I find it difficult
to let people help. I always have. Tony knew that. He would not push me. "I'm
afraid," I said.
The thunder roared
and rain clattered on the tin roof above us. In the flash of lightning that
illuminated the plaza I saw a shadow step into the open space, moving with the
rain that swept across the hard-packed dirt, yet oblivious to it. In her world,
it was not raining.
"Don't be
afraid," Tony said.
Another flash and I
saw the shadow more clearly: a young woman dressed in blue, her face
illuminated by a moon that I could not see. I recognized her by the tattoos on
her face: Zuhuy-kak, when she was much younger. I heard the steady beat of a
drum, a hollow wooden sound. The woman was dancing, lifting her arms over her
head and leaping toward the sky. Another lightning flash: she was whirling and
the light glinted on the obsidian blade in her hand. The drumbeats blended with
the thunder. Her expression was joyful; her eyes were enormous and filled with
power. I felt the moonlight running in my veins, and for an instant, I wanted
to join her, to dance with her under the moon.
"Liz?"
Tony squeezed my hand to get my attention. "Just remember that you can
talk to me."
"I'll
remember," I said.
The lightning
flashed and the plaza was empty except for the rain. I held Tony's warm
calloused hand and tried not to be afraid.
I was tired. The
rain let up soon after I left Tony, but I slept sporadically, awakened again
and again by ordinary sounds: the rattling of the door in the wind, the
croaking of a frog, the thunder.
At dawn, I was glad to leave
my hammock and walk out to check on the southeast site.
The ground steamed
in the early-morning sun. Most of the water had already seeped away into the
soil. Birds bathed in the few remaining puddles. One of Maria's pigs was
napping in a wet spot beside the albarrada.
At the excavation,
all was well. Some water had leaked past the tarp that covered the opening, but
only a little. The stones were damp.
I went down the
steps. A centipede rippled across the floor to hide in the rubble. When I stood
erect in the passageway, my hat just brushed the stone slabs. The passageway
was about five and a half feet high, three feet wide. Its construction was
nothing remarkable: the walls of the stairway were smooth masonry, square
blocks stacked neatly. At the top, protruding stones formed a lip on which the
flat slabs that
made the roof of the passageway rested. The plaster of the plaza had been laid
on top of these slabs. The passageway was interesting only because I expected
it to go somewhere interesting. I climbed the stairs and stepped out into the
sunshine.
Zuhuy-kak squatted
in the shade, as if she were waiting for me. I greeted her and she nodded to
me, accepting my presence. I sat on a nearby rock and lit a cigarette.
"Yesterday was the day Oc," I told her. "The fourth day of
Cumku."
She smiled.
"Yes," she said. "The year ends soon. The time is near. Have you
seen my enemies, Ix Zacbeliz?"
"Last night, I
dreamed of a jaguar who stalked me and my daughter," I said slowly.
"He knows that the time is coming for change," she said.
"Cycles are turning." She fingered the conch shell on her belt
thoughtfully. "My enemies will try to stop the goddess from returning to
power. You must be careful." She turned away from me, her eyes tracing the
line of a building that had long since fallen. "It is so quiet here since
the people have gone," she muttered. A lizard the length of my forearm
watched us from a sunny rock on the mound. The grasses whispered softly.
"I did not know it would be so quiet."
She looked sad and
weary. I started to reach out to her, wanting to give her comfort. My hand
passed through her as if she were smoke and I sat alone beside the tomb,
talking to myself in the growing heat of the morning.
The
bush covers almost everything; it is the background within which lie
all
other special features of earth's surface. It is never reduced permanently
to
man's use; the milpas are but temporary claims made by men upon the
good
will of the deities who animate and inhabit the bush ...
—Robert Redfield,
Folk
Culture of the Yucatán
That night, we went to the university
basketball game and watched Marcos's team lose. The game was played in a
central courtyard, surrounded by tall stucco buildings. A few stars showed in
the dark patch of sky above our heads. Spectators' shouts echoed from the
yellow walls, and a small boy kept the score on a large blackboard. Marcos's
team, long-legged young men dressed in bright green, ran and shouted and stole
the ball from long-legged young men dressed in blue. High
over the courtyard, the stars moved slowly across the rectangle of the sky.
Barbara and I sat
at the top of the concrete bleachers, the only North Americans in the crowd. Barbara
leaned against the building that served as the back of the bleachers and put
her hands behind her head. Her eyes followed the men as they ran from one end of
the court to the other.
"Wrap them up," she
said softly. "We'll take them all home."
On the court,
Marcos fumbled the ball and lost it to a blue-clad giant. I could recognize
Marcos only by the number on his shirt. "Somehow I think Liz would
object."
"Yeah, she
would. She deals with sex by avoiding it." I glanced at her and she
shrugged lightly. "As far as I can tell."
"How long have
you known her?" 1 leaned back too, imitating Barbara's casual pose.
"Seven years," she said. "We've been working
together at the university for three years." She lifted her eyes from the
court to look at the stars overhead. "She's not an easy person to get to
know. She likes to keep people at a distance. I'd been working with her for a
year and a half before she ever invited me to her house."
"Where does
she live?" The question was out before I stopped to think.
"It's a little
apartment in an old building. One-bedroom. Crammed with books and pots and
artifacts. Tiny kitchen. I think she eats out mostly." Barbara glanced at
me, still casual. "You know, you still haven't told me the story here.
You're Liz's daughter, but you don't know her and she doesn't know you. You
turn up here unexpectedly and you stay." She shrugged without looking at
me. "Tell me if you want to."
"She and my
father were divorced when I was five. My father raised me," I said.
"I only saw my mother a few times after the divorce. My father didn't want
her to have anything to do with me. So I don't know her. 1 don't know her at
all."
"Your father
kept her from seeing you? Didn't Liz have anything to say about that?"
I shrugged.
"Apparently not."
The courtyard
erupted with cheers when Marcos's team grabbed the ball and made a basket—their
first in ten minutes. Barbara waited for the echoes to die, her eyes following
the running men. "So, do you think you'll sleep with him?"
I shrugged,
grateful that she had changed the subject and knowing that she had done so for
my benefit.
"Don't expect
much if you do," she said. "Mexican men play by a different set of
rules."
"That sounds
like the voice of experience."
"I've heard
tales," she said.
I did not get to
hear any of the tales. Emilio hailed us from the bottom of the bleachers and
made his way up to where we sat. He sat on the level below us, leaned against
Barbara's legs, and grinned up at her, showing his gold-rimmed teeth. "I
knew Marcos and I would have luck today," he said.
Sunday morning,
Barbara and I woke early to the sound of church bells calling the people to
Mass. Marcos and Emilio arrived at the cafe" just as we were finishing
breakfast.
Emilio dropped a
stack of hammocks beside the table, collapsed into a chair, and waved for the
waitress to bring two more coffees. "Qué hacemos?" Marcos
asked, sitting beside me. "What are we going to do?"
"Want a hammock?"
Emilio said to a passing couple, and what we did for a while was watch the
intricate quick-step of careful negotiations. The woman said no and the man
said yes, then after a while the man said maybe and the woman said maybe. Then
finally, after much bargaining, the woman said yes and the man said yes. Emilio
returned to the table smiling.
"So what are
we going to do?" Barbara asked, but Emilio, distracted from romance by the
promise of profit, had spotted two French tourists on the other side of the
caf6 and was watching another hammock vendor try to convince them to buy a
hammock.
"I will sell
them a hammock tomorrow," he said.
"Let's leave
these guys here and go somewhere cool," Barbara suggested to me.
Marcos leaned
forward and said, "We could go to the park. You haven't seen the park,
have you?"
We caught the
crosstown bus, a battered vehicle that had come to Mérida to die. Clattering,
wheezing, overloaded, and much abused, it had, I would have bet, served many
years hard time in the States or in some wealthier province of Mexico before it
reached Mérida. The bus took us to the park, which was not cool, but was a
little cooler than the cafe.
We rode the small
train that circled the park, squeezed in one corner of a car packed with fat
women in peasant dresses and sticky happy children who smelled of cotton candy
and hot sauce. We rented a small boat with clumsy wooden paddles and journeyed
slowly across a tiny cement pond filled with pale green water no deeper than
waist-high. Barbara and Emilio paddled enthusiastically. Halfway across, we
collided with a boat piloted by a solidly built Mexican father; his wife and
two children watched us with round eyes as we called out apologies in English
and Spanish. On the way back, we rammed a boat piloted by two high school boys,
who seemed to regard the collision as a challenge of some sort. The taller boy
smacked his paddle against the water to send a cascade of green water in our
direction, and we hastily retreated toward shore.
We rode in
red-and-gold skyway cars, passing over the pond and dropping potato chips on
the high school boys and, accidentally, on the father, who still paddled
valiantly in a vain and foolish effort to reach the far shore.
We watched high
school students on roller skates careen around a small concrete rink. Marcos
bought me a balloon from a withered old man. Barbara and Emilio tried to sell a
hammock to two young American men.
Two old women in
huipiles sat at a small metal table by the refrescos stand, drinking Coca-Cola
and eating potato chips. A troop of noisy children ran along the paths; a
middle-aged woman carrying an oversized purse trudged after them. Four high
school boys strolled along the path with their hands in their pockets and
sunglasses shading their eyes. Emilio bought us all melon-flavored helados, sweet
fruit ices that had cantaloupe seeds mashed in with the fruit juice. Marcos
held my warm, fruit-juice sticky hand, and we strolled behind the high school
boys, taking the day at its own pace.
The zoo was small
and smelled of warm animals, warm hay, warm manure. The owl, a small
brown-feathered bird with delicate ear tufts, perched in the far corner of his
cage, as far as possible from the path. When Barbara hooted at him softly,
mimicking the call we heard in the camp at night, he blinked at us, ruffled his
feathers, then closed his eyes again.
The jaguar was
pacing in his cage, one foot crossing over the other as he turned, took three
steps to the far end of the cage, turned again and took three steps back,
weaving an endless pattern. He returned my gaze. Marcos leaned on the railing
beside me.
"Are there
still jaguars in the monte?" I asked him. "I'd hate to meet one out
by the camp at night."
He shook his head.
"Not here. Not near Mérida. Not anymore." He put his arm lightly
around my waist. "Are you afraid, being alone in the camp at night? 1 will
come back with you and keep you safe at night."
I laughed.
"Ah—there may be no jaguar, but there are wolves in Mérida."
He frowned. "I
don't understand."
I laughed again.
"Nothing. Never mind. It's not important." I spotted Barbara and
Emilio over by the camel's enclosure and started to lead him in that direction.
He held my hand and pulled me back to him, put his hand lightly on my shoulder,
and kissed my lips quickly.
"You should
not laugh at me when I don't understand," he said. "I don't laugh
when you don't understand."
I think I blushed.
"I'm sorry," I said. "I didn't mean ..." He kissed me
again, then led the way to where Emilio and Barbara were feeding the camel
popcorn through the bars.
By the time we
returned to Parque Hidalgo, the day was fading. The line for the movie theater
stretched along one side of the square, and vendors sold balloons to the people
leaving the church on the corner. Marcos and I shared a concrete love seat on
one side of the park; Emilio and Barbara shared another. The love seats in
Mérida's parks are two concrete chairs joined in an S curve—the person in one chair faces the person in
the other chair, yet the two are separated by a wide concrete armrest. Intimacy
with separation. I still wore my sunglasses and they made the world seem dim
and far away.
Marcos was holding
my hand in a companionable way and I was watching Emilio and Barbara. Emilio
was trying to persuade Barbara to stay one more night and go to bed with him. Barbara was saying that she would see him next weekend. I knew
their conversation because the discussion had started on the bus back from the
park. Barbara was laughing and shaking her head.
The heat of the day weighed upon me. On the brick plaza, two
pigeons were courting. The male was circling the female, cooing and puffing out
his neck feathers so that they caught the light. The female was searching for
bread crumbs, oblivious to his attention.
Two small children,
a boy in a blue shirt and jeans and a little girl in a faded dress, came to us
with a bouquet of flowers. Marcos bought me a flower and I tucked it behind my
ear. The little girl grinned: her teeth were crooked and her hair needed
combing. I patted her on the shoulder—the way you pat a kitten or a puppy—and
gave her a coin.
"Will you come
here next weekend?" Marcos asked me.
"Sure," I
said. "I think so."
He squeezed my hand
lightly. "Sometimes," Marcos said, "you look like you are very
far away from here. What happens with you then?"
"Just
thinking, I guess. I can't explain it."
He studied my face,
then shrugged. "Whatever it is, it will be OK. You are in Mérida with
us." He squeezed my hand lightly. "It will be good. We will be good
friends."
Across the way,
Emilio's attempts to persuade Barbara had been interrupted by the
flower-bearing children. As I watched, Emilio tried to shoo them away and
continue his conversation with Barbara, but the boy just grinned and thrust the
flowers out again. Clever urchins, they kept grinning and holding out the
flowers and watching Barbara laugh. Finally,
Emilio threw up his hands with impatience, bought a
flower from the boy and bribed the little girl with a coin.
"Don't look
sad," said Marcos. "You will come back in a week. One week will pass
just like that." He waved a hand in the air.
Barbara was walking
toward me, twirling a white flower between her finger and thumb. Emilio,
defeated but still hopeful, walked at her side. Barbara and I drove away in a
car filled with the scent of dying flowers.
Diane and Barbara returned to camp late on
Sunday, roaring in about an hour after sunset. Tony, John, and I were sitting
beside Tony's hut when they drove up. Barbara waved to us from the car,
immediately brought over a bottle of red wine that she had purchased in Merida,
and insisted that we all share it. She seemed exuberant, happy to have gone to
Merida, happy to be back. Diane was more subdued.
Barbara dragged
over a few folding chairs, and we drank wine and listened to Barbara's tales of
selling hammocks to tourists. The wine was too sweet. Diane said very little,
and I found myself watching the shadows shift and move. The dancing woman did
not return. I felt restless and out of place and I excused myself after
finishing a single glass of wine. Alone, I walked to the cenote.
I fingered the
lucky piece that I carried in my pocket. Tony had given me the coin on the same
day he told me that he loved me. I don't remember what I said to him. I have a
better memory for what others say than for what I say myself. We were walking
home from the movies. Tony had insisted on taking me; he told me I was working
too hard, that I needed some time off. When we reached my apartment door, he
pulled a dark blue box from his pocket and handed it to me. "I made you a
present," he said.
"You realize,"
he said as I was opening it, "that I care a lot about you." He was
shy, a little awkward. I remember hoping, as I opened the box, that a collapsible rubber
snake would jump out, or that a joy buzzer would sound, or somehow the whole
thing would be a joke. The coin glistened in the light. "I love you, Liz.
You know that?" Tony said quietly.
I did know—though I
had not admitted it to myself before. I said, I think I said, "I don't
want this. I'm sorry." I think I held the coin out to him, hoping that he
would take it back and hide it away again.
He took my hand and
gently closed it around the coin. He kept his hands on mine for a moment.
"Think about it," he said. He turned and walked away, leaving the
coin in my hand.
I remember sitting
in my apartment. I didn't turn on the lamp; I could see the dim outlines of the
furniture by the light of the streetlamp, filtered through the window shade,
and I wanted no more light than that. What I had told Tony was true—I could not
love him. Somewhere at my center, with the madness I had locked away, I had
sealed off the part of me that knew how to love. It was too close to the part
of me that knew how to hate, and that was at the center of the madness. I had
sealed them all away, leaving a dead place, a place where nothing hurt because
there were no nerve endings there. I had severed connections, cauterized the
wound. I sat in the dim light in an ugly apartment that needed painting and I
probed the dead spot, thinking about Robert, thinking about the pain of
madness. Nothing.
I don't think I
cried. I don't remember crying. I remember taking a shower and letting the warm
water run over my body. I remember thinking, I feel the water, so I must be
alive. But the warm water did not reach the part of me that I had sealed away.
Tony and I remained
friends—very good friends. I tried to give him the coin back, but he insisted I
keep it. We went to lunch together, to dinner now and then. Eventually, he
mentioned to me that he was dating Hilde, one of the secretaries who worked in
the department.
The cenote was dark
and still. I stood on the edge of the pool and held the coin lightly in my hand. Something was
stirring in the back of my mind; something that I did not want to examine too
closely. Feelings that I had buried long ago were surfacing in me. I turned the
coin over and over in my hand.
I heard the rustle
of fabric behind me. Zuhuy-kak stepped to my side, smiling in the moonlight. "Ah,
you are here," she said. "That is well: you belong here."
I smiled back.
Seeing her helped ease the restlessness. I did belong here; I had always felt
that.
"I came to
tell you that a day of bad luck is coming," she said. "The day Ix,
three days from now, will be unfavorable. It is ruled by the jaguar god, who
does not wish the goddess to return to power. You must give to the goddess to
make her stronger so that she can help you against her enemies."
"What can I
give?"
"Something you
value." Zuhuy-kak was looking at the coin and I closed my hand around it. My mind suddenly held a picture of the coin arcing high in the
air, catching the moonlight as it tumbled toward the black waters.
"You
hesitate," she said.
"Yes," I
said. "I was thinking that you have never told me what we will find when
we finish digging."
She frowned at me.
"You were wondering whether the result would be worth the sacrifice. You
cannot bargain with the gods."
I shrugged. "I
think about these things differently than you."
"What do you want
to find, Ix Zacbeliz?"
I thought for a
moment. Tony and I joked about jade masks and gold, but that was just joking. What
did I want? A tomb that added to our knowledge of religious ritual? Murals like
the ones in the caves at Bonampak?
"I know what
you want," Zuhuy-kak said softly. "I can tell you. You want power.
That is what you will find when you reach the end. You will find the power of
the goddess."
I was turning the
coin over and over in my hand.
"You must
sacrifice to the goddess to gain her favor. You must give to her
willingly."
I held the coin,
unwilling to let it go. It caught the moonlight and gleamed in my hand. A sound
on the path distracted me. My daughter's voice calling, "Hello?" I
turned toward her, slipped on the rock, started to fall and flailed my arms to
regain my balance. My hand opened and the coin slipped away from me, through my
fingers. I heard it hit the rock, slide. I heard a splash in the water below.
Gone.
"Hello? Who's
that?" Diane called. My daughter had stopped in the shadows where the
trail reached the pool's edge. She was alone. "Who's there?"
1 walked around the
pool to stand beside her. "What are you doing here?'' My voice sounded
strained and I fought to control it. "It's late to be wandering
around."
She shrugged.
"I thought I might go for a swim," she said. "I thought it might
help me sleep."
"The water
should be cool." I stood with my hands in my empty pockets, looking at the
cenote.
"What are you
doing out here?" Diane asked hesitantly.
"Thinking,"
I said. "It's cooler here. And quieter."
"Sorry to
interrupt," she said quickly. "I didn't know—"
"It's all
right," I said. "It's fine." Her eyes were large in the
moonlight, like the eyes of a little girl. "I was just heading back to
camp."
"All
right," she said with a trace of relief. She turned away, kneeling by the
pool to test the water with her hand.
And suddenly, I
don't know why, I was afraid to leave her there by herself. "I'll wait for
you," I said. "I'll walk you back to camp."
She frowned at me,
puzzled. "That's all right. I'm fine by myself.''
"No, I'll
stay. I'd like to just sit here for a while anyway," I said.
She shrugged.
"If you want."
When she dove in,
she shattered the silver moon that floated on the surface of the pool. The
moonlight rippled around her. I think she shortened her swim because I was there. She ducked beneath
the dark surface once or twice, did a slow breaststroke to the far end of the
pool and back.
Walking along the
dark path to camp with my daughter at my side, I realized that she frightened
me. I am not used to caring. The breeze blew and I thought I heard laughter in
the branches overhead.
That night, I
dreamed of the city of Dzibilchaltún before the coming of the ah-nunob.
In the dream, I
walked north along the sacbe that led from the outskirts to the city center.
The city was quiet and still. Most houses were empty, but the desertion seemed
temporary. I could see through the open doorways into the huts. In one, an old
woman tended a fire and stirred a pot of atole. In another, a child cried, a
sound as thin and lonely as a fingernail scraping on a classroom chalkboard an
hour after school was out. In one solar, I saw tall water jars, elegantly
painted with black on red. A woman hurried along the sacbe, glancing warily
over her shoulder. I saw a man lying in a hammock, while a woman sat beside
him, her head bowed, rocking his hammock as if he were a child. I guessed the
date of the dream to be sometime near a.d.
900, sometime before the Toltec invasion.
The huts I passed
grew more affluent as I approached the city center. First, the huts of
well-to-do peasants; then, those of rich merchants. An effigy of Ek Chuah, the
black-eyed guardian deity of the merchants, pouted at me from one yard. He was
an ugly god, and the cedar carving portrayed him accurately, showing his
misshapen lower lip, the black markings on his face, the burdens on his back.
Finally, the huts of the nobility and priests. The solars around these huts
were well tended and filled with flowers. But something was wrong. An evil
smell hung in the air. The horizon was clouded with smoke.
I left the huts
behind and entered the first ceremonial plaza. As I approached the far end of
the court, three ravens flew up, shrieking and cursing. The black birds had
been perching on a heap of sun-bleached coconuts, and that seemed odd, since
coconuts did not grow in this part of the Yucatán.
The coconuts
grinned at me and watched with hollow eyes.
The round objects
were not coconuts, but the skulls of men. I suddenly realized what was
happening: Dzibilchaltún was at war. These were the skulls of enemy warriors
killed in battle. Scraps of dried flesh clung to the topmost
skulls, the most recent additions. The other skulls had been there longer; they
had been picked clean by birds, insects, and night-wandering rats. The faint
aroma of dead meat hung in the warm air.
I was surrounded by
the heavy scent of death. The sky was cloaked in clouds and the air was thick.
From somewhere far away, I heard the slow beat of drums, growing louder with
each beat.
When I woke, I was
drenched in sweat. The hut was filled with darkness. I lit a candle, but that
only pushed the shadows back; it did not chase them away. It was strange to
walk through the dark camp and fear the shadows. They pressed too close, these
shades of darkness. Something was wrong here. The smell of death clung to me.
I stood by the open
door to Diane's hut. I remembered a long distant evening, buried deeper than
any jade mask, when I watched my four-year-old daughter sleep. She was covered
by a quilt, surrounded by stuffed toys. Her red-gold hair fanned out over the
pillow; her thumb had found her mouth under cover of darkness. The next day, I
packed my bags and left for New Mexico the first time.
Now I listened to
soft breathing in four voices: Diane's breath was a husky whisper in the
chorus. She was quiet in her hammock, at peace. I turned away from my sleeping
daughter.
Zuhuy-kak stood in
the shadows by the water barrel. She walked beside me as I strolled toward my
hut. "You and I have much in common," she said to me. "I had a
daughter once." She walked in the shadows and I could not read the
expression on her face.
"What became
of your daughter?"
"The ah-nunob
came and she died. Many died." Her voice was very soft.
The uneasy residue
of my dream lingered. "I dreamed of the time before the ah-nunob
came," I said.
"You dreamed of bad luck," she said flatly.
"Bad luck is coming. You did not make a willing sacrifice to the
goddess."
I walked in silence
for a moment, imagining what Tony would say if I suggested we take a holiday in
the middle of the week because I feared bad luck. When I entered my hut, I was
alone. I returned to my hammock, but it was a
long time before I fell asleep.
The week began
badly and got worse. On Monday, John spotted a rattlesnake on the trail to the
tomb; Robin was afflicted with heat rash; Pich was bitten by a centipede, a
nasty sting that quickly began to swell.
The students were
growing restless. At breakfast and dinner, I heard talk of what they would do
after the dig was over. They were as nervous as birds just before a storm,
fluttering here and there with little purpose other than the movement itself. I
think they felt the tension in the air, but they blamed it on isolation, on hot
days and lonely nights.
On Tuesday, two
workmen did not come to work and two others arrived late. I was in a bad temper
when I drove the jeep to Mérida and tried to track down the chain hoist and
winch that we needed to raise the stela. After much searching, I located a man
who would rent us the equipment on Thursday of that week, later than I had
hoped but better than nothing. On the way back, I had a flat tire, discovered
the jack was broken, and finally put out my thumb and hitched a ride with a
farmer. I arrived at camp crouched in the bed of a pickup truck with a mournful
pig. I spent the evening with Tony, drinking aguardiente and calling curses
down on the workmen who had not come.
And on Wednesday,
the day Ix, our luck turned bad, very bad. Philippe, Maria's younger brother,
was working in the passageway when a large rock rolled down onto his right
foot.
Philippe was young:
a basketball player, a boxer, a university athlete who was earning a little
cash doing work that he considered beneath him. Salvador had hired him, I
believe, partly because Maria had asked him to do so. Certainly, the young man
was strong, but he lacked the traits that make a good worker for a dig.
Older men make the
best workers: they appreciate the virtue of a slow steady pace; they take
advantage of delays to stand in the shade and smoke; they are wiry and enduring
but not overly muscular. They know how to conserve their energy. Hot-blooded
and restless, eager to see signs of progress, Philippe had grown impatient with
the work, annoyed at the frequent delays while John photographed the site. In
the moist warm passageway, he had shoved too hard on a crowbar, using muscles
built through long hours in the gym. A boulder, suddenly loosened, tumbled down
so quickly that Philippe had no time to dodge. The rock pinned the young man's
foot beneath it.
Working in the
narrow passageway, squeezed between unyielding masonry walls, was difficult. It
took half an hour for the other workmen to lever the rock off the wounded foot.
When Salvador and Pich carried the young man from the passageway, his bravado
and impatience were gone. He was pale; his jaw was set; and his face was
covered with sweat. Salvador and Tony took him to the hospital emergency room
in the pickup truck.
Dinner that evening
was not good. I believe that Maria was punishing us for indirectly causing, by
our existence, her younger brother's injury. The chicken was smothered in a
sauce that left the tongue scalded and numb. Beneath the sauce the chicken was
scorched. The salad was limp and the tortillas were cold.
I was lingering in
the plaza over a cup of bitter coffee when I heard the coughing roar of
Salvador's pickup truck. After a time, Tony came to find me and report.
Philippe's ankle was broken and the foot was badly bruised. With his ankle in a
cast, he had returned. Now that the ordeal was over, his bravado was restored.
At Maria's insistence, Philippe would
be staying with
Salvador's family until he was better. Maria was determined to
nurse him back to health.
"Tomorrow,"
Tony said, "she wants Tony to bring the curandera from Chicxulub to
come and see him. Apparently she thinks this is more than a medical
problem."
I offered Tony a
cigarette and lit one myself. "Of course," I said. "She wants a
specialist in matters of bad luck, evil winds, and sorcery."
"I don't suppose there's much we can do to talk her out of
it," he said.
"I don't
suppose so." I leaned back in my chair and watched the red-hot coal on the
end of my cigarette. "That leaves us short another man and marked as
unlucky in the bargain." I shrugged. "Nothing we
can do about it. Nothing at all."
"Do you
suppose there's a chance that she'll give us a clean bill of health? No bad
spirits here."
I shook my head.
"I doubt that. At best, she'll blame the Aluxob." The Aluxob were mischievous
gremlins that haunted the old ruins and occasionally harassed people who
disturbed the ancient places. "At worst, we'll need an exorcism. For that,
we'd lose a few days' work."
"That's not so
bad. We could weather that," Tony said.
I watched the
shadows grow longer and I hoped he was right.
On Thursday, the
day Men, we dragged the winch and other equipment out along the sacbe to raise
the stela. Salvador and five of the men from his crew constructed a wooden
tripod and rigged an arrangement of pulleys that culminated in the small
gas-powered winch. Salvador politely ignored most of my advice on how to rig
the pulleys, quietly setting them up his way, and in the end I sat with Tony by
the mound and picked thorns and burrs from my clothing while listening to the
workmen. In digging to slide a rope beneath the stela, they had disturbed a
nest of stinging ants and they were cursing steadily, colorfully, with many
anatomically impossible suggestions.
Not far away in
space but very much removed in time, two young men, h'menob or apprentices studying to be h'menob,
were playing what looked like a gambling game with the red fortune-telling
beans. I tried to listen to their conversation, but Tony kept interrupting with
comments about the weather, the dig, the stela.
Throughout the
morning, the sky rumbled with thunder and the sun hid behind a solid gray
expanse of clouds. Salvador sniffed the air and said that it would not rain
before afternoon, but I had my doubts.
Just before noon,
as Salvador's crew was digging a depression in which the stela could rest once
it was upright, the survey crew came tromping through the monte. The end point
of their latest transect was about a mile away, so they had decided to join us
for the raising of the stela.
Diane looked cheerful enough,
smiling even though her legs were covered with insect bites and scratches.
When Salvador
started the winch, it made a horrible sputtering noise, then died immediately.
He swore, made various adjustments, and tried again. It caught this time and
began to turn. One man on each corner of the stela held a guy wire, steadying
the great stone slab as it shuddered, then began to tilt, lifting slowly from
its bed in the dirt and leaves. At first, it moved smoothly.
The wind blew,
fluttering the leaves of the trees around us. Birds flew here and there,
calling their displeasure. The sky cleared its throat. The rain began when the
upper end of the slab was a foot off the ground and rising steadily. In minutes
we were drenched. The stela's steady ascent faltered as the workmen holding the
guy ropes slid in the mud. I ran to help the workman who was guiding the
northwest corner of the stela, clinging to the guy rope and planting my heels
in the mud in a vain effort to stop sliding. Tony was on another rope, shouting
encouragement. Diane and Barbara were dragging on another
rope, helping a thin old man who was calling loudly to the saints for
assistance.
The rain whipped
us, stinging on my bare skin, soaking through my thin shirt. The flashes of
lightning shattered the world into fragmentary blue-white images: Tony's face,
his mouth open
to shout; Diane's hands, knuckles white as she tried to grip the rope harder;
black exhaust rising from the coughing winch; wet metal glistening in the rain.
Thunder crashed as if the sky were tumbling down around us, overwhelming Tony's
shouts, Salvador's instructions, and the old man's prayers.
The slab was nearly
erect, sliding slowly into the hole that had been dug for it, when the thunder
crashed with a cataclysmic rumble and the lightning struck the end of the
stone, filling the air with the crackling smell of ozone. I could hear a man's
voice, shouting in Spanish to the Virgin Mary for mercy and another calling to
Saint Michael and the Chaacob. The winch coughed once, a petty imitation of the
thunder, then roared with a sudden surge of power, jerking on the stela. We
gripped the guy ropes, our hands wet and slippery, our feet sliding in the mud,
and the great stone slab kept moving, tumbling with majestic grace, its
momentum overcoming our puny efforts to stop it, continuing on its slow
inevitable path. It fell.
The thunder mocked
us with deep demonic laughter, and I scrambled through the mud to see the stela,
ducking involuntarily whenever the lightning flashed. The limestone had broken
when it fell. An irregular diagonal crack—bright white but darkening already in
the falling rain—cut through the relief carving, separating the slab into two
parts.
The leaves and dirt
that clung to the surface made the relief carving stand out. On the top
section, a Toltec warrior stared down, resplendent in an eagle headdress, a
jaguar-skin cloak, and full military garb. His eye was a dark clot of mud, and
angry ants ran over his robes, his spear, his round shield.
The crack separated
him from the Mayan woman who crouched at his feet. Her head was lowered and her
hands held out an offering—a bowl of something. I recognized her face as that
of Ix Chebel Yax, the fickle Mayan moon goddess who sometimes brought healing
and sometimes death.
The lightning
flashed again and the thunder rolled more softly, as if it were moving away,
having finished its work. I looked up and saw Zuhuy-kak watching me from the
far side of the stela, smiling in the rain. Angrily, I called to her in Maya,
asking why this had happened. She did not reply.
The thunder rumbled
again, distant now, and I became aware once again of the people around me. The
Mayan workmen stood in the shelter of the trees, far away from the stela. The
rain was still falling, though it was gradually letting up. Diane stood beside
me, drenched as a drowned cat. Barbara, Tony, and Salvador stood at the winch,
all shouting at once in voices intended to carry over the thunder, which no
longer rolled overhead.
Diane was looking
out where Zuhuy-kak had been standing, as if trying to figure out who I had
been shouting at. I put my hand-on her shoulder to distract her. "Are you
all right?" I asked. She nodded. "Welcome to the romance of
archaeology," I said.
"There is nothing wrong with being afraid. When you fear, you
see
things in a different way."
—Carlos
Castaneda,
The Teachings of Don Juan
My mother was chain-smoking again. She had been in a bad mood since
the beginning of the week, but it had grown worse since the stela fell. Tony
was drinking. Maggie and Carlos were trying to persuade John and Robin to join
them in a game of cards. The air was hot and heavy and slow-moving.
"Want to go
for a swim?" Barbara asked. I shrugged and followed her to the hut to get
our swimsuits, then down the path to the cenote.
As soon as we were
out of sight of the plaza, she grinned at me. "I have a treat," she
said. "A present from Emilio." She pulled a joint from her pocket,
waved it delicately under my nose, and tucked it back in her pocket. "I
think we need a little relaxation."
"I think
you're right."
On the edge of the
pool, she stopped. "Swim first or smoke?"
"Smoke."
We left the path and scrambled around the pool to the high
rock from which Carlos liked to dive. If anyone from camp wandered down to the
cenote, we could sneak away, following the path to the tomb site. Barbara lit
up and took the first hit, closing her eyes and drawing the smoke in deep. I
took the joint and drew on it, fighting the urge to cough out the smoke,
drawing it in deep and holding it in my lungs.
"Emilio said
to think of him when we smoked it," Barbara said, holding the joint.
"I'm thinking of him quite fondly."
I nodded. With the
second hit, the world around me began losing its hard edges. The air was cooler
here, and bats skimmed low over the water. "He's a fine man, Emilio. He
has risen immensely in my estimation." I accepted the joint and glanced at
Barbara. "Are you going to sleep with him?"
She shrugged,
leaning back on her hands and staring out over the water. "Don't know.
Wouldn't mind it, but I get the feeling that he's playing some variation on the
game I'm used to. I think he would like me better if I didn't sleep with
him." She shrugged again. "I'll play it by ear. What about you? You
like that young basketball player?"
"Sometimes.
But I know what you mean about the game. The rules are different."
For a moment, we
sat in companionable silence, trading hits. Long shadows stretched across the
cenote. The surface was still, disturbed only by spreading ripples when an
insect landed on the water or when a fish rose. Barbara took a paper clip from
her pocket and bent the wire to make a primitive roach clip. We finished the
joint.
"Let's go for
a swim," Barbara suggested.
The water was cool
and I swam several slow laps, watching the last of the sunlight play on the
rippled water. I floated on my back, looking up at the deepening blue of the
sky. I relaxed and my thoughts drifted. There was a rock ledge a few feet
beneath the water's surface at one edge of the pool. I rested there for a
moment, sitting on the submerged ledge with my head above water, my knees
pulled close to my body. The last sunlight shone on the mound beyond the path.
I could see the traces of relief carving on the stones, here and there. I
wondered idly what the temple had looked like before the stones had tumbled and
the trees had overgrown it. I studied the hill and drew a picture in my mind:
three doorways, side by side in a rectangular building.
Barbara glided to a
stop beside me. "What are you looking at?"
I jerked my head
toward the hill. "That pile of rocks. Liz told me, one time last week,
that you can choose to see the past. I'm trying it out."
"Liz can be a
very strange lady," Barbara said. She sat on the ledge, let her toes rise
to the surface of the water, and regarded them solemnly.
"Yeah."
"I'm going to
head back to camp before my toes turn to prunes. I've still got to write up
today's field report," she said.
"In your
condition?"
"It'll
probably be better than all the ones I've written straight. I feel
inspired."
"I'll stay
here a while," I said. "I'll meet you back there."
She swam languidly
to the rocks on the far side and dressed. "If you don't come back soon,
I'll send out a search party," she called.
I waved and she
headed back to camp. I returned to my consideration of the rock-strewn
hillside, and the picture in my mind came into sharper focus. Above the doors,
the wall was an intricate lattice of stone, which rose high above the pool. The
stones around the doors were carved with hieroglyphics, a jumble of shapes and
faces and strange symbols, painted in bright red and blue. A curving stone
jutted out just above the central door; a little higher on the wall, two dark
recesses in the carvings flanked the stone, making the doorway appear to be a
cavernous mouth in an enormous long-nosed face. A steep stairway led from the
mouth to the edge of the pool, and the stones of the stairway were carved and
painted, a riot of unreadable symbols.
I leaned back in
the water, squinting at the slope and holding the picture in my mind. I was
still tired, a lingering weariness from all the sleepless nights in Los Angeles, and
the pot had relaxed me. I listened to the beating of my own heart, steady as a
drum. I relaxed, half asleep though I could still feel the ledge beneath me,
the water around me. I listened to the crickets in the monte, and their
trilling seemed to come and go, keeping time with the beating of my heart. The
tone of the cricket's song seemed to change as I listened, growing harsher, a
sharp buzzing like beans in a rattle.
Suddenly I was
afraid. I smelled smoke in the air, an acrid scent like burning pitch. My eyes
were closed and I was afraid to open them, afraid of what I might see.
I shivered suddenly
and opened my eyes. For an instant, I saw a temple at the end of the pool, as
detailed as I had imagined it. On the steps, a blue-robed figure stood watching
me. Then there was nothing but rocks, sunlight, and shadows. The temple was
gone.
The sun was nearly
down. A bat flew overhead, dipping and dodging in erratic flight. I shivered
again, climbed out of the pool, and dressed. I returned to camp through the
darkness where the trees shaded the path. I knew the path from each afternoon's
visit to the pool, but things seemed different now: the trees seemed closer to
the path; the path seemed rougher; the noises of the monte seemed louder, and
it bothered me that I did not know what animals were rustling in the bushes.
Something moved at the edge of my field of vision, and I turned toward it.
Nothing there. Maybe a bird flying overhead. Again, I caught a flickering
movement in the corner of my eye. Again, nothing. Maybe the shadow of a swaying
branch. I hurried along the path to Salvador's hut, where the lantern light
would chase back the shadows. I hurried from the trees by Salvador's hut and
almost tripped over Teresa.
The little girl
crouched in the deep shadow by the garden wall, playing with a scrawny black
kitten. The kitten came to greet me, mewing piteously, and I knelt to stroke
it. Teresa stood by the garden wall, one hand at her mouth, the other clutching
the hem of her dress. The air was hot and heavy. Already, I felt sweaty and
dusty again. My mouth was dry.
"What's the
cat's name?" I asked Teresa. At least, that's what I intended to ask. I
think I said something like that in Spanish.
She did not answer.
She watched me with round brown eyes, as if I were dangerous yet fascinating.
"Cat got your
tongue?" I asked in English.
Still she didn't
speak. The kitten was purring, a steady desperate throbbing under my hand. I
smiled at Teresa, seeing in her expression a reflection of my panic down by the
cenote. I think she wanted to run back into her yard, but she found me
intriguing. "Qué tal?" I asked her. "How's it
going?"
The creak of an
opening door sent her scurrying away through the gate and into the foliage of
the yard. An old woman was stepping through the doorway of Salvador's house;
Maria was just behind her. Maria was speaking quickly in Maya, and her hands
were clasped together in supplication. Salvador followed the two women, saying
nothing. I remained where I was, petting the kitten and listening to it purr.
The gate was right
beside me. The old woman stopped in the middle of the path and said something
sharp in Maya. I looked up at her and smiled, but she did not smile back. She
said something to me in Spanish and scowled when I did not reply. Maria
murmured something, and the old woman shook her head. She thumped her walking
cane on the ground angrily and repeated herself.
"I don't
understand," I said. "I'm sorry. No comprendo."
Maria quickly made
the sign of the cross, still staring at me. The old woman leaned forward. She took hold of my arm and peered into my face as if she wanted
to remember it later. Her breath smelled of chili peppers. I drew back,
startled, but her hand stopped me. I tried to smile. "What do you want?" I asked in English.
She shook her head,
released my arm, and started down the path to the plaza. Salvador glanced at me
and followed the old woman. Maria retreated into the house. I stood and watched
Salvador and the old woman walk away. The kitten rubbed against my legs, gazing up at me
expectantly. I found that I was holding my arm where the old woman had touched
me as if I were stanching the blood flow from a wound. I let my breath out in a
rush.
For a moment, I
stood where I was, unwilling to follow the old woman and Salvador along the
path to the plaza. The hair on my neck prickled, and I glanced toward Salvador's
hut. Maria stood in the doorway, her arms crossed, watching me. I turned away,
stumbling a little, following another path, one I had noticed but never
followed, away from Salvador's hut.
I felt strange and
unsettled. Nothing had happened—I reminded myself of that. Drug-induced
paranoia, that's all. A dream, an old Mayan woman—nothing really. But the
shadows around me seemed darker and my hand kept touching my arm where the old
woman had held me. I wished that I had understood what she had said.
The path led
through the monte to a dirt road that ran along the edge of the henequen field.
To my left, the henequen field stretched away, mile after mile of spiky brutal
plants. The sun had set and the moon was rising. In the moonlight, the henequen
plants cast distorted shadows. Each plant made a tangle of darkness beside it,
a black net of shadows that could trap anyone foolish enough to stroll among
them. The dirt road was clear of plants and I walked in the center between the
wheel ruts.
On my right grew
the monte. Near the road, the scrubby mass of brush was no taller than I. Beyond
that, maybe fifty feet from the road, larger trees reached for the sky with dry
branches. The wind made the leaves rustle, but it
was not strong enough to stir the branches.
When I was in
junior high school, my father sent me to summer camp for a month. I remember
walking through the woods at night from the campfire to my tent. I was always
very careful to stay on the path. The path was safe; it was marked ground. The
woods beyond the path were unknown, filled with strange sounds. But at the same
time, the woods fascinated me. I found excuses to walk along the path at night, and each time that I
passed through the woods unharmed I felt that I had accomplished something
noteworthy.
I was never sure
what the danger was. Nothing concrete: I did not fear mad killers or wild
animals. I never thought it out completely, but I think I felt that if I
stepped off the path I might vanish, blend with the darkness and be gone. The
darkness drew me and repelled me, and I walked the thin line, never straying
from the path.
My footsteps seemed
loud. I could hear an owl hooting in the trees. I walked with my hands in my
pockets, knowing that I was walking along a thin line once again.
The old woman
stepped from the shadow of the monte. For a moment, I thought it was the same
old woman who had touched my arm. No, not the same. She was dressed in blue and
she grinned at me, displaying crooked teeth. Her head seemed misshapen, though
perhaps it was just the way her hair was arranged. I recognized her face: the
face I had seen on the stone head, the face of the Madonna in the Mérida
cathedral. I backed away.
Her grin grew wider
and she held out her hand as if to welcome me. I took another step away from
her, back toward camp.
She said something
in a language that I did not understand, and she laughed. The sound was like
dry leaves rustling against one another. My hands, still in my pockets, were
trembling. I took them from my pockets and made fists to stop them from
shaking. Then I turned and hurried back toward camp, pursued by the sound of
her laughter.
What was it that my
mother had said in one of our morning walks? At twilight and dawn, the shadows
show you secrets. I don't know why I ran. She was probably just a woman from
the hacienda or maybe a companion to Maria's visitor. She would probably tell
Maria that she had met this gringa wandering in the bush and scared her to
death. I must have imagined that her face was familiar. The dim light played
tricks.
I had reached
Salvador's hut when I saw a flashlight beam
bobbing down the path to the cenote.
"Hello," I called out, my voice a little shaky.
"Hey,"
Barbara called back. "I wondered what happened to you." She came up
beside me and shone her light on me. She laid a hand on my shoulder and said,
"What's up? You don't look good."
"Nothing. Just
went for a walk and got caught in the dark, that's all." I shrugged.
"It gets creepy alone at night. That's all." I didn't mention the old
woman. I didn't want to feel any more foolish. "Let's go back to
camp."
The Fates guide those who will; those who
won't they drag.
—Joseph Campbell,
The Hero with a Thousand Faces
Thursday night, after another burned
dinner, I sat in my hut, checking my notes on the Mayan calendar. I had caught
a chill on the way back from our attempt to raise the stela. Though the evening
was warm, occasionally I would be taken by a violent spell of shivering and
chills. I considered asking Maria to prepare me a pot of hot tea. Boiling-hot
tea laced with rum might head off a cold, but in the end I decided against
asking anything of Maria. I had heard Salvador's truck roaring back to camp,
returning from the village of Chicxulub with the curandera, and I did not want
to blunder into a touchy situation.
I checked my
calculations, and rechecked them. Today was Men, a day governed by the old
goddess of the moon. It should have been a favorable day, yet the stela had
fallen, an outcome I would not consider favorable. I had not seen Zuhuy-kak
since that afternoon.
The camp was quiet;
the students were either writing up field notes or swimming in the cenote. Camp
had been quiet ever since Philippe's accident. The sun had set and the moon was
just rising when I saw Salvador walking toward my hut.
The old woman who
walked beside him took two small steps for every one of his. Tucked under one
arm, she carried an orange-and-red plastic shopping bag, the kind that
Yucatecán housewives use to carry groceries. She walked slowly, leaning on a
cane.
Salvador stopped in
the doorway to my hut and removed his broad-brimmed straw hat. "Señora,"
he said in Spanish. "I am sorry to interrupt you. This is Doña Lucinda
Calderón, the curandera from Chicxulub. She wanted to meet you."
Doña Lucinda was
examining my hut and myself with great interest. She was a thin old woman with
eyes like a predatory bird. Her huipil was elaborately embroidered around the
neck and hem with a pattern of twisting green vines and flowers. A rebozo was
draped casually over her gray hair and her shoulders; leather sandals were
strapped to her feet. Her cane was rosewood; the face of an owl watched me from
its carven head,
"Welcome, Doña
Lucinda," I said in Maya, rising from my chair. I took my other folding
chair from the corner and put it in the open doorway. The old woman placed her
bag on the ground by the chair and sat down, leaning forward on her cane—the
tip set on the ground, the owl's head locked between her hands.
"Thank
you," she said in Maya. Her voice was strong. "Performing the
cleansing ritual leaves me weary. I have grown old."
I nodded in
sympathy. "How can I help you?"
For a moment, she
continued her scrutiny of my hut. Her nostrils flared, as if she were trying to
place an elusive scent. She studied my hands, my face, the papers on my desk
top. The sleeves of my shirt were rolled to the elbow.
She lifted her cane
from the ground and pointed the tip to the scars on my wrists. "How did
you come by this?"
I glanced at the
scars and made a cutting gesture with one hand on the wrist of the other.
"By my own hand," I said. "Many years ago."
"Ah." She
glanced again at the papers on my desk. "And what is it you are doing
now?"
"Writing,"
I said. "A book about this place."
Salvador, standing
in the doorway, was holding the brim of his hat in both hands and turning the
hat around and around restlessly. I offered cigarettes. Salvador accepted; the
old woman declined. I lit one for myself and for a moment we filled the silence
with smoke.
"How is
Philippe?" I asked at last.
"The doctors
at Hospital Juarez have set his broken bones," she said. "They will
heal."
"Yes," I
said. "I understand that."
"I respect the
doctors at the hospital," she said. Her eyes were dark and shrewd.
"You must understand that. My grandson, a clever young man, is studying to
be a doctor. The hospital is very good for treating natural illness." She
was leaning forward as she tried to impress me with her progressive attitude
toward medicine. "But you must understand that Philippe has more than
broken bones. As you know, he has bad luck."
"That is
true," I said. "Salvador said that we are digging in a place of bad
luck."
She glanced at
Salvador then frowned at me. "The place that you are digging does not
matter so much. But the gods are strong now. And Philippe was digging on the
day Ix, a day of ill fortune."
I glanced at Salvador, but he was looking at the burning tip of
his cigarette. He did not meet my eyes. Strange, to have my calculations
confirmed so directly. "The bad luck is past then," I said.
"That is good to hear."
She rolled the
rosewood cane between her hands and the eyes of the carved wooden owl stared in
a new direction. Doña Lucinda scowled and continued staring at my face.
"Do not be a fool," she said crossly. "You know better. Tell me,
what day is today?"
"On the Mayan
calendar?" I shrugged. "I don't know."
She narrowed her
eyes as if she expected better of me. "Today is the day Men," she
said. She jerked her head toward the rising moon, but did not look away from my
face.
"She is a
fickle old woman, Men. Contrary. Always turning a new face. She is not to be
trusted."
I was uncomfortable
under her gaze. I shrugged. "Today is the eighth day in Cumku, the last
month of the year," she said. "This is not a safe time. The gods are
strong now." Her voice had dropped. I could barely make out her words.
"You must be careful." Salvador was not watching us; he was smoking
his cigarette and looking away, gazing out into the open plaza. "The year
is almost over."
I shook my head,
took a drag on my cigarette, and stubbed it out in the ashtray. My hands were
shaking and I folded them in my lap.
"Why do you
look at me as if you do not understand? You know these things," she said.
"I can see that you have the second soul." The second soul is what
gives power to a witch—a bruja in Spanish, a wai in Maya. The
second soul is a source of power.
What did I say
before? The mad recognize their own. Her head was cocked to one side, and she
was watching me carefully. "You are a strong woman, and that is a danger
to you. You seek to stand alone in the evil times, and that cannot be. Unlucky
days are coming."
She stopped and
waited for me to speak. "How can I be careful?" I asked. "I
cannot change the time of year." "Leave this place," she said.
"Impossible,"
I said.
"It is not
safe here. Not for you, not for the rest."
I shrugged.
She frowned and
thumped her cane on the ground. "I want to help you, Señora Butler, you
must understand that. You are a clever woman. Now you must listen. This is a
serious business." Her hands gripped her cane more tightly.
"Send away the young one, the redheaded woman, your daughter."
I was shaking my
head slowly. "My daughter has nothing to do with this," I said in
English.
The old woman
shrugged. She did not understand the words, but she seemed to understand my
tone. "It is your choice. You may choose to be a fool. You speak our
language well, but you do not understand this place. You do not belong
here."
My hands were in
fists. Who was this old woman to tell me that I did not belong? I belonged. I
spoke with the dead; I knew the day of the year. My hands were trembling and I
shivered with a sudden chill. "That may be so," I said to her.
"But I cannot leave now."
"I tell you to
leave this place," she said. "If you choose not to ..." She
shrugged. "I will pray for you and your daughter.''
I wondered what
gods she would pray to. "Thank you for telling me this, Doña Lucinda. I
will think about it." I stood up.
The old woman
remained seated, staring up at me with beady black eyes. "Listen to me,
sénora."
"Thank you for
your advice, Doña Lucinda."
She stood
reluctantly with the aid of her cane, bent slowly to pick up her shopping bag,
and turned away. In the doorway, she stopped and turned back to make the sign
of the cross and mutter a blessing.
Salvador put on his
hat. "I am sorry, sénora," he said, but whether he was sorry for
bringing the old woman to me or sorry that I was a witch, I did not know. He
turned away to follow the old woman across the plaza. Whatever he was sorry
about, I knew he was embarrassed.
I could see a
lantern burning in Tony's hut, but I did not want to speak with him, not now,
not yet. I walked alone to the tomb site. Zuhuy-kak was there, sitting on a
stone beside the picks, sifting trays, and buckets. The moon was rising and she
cast a shadow in the dim light.
As I approached,
she looked up and nodded in greeting. "What do you want from me, Ix
Zacbeliz?" she asked.
"Answers,"
I said. "Why did the stela fall when we tried to raise it? This day was
governed by the goddess. We should have had good fortune."
She squinted at me,
her eyes as shrewd as the eyes of the curandera. I realized that she was more
solid than any other shadow had ever become. Even in the moonlight, I could see the fine lines etched on
her jade beads, the stitches in the embroidery on her robe. She spread her
hands on her lap. "That was good fortune, Ix Zacbeliz. When the stela
fell, the warrior lost his place. His strength is gone and the strength of the
goddess is returning. Today was governed by the goddess and you helped her gain
strength."
"Not good
fortune," I said irritably. My joints ached and I knew that the chill that
I had caught was creeping into my bones. "We wanted that stela intact, not
in two pieces."
The old woman was
staring at me in surprise. "Do you only care for things, Ix Zacbeliz? Did
you want to find only old pots and bits of jewelry? I am giving you secrets
greater than that. You and your daughter."
"Leave my
daughter out of this," I said. "She has no part in this." I
wanted to take hold of the embroidered garment and shake the old woman, make
her listen. I was alternately hot and chilled, and I felt dizzy. I wondered,
gazing into her shrewd dark eyes, whether I could catch hold of her. Would
it be like trying to catch a wisp of fog? My hands—clenched in fists at my
sides—were shaking.
"Your daughter
chooses her own way." The woman was frowning at me. "You and I do not
determine it. The cycle is turning and she is here."
"If I send her
away, she will be safe," I said. "She will be out of all this."
"Send her
away? Where will you send her? The cycle is turning. When the world changes,
everything will change. And why will you send her away? She belongs here, just
as you belong here."
"The turning
of the cycle doesn't matter," I said, suddenly angry. "This is not
..." I stopped short of voicing my thoughts.
"This is not
real?" Zuhuy-kak calmly finished the sentence. Her voice was very soft.
I did not look at
her. I took my cigarettes from my pocket and lit one, cupping my hand to shield
the match from the wind. When I looked at Zuhuy-kak, she was smiling at me.
"I am real," she said.
"No. This is a
game that I play with myself. I have played it for years. I can stop playing
it. I can return to a world where you do not exist, where there is no danger,
where there are no jaguars in the shadows." I looked into the distance,
drawing in the smoke and feeling my heart beat faster. The smoke was real; the
cigarette in my hand was real; the rock beneath me was real. Zuhuy-kak was a
dream in which I chose to believe. I could stop believing.
I blew out a stream
of smoke and watched it swirl, catching the moonlight. Just a game. I looked at
Zuhuy-kak and she was watching me, holding her conch shell in her hands and
smiling.
"It is not as
easy as that," she said. "Not nearly so easy. You cannot stop the
cycles of time by turning your back."
"I can send
you away."
She shrugged.
"You can try."
"You shrug
like a Californian," I said suddenly. "That gesture could not have
been part of Mayan culture."
"I learn from
you just as you learn from me," she said. She grinned, showing me her
inlaid teeth. "You think that you can control the world. You are
wrong."
"I made you
up," I said. "You're my invention. I can make you go away."
"Why would you
want to do that?" she asked easily. "We are friends, Ix Zacbeliz. I
am helping you."
I shook my head
slowly, fighting the dizziness. "I am not so sure of that."
"You are my
friend," she said with quiet dignity. "I consider your daughter as my
own."
I shook my head
again. "I can make you go away," I repeated. I did not like the
tremor in my voice, but I could not stop it.
"It is not so
easy," Zuhuy-kak said. "You choose your gods, but you do not invent
them."
I closed my eyes.
In the distance, an owl hooted softly— once, twice, three times. I imagined
myself alone by the tomb site. I listened to the wind rustle through the
grasses and I knew that I was alone, I had always been alone.
When I opened my
eyes, Zuhuy-kak was still there. "You want the power of the goddess,"
she said. "Then sacrifices must be made. You belong here—you understand
that."
I walked away from
her, feeling old and fragile as I crossed the open plaza. At the far side of
the open area, I looked back. Zuhuy-kak lifted a hand and waved.
The door to my mother's hut was halfway open
when we reached the plaza. I hesitated. "I think I'll see how Liz is
doing."
"Fine,"
Barbara said grumpily. "I still have to finish that report.''
"I thought you
were inspired."
"My
inspiration expired when I got back. So far, I've written the date at the top
of a page and read half that rotten romance novel you bought in Merida. I'll
see you later." She left me by my mother's door and I watched her
flashlight bob toward our hut.
I knocked on the
door, then peered inside. The only light was a candle burning in a small
chimney. The card table that served as my mother's desk was strewn with books
and papers.
"Sorry to
interrupt," I mumbled. I felt awkward and embarrassed. Already, the
thought of talking to her about the old woman I had seen in the monte was
fading, like Barbara's inspiration.
"No
problem," she said, closing the book on the table before her. The
candlelight etched shadows on her face, making her look old and weary. She
looked pale, though that could have been a trick of the light. "I'm glad
you came. I understand you met the local curandera,''
I shook my head.
"I don't think so."
"The old
woman," my mother said patiently. For a moment, I was confused, then I
realized she meant the old woman by Salvador's hut. "Oh, yeah. I guess
so." I couldn't read her face in the candlelight. Her right hand was on
her desk, fidgeting with a pencil, tapping it on one end so that it lay
parallel with the edge of the desk, then tapping it out of line. She was watching
the pencil very carefully.
"The curandera
remembered you better than you remembered her," she said lightly. She
tapped the pencil again, a little too hard, and it rolled off the edge of the
table, bounced on her knees, and fell into the shadows. Lost. She looked at my
face then. "I haven't asked you—what do you think of the dig so far?"
"I like going
on survey," I said cautiously. "You like hiking through the jungle
and battling the bugs?" I shrugged. "Barbara and I get along. I'm
glad to be able to help her.''
"Perhaps you
should leave the dig for a while," she said softly, almost as if she were
talking to herself. "Rent a car and go out to the Caribbean coast—out to
Isla Mujeres, Playa del Carmen. Beautiful beaches, wonderful snorkeling. I'll meet
you there when we're through here." She was gazing thoughtfully at the
ground, where the pencil had disappeared. Her face was still, mask-like.
"I like it
here," I said.
"You shouldn't
waste your entire vacation out here in the sticks," she said. She did not
look at me.
"I don't
understand."
She took a
cigarette from the pack on her desk and lifted the glass chimney to light it
from the candle. The hand that held the cigarette was trembling. The light of
the candle reflected in her eyes.
"Have I done
something wrong?" My voice was shaking. She turned from the desk to face
me, leaning forward on the metal folding chair and resting her elbows on her
knees. The hut was very quiet. The crying of the crickets was very far away, on
the other side of the moon. My mother wanted to leave me again.
"The
curandera, the old woman you met, thinks that you are a witch," she said.
"You're in good company: she thinks that I'm a witch too. She has more
reason to suspect me. I mutter to myself and talk to people who aren't there. I
wander around at dusk and dawn, when the spirits are out." She was
watching me, her face fixed in a strange smile. "Surely you've noticed
these things."
I hunched my
shoulders forward. "I didn't think anything of it. I just figured you were
working on your book."
"In the United
States, people interpret these things as eccentricity or—if taken to an
extreme—madness," my mother said mildly. "Here, they are the mark of
a witch. Of the two interpretations, I have to admit I prefer the second. A
witch has some power. A madwoman is just a nut." She tilted her head to
one side, considering me. "What do you think?" I shrugged, unable to
speak.
"Suppose 1
told you that I get up early to chat with the spirits. I see the past—I
described it to you, remember? What would you think then? Would you go to the
Caribbean coast and meet me there?"
"You think
that I should leave because an old woman thinks I'm a witch?"
"I think you
should leave because I want you to leave. I want you to go away—to Isla
Mujeres, to Los Angeles, anywhere you want."
I found myself
standing, my hands in fists. "You can't tell me what to do."
My mother remained
as she was, holding the cigarette loosely in one hand, the other hand relaxed
in her lap. "That's true. I gave up that right long ago. I am only saying
what I want. What you choose to do is your responsibility." She stubbed
the cigarette out in the ashtray, glancing at my face as she did so, a sidelong
considering look.
"I won't let
you run away again," I said, looking down on the strange woman who was my
mother.
She wet her lips
and shook her head slowly. "I just want you to be careful."
I left, slipping
through the door without saying good-bye. I never did tell her about the old
woman in the monte.
The lantern burned
dimly in front of Tony's hut. Tony sat in a lawn chair, smoking his pipe and
sipping a gin and tonic with no ice. He was dressed in a bathrobe and slippers.
"I'd offer you
a cold drink," he said when I sat down in the other chair, "but the
gin is warm and we packed all the ice around Philippe's foot yesterday, then
forgot to buy more. Want a warm one?"
I shook my head. I
could feel tears stinging behind my eyes and I did not want to let them go.
"What's
wrong?" He put his hand on my arm. "Are you all right?"
"Nothing's
wrong." I managed a very weak smile. "Nothing. I just ..." I
shrugged. I had no idea what to say.
He kept his hand on
my arm and he watched me with concern. I had to say something.
"Have you ever
..." I began shakily, "have you ever had your life fall apart
underneath you? Where suddenly everything and everyone
that you trusted went away? It's as if the ground moved out from under you, as
if the world shifted and you didn't belong anymore." My voice was shaking
and I crossed my arms as if to keep warm. My thoughts weren't clear—I grasped
at fleeting images: Brian's blue eyes studying my face when he told me our
affair was over; my father's coffin being lowered into the ground; the family
portrait on the desk of my boss—to avoid meeting his eyes, I kept glancing at
that picture when I told him I was quitting. And from some other time, I could
hear my father's voice saying that my mother was gone. She had left us. Bits
and pieces, scraps and tatters. A jumble and a mess. I closed my eyes and said,
"You get through it and you think that everything's fine again. But you
keep thinking that it will happen again. You watch. You see little signs that
suggest that things are going on under the surface of things. And you don't
know what they are. Someone is angry, and you know that they will vanish
forever. Everything is too close to the surface."
I shook my head.
The words had come out suddenly. I had not intended to say all this. "I
don't know how to make it all right again," I said. "I don't know how
I can stop feeling like this. It's crazy, crazy ..." That was the other
part of it. Normal people did not feel like this. I kept a barrier between myself
and the darkness; that was what kept me sane. If that barrier were breached, I
knew the world would be swept away in a great bloody flood of emotions. I knew
it. Normal people are not like that.
My breathing was
coming back under my control. I was bottling up the feelings, pushing them back
behind the barrier. I made myself unclench my fists, use my open hands to push
back my hair. I almost smiled at him. "Sometimes, you get more of an
answer than you bargain for.''
"That's all
right," he said. "Sounds like you'd better have that drink." He
went into his hut and I heard the sound of liquid pouring from a bottle. He
gave me a glass of warm gin and flat tonic water, then returned to his seat.
"Can you tell me what set this off?"
I took a deep
breath. "Liz wants me to leave the dig. She told me to go away." I
could feel my face reddening and I stopped for a moment. "I don't want to
go."
He frowned.
"That's strange. I thought you were getting along."
"I thought
so."
"What did she
say?"
"She said she
thought I shouldn't waste my vacation here."
"I can see her
point, I suppose. Many people would agree."
"She said
..." I hesitated. Somehow, I did not want to tell Tony what my mother had
said about being a witch. "The curandera, that old woman, told her that I
should go,"
Tony leaned back in
his chair, shaking his head. "I'll talk to her. Until then, don't push
her. It doesn't pay to push Liz. If you try, she shuts up like a clam. I just
wait and sometimes she tells me. Sometimes she doesn't." He shrugged.
"You and your mother are both very stubborn women."
"Leave me out
of this."
"If you aren't
stubborn, then why aren't you packing your bags and heading out of this place?
If she doesn't want you here, why stay?" He took his pipe from his mouth
and inspected the ashes in the bowl. He held a match to them and puffed until
they lit. Then he looked at me. "Stubborn."
"I'm worried
about Liz," I said then.
"Why's
that?"
"She talks to
herself."
"She's been doing that for years."
"She's always
up at dawn. I don't think she sleeps well."
"She's been
doing that for years too. Tell me something new." He waited, puffing on
his pipe.
I didn't like the
way my voice sounded, kind of thin and stretched out and weak. "I think
... Do you think she's crazy?''
"I think we're
all crazy, living out here with the bugs and the dirt, drinking warm gin, and
digging up things that most people don't give a damn about. Normal is what most
people do. None of us is normal, so we must be crazy."
"I mean really
crazy."
He poked at the
ashes in the pipe bowl with a small stick. "I would hesitate to call
anyone really crazy." There was a slight edge in his voice now. "I'd
say your mother was no crazier than she has been for years." He studied my
face. "What do you want to do about it? Put her under a doctor's care?
That's what your father tried."
"Tony, I'm
sorry. I'm just ... I'm worried. I don't know what to do."
"I told you
what to do last week," he said. "Give her time. Don't go rushing to
conclusions. Take it slow. And I just told you again. Let me talk to her."
"But she wants
me to leave."
"And you said
you wouldn't. What else did she say?"
"She said to
be careful."
"Always good
advice. So stay if you want, but be careful.
And admit that you're stubborn. It's not such a bad
trait to have. I'll talk to her about this business of making you leave. See
what she has to say."
I was watching my
hands. They were in fists in my lap. I heard Tony move and one of his hands
closed over one of mine. "Take it slow," he rumbled. "I'm still
your friend."
I never did tell
him about the old woman in the monte.
At the best of times, I mistrust students.
They bring back memories of lecture halls filled with the dusty smell of chalk,
rustling notebooks, and arrogant young men and women with the sleek and
well-fed look of wolves in autumn after a long summer of abundant hunting.
I remember
afternoon class in an overheated hall, and outside the rain is darkening the
cement sidewalks, rattling the leaves, making Strawberry Creek, the campus's
captive brook, rush and swirl in panicked eddies. The students drowse in the
warmth of the lecture hall.
I know that I
cannot let them see my true self—thin and hungry and draggled as an alley cat
crouching beneath a parked car for a moment's shelter from the rain. The
university is my temporary shelter; to keep this lecture post I must waken
these somnolent beasts and teach them something, make them blink, shake their
heavy heads, and grope for answers in their sluggish brains. I must breathe
life into the dusty air.
I lecture like a
shaman conjuring spirit forces to life. I work at it—throwing questions like
rocks, whirling anecdotes over my head like bolos, calling up visions of burial
customs, rites of passage, and ancient cities, dodging, pacing, always on the
move. I am afraid, but I keep them at bay, alert but wary, a little confused,
always on edge. No one sleeps. I keep my shelter.
Friday, the day
Cib, is portrayed in the glyphs by a conch shell, a symbol of rebirth, of
passage through the underworld and return to the light. I do not know what god
governs this day.
On Friday, tension
hung in the air, ran with the lizards over the rocks, hissed with the grasses
in the wind. My body ached, and the chills and shivering had continued through
the night. The mild fever made me irritable and restless. When I smoked, I felt
a trembling in my chest, and my heart seemed to beat too fast.
Throughout the day,
the wind carried the sound of chanting. Somewhere in the past, men and women
raised their voices to the beat of a drum, the murmur of rattles, the wailing
of conch shell trumpets and pipes. I could not make out the words. I searched,
but I could not find the source of the sound.
I stayed in camp,
drinking hot tea laced with aguardiente and trying to rest. I lit cigarettes
one after another, drawing the smoke deep into my lungs as if the nicotine
would soothe me and make the shivering stop. But the trembling remained. It
seemed a part of the place, like the scrub of the monte, the dust on the
stones. In the afternoon, I wandered out to the Temple of the Seven Dolls. In the
plaza near the temple, a group of young men were decorating their shields with
the richly colored feathers of jungle birds. They did not talk, but worked in
grim silence, preparing for war.
Late in the
afternoon, Carlos, Maggie, Barbara, and Diane left for Mérida to seek the
dubious pleasures of the city. Only Tony, John, and Robin remained in camp. We
made our own dinner over a camp stove and for the first time in days the food
was not burned, not overspiced. I had tea with aguardiente, then aguardiente
without the tea. The aguardiente warmed me but did not ease the trembling. Tony
and Robin talked about pottery.
For the past week,
Robin had been helping Tony with basic pottery analysis. The young woman seemed
to share Tony's interest in the topic: she talked with muted enthusiasm about
color on the Munsell chart and hardness on Mohs' scale, about burnishing and
paint composition, about rim stance and spout attachment.
John was listening
with an intensity that seemed unwarranted by the subject. At one point, he
reached over, brushed a strand of hair out of Robin's eyes, and gently touched
her shoulder. She smiled and took his hand. I realized that they were lovers
and wondered how long this romance had been going on.
After dinner,
before the fading of the daylight forced us to resort to lanterns, John brought
out his spiral-bound notebook to show us his site drawings: partial floor plans
and on-site sketches of the structures immediately surrounding the tomb site.
Though I had glanced over his shoulder at the site, noting his progress on each
sketch, this was the first time I had seen his work gathered together.
John had studied
architecture and his sketches reflected that training: meticulously executed in
India ink with sharp black lines and careful shading. The lines were, if
anything, too precise, too straight, too crisp. His sketch of the mound to the
northwest of the tomb site failed to capture the air of abandonment and decay,
the softness of the weather-beaten and eroding limestone blocks. Even so, his
work was beautiful.
He flipped through
the pages slowly, stopping at the site drawings and passing quickly the work
that he judged inappropriate for our attention: quick pencil sketches, a
detailed drawing showing exactly how the lintel rested on a particular doorway,
a portrait of Pich's sagging features, a profile of Robin examining a potsherd.
He stopped at a sketch of the opening to the tomb that showed the placement of
each masonry block, then he set the notebook on the wooden crate beside him.
While Tony and
Robin praised the work, I took the notebook and flipped back through the pages,
stopping at one that had caught my eye earlier: a pencil sketch of the plaza
near the tomb. For once, John had relaxed and allowed
himself to imagine the structures as they might have looked. The piece combined
meticulous detail with softness, in a style reminiscent of the work of
Frederick Catherwood, the nineteenth-century artist who had been the first to
sketch the ruins.
The facade of the
palace on the left was decorated with stucco Chaac masks and serpents; the low
steps that fronted on it were carved with indecipherable glyphs. I recognized
the place from my dream. The pile of skulls had rested before these steps; I
stood on the edge of the plaza and the ravens flew up, shrieking their
warnings.
That's not right, I
thought, looking at the temple facade, and remembering how Zuhuy-kak had
described it to me and how I had dreamed it. This was the temple of the moon
goddess, and the Chaac masks and serpents had no business there. No business at
all.
"What's
wrong?" John asked, and for a moment I thought I had spoken aloud. He
leaned close to me, looking over my shoulder at the sketch. "You were
frowning. Is something wrong?"
I shook my head to
clear it. "The facade's wrong. It should be more like the facade over the
temple at Tulúm. Seashells and fishes."
He took the
sketchbook from my hands. "Why do you say that?"
Why did I say that?
Because I had been drinking and remembering a dream. Because the aguardiente
hummed in my head. The past and present had momentarily crossed. I tried to
smile, but my face was frozen. "Just a feeling."
He gave me a
strange look. John did not like statements based on vague feelings. "I
don't really have enough information to do a reconstruction drawing. I was just
fooling around a bit."
"Nothing wrong
with that," I said. "Nothing wrong with using your imagination."
An awkward pause.
John held the sketchbook as if he did not know what to do with it and frowned
at me. Finally Robin leaned over to him and gently took it, asking if she could
look. Tony got up to light the lantern and pour me another cup of
tea. And the conversation went on.
I sat at the edge of the circle of light, listening and watching the three of them.
John relaxed again, after a moment. They were comfortable together: Tony and
Robin joked about studying pots; John's arm rested lightly on the back of
Robin's chair; now and then, she smiled at him or touched his hand lightly. I
watched them, much as I watched shades of the past, an observer but not a
participant. But somehow, I could not leave.
Much later, Robin
and John left the circle of light, walking hand in hand toward the cenote. Tony
poured me another glass of aguardiente. Sitting together in the circle of
lantern light, watching the moths circle and tasting the bite of the
aguardiente at the back of my throat, it seemed that there was something new
between Tony and me, or else something very old that was stirring once again.
Something was shifting uneasily beneath the surface.
I had another glass
of aguardiente, leaned back, and closed my eyes against the lantern light. The
brown liquor comforted me, slowing the beating of my heart, blurring the cries
of insects and birds in the monte.
Tony's lawn chair
creaked as he leaned forward to take his pipe from the crate. I heard the
rustle of his tobacco pouch as he began the endless process of packing the pipe
with tobacco and lighting it. The sweet scent of unburned tobacco hung in the
warm air. I heard the scratch of a wooden match and smelled the sulfur when it
caught, then the first smoke of the tobacco. Tony's voice was as rough and warm
as a block of granite in the sun. "I've been drinking too much
lately," he said softly. "I wanted to let you know that I'm cutting
back."
I opened my eyes.
The glass at his elbow was empty and his hands were busy with his pipe. I had
noticed that he had not been sharing the aguardiente, but had thought little of
it.
He glanced at me. "I know that you've been worried about it,
about my drinking. It just got to be a habit after Hilde died."
I nodded, not
knowing what to say. "I guessed that."
"It's a habit
I'm breaking. I wanted to let you know that."
"Good."
His pipe had gone
out and he began poking in the bowl with a burned-out wooden match. He was
avoiding my eyes and I knew that he was edging around a difficult topic.
I waited for a
moment, then asked, "What is it, Tony?"
"Diane told me
that you asked her to leave," he said abruptly.
"That's
so." I leaned back in my chair, feigning a relaxation I did not feel.
"Why?"
"It doesn't
much matter, does it? She refuses to go."
He sat on the edge
of the chair, his hands clasped before him, drooping between his knees. Behind
him, the open doorway was a blaze of light. He stared down at his hands.
"Diane said that the curandera told you to send her away."
"Does that
sound like something I would do? Listen to the advice of a Mayan shaman?"
I shook my head.
"Then why do
you want her to go?"
"I thought she
might want to see something of the Yucatan besides one little dig. Just a
suggestion."
"She was
pretty upset. She seemed to think that you really wanted her to go."
I shrugged angrily.
"Yes, there are times that I would like her to go. She seems to expect
something from me that I can't give her." I rubbed my hand across my
forehead, wishing I could clear away the liquor and the fever and think
straight. "She's trying to learn who she is and she seems to think I can
tell her. I can't tell her anything."
"I think that
sending Diane away would be a mistake," Tony said quietly. "I think
that you want to run from a situation that you're afraid you can't handle.
You're afraid of getting to know your daughter, afraid you will be hurt. But
you can't go on being afraid forever."
"Tony," I
said, leaning forward. "Tony, listen to me." I stopped. What could I
tell him? Nothing. An ancient priestess of a long-dead moon cult is showing an
unhealthy interest in my daughter. "I just have a bad feeling about this
place. I think somehow it's dangerous for Diane, maybe dangerous for all of us.
I can't control what's happening here."
"What is
happening here?" he asked. "What do you see that I don't?"
I leaned back in my
chair and looked down at my hands with their broken nails and old scars. "Can't you feel the danger?" I asked him. "I know
you don't see things as I do, but you must realize that what you see is not all
that there is to the world. There are always things just beyond your gaze when
you walk alone in the darkness, or in the dim light just after sunset or just
before dawn." I studied his face. "I guess you don't walk alone, not
often. You keep people around you.
Even when you are by
yourself, you think about your friends, worry about them, keep them wrapped
around you like a blanket that keeps you warm." I shook my head. "I
live in a more solitary place."
"You don't
have to," he said. He looked up at me and held out his open hands.
"You don't have to be alone."
I shook my head.
"I think it
was hard enough for Diane to find you once. If you send her away, you shouldn't
expect her to try again."
"I don't
expect anything from her."
"And from
me?"
"Nothing,
Tony. There's nothing you can do." His open hands were in his lap and I
wanted to reach out to him, put my hands in his. But I was a danger to him. I
would hurt him by being near.
I clasped my hands in my lap
and shook my head.
He looked up and
hesitated. "Liz, we've known each other a long time. I've known ..."
He stopped and started again. "Ever since I have known you, you've been
watching things that aren't there. I accept that. It doesn't bother me. I have
never mentioned this to you because I thought that if I did you would back away
from me. I've always been afraid to talk about this." He was watching me
steadily; he held his pipe, but his hands were still. "Do you believe
that?"
I nodded, not
trusting my voice. In the monte, the crickets shrilled. Above us, the palm
thatch hissed like a roof full of snakes. I could feel the touch of a breeze
stirring the hairs on my arms, tickling my neck with loose strands of hair. The
camp was very quiet.
"But lately I
have heard you talking in Maya when you are alone—in your hut, out at the site.
I wondered who you were talking to." His voice was very gentle.
The aguardiente had
slowed my mind and body. I leaned toward him, cradling my cup in both hands.
"You don't have to worry about this, Tony. Like you said, I've been seeing
people who aren't there for years. Why start worrying now?"
"Diane is
worried about you," he said.
The sudden rush of
anger was a product of the aguardiente; I knew that. "She told you that
she was worried about my sanity, right?"
"She did
mention that."
I leaned back in my
chair, realized that one of my hands was gripping the other tightly, forced
them to relax. "And what did you say?"
"I told her
that you were no crazier than you had always been." He shrugged. "I
think that's true."
"And how crazy
is that?"
He looked at me
steadily. "Depends on one's definition," he said. "I don't worry
when you see people who aren't here. I only start to worry when you ignore
people who are. I don't think that you should send Diane away."
I sat silent. The
moon was up. I remembered my view of the moon from the ward. I could see it
only if I stood on the back of one of the toilets and peered through a tiny
grill-covered window. Clinging to the dusty ledge, I could watch
the moon reluctantly lift her battered face over the horizon and gaze down on
the earth. With the flowers that Robert brought me, I bribed another woman to
keep watch at the door while I watched the moon rise. I could watch until I
tired of the scent of urine and disinfectant, or until an orderly caught me and
escorted me roughly to bed. I remembered.
Tony reached across
the space between us to touch my hand, but I stood up and moved to the edge of
the circle of light. I stumbled a little and put one hand on the chair back for
support. The aguardiente had left my body heavy and my head light. When I turned
my head, the world moved too quickly around me. "I don't mind being told
I'm crazy," I said, looking out into the plaza. "I don't care what
you think about that. But I won't be locked up."
"What are you
talking about, Liz? I didn't say anything about—''
"No, you
didn't say anything." He was starting to stand, to move toward me, but I
glared at him and he sat down again. "You think I've been crazy for
years."
"You know
better than that."
My hand was in a
fist and my fingernails were etching painful crescents in my palm. The tension
was all around me. I was afraid. No words came. When I groped for words, I
thought of the great silence that surrounded the mounds at dawn, the scrabbling
of the lizards on the rocks, the crying of birds in the monte, the hissing of
grasses in a light breeze. No words.
"I'll
stay," he said. "I've been battling shadows of my own for years.
Fighting yours might do me good."
I felt empty. I
heard my own words slurred by alcohol, remembered too vividly the stench of the
ward. I looked at Tony, leaning back in his chair, and remembered Robert and
the way he had comforted me when I was upset. "Don't worry about it,"
I said to Tony then. "I won't send Diane away. Don't concern
yourself."
"Now
wait," he said, holding out a hand. "Relax. Don't—"
"I said it's all right. Don't worry." I left him
and returned to the safety of my hut.
At Barbara's suggestion, we left camp before dinner on Friday. We
dined at Los Balcónes, a small restaurant on a terrace that overlooked Parque
Hidalgo. From this vantage point, Barbara amused herself by watching the men
who were watching the women in the square below. The men loitered on the
benches and comers, discussing important things, gesturing and laughing. When
a woman strolled past— especially a young woman—the discussion was disrupted.
One man stared at her. Another man, noticing that his friend had been
distracted, turned his head to see the source of the distraction. A third man
saw the second man turn to look and followed suit. By
that time, the first man had returned to the discussion, but a fourth man was
just beginning to look. Whenever a woman, any woman, walked by, a ripple of
turning heads followed her.
"Look,"
Barbara said. "Why don't you go down and walk through the square, and I'll
check out the reaction? Then I'll go down, and—"
"I don't
really feel like it."
"Yeah?"
She stopped watching the men in the square for a moment. "You feeling
sick?"
"No."
"Then what's
wrong?"
I shrugged.
"I'm just pissed at Liz."
"Yeah?
Why?"
"She wants me
to leave the dig."
"Yeah? Where
does she want you to go?"
"The Caribbean
coast. Back to Los Angeles. Anywhere, she said."
"Why?"
I watched the men
in the square. They had returned to an animated discussion. "She said ...
this is weird, but she said that the curandera said that I should leave."
"Liz said
that?"
"Yeah."
Barbara tapped her
fingers restlessly on the table.
"Do you think
..." I hesitated, uncertain.
"What?"
"Sometimes she
watches things that aren't there. Her eyes follow them, and when you look
there's nothing there at all."
"I've noticed
that. She has always done that."
"Sometimes,
she talks to herself. I keep meeting her wandering around early in the morning
and half the time she is talking to herself.''
"That's
so."
"Do you think
she's crazy?"
Barbara looked down
at the square. The two flower-selling children were pestering a retired
American couple in matching leisure suits. "She's not normal, but that
doesn't mean she's crazy."
She shrugged. "I mean
... who is normal? Those people?" She pointed at the retired couple.
"I like your mother. She acts a little odd sometimes, but that's all right
with me. I act a little odd sometimes. What did you tell her when she asked you
to go?"
"Told her I
wouldn't."
"And what did
she say?"
"She said it
was my responsibility."
"Sounds fair
enough. So you're not going."
"I guess
not."
For a moment we sat
in silence. The bronze statue in the square caught the last rays of sunlight. A
hammock vendor strolled
through the square and hailed the retired couple without success.
"You know the
night that we had a smoke down by the cenote," I said suddenly. "I
met the curandera over by Salvador's hut. I wish I had understood what she said
to me. She was pretty excited about something."
"You hang
around this place long enough, and eventually you realize that you won't ever
understand half the stuff that goes on around you. Even when you understand the
words, you can't catch all the nuances." Barbara shrugged. "I
wouldn't worry about it." She glanced at my face and reached across the
table to pat my hand. "Why don't you just relax and enjoy your vacation.
Don't worry about Liz. Things will sort themselves out."
We slept that night
in real beds. Of course, we had breakfast at Cafetería Mesón, and of course
Emilio and Marcos— "the boys" as Barbara had taken to calling
them—showed up as we were drinking our coffee. Emilio bought a round of coffee
and I tried to forget camp.
"So what are
you going to do today?" Emilio asked, spooning sugar into his coffee.
"We were
talking about going to Chichén Itzá," Barbara said.
Emilio looked up.
"You want me to come and drive?"
"Depends,"
said Barbara. "Do we get a cut of the profits for providing
transportation?"
Emilio's grin
widened. "Sure. I'll pay for gas."
Barbara glanced at
me and laughed. "Don't look so shocked, Diane. This bandit makes a hell of
a good profit on his sales. Even on a bad day, he makes more money than a
graduate student."
"What does
that mean—bandit?" Emilio asked, stirring his coffee.
Barbara grinned and
shook her head.
He looked up at
her, pouring more sugar into the pale brown coffee. "I think you like this
bandit," he said. He set down the sugar and grinned at Marcos. "We will have good
luck today."
In the end, we all
went to Chichén Itzá: Barbara, Emilio, Emilio's hammocks, Marcos and I. Emilio
hailed a German couple on the steep stone steps of an ancient pyramid and sold
them two hammocks on the spot. He dickered with an elderly couple in the shade
of the feathered serpent columns that topped the Temple of the Warriors. He
haggled over a hundred pesos on the steps to a platform carved with jaguars
clutching human hearts. He offered a man a good price, a very good price, on
the steps that led to a crumbling stone dome. Grass grew between the stones of
the steps.
Barbara took to
hailing the young male tourists herself. "Hey," she called happily to
two blond college students. "Want to buy a hammock?" They stopped to
talk in the shade of a massive structure that was little more than a tumble of
stones. A dark passage that led to the inner recesses of the structure smelled
faintly of rot and urine. The blond man in the University of California T-shirt
bought a matrimonial hammock at twice Emilio's usual rate.
Emilio led us into
Old Chichén, the older portion of the site where the monte had been cut back
but the buildings were unrestored. In a secluded corner beyond the main ruins,
out where the only sounds were the rustling of leaves in the monte, we smoked a
joint and listened to the birds call in the trees. Then Barbara insisted that
we had to go see the Sacred Well.
Marcos led the way.
Emilio had his arm around Barbara and they strolled slowly, stopping to look at
carved stones and buildings. We passed a stone wall where each limestone block
had a relief carving of a skull. The blocks were carefully stacked so that row
upon row of grinning skulls watched us as we bought soft drinks at a refrescos
stand and walked to the Sacred Well to drink them.
We sat at the edge
of the precipice, where we could look down on the green water, a small pond far
below. Emilio rested his head on Barbara's lap. Blue-green birds with long tail
feathers—Marcos called them motmots—skimmed over the water's surface and perched in the trees
that clung to the crumbling limestone cliffs on the far wall of the well. The
drop to the water looked like more than a hundred feet. Marcos pointed out the
platform from which the Mayan priests threw gifts into the well, a small ledge
of limestone on the south side.
"They threw
people in, didn't they?" I asked lazily, leaning back against a boulder.
Marcos nodded. I
squinted at the ledge. I wouldn't want to dive from that height, let alone be
thrown. Marcos offered me a cigarette, then lit one for himself. The cliffs
shimmered in the sunlight and the dope made the world brighter.
'"Beautiful, isn't it?" Marcos said.
I nodded, my eyes
still half closed, still watching the ledge. I saw something move there: a
flash of blue the color of the Virgin Mary's robes, something falling. Then
Marcos took my hand, leaned over, and kissed me gently, blocking my view.
Back at the hotel
that evening, Barbara and I compared notes. On the drive back, Marcos had asked
me if I wanted to go to the beach at Progreso with him on Sunday. Barbara said
that Emilio had asked her if she wanted to go swimming at the village well at
Tixkokob. "Sounds like the theme is 'divide and conquer,' " Barbara
commented.
"Looks that
way."
She shrugged.
"I said I'd go. It's a chance to see a Mayan village with a native guide.
And the village well sounds safe enough. Happy children playing in the water.
Village women washing their clothes against the rocks."
"Ah,
yes." I lay back on the bed and tucked my hands behind my head. "A
rare anthropological opportunity." The ceiling fan rattled rhythmically,
like a boy running a popsicle stick along a picket fence.
"That's
right." She kicked off her sandals and sat on the edge of the other bed.
"Look for trouble and sometimes you find it. Let's go for it. What trouble
can you get into at
a well in the heart of a rural village? Or at a public beach?"
"I'm sure
we'll find out."
The bus to Progreso
was of the same vintage as the cross-town bus. It stopped a block from the
beach.
Beneath an overcast
sky, an endless line of palms marched alongside the white sand. Coconut hulls
and broken seashells washed in the surf with the crowds of laughing brown
children. Young men were courting teenage girls by chasing them into the water.
An older woman was splashing herself while standing in thigh-deep water. The
little skirt on her one-piece swimsuit lifted when the waves hit and hung
limply around her thighs when the water retreated. Each time the water reached
her, she called to her husband in excited Spanish.
The sun was hiding,
and the colors seemed muted and dull: an amateurish watercolor where paints had
become muddy. Near the shore, the water of the gulf was the color of turquoise,
an opaque milky blue. Farther out, it darkened to green, I could not see
beneath the surface.
My mother would see
this beach in a different way. What would she see? Mayan women collecting
shells to be carved into jewelry. Mayan men drying salt for trade. Would she
have seen the woman falling from the platform at the sacred well?
"Qué piensas?" asked Marcos. He was walking beside me.
I shrugged.
"You don't
know what you are thinking?"
"I can't
explain."
We kept walking. As
we walked farther from the bus stop, we left the families behind. There were
only a few couples strolling along the beach. Marcos put his arm around my
waist. He stopped beside a palm tree that leaned away from the ocean, reaching
toward Merida with grasping fronds. "Want to sit in the sun?" he
asked.
"Sure."
He rubbed suntan
lotion on my back, his hands lingering longer than necessary, carefully
stroking the lotion into the skin along the edge of my bikini. He began rubbing
lotion on the backs of my legs and his hand dipped between my legs and pressed
against me with a gentle insistent caress. The other hand stroked my back.
"Hey," I
said, rolling away from him.
He smiled. "I
like you very much. You make me a little crazy." He looked around us. The
nearest family was a few hundred yards down the beach. "No one saw. It's
all right."
"No it's
not."
"Yes it
is." He reached out and ran a hand along my shoulder and arm until he
reached my hand. "I like you very much. We could have a good time
together." He smiled at me brilliantly and squeezed my hand. "What do
you think?"
"Not
likely."
"Porqué no?
Why not?"
"It doesn't
seem like a good idea."
"It's a good
idea," he said. "You don't know what you think." He released my
hand and lay back on the sand, tucking one hand behind his head. "You make
me a little crazy."
I lay on my back
and closed my eyes. The surf washed in a steady rhythm.
"What have you
found, out where you are digging?" he asked.
I told him about
the stone head, the manos and metates, the tomb site.
"When I was a
little boy, I found a very old pot in the fields near my grandmother's house. A
very old pot, with paintings on the sides. I took it home to my grandmother,
and she said that I must take it back to the fields. She said it was very bad
luck to take it from the old ones, very bad. I went back to the field and
buried the pot." I could tell from his voice that he was smiling. "If
I found that pot now, I'd sell it to someone like your mother for lots of
money. I wouldn't worry about bad luck."
I lay on my back,
listened to the surf, and worried about bad luck.
"Your friend
Barbara will have a good time at Tixkokob," Marcos said. "You and I
could have a good time too. Why not?"
"Because I
don't want to," I said.
"You want
to."
I shook my head and
listened to the surf wash the beach clean.
"Qué
piensas?" he asked.
"I'm thinking
about my mother."
"Why are you
thinking of your mother?" I believe that Marcos was growing impatient with
me. He wanted me to be thinking about him, not about my mother.
"She doesn't
want me to come back to the dig."
"Why
not?"
The sunlight was
warm on my eyelids. "She is afraid of something. She won't say what. I
think she's like your grandmother. She's afraid of the old ones."
"Your mother
is afraid of the old ones? She's crazy."
I opened my eyes to
protest and saw the old woman standing by the surf. She was dressed in blue and
in her hand she held a conch shell. I turned to Marcos to ask him if he saw her
too. He leaned toward me, forcing me back down on the sand. I felt a warm
strong hand on my breast and another between my thighs and he leaned on me,
kissing me hard on the mouth. "You're crazy too," he said. I pushed
him away and he laughed. The woman was gone.
"Later,"
he said. "At your hotel, we will have a good time. I like you very
much."
I left him on the
beach and went swimming in the warm murky water of the gulf, swimming far away
from the beach and looking back at the line of palms, the strip of white sand.
Floating on my back in the blood-warm water, I admitted to myself that I was
afraid of the strange apparition in blue. I was afraid. I was haunted by a
Mayan ghost and I felt very much alone.
As a child, I had
played tag with other neighborhood kids on summer nights. As the sunlight faded
to darkness, we would go on playing, but the nature of the game changed. The
kid who was It would not chase the rest of us—he would
slip into the shadows and sneak up on people, appearing out of the darkness
like a ghost. I remember jumping at shadows, thinking that each one was going
to tag me. I felt like I was playing night tag now, fighting with shadows that
appeared and disappeared.
Eventually, I had
to swim back to the beach. Marcos smiled when I came back, and said that he was
sorry, that he would not try to kiss me again. I lay in the sun for a time, but
I felt nervous, on edge. I kept glancing toward the water, expecting to see the
woman. She did not reappear, but I could not relax.
We ate dinner at a
small restaurant by the beach and took the bus back to Mérida.
Of course Marcos
was playing a game. The name of the game was get the gringa into bed. I told
him so on the bus back to Mérida. "I don't know the rules to this game
you're playing. And I don't play games when I don't know the rules."
"You think I'm
playing games? I'm sorry you think that." He sat in silence for a while,
staring out the window. When we stopped in Mérida, he stood abruptly and headed
for the door. "Come on. I will take you to your hotel. No games." I
followed him, saying nothing.
Early evening and
the shadows were thick in Parque Hidalgo. "Why won't you sleep with me?
What are you afraid of?" he asked me as we walked.
I shrugged. I
looked in the shadows for the old woman, but I did not see her. But I could not
stop looking.
"Maybe I won't
see you again," Marcos said. "You don't know what you want, so maybe
I won't see you anymore."
"As you
like." I was watching the shadows. It seemed to me that there were too
many of them, more than other evenings. The lights of the Cine Fantastico sign
scarcely penetrated
the gloom. A beggar woman in the square called out to me and I jumped,
startled. When I gave her a coin, my hand was shaking. I did not know why I was
afraid. Nothing had happened. The woman had not threatened me. No reason.
Marcos followed me into the lobby of the hotel and up the stairs to my room.
The shadows were darker here, gathering in the corners like dust. The hallway
was stuffy, and the shadows crept like rats along the baseboards.
The room was dark.
Barbara was not back yet. I unlocked the door but did not step inside,
reluctant to venture into the shadows.
"You
see," he said, "Barbara is not home yet. She is having a good time at
Tixkokob. We can have a good time too." He put his hands on my shoulders
and pulled me close to him. I saw the shadows moving and I let him hold me and
kiss me on the neck. I wanted protection; I wanted comfort.
Through his jeans
and my thin dress, I could feel his cock pressing against me. "Marcos," I said,
"wait."
His hand pressed
against my ass, rubbing me against him. "You want it," he said.
"We'll have a good time." He half lifted me through the open door and
pushed it closed behind him with one foot. The shadows were all around us and I
clung to him for protection.
"Wait," I
said. "Barbara will be back."
"No," he
said. "Not yet. Don't be afraid.
It'll be all right."
His hand left my
back and undid the top buttons of my dress. He fumbled inside, pushing aside
the top of my bikini and cupping my breast, rubbing his thumb over the nipple
until it hardened under the pressure. My breath came faster and the shadows
seemed far away.
"Yes, I like
you very much," he said, bringing one hand under me and pushing me down on
the bed, taking my breast into his mouth and sucking gently, then harder. I
moved against him. I felt warm and the shadows were very far away. He teased
the nipple with his teeth. He ran his other hand up my thigh and under my
dress, reaching inside my bikini. He had unbuttoned my dress to the waist and
pushed my bikini
top up around my neck. Both nipples were erect, and he pinched them between his
fingers. The fingers of his other hand were inside me, urgently rubbing,
stroking.
He lifted the
bikini top over my head and pulled the dress down over my shoulders, dragging
it under me and stripping away my bikini. The bed creaked when he stood and
turned on the ceiling fan. He left his clothing in a heap on the floor and lay
on top of me. My hips rose to meet him when he cupped my breasts and thrust
deep inside me. The rattle of the ceiling fan drowned out the squeaking of the
bed and the sound of my breath coming faster and faster.
I woke up when
Barbara came back. The ceiling fan still turned. "Hey," she said
softly. "It's time to go back."
I lay still for a
moment, pretending that I was still asleep and thinking about the Caribbean
coast, the place my mother wanted me to go. Pure white beaches where there were
no shadows. Then I sat up and shook my head. "How
was the village well?"
She shook her head
and flicked on the light switch. "The village well is tucked away in a
secluded limestone cave. No laughing children. No village women. I had to throw
Emilio in to cool him down." She turned her head and I saw two bright red
hickeys on her neck. "But not until after he had made his mark."
"You decided
you weren't going to sleep with him?"
"I actually
think he likes it better this way," she said. "It's a power game, and
sleeping with him would end the game. I think."
"We'll find
out." I stretched beneath the covers. "I slept with Marcos, so the
game may be over." The shadows in the room were just ordinary shadows,
nothing more.
"Yeah?"
Barbara perched on the edge of the bed. "So how was it?"
I frowned. My
memories were a jumble of shadows and urgency. "A bit quick for my
taste."
"Ah, those
hot-blooded Mexican men," she said.
I got out of bed. I
showered and dressed while Barbara camouflaged her hickeys beneath a layer of
calamine lotion. We drove back to camp through the evening gloom.
Sunday was Etz'nab, a day of pain and
sacrifice. I woke up feeling dizzy and aching, with no appetite for breakfast.
I lingered in my hut, avoiding Tony, until late morning, when I went for a walk
to the tomb site. En route, I saw an old man stirring a ceramic pot that was
warming over a small fire. The resinous scent of sap filled the air. The woven
cloth bag that lay on the ground beside him was dusted with dark blue clay; the
carved wooden stick with which he stirred the pot was tinted a vivid blue.
Blue is the color
that the ancient Maya painted the cakes of incense that they burned in
ceremonies. Blue is the color they paint the victims that are sacrificed to
honor the gods.
I did not like the look of the old man and his pot of paint. I
walked past quickly and did not look back.
The students
dragged into camp that evening, battered by civilization. On every dig there
are times like this. People are weary from the rigors of field camp and
dissatisfied with the limited civilization within reach. Relationships grow
strained. Maggie and Carlos were squabbling because a casual fling had gone on
too long; Robin and John were clinging together because departure and
separation were approaching too fast. Field school had only three weeks to run.
Diane and Barbara
came in late. I was sitting in the plaza when they returned, drinking still
another pot of hot tea.
Diane said hello,
then headed for the hut. She seemed quiet, dispirited, but I did not pursue
her. I did not know what to say to her.
Monday was Cauac,
governed by the celestial dragon who brings tempests, thunder, and wild rains.
I woke before breakfast and went walking. On the way to the cenote I saw a
stoneworker chipping thin blades of obsidian, ceremonial blades of amazing
sharpness. He smiled as he worked and I did not stop to watch him.
At breakfast on
Monday there was little talk, but that little was stormy. Barbara had misplaced
the rope she used for site mapping on survey and there was no peace until she
found it, coiled in a corner of Tony's hut where she had dropped it on Friday.
The survey crew stumbled out of camp half an hour late.
John and Robin had
apparently disagreed over something—I could not guess what—and they ate in
silence. John left early for the tomb site; Robin strode off to the lab.
Tempers were short and people were itchy and restless.
I went to the tomb
site at nine and found John shaking the sifter. He wore a red bandanna tied
over his nose and mouth to block the clouds of dust that rose as he shook the
rectangular screen, sifting potsherds and stone chips from the dirt. When I
hailed him, he laid the sifter down, waited a moment for the dust to clear,
then pulled down the bandanna, exposing clean skin. "We're finding chips
of flint," he said. "And a few large potsherds. And we have something
that looks a hell of a lot like a wall."
The flint was a
good sign. Generally, the fill that led to Mayan burials and tombs contained
flint chips.
The workman who was
carrying a bucket of dirt up the eight stone steps from the lower level grinned
when he saw me, recognizing the opportunity for a break. He asked if I wanted
to take a look at the work so far. His grin widened when I said yes, and he
called down to the other two workmen. Their jeans were stiff with dirt; their
bare chests were powdered with white limestone dust. I offered each one a
cigarette and they retired to the shade to smoke.
I stepped down into
the tunnel and blinked for a moment in the sudden darkness. The air was humid
and smelled of sweat. The passageway ran about six feet beyond the last step,
dark and narrow enough to be oppressive. A pickax, a trowel, a whisk broom, and
a bucket lay on the stone floor where the men had abandoned them.
John was right: the
stones at the end of the passageway did look like a hastily constructed wall. The
stones were not as neatly aligned as the stones of the side walls, but they
were not as jumbled as the ones that the workmen had extracted from the
passageway.
"What do you
think?" John asked. He had stopped on the bottommost step. "A dead
end?"
"Have them
clean it up a bit," I said, pointing to the side walls. The corner where
the walls met the floor was filled with dirt. "They're getting careless.
Document this, then go on through."
I took the larger
sherds back to Tony for analysis. I left the sherds, described briefly the
situation at the tomb site, and retreated to my hut to rest. The fever made me
weary, light-headed.
That evening, I sat
in the plaza after dinner, drinking gin and listening to Robin and Tony discuss
the sherds. Tony had dated a large gray sherd to the late Pure Florescent
Period, at about the time that construction of new buildings at Dzibilchaltún
had ceased. He speculated that the largest sherd was a piece of water jar. The
clay was coarse-grained and tempered with calcite sand; the jar had been
burnished slightly when leather-dry and coated with a layer of wet clay, the
slip that gave the jar its gray finish. I did not care about the particulars as
much as I did about the conclusion. "No earlier than a.d. 900," Tony said. That fit
with my estimates and with the date we had deciphered on the capstone of the
tomb. Whatever was beyond the wall dated from about the time that the Mayan
cities had been abandoned, sometime after the Toltecs had invaded this region.
Tony and Robin went
on about the sherd for a long time, but I stopped listening. Maggie sat at a
nearby table, writing a letter. Probably a note to a boyfriend back home. Diane
shared her lantern light, reading a paperback novel. I watched her, but she
never turned a page. Occasionally, she looked up, stared out into the darkness
beyond the lantern light, then returned to the same page. She started when I
sat down beside her.
"How was
survey?" I asked her.
"OK."
"The book any
good?"
She shrugged and
showed me the cover. A romance novel by the look of it. "Not much choice
in Mérida," she said. "It was this or a western."
"Are you
finding archaeology a little dull?"
She shook her head
with a quick jerk. "Not really " She sat with her hands in her lap,
clutching the book. She did not look at me. The darkness was all around us.
Tony and Robin were absorbed in their discussion; Maggie had left for her hut.
"What did you
and Barbara do this weekend?" I asked.
"We visited
Chichén Itzá on Saturday."
"What did you think of it?"
She bit her lip,
staring out into the darkness. "I don't know. I thought ... I didn't like
some of the carvings. Skulls. Jaguars holding human hearts. It seemed pretty
harsh."
"That's the
influence of the Toltecs," I said. "A group from the Valley of Mexico
that invaded this area and took Chichén Itzá as their capital city. Most of the
Mayan sites show the Toltec influence in later years. The warrior on the stela
you found is a Toltec. The woman at his feet is a Mayan goddess. The original
Mayan work is buried beneath the work of their conquerors."
"What happened
to the Maya?"
I shrugged
uncomfortably. "They worked the fields and went on living their lives, I
suppose. Added the new gods to their pantheon.
People who were unwilling to accept the new ways kept quiet or died, I would
guess." I stopped talking. "You must be getting bored with all
this."
"Not
bored."
I waited, but she
did not continue. She gazed off into the shadows, and I could not read the
expression on her face. The muscles in her neck were tense. "What,
then?" I asked.
She glanced at me.
One hand tapped the book restlessly into the palm of her other hand. "I
feel like I'm waiting for something to happen. Sometimes I'm afraid."
"Afraid of
what?" My voice was low.
She shrugged, a
quick jerk of the shoulders, as if she were shaking off an insect. "I
don't know. If I knew, maybe I could do
something." She shook her head. "Or maybe not."
"You could go
to Cancun," I said urgently. "I will meet you there after the dig is
over. The Caribbean coast is—"
"No," she
said. "I'll stay."
She went to bed
shortly after that. I returned to the table with Tony and Barbara and listened
to them talk. Tony, I noticed, was not drinking. After a time, I went to bed
myself.
The week passed. We
were short on workers. The incident with the stela had frightened a number of
the older men away. But our luck improved.
I did not see
Zuhuy-kak. I looked for her, but I did not see her. When I went walking in the
morning to look for her, I met Diane by the cenote. When I went walking in the
evening, I met Diane by the Temple of the Dolls. When we met, we returned to
camp together in silence. I had little to say to her. I felt I had already said
too much, drawn her in too close.
Wednesday was Ahau,
the day of the sun, a favorable day. No equipment broke down; no men fell sick.
I could not quite shake the fever, and it made me restless and irritable. I was
content only when I was sitting at the tomb site, watching the men work. But
even there I was plagued by chills and shivering.
I dreamed that
night, strange vivid feverish dreams. I remember dancing in the rain, holding
an obsidian blade. The moon shone down, almost full, and I was young again. My
robes swirled about me. A feeling of power that surged through me, a great
ancient power that stemmed from the moon.
Thursday was Imix,
the day of the earth monster, a dragon-like creature with a protuberant nose. A
good day for digging, for taking things to their roots. Late in the afternoon,
Pich finally worked one stone of the wall free, pulling it from the place where
it had rested for a thousand years.
I was on site—I
spent most of the working day on site—and I went down into the tunnel. Cool
moist air blew through the gap in the wall. With a flashlight, I peered through
the opening, trying with little success to see what lay beyond the wall. A
large open space, a low platform, vague pale shapes that could be pots or
skulls—I could see little. The wall was about a yard thick.
The workmen stayed
late on Thursday, but at five o'clock it was clear that we would not remove
another stone that day. We stopped then, covered the opening with a tarp, and
reluctantly left the site.
I went to the
cenote that night after dinner and I sat by the pool, listening to the sound of
the crickets and watching the shadows of peasant women come to fetch water.
Zuhuy-kak did not come to join me. My daughter did not come. I was alone, and
when the moon rose, I went to bed.
Friday was Akbal, a
day of darkness. It is governed by the jaguar in its night aspect, lord of the
underworld.
On Friday, Tony
went with me to the site. By noon, the workmen had loosened and removed another
stone, making an opening large enough for me to slide through on my belly,
pushing my flashlight before me.
The skeleton lay on
a stone slab, flat on her back with her legs stretched out. Her rib cage had
collapsed; the flashlight beam shone on a jumble of pale crescent-shaped bones
and glinted from the smooth jade beads scattered among the ribs and vertebrae.
One arm lay over her ribs and across the pelvic girdle; the small bones of her
hand were strewn between her thighbones. The other arm was crossed over her
chest and the finger bones were lost in the confusion of ribs and vertebrae.
The bones of her feet and toes had been scattered, perhaps by mice scavenging
for food. Not far from the arm that was crossed over her chest, an obsidian blade
lay on the stone platform. Nearby, the stone was stained by a splash of red:
cinnabar spilled from the scallop shell that lay beside her.
Her skull was
deformed, flattened at a steep angle to make an elongated expanse of forehead.
Her mouth had fallen open and the teeth were intact. I recognized Zuhuy-kak by
the jade inlays in her front teeth. A white shape lay by her pelvis and I
played the light on it: the conch shell that had dangled from her belt. One
thighbone had a knot in its center: a break that had not healed properly.
I heard Tony slide
through the narrow gap behind me. His flashlight beam played over the pots that
surrounded the skeleton: a jug in the shape of a turkey, a cream-colored
three-legged bowl painted with glyphs, a squat vase in the shape of a spiraling
shell, an incense burner in the shape of a jaguar, an assortment of bowls,
jars, jugs, and vessels.
Tony's flashlight
stopped, spotlighting a large bowl at the skeleton's feet, a vessel as big
around as the circle I could make with my arms. It was elaborately decorated
with glyphs and pictures. The ceramic lid had been knocked askew. Tony stepped
closer, peering into the bowl, then gently lifted the lid aside.
A skull the size of
a large grapefruit smiled out at us—a dark-eyed child whose teeth had long
since left the jaws. Smooth and pale, the skull nestled among the curving ribs
and long bones like an egg among twigs. Here and there, the bones were touched
with cinnabar. By the look of things, the skeleton of the child had been
disinterred, cleaned, dusted with cinnabar, packed neatly in the bowl, and
buried again. I stepped closer, and the dark sockets of the eyes, set low
beneath the flattened forehead, followed me. So frail: I could easily snap
these ancient ribs in my hands. So young. The bones had been arranged with
care, gently placed in the bowl, and I wondered who had tended to them.
In the end, the
grand movements of civilizations matter little. What matters is the skull of a
child beside the skeleton of its mother. I glanced up at Zuhuy-kak's skeleton
and the obsidian
blade beside her. What mattered was how this child had died. A cool damp breeze
touched me and I shivered.
"It goes
on," Tony said, and for a moment I did not understand. Then I followed his
flashlight beam with my gaze and realized that the darkness was a sloping
passage, the beginning of a limestone cavern extending down beneath the earth.
The limestone walls were studded with fossil seashells. The hairs on my arms
prickled and my skin rose in goose bumps. I could smell water somewhere far
away. No sound but Tony's breathing and mine. He stepped toward the opening.
"No," I
said sharply. "Don't go in there."
It was not until he
looked back at me that I realized I had spoken too loudly.
"Is something
wrong?" he said, stepping toward me.
"No," I
said, "nothing."
"We have our
work cut out for us," he said. "I hadn't counted on spelunking."
"We aren't
equipped for it," I said. I played my flashlight over the walls and knew
that there were shadows just beyond the reach of the beam. I did not want Tony
to go into the cave. I did not want anyone to go into the cave.
"That's never
stopped us from doing anything before," he said. "I'll see if John
wants to organize an expedition tomorrow."
We began excavation
of the burial that day, setting John and Robin to work with trowels and whisks
while the men continued bringing down the wall. When the survey crew returned,
they all trooped down to the site and exclaimed over the skeleton. We finally
quit working when the sun went down.
On Friday night, I woke to the sound of
stealthy footsteps on the path. The hut was dark. Barbara breathed in a steady
rhythm. Maggie mumbled something in her sleep and shifted uneasily in her
hammock. Robin breathed softly, like a small animal curled in a burrow.
I don't know what
woke me—a change in the song of the crickets, the hooting of an owl, something.
I don't know. But I sat up in my hammock and stared out through the open door,
then left my hammock and stood by the opening. The dirt floor was cool beneath
my bare feet.
The lights were
out; the moon was down. The sky was immense, endless blackness dotted with too
many stars. Even Tony was asleep—the light by his hut was out. A bat flew
overhead, briefly blocking out the stars and chittering in a high-pitched
excited voice.
I saw something
move in the shadows near the water barrel. I watched carefully, and it moved
again, a darker shadow within the shadows. "Is someone there?" I said
softly, not wanting to wake the others. "Who is it?"
No answer. I
thought I knew the answer: waiting in the shadows was an old woman dressed in
blue.
In the starlight,
the world was black-and-white, a late feature on a black-and-white TV. In
late-night movies, monsters live in the shadows. The heroine always goes to
investigate and the monsters always get her. Always. When I watched late-night horror
movies, I never knew why the heroine didn't just go back to bed and pull the
covers over her head and sleep until morning, when the sun would come out and
the birds would sing and the vampires and werewolves would go back into hiding.
I was no late-night-feature heroine; I could go back to bed and sleep until
morning.
Except for the
uncertainty. The lingering doubt that had been nagging at me since I saw the
old woman in the monte. The suspicion, faint but growing stronger, that I was
going to be as crazy as my mother someday soon. I was afraid of things that
were not there. I saw shadows by day; I heard noises at night. When I was not
aware of them, my hands formed fists—they were doing it now.
I snatched my
flashlight from the table, slipped through the door, and hurried along the path
toward the shadow, hurrying because if I did not hurry I might go back to bed
and lie awake all night, listening for the sound of footsteps coming
nearer.
The figure beside
the water barrel did not move as I approached. I shone my flashlight beam into
the shadows, and my mother blinked in the sudden light. Tousle-headed, clad in
blue pajamas, barefoot, and blinking like an owl. Her eyes were large and her
face was haggard. I touched her shoulder and felt the frail bones beneath the
thin layers of cloth and flesh. She was trembling. "What are you doing
here?" I asked. "What's going on?"
"I'm watching
over the child," she said. Her eyes had turned away from the light, but
they focused on nothing.
"You scared
me," I said. "You didn't answer when I called." She was not
listening.
"Someone must
watch over the child," she insisted. "She's too young to be left
alone." She was looking at my face, but I didn't think she saw me. "I
can't run away again."
I put my arm around
her shoulder and tried to turn her away from the hut. She would not move. I
could feel her trembling.
"I'll watch
her," I said. "I'll keep her safe."
"You must be
very careful," she said to me owlishly.
"She is
stubborn and she doesn't want to leave. But it isn't safe here."
"I'll be
careful."
"How do I know
I can trust you?"
"I'm a friend
of hers. A very good friend." I hesitated, then said softly, "Tell
me—what must I watch for?"
"The old
woman," she said, blinking into the shadows. "Watch out for the old
woman."
She let me lead her
through the silent camp to her hut. In her hut, I lit the candle on the desk.
The big stone head watched from the corner as I helped my mother to bed. I used
the sheet that had been bunched at one end of the hammock to cover her. Her
skin was hot and dry, and I wondered if she were running a fever. She tossed
and turned in her sleep. When she spoke in Maya to people I could not see, I
told her that everything would be all right. I hoped that I was not lying. I
sat beside her, listening to the sounds outside and holding her hand.
When the faint gray
light of dawn shone through the open door, my mother was sleeping quietly. I
blew out the candle and returned to my hut. I had just finished dressing when
Barbara woke.
"Come
on," I told her. "Let's get out of here."
She blinked at me
sleepily. "Hey, give me a minute to wake up."
I waited for her to
roll out of bed and dress, and we walked out into the plaza. "I was
thinking of sticking around here to see what Liz turns up in the tomb
today," she said. "After all, this is our first big find."
" Whatever's
in the tomb now will still be there on Monday," I said. "Are you
willing to go without a hot shower to see it one day sooner?"
"You've got a
point there." She stopped at the water barrel and splashed water onto her
face. "You sure are eager to go to town all of a sudden. Did
Marcos steal your heart?"
I shook my head,
wondering how much I could tell Barbara. "I just need to get out of here."
"More troubles
with Liz?"
I nodded.
She studied my
face, then shrugged. "I suppose you're right. The secrets of the ancient
Maya can't really compete with a hot shower. Let's go."
We arrived in town
early in the morning and had breakfast at the usual table beneath the trees
that shed yellow flowers like a cat sheds fur. Emilio arrived with his hammocks
at the usual hour, bought the customary round of coffee.
It was Barbara, not
I, who asked about Marcos. Marcos, it seemed, was busy that day; he had
business that took him elsewhere. Emilio was evasive; he would not look at me.
Barbara frowned and asked him a few questions in Spanish, then shook her head.
We finished our coffee in silence, then Emilio said that he would be selling hammocks
in the zocalo. He would meet us at lunchtime, he said.
After Emilio left,
Barbara ordered more coffee. "It seems we were right about the game,"
she said. "You all right?"
"I'm fine. If
he's busy, he's busy." I shrugged. "I don't care."
"You can stop being polite," she said. "Emilio's
gone."
"I really
don't care. It doesn't make any difference."
She looked at my
hands. "You're shredding that napkin," she said quietly.
I put the pieces of
paper napkin down on the checkered tablecloth. "It shouldn't make a
difference," I said. "He doesn't mean anything to me. It doesn't
matter."
"What a stupid
asshole," she said.
I shrugged again.
"No big deal."
"Look,"
she said, leaning forward and putting her hand on mine. "I know it's not a
big deal. I know your heart isn't broken or anything like that. But it's still
no good. You can get mad about it if you want."
I sipped my coffee,
watching a blind beggar trying to sell a badly carved wooden animal to the
couple at the next table.
"Think I
should tell Emilio to buzz off?"
"Why? It's not
his fault."
"Whatever you
want." She leaned back in her chair and
spooned more sugar into her coffee. "Maybe
we should get out of town today. Go tour the ruins at Uxmal. Something
different."
"I'm all
right," I told her. "I don't care."
She studied my
face, then nodded. "Have it your way. What do you want to do? Go
swimming?"
"Fine."
We went swimming in
the hotel pool, a tiny patch of water in a turquoise concrete basin. I lay on
the cement by the side of the pool and tried to read the paperback romance, a
stupid story about beautiful people who always wore the right clothes. The
world of the heroine was filled with vague anxieties, overblown fears. I felt
right at home.
Barbara swam and
periodically tried to get me to talk. After an hour of this, I told Barbara
that I wasn't hungry; she and Emilio should eat without me.
"I think I'll wander around in the market. Maybe
buy a dress. I'll meet you back here."
I walked. I didn't
go to the market; I wasn't up for the crowds. I wandered around the zocalo,
bought a lemon ice from a sidewalk vendor, and sat down on a bench near the
cathedral to eat it. The clock on the Municipal Palace said it
was one-thirty, but it seemed much later. The air was heavy with the promise of
rain.
I didn't miss
Marcos. I had expected little of him. He was a person to cling to when the
shadows came, no more. But now, I didn't even have that.
Two withered women
wrapped in dark red shawls sat on the pavement before the cathedral, begging
coins from passing strangers. The two middle-aged women who sold gilt-framed
pictures of saints at the cathedral door were closing up shop, wrapping the
garish frames in newspaper and stacking them in a cardboard box. Above their
heads, pigeons trudged up and down on the stone lintel.
On the sidewalk,
tourists strolled up and down. A neatly dressed woman with a sunburned nose was
exclaiming over postcards. A man in a new panama hat was taking a picture of
the Municipal Palace. All strangers. None of them would understand if I told them I
was afraid that my mother was crazy, afraid that I might be crazy. They would
not understand that I was being haunted by an old woman who looked like the
stone head in my mother's hut.
I thought about
calling my former lover, Brian. I hadn't spoken to him since I quit my job.
What could I tell him? I'm seeing ghosts and I think my mother is crazy. No, I
could tell him nothing.
I was afraid. A
friend of mine had a dog that would chase after the spot of light cast by a
flashlight beam, unable to catch it and unable to leave it alone. The dog would
run after the spot on the floor and bark when it ran up the walls, until he collapsed
with exhaustion. Poor dog could never figure out that he could never catch the
spot. I felt like the dog. I did not know the rules and there was no one to
tell me. It was like chasing a spot of light. Or like trying to catch soap
bubbles as they drifted on the breeze. You end up with handfuls of nothing.
I did not see the
curandera approach. She sat beside me on the bench and took my hand, holding it
tightly in her warm dry hands. She said something to me in a low urgent voice
and I shook my head. I didn't understand. I tried to free my hand, but she
would not let go. She called out to a passing hammock vendor and he came near.
Still holding my hand, she spoke quickly to him. He glanced at me curiously,
amused by the situation.
"Do you speak
English?" I asked him. "Can you tell her to let me go?"
"A
little," he said. He spoke to the woman and she shook her head and said
something else.
"She wants me
to tell you ..." He hesitated, as if searching for the right words.
"You got to go away," he said at last. "Don't go back to your
mother."
"What are you
talking about? Why shouldn't I go back?"
He shrugged.
"She says that your luck is bad." He shrugged again. "That is
what she says."
"Tell her that
I understand," I said. I looked at the old woman and she stared back. "Yo
comprendo." Her grip on my hand loosened and I freed myself. I stood then, backing
away from her.
"Hey,"
the hammock vendor called after me. "You want to buy a hammock?"
I was stumbling
away, almost running across the zocalo. Thunder rolled across the sky, bumping
from cloud to cloud. I went back to the hotel to get my bag and found Barbara
and Emilio at the usual table. I told Barbara that I was going to catch a cab
back to camp. When she protested, I just shrugged. I knew that I had to go
back. I did not know why the old woman wanted to chase me away from my mother,
but I knew I had to go back.
The first fat drops
of rain began falling as I ran from the hotel across the square to the taxi stand.
The bronze man on the pillar glistened in a flash of lightning. He stared out
over my head, ignoring my hurried negotiations with the cabby.
The road to the
ruins seemed longer in the rain. The taxi driver tried to talk to me. I think
he was complaining about driving in the storm, but I just shrugged,
understanding only a few of the words. I watched the shapes in the moving rain,
never clear but always present. Once, I almost called to the driver to tell him
to stop—I saw an old woman crossing the road. But she vanished into the rain, a
shadow, nothing more. Thunder rolled overhead like the crash of falling
monuments.
I woke on Saturday, the day Kan, as stiff
and sore as if I had been hiking through the monte in my sleep. The sky was
overcast and the morning was half over. I stopped by the kitchen and Maria gave
me—reluctantly, I thought—a breakfast of atole. Barbara and Diane had left for
Mérida; Tony was nowhere to be seen.
This day is
governed by the smooth-faced young god who makes the maize grow. It is a good
day, by most accounts, favorable for beginning new projects and continuing old
ones. I considered this as I sat in the plaza and ate my atole. Then I gathered
my equipment and went to the tomb.
I was halfway there when Zuhuy-kak fell into step beside me. She
limped slightly and I remembered seeing the knotted thighbone that caused her
pain. I looked at her broad face and knew the smooth white surfaces beneath it.
I glanced at her, but did not speak.
"Are you happy
with the secrets you have found?" she asked. When she spoke, I remembered
the skull's gaping mouth.
We had reached the
mouth of the tomb. I did not acknowledge Zuhuy-kak's presence. I pulled aside
the tarpaulin that covered the excavation, and descended the steps into the
tomb. In the passageway, I lit the Coleman lantern, reached through the opening
to set it on the floor of the tomb, and squirmed in after it.
In the tomb, it was
still night, governed by the jaguar, the dark aspect of the sun. The lantern
cast a circle of light that faded before it reached the ceiling. In the silent
darkness, I could hear my heart beating quickly, as if I had run a long
distance. I lifted the lantern high and looked toward the back of the tomb. The
floor sloped away, ending in darkness. Caves are the entrance to Xibalba, the
Mayan underworld inhabited by gods of death and sacrifice. Cold air from the
underworld stirred the hairs on my arm and I shivered. On the mottled stone
wall of the tomb my shadow shifted and changed, monstrous and strange. I saw
Zuhuy-kak standing at the edge of the circle of lantern light, watching me.
On Friday, we had
begun clearing the area, brushing away the loose dirt. Our initial work had
uncovered a vase that lay on its side on the floor near the skeleton's head. I
set the lantern on the stone dais, so that the vase fell within the pool of
light.
I knelt by the
vase. On Friday, I had started cleaning it, but the vessel was still half
covered with soft dirt and bits of straw brought in by generations of rodents.
I used my whisk broom to brush the upper surface clean.
"I made that
vase," Zuhuy-kak said. "When I emerged from the well, while I lay on
the pallet, I painted it."
I noticed that my hands
were shaking and I stopped for a moment, waiting for the trembling to subside
before I continued my work. I breathed deeply. I could still feel a trembling
deep inside me, but my hands were still. I recognized one glyph—the place glyph
for Chichén Itzá. On the side of the pot, just below the band of glyphs, I
could make out a thin black outline on the cream-colored pottery. I continued
brushing. The dirt brushed away easily now, revealing the elaborate headdress
of a priest or nobleman. The black outline was his hand, which was raised above
his head. He was looking down, at something beyond and below him.
I continued
brushing the dirt from the pot. The half inch of rim that I had exposed was
circled with a band of black marks on a red background: glyphs that were
scratched and illegible in the dim lantern light. On the vase, a priest stood on a cliff with a group of
other priests and nobles.
All of them looked down. My
whisk broom uncovered feet first, then her blue dress, fluttering around her as
she fell. Her hair was streaming behind her. The falling woman. The priest's
hands were raised because he had cast her off the cliff. Her arms were crossed
on her breast; her eyes were open and staring. She saw something, but I did not
know what it was. She was falling through empty space, just as she had been
falling for many years.
The glaze at the
base of the vase was scratched, but I could make out curling waves of turbulent
water, black swirls on the cream-colored background. In the swirls, between the
cracks and gaps in the glaze, I could see an upthrown arm and a weeping face,
several small figures struggling against the serpentine coils of the water.
"I brought
that vase with me when I came down here," she said. "I wanted it with
me. I brought my daughter's bones."
I heard the rain
begin to fall outside the tomb. The tarp flapped in the wind and the water
trickled down the steps—I could hear the soft liquid sound, like a cat licking
itself.
I used my trowel to
remove the soil surrounding the vase, transferring the loosely packed dirt and
detritus to a bucket. The vase was almost free of its cradle of soil. When I
brushed it, it moved slightly, rocking in place. I stopped for a moment,
waiting for the trembling in my hands to stop. Then, with care, I lifted the
vase from the soil.
The glaze on the side that had faced the ground was pitted and
cracked, but the picture was still intact. The woman in blue—the falling
woman—lay on a platform. At her feet lay a conch—a symbol of the water from
which she had emerged and of the underworld where the sun dies and is reborn.
One hand held a leaf-shaped obsidian blade. Her other arm was extended to
display a bloody gash from which blood flowed. She was smiling and her
expression was triumphant.
"You killed
yourself here," I said.
"There was no
one else left to kill me," she said softly.
"The goddess
had no power and I had sent the people away."
Zuhuy-kak was
sitting on the edge of the stone dais, and she seemed as solid as the bones
that lay beside her. She sat with her shoulders hunched forward, staring at her
folded hands. For a moment, I felt sympathy for this poor mad ghost, exiled by
her own doing, lost and alone.
Without thinking, I reached
out toward her. She looked up and I stopped.
"How did your
daughter die?" I asked.
Zuhuy-kak met my
gaze. Her hands were folded in her lap. For a moment, she said nothing. "I
gave her to the goddess," she said at last.
"You
sacrificed your daughter," I said, staring at the woman's face.
Zuhuy-kak did not
speak for a moment. "The ah-nunob were coming and the battle was not going
well," she said. "We had captured their warriors. I killed them at
the altar and we heaped their skulls in the courtyards, but that was not
enough."
Her hands were
grasping each other tightly. She turned her gaze toward the darkness at the
back of the cave and swayed forward and back almost as if she rocked a child in
her arms. She spoke in a singsong tone. "There had been much killing, so
much killing on the battlefield and in the temple. My husband, a man of power
and nobility, a good man, had died that week on the field. The scent of blood
hung thick and heavy in the air, overflowing the temple, filling the courtyard,
spilling out of the sacred places and flowing down the sacbe, a river of rich
red scent laced with the smoke of burning incense. The sound of the drum and
the rattle followed me everywhere, beating like my own heart, steady and
strong. Like my own heart."
She had drawn her
folded hands up to her breast, and she was rocking back and forth, back and
forth to a drumbeat that I could not hear. Her words came quickly now.
"The smoke, the smell of blood, the cries of the wounded tended by the
healers-—these seemed natural things." She had closed her eyes. "I gave my child
to the gods to stop the coming of the ah-nunob. I meant it to be a willing
sacrifice, a gift. I prepared her, dressed her, and perfumed her, gave her
balche mixed with herbs to drink. I took her to the place of sacrifice, filled
with the power of the goddess. She did not struggle. She smiled at me, because
I had told her that Ixtab would come and take her to paradise. She was afraid,
but she smiled up at me. And at the moment that I was bringing the blade down,
when the power of the goddess should have been greatest, I doubted. My daughter
looked up at me, and I doubted the power of the goddess." She opened her
eyes and the strange light that filled them reminded me of the madwoman who
claimed to be Jesus Christ. "I doubted and the ah-nunob took the city. The
cycle turned and the goddess lost her power."
My stomach ached, a
solid steady pain that reminded me of the aching in my gut that plagued me
throughout my pregnancy. A sad and heavy feeling, as if I canned a burden that
was too great. The doctor who attended me during
pregnancy said it was nothing, it was psychosomatic. Many pregnant women felt
unhappy, he said; it wasn't abnormal. He said that they felt unhappy—I remember
that. It did not seem to cross his mind that maybe they had good reason to feel
unhappy, maybe they were in pain, maybe they carried a weight that was too
great to bear. I wondered what the doctor would say now.
"Now it is
time for the cycle to turn again. You can bring the goddess back to power. Your
daughter—''
"No," I
said.
"You
can," she said. I noticed then that she was holding the obsidian blade.
"It will be easy. And then, once it is done, you can rest."
"No."
"You are like
me," she said. "I know you. I knew you when I saw you by the well.
You too made a sacrifice that was not good. You began falling just as I began
falling when my daughter died and the power of the goddess died with her. I began falling long
before the priests threw me in the well," she said.
"You can rest
now," I said. "You can stop."
"I tried to
stop. When the people were leaving and the city was in confusion. I asked two
masons to wall me in, and they did it for me. They walled me in and I stopped
here. I wanted to rest. But there is no rest. The cycle is turning again. The
time is near for sacrifices to be made. Once they are made, we can rest, you
and I."
"You can
rest," I said. "There is no need for you to be here. There will be no
sacrifices, no blood spilled."
She looked at me
with eyes as dark as the darkness beyond the tomb. "Why are you
here?" She did not wait for my answer. "You are here because you want
to learn secrets. You want them, and at the same time, you are afraid to learn
them. You want power, but you fear it. You fear that you will learn what you
are capable of doing." She ran her finger along the obsidian blade.
"There will be blood."
She held it out,
and I took it. Held it in my hand and drew it gently along the skin of my
wrist, testing the blade, just testing it. Blood beaded in its wake and I felt
a new warmth and strength travel up my arm and into my heart. The touch of the
cold obsidian recalled my suicide attempt. I remembered the feeling of heated
anticipation, the sense that the pain I felt was insignificant beside the power
I would gain. I watched the blood trickle from the wound in my arm and I felt
warm and strong.
I paid the cabby and ran out into the rain.
Behind me, I heard him gun his engine and roar away.
My mother's hut was
deserted. Both doors were open and the rain had swept in, dampening the dirt
floor. A plastic poncho hung on a nail, and after a moment's hesitation I
pulled it on over my dress and headed back into the rain. I didn't know exactly
why 1 wanted to see my mother right away. I think I had some idea that I would
tell her about the old woman that I had seen, and then we would discuss the
whole thing like adults, separating phantasms from reality carefully, bit by
bit.
I followed the path
to the tomb, splashing recklessly through the puddles in my sandals. I was
already soaked; a little more water made no difference. Once, I slipped and
banged my knee on the ground, and after that I limped.
The mouth of the
tomb was a dark spot on the plaza floor. As I stepped down into the passageway,
I felt a faint breeze that carried the scent of newly turned earth. The rain
was splashing down the stairs into the tomb. Over the sound of the rain I could
hear my mother's voice. I could not make out the words.
On the last step,
my leather sandals slipped on the wet stone. I lost my balance, stepped into
the puddle that covered the floor of the passageway, and almost fell. A beam of
white lantern light shone through the gap between the stones.
The light beam
shifted as my mother lifted the lantern up to the gap in the stones.
"Hello,"
I called to her. "I thought you might be up here."
I could see only
her head, silhouetted in the gap.
"I came back
from Mérida early," I said. "There really isn't much to do there.
Barbara stayed, but I came back." My words trailed off. I could hear the
rain trickling down the steps behind me, a river feeding the cold lake that
lapped around my ankles. "It's pouring out there." I stood awkwardly
in the puddle, waiting for her to move aside, to invite me to look at what she
was doing, to say something. Water dripped from my hair down my back. The
poncho clung to my bare arms and legs. I lifted it over my head and draped it
over the handle of a pickax that stood, head down, in the water. I kicked off
my wet shoes and set them in the metal bucket beside the pickax. The bucket was
not yet floating, though it was a near thing. Uninvited, I squeezed through the
opening, and my mother stepped back to let me through.
The walls arched
high over my head, and the light of the lantern did not reach the ceiling. Here
and there, the light reflected from seashells, embedded in the rock long ago. A
skeleton lay outstretched on a stone platform, staring up into the darkness
with blank eyes. My mother's notebook, trowel, and whisk broom lay on the floor
near the skeleton's head. She stood near the skeleton, staring at me fixedly.
In one hand, she held the lantern, gripping the wire handle. In the other, she
held an obsidian blade. Her right wrist was bleeding. "You cut
yourself," I said.
"Why did you
come back?" she asked. Her voice was rough, hoarse.
"There didn't
seem to be any reason to stay in Mérida," I said.
She was shaking her
head. "What brings you hiking through a downpour in sandals and a
dress?"
I looked down at
myself. My shins were marked with mud and a line of dark droplets oozed from a
scratch where a thorny branch had raked across my skin. My dress was soaked despite the poncho.
"I guess I should have stopped to change."
"You shouldn't
be here. You should have stayed in Mérida." She sounded on the verge of
tears.
"I'm sorry. I
..." I didn't know what to say. I held out my hands in a gesture of
resignation and tried to smile. "What can I do? Can you tell me what's
wrong?"
She took a step
back as if I had threatened her and stopped beside the stone platform. She
shivered like a wet dog. She looked thin and tired. "Go away," she
said. "Please. Get out of here."
"It's
raining," I said, trying to sound reasonable. "I'll stay out of the
way. I just—"
"Get
out!" Her words echoed from the stone walls, and I stepped back, the smile
dying on my face. She straightened her shoulders and stepped forward. Her face
was suddenly hard. "Go away from here! Now!"
I backed away.
"I'm sorry. I just—"
"Get
out!" Her face was a mask, washed from below with lantern light. Her eyes
were wild, touched with red and too large for her face. She threw back her head
and cried out again, not a word, but a groan, a wail of desperation. The
muscles of her neck stood out in ridges and her breath came in great gasps. I
took a step toward her and she glared at me, shaking her head like an animal
tormented by flies. She lifted one hand in a fist, and as I stepped back, she
struck herself in the leg, once, twice, three times, each blow hard enough to
make me wince. "Go!" she said. "Go! Go
away." The last words were not shouted. The blow did not have the force of
the ones preceding it.
I stood by the
opening. I could hear the soft trickle of water flowing down the steps, but the
pounding of the rain had ceased. "The rain has stopped," I said to
her, as calmly as I could. "I can head back to camp. Why don't you come
back with me?"
Her hand was
clenched in a fist, resting against her thigh. "You have to go."
"I'll go if
you come with me."
The breath left her
in a sigh and she seemed to shrink, her shoulders relaxing, her grip on the
lantern easing. "All right," she said. "You go out."
I slipped through
the opening and stayed right on the other side, where I could look through the
wall. Newly washed light shone down the stone stairs and made a faint rectangle
on the floor. The puddle was already lower. Water had
drained away into the earth. "I'm right here," I said. "Why
don't you hand me the lantern and then come on through?"
"Yes,"
she said and handed me the lantern. I stepped back and let her come through
after me.
"That's good," I said.
She stopped in the
center of the passage and turned to look at me, frowning though her face was
still wet with tears. "No need to talk to me as if I were a fool. You may
think I'm crazy, but don't think I'm stupid." She took the lantern from my
hands, extinguished the light, and led the way up the stone steps into the
steaming afternoon. She did not look back.
Sunday was Chicchan, the day of the
celestial serpent. Carlos, Maggie, John, and Robin returned to the dig for
dinner in the late afternoon, clean and well rested. With a tomb to excavate, a
cave to explore, and only two weeks of field school to go, they were cheerful.
Over dinner, they chattered about what they planned to do before returning to
school. Carlos and Maggie were planning to spend a week on Isla Mujeres. John
and Robin were heading south; they planned to travel through Belize and visit
Mayan ruins at Altun Ha and Xunantunich. They all seemed so light-hearted, like
sparrows that land for a moment on a garden path, squabble over crumbs, then
fly away. Diane was subdued, taking no part in the conversation. I caught her
watching me surreptitiously, then looking away when I turned to meet her gaze.
She and Tony both watched me and I wondered if they had talked to each other
since Diane met me at the tomb.
Barbara came in
late, well after dinner. I was in my hut trying to rest and shake the fever
that still sang in my ears. I heard the distant rumble of Barbara's Volkswagen
and wondered if Diane would talk to Barbara, tell her of our conversation in
the tomb, where I had lost my temper. I did not leave my hut to greet her.
When I tried to sleep, the sounds in the night disturbed me: the
crickets, the palm thatch in the breeze, the footsteps of someone—I think it
was Carlos—heading to his hut. When I slept, I dreamed of the obsidian blade that lay beside the
skeleton in the tomb.
In the dream, I
stood in the kitchen of the apartment in Los Angeles, holding the obsidian
blade in my hand. I ran a finger across the edge to test its sharpness. I liked
the feel of it—cool and sharp, with just the right weight. It was thirsty for
blood. Sitting across the kitchen table from me was a young woman who was
drinking a beer and listening to the water heater rumble. She looked at me and
said something that I could not make out. I offered her the obsidian blade and
she stood up, backing away from me. Somewhere very far away, a child was
crying.
The kitchen was
gone, the young woman was gone, but I knew that the child was still crying. I
was in a very dark place and I went to search for the child. I was very tired,
bone-tired—all I wanted to do was lie down and rest—but I had to find the
child. I wandered, disoriented and confused, carrying the obsidian blade in my
hand.
I stood in the
doorway to the hut, listening to a chorus of breathing and crickets. Barbara—I
think it was Barbara— muttered something in her sleep and shifted position,
making her hammock sway gently. She sighed deeply, then her breathing became
regular again. I could see the dark copper glint of Diane's hair in the
darkness. Her breath came and went softly and easily—so gentle, so easily
stopped.
When Diane was
four—a cherubic child with soft green eyes—she would wake in the night with bad
dreams, come to the bedroom I shared with Robert, and stand silently in the
doorway. Somehow, I always woke, always knew to
look toward the door where a diminutive apparition stood, waiting patiently for
recognition. On those nights, I would take her back to her room and lie beside
her in a bed that was over-populated with stuffed toys. In the darkness, she
would tell me garbled tales of faces that came to her at night, of shadows that
moved in the closet. I never told her that the faces and shadows were not real;
I only told her that they would not hurt her. She was safe.
I stood in the
doorway and listened to her breathing, wondering why she did not wake to find me standing there.
Something had to be done with the blade that I carried. Something had to be
done to complete the cycle of time. I started to take a step toward her, into
the hut, but a hand on my shoulder stopped me.
Tony, still fully
dressed, stood just behind me. "What's going on?" he said softly.
"What are you doing?"
I shrugged my
shoulder, still adrift in memories. "Watching over the child," I
said, and my voice was as soft as the dust beneath my bare feet. I blinked and
a few stray tears completed their journey down my face and fell.
Tony wrapped an arm
around my shoulders and steered me toward my hut. His arm was warm and
comforting; he smelled of tobacco. He dried my face with a dusty bandanna.
"What's wrong,
Liz?" he asked me. "What is it?"
I shook my head.
Words were hard to find in the soft darkness that surrounded me. "The old
woman in the tomb says that the cycle must be completed. The child must die,
just as her child died." The words were soft. My own voice seemed distant.
"I must be careful. You understand that, don't you? I must keep the child
safe."
"Who is the
old woman in the tomb?" he asked.
"Her name is
Zuhuy-kak. She's the one who made them leave the cities, long ago. She's a
strong woman, very stubborn. I talk to her, but I'm afraid of her."
"The woman in
the tomb is dead, Liz."
"That is why
she is so strong. She is stronger than I am. And she's crazy, crazier than I
am. She wants me to kill the child."
"I'll take
care of you, Liz," he said. "It'll be all right."
"Who will take
care of the child?" I asked. "I'm so tired, but who will take care of
the child?"
His hand rubbed my
shoulders gently. "I'll take care of her too," he said. "You
know that. But you've got to rest." His hand felt cool on my forehead.
"You have a fever." One hand was on my shoulder; one hand took my
hand. He hesitated, feeling the new scratch on my wrist. "What's
this?"
I looked at the
thin red scratch and muttered, "I was testing the blade. That's all."
He led me into the
hut and helped me into my hammock. I noticed that 1 no longer carried the
obsidian blade, and I knew that it had returned to the tomb.
I sat up in the
hammock, clinging to the strings to keep from floating away. I was very light
and my head was too large for my body. I had to cling to the hammock or I knew
I would drift away. I swung my legs over the edge of the hammock, still holding
onto its side. Then Tony was beside me again, his hand on my shoulder gently
pushing me back. "I have to go to the tomb," I said. "I have to
talk to the old woman."
"You're not
going anywhere, Liz," Tony said. "You're staying right here."
"I have to
find her. I have to tell her that she can't have the child. She can have me,
but she can't have the child. I have to tell her.''
"I'll go to
the tomb," he said. "I'll tell her."
"You
promise?" I said. "You will go to the tomb? You promise?''
"I
promise."
I lay back in the
hammock and closed my eyes. "Be careful," I said softly. "Be
very careful." I heard the rattle of pills, the splash of water pouring
from canteen into coffee cup. He gave me the small red pills that brought
sleep, and I took them, holding his rough hand tightly. I drifted away into
sleep, listening to him softly tell me that everything would be all right.
I woke at dawn on
Monday, the day Cimi, the name day of the god of death. Not a lucky day. I woke
with vague drug-hazed memories of the night before. My bare feet were dusty and
my bottle of sleeping pills was on my desk beside my coffee cup.
I went to find
Tony, but he was not in his hut. The chickens that scratched in the plaza and
the little pig that slept in the shade stared at me as if I were the first
person to stir.
Tony was not at the cenote. I continued along the path toward the tomb.
I was almost to the
tomb when I saw him. He lay motionless, sprawled halfway across the path as if
he had fallen in the act of crawling toward camp. Flies rose when I ran to him
and buzzed curiously around my head when I knelt beside him.
His red bandanna
was knotted around his leg just above the knee. He had slashed the leg of his
pants with his knife to expose the wound: a dark mass of blood surrounded by
the swollen flesh of his calf. Through the blood I could make out two ragged
slashes, separated by about half an inch, the distance between the fangs of a
snake. Bright fresh blood still bubbled slowly from the wound.
His breathing was
shallow and uneven. His pulse was rapid. His skin was the color of the
limestone blocks around him, slightly cool and damp to the touch. I called to
him, shook him lightly, but there was no response. I pulled back an eyelid: his
eye was bloodshot and the pupil was a pinpoint.
I hooked his arm
over my shoulder and tried to drag him to his feet, but I could not lift him. I
tried again, the blood singing in my ears, the beat of my own heart loud in the
stillness of the morning. I succeeded in walking three paces before we both
fell.
I caught him as we
went down, almost wrenching an ankle and catching most of my weight on one knee.
"Tony," I said. "Goddamn you, Tony. You have to help."
His breathing
caught in his throat, then started again. He did not move. I laid him on the
barren path, irrationally put my hat under his head as a pillow, then moved it
to shield his face from the sun. I pulled his shredded pants leg to cover the
open wound, and ran for camp.
I did not run well.
I was too old for running. The sun was a hot blur low in the sky. My lungs were
useless for drawing air, though they made noisy ragged gasping sounds. I felt
as if I were watching from a distance: an old woman, hobbled by the passage of
years, ran slowly down a barren trail, fighting to draw air into lungs clogged
with cigarette smoke, struggling to shout for help across the ruins where
generations had lived and died. As I ran, I swore that if Tony lived, I would
give up cigarettes. I would give them up. I did not know to what gods I swore,
but I swore I would stop smoking to save him. The ache in my side was as bright
and hot and sharp as the wound from an obsidian blade.
Once, in the
shifting light that sparkled through tears, I thought I saw an old woman
dressed in blue on the path ahead of me. If I had had the breath, I would have
cursed her, but I could not curse or call to her. I tried to run faster, but I
could not catch her. She was far away, just a figure in the distance.
The camp was still
silent. I tried to shout, but I had no breath for it. I reached Salvador's
truck, parked outside the plaza, and reached in through the open window to lean
on the horn, holding it down and letting it blare as if the length of the sound
would somehow dictate the speed of Salvador's response. I could see Salvador
step from his hut, a tiny figure in the distance, shirtless and hatless. I
released the horn and blew it again. He ran toward me.
"Tony," I
said when he reached me. "Snakebite." I jerked my head in the
direction of the tomb. "Unconscious by the trail." He
began swearing under his breath in Spanish, a steady stream of curses.
It took too long to
get to Tony. Salvador drove the truck over the old sacbe as far as he could.
The truck lurched unwillingly over gullies and bumps, and the frame creaked and
groaned. Once, after a particularly nasty bump, I heard something crack sharply,
but nothing gave. Salvador left me behind when he ran up the trail to where
Tony lay. I was toiling toward the tomb when I met Salvador coming down the
path. He was carrying Tony, cradling the old man in his arms as if he were a
child. The muscles on Salvador's bare brown shoulders glistened in the sun, and
Tony looked even frailer, smaller.
It took too long to
get to the hospital. Salvador drove like a madman, but it seemed slow. He
skidded in the gravel on the shoulder as he passed a tourist bus that was
lumbering down the center of the road. A man on a road-repair crew leapt aside as Salvador's truck
raced by, refusing to slow down. Tony was slumped on the seat beside me, his
head in my lap. Over the rumble of the truck, I listened to his labored breathing.
We had reached the outskirts of Mérida when his breathing faltered and stopped,
and I began mouth-to-mouth resuscitation, a steadying task that made me feel
like I was accomplishing something.
At Hospital Juarez,
two young attendants took over, clapping a respirator over Tony's face and
carting him away. I felt cold, listening to the soft babble of voices in the
hospital waiting room. The walls were painted white and pastel
green, marred by scuff marks near the floor. A young woman with classic Mayan
features sat on an orange plastic chair. She held a baby that wailed steadily
in constant complaint. The woman crooned soft comforting words in Maya; she
told the infant the same tired lie over and over: it will be all right; it will
be all right. An old woman in a wrinkled huipil spoke softly to an old man who
wore a bandage over half his face; they leaned together like the stones of a
corbeled arch. The old man watched us with his one good eye. A young man,
wearing the straw hat and loose clothing of a worker on a hacienda, clutched a
white cloth to his arm; I could see the bright red of blood seeping through the
cloth. When we walked past him, I caught a whiff of aguardiente— late night in
the bars. Salvador and I found two plastic chairs, sat, and waited.
The nurse who
called my name wore a stiff blue-striped dress with a white apron. Her dark
hair was tucked beneath her nurse's cap. I followed her, listening to the stiff
rustling of her skirt. She took me to a tiny airless office, where an officious
young doctor asked me questions about Tony. The doctor was thin-faced and he
wore the scent of disinfectant like an aftershave. I disliked him immediately.
I recited Tony's
full name, age, residence, and professional affiliation. Each question seemed
to come to me from farther away, as if the doctor were fading in the distance.
"I don't know
how long he was there," I said. "I hadn't seen him since the night
before. I suppose he must have been out walking very early." My voice was dull. In my
imagination, 1 could see the snake, still sluggish from the cool night air,
basking in the sun. I imagined Tony, preoccupied with the necessity of locking
up his friend and colleague in the nuthouse, stumbling up the trail. I guessed
he had not slept after he left me: he sat alone, drinking and considering the
shadows.
"Why would he
have been walking so early?"
"I don't
know."
I knew, but I did
not care to say. Why would he stumble through the monte in the pale light of
dawn? Because someone he cared for was crazy; she was talking about secrets in
the shadows. He was thinking about me and he did not see the snake.
Tony died in the
early afternoon without regaining consciousness. The doctor's English was very
good, but I heard a note of disapproval under his professional tone of
sympathy. "He had been drinking heavily," the young doctor said.
"That's probably why he was unable to reach the camp and seek help."
He knew so little of the world, this young doctor. He seemed to think that
heavy drinking was unusual.
Salvador was there,
standing just behind my chair. An orderly had loaned him a shirt that was much
too small for him. The shirt was unbuttoned.
"Would you
like the body prepared for transport to the States?" the young doctor
asked.
He had pens in his
pocket and a stethoscope around his neck. He knew nothing of rocks, ruins,
herbs, and old bones. Yet his face, as he looked down at the form on his desk,
was a match, feature for feature, for the face of the young maize god of the
hieroglyphics. He belonged to the rocks and the ruins, this young doctor, but
he did not know it.
He looked up from
the form and repeated the question. Salvador laid a hand on my shoulder. "Yes,"
I said then. "Yes. Have the body prepared."
From a pay phone in
the hallway, I contacted the university and spoke to the department secretary,
a woman my age who knew everything about everyone. She was appropriately
shocked, yet still willing to ask—tactfully and carefully— about
the circumstances. I did not like this woman and under normal circumstances she
did not like me. But now her voice flooded with sympathy and false warmth.
"How
terrible," she kept saying. "How terrible."
I could only agree
wearily. She was a tinny voice coming to me from far away. She was not real. As
I stood in the white hall, listening to her reassurances and sympathy, an
orderly walked by. I watched his shadow move on the white wall. Here in the
hospital, shadows had edges. They did not blur, one into the other. Here,
people were alive or dead, conscious or unconscious. No gray zones of
uncertainty. After explaining to the secretary that I would make arrangements
to ship the body, after promising that I would call her on the next day, I hung
up.
"Perhaps you
should stay here in town, sénora," Salvador said. "I will go to
camp."
I shook my head.
"You know I have to go back."
Salvador shrugged,
a tiny movement of his shoulders. He was a practical man. He did not argue. He
drove back to camp with the careful dignity of a man in a funeral procession.
We said little to each other. I had nothing to say.
Camp was quiet. A
thin ribbon of smoke drifted up from the kitchen; Maria was burning dinner.
Barbara, John, Robin, and Diane were sitting in the plaza; they came to the
truck as we pulled up.
"Tony died at
Hospital Juarez this afternoon," I said. "Snakebite." They were
all looking at me, their faces blurring in the heat and the tears. I had one
hand on the open door of the truck, leaning on it for support. "Snakebite
and bad luck," I said. Barbara started toward me but I waved her back. It
was Cimi, the day of death, and touching me was not a safe thing to do.
"Pack your
things," I said to them. "Go to Mérida for the night. We will do no
work tomorrow or the next day. Tomorrow is a holiday." I did not tell them
that tomorrow would be the beginning of the end. The first of the last five
days of the Mayan year. Bad-luck days.
They were watching
me, uncertain and confused. I summoned the voice of authority from my distant
past, from lecture halls where, fearing the hungry young faces that watched me,
I made my voice like a whip and told them what to do. I spoke as a teacher,
hard-edged and irascible, no lingering trace of softness. I told them to pack
their bags. I told them to leave. Carlos and Maggie had come up from the
cenote, summoned by the sound of the truck. They stood, still dripping, just
behind the others. I looked at Diane and spoke to them all. "Leave this
place," I said. "Come back later and pack up the camp, but leave now.
Tony would want you to go."
They watched me
blankly and I remembered countless dusty lecture halls where I fought to give
blank faces pieces of my dreams, to describe for them the worlds of the past
that they would never glimpse, carefully cloaking my thoughts in the words of
the professor, the scholar, the archaeologist, careful lest someone think I
believed too much in my own dreams, that I saw too well, lived in a different
world. "Go," I said. "Go now."
I left them there.
I went to my own hut, as if to pack, but I took a flashlight and headed along
the path to the tomb. It was late afternoon. The air was heavy with moisture
and the sky hung low with clouds. I found my hat in the dust where Salvador had
left it. I picked it up, beat it against my knee to knock the dust free,
straightened the brim, and carried it as I continued down the trail. I was not
willing to wear it now.
A few hundred yards
farther down the path, I passed the spot where Tony had dropped his gin bottle.
The shards of clear glass glittered in the afternoon sun. He must have dropped
the bottle when he fell. Beside the trail, the grass was crushed and the ground
was marked with blood.
I kept walking along the path. I was halfway to the tomb when
Zuhuy-kak joined me. She kept pace with me.
Beside the mound,
near a stone that would have made a comfortable seat, I saw burnt leavings of
tobacco, emptied from a pipe. Tony had rested here, thinking about me, an old
friend who was in trouble. Considering how he could help.
He had rested here
until sunrise, struggling with demons less visible than my own, then headed to
camp, meeting the snake on his way down.
The old woman was
still with me. I could hear her sandals scraping lightly against the sandy
ground. I turned on her suddenly. "Why do you follow me?" I asked
her.
"The time is
coming," she said. Her voice was very soft, like the gentle hissing when
the wind blows dust over temple stones. "The year is ending."
"Why did Tony
die?" I said suddenly. In the bright sunlight of late afternoon she was as
solid as the silent stones around us.
"Your enemies
seek to stop you," she said. Her voice was even and devoid of any
expression. "I told you that."
"My life is nothing like yours," I said. "I did not
sacrifice my daughter, I will not be hurled into the well."
"The year
grows old and things happen," she said. "Perhaps not the same things
that happened in my time. Nevertheless, things happen."
"Leave me alone," I said to her.
"It will do
you no good to ignore me," she said.
"It did me no
good to speak to you," I said. I turned away from her. I climbed down into
the pit without looking back.
It was cool and
quiet in the inner chamber. I flashed the light on the skeleton. That lay quiet
at least. Her daughter's skull peered out of the nest of bones.
"I used that,
blade," Zuhuy-kak said, jerking her head toward the obsidian knife that
lay on the stone platform. "It is very sharp. Her pain will be
brief."
I picked up the
blade and tested the edge. Still sharp: a bright bead of blood formed on my
thumb. I inspected the old scars on my wrists. The skin was thin and
vulnerable. But Tony would not approve if I bled on a valuable artifact. I
could use my pocketknife instead.
"Not
yet," Zuhuy-kak said. "First your daughter, then yourself.''
"I sent my
daughter away."
The woman was not
listening to me. She lifted her head as if she heard something outside the
tomb, and she smiled.
"Liz?" My
daughter's voice came from the dark gap that led to the outside world.
"Are you there? Are you all right?"
What do you do when
you are falling? Do you reach out and try to grab for support? If you aren't
careful, you will pull others down with you. Unless you are very careful.
A flashlight beam
found the gap in the wall, filling it with yellow light. Diane's head followed
the beam.
"You don't
belong here," I said. "Go back."
The hand that held
the flashlight was trembling. "You can't tell me what to do." She
climbed through the opening into the tomb.
"No." I
took a step back, away from her. Shadows nestled in her eyes, making them into
dark hollows, like the eyes of a skull.
She stepped toward
me, holding out a hand in supplication or threat—I could not tell which. I
backed away, the blade in my hand, retreating into the cave. I was not afraid
of these shadows. I wasn't afraid of death; dying was an easy way out. I could
not name the thing I feared, but I saw it in the reaching hand of my daughter.
I broke and ran,
scurrying away like a bewildered rat in an unfamiliar warren. Some dark
instinct had overtaken me, driving me to escape, to dart down any tunnel that
led away from the light, to crawl where I could not run, to squeeze through
narrow passages, rushing just ahead of the pursuing flashlight beam, a
nocturnal animal seeking the safety of darkness.
She was just behind
me, always just behind me. "Liz?" I dropped my light and did not linger
to retrieve it. I could hear her behind me as I blundered forward, hands out
like a blind man, touching the cool walls and the rounded stalactites.
"Mother?"
she said, and the voice was so near that I leapt forward. I did not land for a
long time. I fell in the warm velvet darkness, knowing that this was what had
to happen, this was the destiny of the katun that was to come.
I woke with a sharp
pain in my leg and the chill of water around me. For a moment, I thought 1
floated in the Sacred Well, but I opened my eyes to darkness. I was resting in
a puddle of chill water, cupped in a low basin of limestone. My hips were in
the water; my shoulders, on the rock. My leg was twisted beneath me, stabbing
with a pain that distracted me from the aching of my head. I drew a deep breath
and lifted myself on my arms, trying to straighten the leg, an effort that made
me cry out in pain.
In response to the
cry, like an answer from the gods, a beam of light flashed down from above,
blinding me and making me cry out again. I could not see the source of the
light—it was a bright spot high above me—but I recognized my daughter's voice.
Her voice was ragged. "Why did you run? You shouldn't have run."
I squinted up into
the beam. "That's so." My voice was as rough as the limestone beneath
me. I was calmer now. The instinct that had made me run was contained. I looked
down at myself, and by the light of Diane's flashlight I could see the twisted
leg. Broken, I thought. When I tried to shift my weight and support it on my
hands, I felt the bones grind. For a moment the flashlight seemed to fade and
my head filled with a dull red thundering darkness.
When I could hear
again, my daughter's panicky voice stabbed me from above. "Are you all
right? Say something. Are you all right?"
"My leg is
broken," I told her, my voice rasping. "You've got to go back and get
help."
"I
can't." The light did not waver from my face. Her voice was thin and
strained, on the edge of tears. "I don't know the way. I lost track. You
were going too fast."
There was a moment
of quiet in which I could hear water dripping, a sweet, high sound. I looked
around me. Beside the pool, a stalagmite rose from the limestone floor to meet
a stalactite that reached down from the ceiling. Beside this pillar was a
rounded stone, an altar of sorts. Pots and clay figurines clustered around the
base of the pillar. On the distant walls, I could see paintings: Ix Chebel Yax
watched me from
the wall, and the serpent coiled on her headdress grinned. In one hand, she
held a thunderbolt; in her other hand, a scrap of the rainbow. Women danced
before her, and a child, painted bright blue, lay across the altar, her chest
arched back to receive the knife.
"Why did you
run?" she asked. "Why did you run from me?"
The water dripped,
a steady liquid music. My leg throbbed, but as long as I did not move, I was
spared the shooting pains that made me cry out. I did not answer my daughter
because I had no answers. What would satisfy her? I had been dreaming of blood.
I held an obsidian blade in my hands and I feared that I was capable of much. I
knew that soon I would die, and that death would spare me the necessity of
providing answers.
"I'm crazy
too," my daughter was saying softly. I shivered in the darkness.
"Shadows follow me. The old woman follows me."
"Not
crazy," I said, but the words were an effort. The chill of the water had
filled my bones and my voice was stiff with the cold. I could not stop
shivering.
"Call it what
you like." The light moved, as if she had shifted position. "What
difference does it make? I'm lost up here and you're lost down there. I can't
get down. We're not going anywhere. It doesn't matter."
"Salvador will
find you."
"I doubt
that."
I closed my eyes
against the light. Surely it would not be so hard to pull myself out of the
water. The limestone sloped at a gentle angle. Not so hard. I would die, but I
did not want to die in the water. I opened my eyes and planted my hands against
the bottom of the pool. The first shove moved me two inches higher on the slope
and made me cry out like a beaten dog. I took a breath and pushed again,
gaining another inch. Again. I knew that if I stopped, I would not begin again,
and so I did not stop. I lost count after the tenth time I pushed. By that
time, the cries had given way to a constant whimpering that rose and fell with
the pain.
I stopped when I
was stretched out on dry land. My leg was more or less straight. It was easier
to bear the pain when I was still than when I was moving. I rested, then
realized that my daughter had been talking to me for some time now. Coming back
from the faraway place that I had been visiting, I opened my eyes.
"What?"
"Do you
remember the Christmas that you gave me a quetzal shirt from Guatemala?"
I lay on my back,
listening to the dripping water. "Yes."
"Why didn't
you let me come with you when you left?"
There are questions
that have no right answers. "I couldn't."
"That's not a
good enough answer."
I closed my eyes
and remembered that Christmas. Diane had followed me to the car and asked me if
she could come. Her face had been open, vulnerable, filled with raw need.
"I couldn't take care of you. I could barely take care of myself. I wanted
you to be safe. I knew Robert would protect you."
"I would have
taken care of myself. I wanted—"
"You wanted
too much." The words came out as a shout. "You still want too
much."
The shivering had
returned and the pain was increasing. I kept my eyes open now—when I closed
them I was alone with the pain. The cold water had numbed the leg, but that had
worn off.
"I'm
sorry," I said then. "I'm sorry. I shouldn't have been a mother.
I-—"
"Why did you
leave?"
"I had
to."
"Why didn't
you take me?"
"I couldn't
take care of you." I was tired, so tired I wanted to die. "I
couldn't." The same questions, the same answers, over and over. The pain
rose in me and I said softly, "I'm not sorry I left. I had to leave. I
loved you and I wanted to stay, but I couldn't."
Her words drifted
down like snowflakes on a winter day. "I hate you."
"All
right," I said softly. "I understand that." Perhaps Zuhuy-kak
was right. She and I did have much in common.
We had both made
sacrifices that were unacceptable. We had both failed.
I closed my eyes
and began to find my way back to the distant place where I could not feel the
pain.
"Mother?"
The cry called me back.
"I'm
here."
"What are the
shadows that follow me?"
"Shadows of
the past," I muttered to the darkness. I tried to raise myself up on one
elbow, but the movement shot a new pain through my leg and I sank back down,
letting my cheek rest on the cool rough stone. "You'll get used to them."
There was more I
wanted to tell her, but I could not remember what it was. She seemed far away,
farther than she had ever been. I closed my eyes and went away.
When one hunts for man as I have done,
even dead men and their ruins,
one goes up, high into the mountains where they may have fled and built
in some final extremity, as at Machu
Picchu, or down into deep arroyos
where their bones may protrude from the
walls, or their mineralized jaws
gape in the gravel fans. Or one enters
caves and with luck comes out again,
but not necessarily with treasure.
—Loren Eiseley,
All the Strange Hours
My mother lay broken at the base of the
limestone wall and I did not know the way out of the cave. She did not respond
when I shouted at her. "Liz? Mother? Goddamn you, you can't leave me here.
You have to help. Liz?"
The cavern echoed
back my words and the darkness was filled with curses. "Wake up. Get up.
Just get up!" The words rolled like thunder from wall to wall to wall,
crashing and repeating. I shone the flashlight down at her crumpled body.
"All right
then—you can be dead. I don't care. You can be dead!" Then with a rush,
words abandoned me and I was wailing in anger, a cry that began as a low moan,
growing louder and rising to a shrill keening that hurt my ears, joining echoes on echoes on echoes.
I tried to stop the sound, but it would not be contained; it spilled from me
like water overflowing a dam. I beat my open hands against the ragged edge of
the limestone cliff, feeling the pain and letting it feed the howling. My face
was wet and hot, and I could not stop crying. It was my mother's fault, all of
it—the anger, the howling, the blood on my hands, and the terrible pain. Most
of all the pain.
Through the tears, I
saw a shadow moving at the edge of the flashlight beam. The old woman stood
watching me. I fumbled for a loose rock to throw, found nothing, and with a
quick movement snatched my sandals off my feet and hurled them at her—right
foot, then left. She faded back into the darkness and I laughed, a sound akin
to the howl of pain.
My mother lay
broken at the foot of the cliff. She would not wake up. She wanted to leave me
here, alone in the dark. I would not let her. She had to wake up and talk to
me. I looked about for something to throw at her to wake her, but there was
nothing. My sandals were lost in the darkness behind me, and I did not want to
throw the flashlight. I studied the limestone cliff and decided to climb down
and stop her from leaving me alone again.
The wall was
pockmarked and uneven, studded with fossil shells. I wedged the flashlight in
the back pocket of my jeans and lowered myself carefully over the edge, feeling
with my feet for holds. My breath came in short gasping sobs, like the panting
of a dog after a hard run. The sharp edges of the limestone etched new cuts on
my feet and stung the gashes on my hands. The flashlight in my pocket moved
with the movements of my hips, and its beam chased shadows on the cavern
ceiling.
About halfway down,
a foothold gave way beneath me, leaving me dangling by my arms and scrambling
for another hold. A little farther, a rock came loose in my hand and I clung to
the sheer face, groping with my worn and bloody hand. I found a protruding
rock, tested it by pulling gently, then tugging hard. Then I trusted my weight
to it and continued down.
My arms and legs
were trembling when I reached the bottom. I was breathing heavily and tears
blurred my vision. I stood over my mother and looked down at her. She lay on
her back, one arm crossed over her chest and one stretched down to rest on the
thigh of her injured leg. Her face was very pale in the flashlight beam. I
knelt beside her and laid my hand on her forehead. Her skin was cool and moist
to the touch.
"It's not that
easy," I muttered. "You can't get out of it that easy. I won't let
you." I was talking to myself, a low continuous murmuring of curses and
abuse. I knew that I was talking to myself, but decided that it was all right.
No one would hear. I was not myself just now. "Goddamn it, you're not
leaving me here. I won't let you die."
I could not
remember what to do for shock victims: elevate the feet or the head or both? I
left her as she was. She moaned softly and tried to move away when I used her
pocketknife to slit her pants so that I could examine her leg. The flesh was
purplish and swelling around a lump in the middle of her calf. She moaned again
when I pulled on her ankle to straighten the leg. I had nothing to splint it
with except for a metal folding rule from her pocket, but I tied that in place
with strips of cloth cut from her pants leg. My hands were shaking, but I
ignored that. It took me three tries to knot the last strip of cloth. All the
while I muttered curses and wiped sweat out of my eyes.
Her face was still
and calm. Her wet shirt clung to her and I could see how thin she was—frail and
small-boned and weak. I swore at her as she lay on the limestone floor, telling
her that she couldn't get away with this, she couldn't run from me this time.
The cloth strips
that held the splint in place were marked with dark spots; my hands and feet
were still bleeding. With cool water from the pool, I washed the blood from my
hands. The water stung at first, but it seemed to numb the cuts. I washed my
face and splashed water on my arms.
I turned off the
flashlight for a moment and sat in the darkness, listening to my mother
breathe. Shallow and rapid, but steady. She wasn't going anywhere just yet. I heard the
sound of wings and flashed the light toward the ceiling in time to spotlight a
bat as it flitted past. I switched the light off and heard the sound again,
another bat hurrying toward some unknown destination.
I didn't mind the
darkness so much. It was restful, sitting beside my mother. I held her hand for
comfort and listened to the bats. I had grown used to the darkness by the time
the lights came—faintly flickering points of yellow and orange in the distance,
moving as erratically as fireflies or glowing spots before my eyes. I stood up
and peered toward them. They did not come from the cliff I had climbed down,
but rather from deeper in the cave, through a tunnel I had not noticed. The
lights bobbed toward us, growing larger and brighter.
"Over
here," I shouted. "We're here."
The cavern echoed
my voice, and then was silent. No reply. The lights moved no faster. I flicked
on the flashlight and waved it, but the lights continued on their steady
course, bobbing toward us slowly.
I waited, watching
the lights come closer. Torches, I could see now, dozens of them, each one
burning with a yellow-orange flame that flared and wavered with the movement of
the person carrying it. The light reflected from the walls, catching on the
white seashells.
Shadows marched on
the cavern walls. Enormous and distorted, like the shadows of hunchbacks and
giants and fantastic animals dancing and swaying with the movement of the
torches. The people carrying the torches seemed dwarfed by their own shadows.
Feathered robes
caught the light and gave it back in pieces. Feathered headdresses swayed
rhythmically. Torchlight gleamed on sharp teeth—a fox head stared open-mouthed
at the ceiling from the headdress of a fur-clad man. Beneath the fox face, the
man's eyes gleamed red. A fox tail swayed between his legs as he danced. Other
animals danced beside him: a woman wore the soft brown fur of a deer; a man
waved the claws of a jaguar.
I could hear them
now: the sound of the drums echoed from the walls so that each beat was
multiplied many times, each sharp note repeating over and over. The gourd
rattles sang in time with the drum, a steady susurration like waves on the
beach. The chanting rose above the rattle and drum, human voices rising and
falling in words that I could not understand. There was a wildness to the
voices, a passion and urgency. Now and again, the chant was punctuated with a
great howl, like a wild animal in torment. The howling seemed to spread through
the procession as different voices took up the cry, the animals' heads tipping
back to the smoke-darkened roof, and wailing to the gods.
The woman who led
them did not walk; she danced, stooping and leaping and spinning in the
torchlight, her shadow first a hunchback, then a giant. She wore a blue tunic
woven of a thin cloth that let the torchlight pass through, revealing the
moving shadow of her body within. She was my age, no older—young and swift.
Though her skin glistened with sweat, she danced as if she were fresh, tossing
her head so that the feathers laced in her hair bobbed and swayed.
She was coming
toward us. I crouched at my mother's side, switching off the flashlight and
moving closer to her, putting one arm around her thin shoulders. I could see
the leader clearly now. One of her cheeks was marked with dark spirals, and the
delicate skin beneath her eyes was painted with red lines, radiating outward
like the rays from a child's drawing of the sun. Her black hair was tied back
with a braided leather thong, and quetzal feathers were woven into the braids. A
black object that looked like the head of a monkey dangled from a leather strap
around her waist. A jade bead strung on a leather thong dangled from her right
ear.
I recognized her
then. She was the old woman whose face was on the stone head. Younger now,
graceful and filled with life.
In a wide place on
the other side of the pool, she danced. The others formed a circle around her,
a respectful gathering of dark tattooed faces and glistening bodies. The air
was thick with the smell of incense and smoke. The sound of the drums and chanting
filled the cavern until the trembling in my hands seemed like a response to the
sound. When the dancing woman threw back her head and howled, I clenched my
fists and groaned at sudden pain from the cuts and gashes.
She held something
high over her head. The torchlight caught on it: an obsidian blade. For the
first time I noticed the rock formation around which she danced: a raised
platform that made a natural altar. The animal cry began in the back of the
crowd and passed like a wave through the sea, gathering strength until the
limestone seemed to shake with it. The crowd swayed with the dancing woman, and
the torchlight flickered on the bright murals that decorated the walls.
At first, I did not
notice the child who stood beside the altar. I was watching the dancing woman
as she used the blade to slash at her own wrists, making shallow cuts that bled
profusely. With the blood, she anointed the altar, leaving dark smears that
shone in the torchlight.
The child was
dressed in blue, and her face and hands were smeared with blue as well. The
little girl was watching the woman, her eyes wide and fascinated. Her face had
been painted bright blue, the color of the sky in the late afternoon. The paint
had been brushed on carefully; only her lips and her dark brown eyes were free
of it. She held her hands clasped just under her chin, and they too were bright
blue. The child moved with the rhythm of the dancing woman, rocking to and fro.
Around them, chanting voices were as deep and low as the rumble of the earth.
As I watched, the
dancing woman accepted a gourd bowl from a young man and took it to the child.
The woman knelt, lifted the child's hands so that she held the bowl, and guided
the bowl to her lips. The child drank and the cavern echoed with another howl.
The sound startled the child, and though she was finished drinking, she clung
to the bowl, staring around her. The woman in blue tickled her hands with one
of the feathers, and the little girl let go of the bowl, distracted.
The woman touched
the child's head gently, then picked her up and carried her in her arms as she
danced.
The beat of the
drum was faster now, and the woman whirled with the child. The girl was
laughing now and reaching for the bright fluttering feathers in the woman's
hair. One small hand clutched a feather triumphantly. The woman danced faster,
whirling, her eyes gleaming in the torchlight.
The dancer set the
laughing child on the stone altar. She lay on her back, her arms stretched to
either side like a child lying in the grass on a summer day. She was smeared with
blood from the dancer's wrists and in one hand she clutched a blue feather. The
dancer undid the child's belt and tenderly folded back the blue robe. I saw the
child laugh when the woman tickled her chin with another feather, but I could
not hear the sound over the chanting. The child's eyes were half closed, and
she looked as if she were falling asleep.
Four men in white
loincloths stepped from the waiting circle and each one took hold of an arm or
a leg. The little girl smiled up at the dancer, waiting for the next game to
begin. The dancer lifted the obsidian blade, hesitated for an instant, then
plunged the blade into the child's chest. The howl of the crowd drowned out any
sound she might have made.
I cried out and
closed my eyes and I must have squeezed my mother's hand because she stirred,
pulling weakly against my hand. She said something, but I could not hear her
over the drums and rattles. I leaned closer and watched her lips. She was
struggling for consciousness, but losing the fight. She lay still, her hand
once again limp in mine.
The altar was
bloody; the four men were spattered with dark spots. The dancer held something
dark and small over her head. Though the beat of the drum continued, her dance
faltered. There was a new hesitation in her step and the drumbeat slowed, the
chanting grew softer.
I saw the runner
coming before the crowd surrounding the altar noticed him. A single torch
bobbed toward them, growing larger. I saw a shadow taking long strides, then
saw the runner in the torchlight: a young boy clad only in a loincloth.
He held the torch
in his left hand; his right arm bled from a wound in his shoulder. He stumbled
as he came toward the crowd, and he must have cried out, for some of the men
turned to look, then ran to help him.
The chant faltered.
The drumbeat continued, but people crowded around the boy, pressing close to
him. The drumbeat stopped. I noticed now, seeing the people gather around the
boy, that the men in the crowd were gray-haired, limping, toothless.
The chant had given
way to the babble of voices. The power was gone. The drum had stopped. The
rattles ceased their hissing. The people turned and snatched up torches and
surged back the way they had come, away from me, carrying the runner with them.
The woman, the
dancer, remained where she was. She had lifted her head to listen to the
clamor, but she did not move with the others. A single torch, wedged in a crack
in the wall, still burned beside her. The echoing clamor of voices faded in the
distance.
The woman crouched
beside the altar. Her expression had stiffened. She picked up the blue feather
that lay on the cavern floor where the child had dropped it, and smoothed it
between her fingers. Then quickly, like someone coming out of a daze, she
reached out and caressed the child's cheek. A shadow of doubt crossed her face.
Then she hugged the body to her and hid her face in the blue cloth of the robe.
The thunderous
power of the chant and the drum remained with me. Watching the woman, I felt
that she mourned more than the death of a child. I wondered what news the boy
had carried. Somehow, it seemed that his news had
changed the value of the child's death. The cavern was dark; the temple had
fallen.
She remained like
this for a time. I watched her, not knowing whether to fear her or pity her. My
head was burning and my heart still beat in the rhythm of the drum. I heard, as
if from a great distance, the sound of a woman weeping. I went to her, my head
on fire. When she looked up, her eyes vague and unfocused in the torchlight, I think she saw me.
I don't know.
When she stood, I
returned to my mother's side. While the woman was arranging the blue robe
around her daughter's body, I checked my mother's splint. It was inadequate,
but I could see no way to improve it. I used another strip of cloth to knot my
mother's hands together. Kneeling, I ducked into the circle of her arms and
hoisted her piggyback, leaning forward so that her body fell against mine,
stumbling as I clambered to my feet, but catching myself before 1 fell. The
woman was lifting her daughter's body, staggering a little under the burden.
She slung the awkward bundle partly over one shoulder, so that the child's
face, still painted blue and smeared with blood, looked back at me. In her
other hand, the woman carried the torch. I followed the light of the bobbing
torch as she trudged away from the pool.
She walked slowly,
stopping now and then to adjust her burden, to rest, to get a better grip on her
torch. The flickering light of her torch showed me the way. Occasionally, a bat
flew over us—a rustle of wings and a burst of high-pitched chittering. I
listened to our footsteps, to the faraway musical tinkle of water falling into
a pool, to my mother's shallow breathing. My mother grew heavier, but the woman
stopped frequently, and whenever she did. I rested by leaning against the
cavern wall. The girl's dead eyes watched me over the woman's shoulder.
The smell of
incense hung in the air. Sweat trickled down my back and my jeans clung damply
to my legs. The stone beneath our feet was glossy, worn smooth by the passage
of many feet. Once, I slipped and smashed my knee
against the floor, a new throbbing ache to add to the pain in my feet and hands.
I tried to ignore the pain and watch where we were going. Was this the second
large room filled with stalactites or the third? Had I been trudging through
the darkness for hours, days, weeks, or years? It didn't matter. My mother's
breath rasped past my ear and I could still walk. That was all that mattered.
My mother was very
heavy. I thought about laying her down on the floor and lying beside her to rest for a while,
but the torch bobbed on ahead of me and I did not stop. My footsteps had taken
up the rhythm of the drum, a steady beat that matched the pounding of my heart
and the soft sighs of my mother's breath passing in and out.
The barriers were
down. The anger that had surged forth to make me scream at my mother and pound
my hands bloody against the rocks was still with me, but it had changed. The
first wild surge had made me scream; now I felt a strong steady current, more
like the movement of the tide than like a crashing wave, or maybe like a big
slow river, strong and smooth and winding as a serpent. It carried me along
like a boat on the tide. The water was dark and murky, and I could not see
beneath the surface. But I had to flow with the river; I could not resist it.
The great river
washed me along, washed me clean of sin, washed me in the blood of my own
hands, washed me through dark tunnels and caverns into a dead end. Then the
torch winked out; the woman was gone. A dead end.
I lowered my mother
to the floor and sat beside her. Her hands were dark and swollen where the cloth
strip had cut off circulation. I loosened the strips and rubbed her hands to
warm them and make the blood flow. I closed my eyes, grateful for the rest.
I heard a bat fly
overhead, but I was not listening to that. I was listening to the soft hooting
of an owl somewhere in the darkness outside the cave. I was smelling the cool
dry scent of the monte at night.
My flashlight beam
found the opening, a narrow slit high above me in the wall of the cave. I left
my mother on the cavern floor and started climbing. The wall was sheer and the
handholds were covered with the droppings of generations of bats. I climbed
about five feet, then threw my arm over a ledge and pushed myself through the
narrow opening.
The monte was dark,
but not as dark as the cave. I lay on my back and listened to the
sounds—strange bird-calls and animal rustlings. It was all right now. I would
get my mother out of the cave somehow. Everything would be all right. The owl
hooted in the distance and I laughed out loud.
"Does this path have a heart? If it
does, the path is good; if it doesn't,
it is of no use. Both paths lead nowhere;
but one has a heart, the other
doesn't. One makes for a joyful journey;
as long as you follow it, you
are one with it. The other will make you
curse your life. One makes you
strong; the other weakens you."
—Carlos Castaneda,
The Teachings of Don Juan
I woke from dreams of falling. I was alone
in a Mexican hospital room, with a cast on my leg, a tube in my arm, and a
foolish white hospital gown wrapped around my battered old body. When I called
out, the nurse came, and I asked her what day it was. She told me that it was
Sunday, and I calculated that it was Ahau, the first day of the new year.
Eventually they let
Barbara in to talk to me. It seems that my daughter dragged me out of the cave
with a rope she found in a shelter that had been built for the convenience of
hacienda workers. The cave opening was not far from the hacienda. The locals
knew about it, but, like many caves in the Yucatan, it had never been fully
explored.
My daughter had
carried me out to the road and flagged down a car driven by a Mexican
restaurateur, who took one look at my daughter and another at me and rushed us both to
Hospital Juarez. My daughter was treated for multiple cuts and bruises, none of
them serious. After she was released, she contacted Barbara, waited long enough
to be sure that I was in stable condition, and then left for the States.
Barbara gave me a curious sidelong glance when she told me all this. I don't
believe that she was telling me all that my daughter had told her, and I said
as much. Barbara just shrugged. I did not have the
strength to persist, and I supposed that if my daughter wanted to keep secrets,
she had earned the right.
I slept again, and
when I woke Zuhuy-kak had taken Barbara's place. She was insubstantial here,
barely the suggestion of a Mayan woman sitting in a padded plastic-covered
chair. Through her, I could see the electrical tape that had been used to patch
a tear in the plastic upholstery. "Is it over?" I asked her.
She did not move.
"There are
still things I want to know," I, told her. "I still plan to dig up
your bones and take another look at that vase."
She shrugged.
"I can't talk
to you here," I said to her irritably. "They won't let me have
cigarettes. I think that goddamn American antismoking propaganda has spread
even here."
She faded when the
nurse opened the door and I realized only then that I had been speaking in
English the whole time.
I went home a week
after Tony. He went home in a box; I went on crutches. 1 was asked to speak at
his memorial service, but I begged off, pleading illness. The department head
delivered a fine impersonal eulogy that painted Tony with a rosy hue, flawless
and unnatural as the cherubs that flanked the altar.
I went back to my
apartment in Berkeley, taking my notebooks. I sent Diane a note, telling her to
get in touch when she felt like it. I did not know what else to say.
My leg did not heal
quite right. I limped, especially in wet weather, and walked with a cane that
Barbara had bought for me in the Mérida market. The university welcomed me back
for the fall semester. In the wake of the publicity attending the finds at Dzibilchaltún,
three publishing houses were vying for the hardcover rights to my
still-unfinished book, City of Stones. I had laid plans to return to
Dzibilchaltún to complete the excavation of the tomb and the ceremonial area. Barbara
would be assisting me on the project. I watched the shadows of the past, but
none of them spoke to me.
On an overcast day,
I had paused on a wooden bridge that spans Strawberry Creek to watch an Indian
woman weave a basket from water-softened reeds. Someone leaned on the rail
beside me, and I looked up, expecting to see one of my students.
Diane was looking
down at the creek. For a moment, she did not look at me. When she did, something
seemed different about her. She held herself with a new confidence, a certainty
that she had lacked before. "I've come to the conclusion that I'm crazy
too," she said. Her voice was steady; she did not seem particularly upset.
"It took a while, but I've gotten used to it. In fact, I don't mind
it."
She paused for a
moment, and I could hear the song that the Indian woman was singing to herself,
a wandering melody based on an unfamiliar scale.
"Barbara tells
me that you're planning another expedition to Dzibilchaltún," she said.
"I'd like to go."
I watched the woman
weaving her basket, carefully lacing the reeds together to make an intricate
pattern of light and dark. "I don't know what we'll find there," I
said.
"You never do
know what you'll find when you dig in the past," she said.
"That's
true," I said.
"Can I come
with you?"
"I think that
could be arranged," I said. I turned away from the bridge and Diane
offered me her arm. I hesitated a moment, then took her arm.
"Tell
me," she said, "about the shadows of the past."