from Omni October 1984
My mother and aunt said that when I was learning
to talk, I talked to people they could not see or hear, sometimes speaking
in our language and sometimes saying words or names they did not know.
I can't remember doing that, but I remember that I could not understand
why people said that a room was empty or that there was nobody in the gardens,
because there were always people of different kinds, everywhere. Mosty
they stayed quietly or were going about their doings, or passing through.
I had already learned that nobody talked to them and that they did not
often pay heed or answer when I tried to talk to them, but it had not occurred
to me that other people did not see them.
I had a big argument with my cousin once when
she said there was nobody in the wash house, and I had seen a whole group
of people there, passing things from hand to hand and laughing silently,
as if they were playing some gambling game. My cousin, who was older than
I, said I was lying, and I began to scream and tried to knock her down.
I can feel that same anger now. I was telling what I had seen and could
not believe she had not seen the people in the wash house; I thought she
was lying in order to call me a liar. That anger and shame stayed a long
time and made me unwilling to look at the people that other people didn't
see or wouldn't talk about. When I saw them, I looked away until they
were gone. I had thought they were all my kinfolk, people of my household,
and seeing them had been companionship and pleasure to me; but now I felt
I could not trust them, since they had got me into trouble. Of course I
had it all backward, but there was nobody to help me get it straight. My
family was not much given to thinking about things, and except for going
to school, I went to our heyimas only in the Summer before the games.
When I turned away from all those people that
I had used to see, they went on and did not come back. Only a few were
left, and I was lonely.
I liked to be with my father, Olive of the
Yellow Adobe, a man who talked little and was cautious and gentle in mind
and hand. He repaired and reinstalled solar panels and collectors and batteries
and lines and fixtures in houses and outbuildings; all his work was with
the Miller's Art. He did not mind if I eame along if I was quiet, and so
I went with him to be away from our noisy, busy household. When he saw
that I liked his art, he began to teach it to me. My mothers were not enthusiastic
about that. My Serpentine grandmother did not like having a Miller for
son-in-law, and my mother wanted me to learn medicine. "If she has the
third eye, she ought to put it to good use," they said, and they sent me
to the Doctors Lodge on White Sulfur Creek to learn. Although I learned
a good deal there and liked the teachers, I did not like the work and was
impatient with the illnesses and accidents of mortality, preferring the
dangerous, dancing energies my father worked with. I could often see the
electrical current, and there were excitements of feeling, tones of a kind
of sweet music barely to be heard, and tones also of voices speaking and
singing, distant and hard to understand, that came when I worked with the
batteries and wires. I did not speak of this to my father. If he felt and
heard any of these things, he preferred to leave them unspoken, outside
the house of words.
My childhood was like everybody's, except
that with going to the Doctors Lodge and working with my father and liking
to be alone, perhaps I played less with other children than many children
do, after I was seven or eight years old. Also, though I went all over
Telina with my father and knew all the ways and houses, we never went out
of town. My family had no summer house and never even visited the hills.
"Why leave Telina?" my grandmother would say. "Everything is here!" And
in summer the town was pleasant, even when it was hot; so many people were
away that there was never a crowd at the wash house, and houses standing
empty were entirely different from houses full of people, and the ways
and gardens and common places were lonesome and lazy and quiet. It was
always in summer, often in the great heat of the afternoon, that I would
see the people passing through Telina-na, coming upriver. They are hard
to describe, and I have no idea who they were. They were rather short and
walked quietly, alone, or three or four - one after the other; their limbs
were smooth and their faces round, often with some lines or marks drawn
on the lips or chin; their eyes were narrow, and sometimes looked swollen
and sore as if from smoke or weeping. They would go quietly through the
town, not looking at it and never speaking, going upriver. When I saw them
I would always say the four heyas. The way they went, silently, gripped
at my heart. They were far from me, walking in sorrow.
When I was nearly twelve years old, my cousin
came of age, and the family gave a very big passage party far her, giving
away all kinds of things I didn't even know we had. The following year
I came of age, and we had another big party, though without such lavishness,
as we didn't have so much left to give. I had entered the Blood Lodge just
before the Moon, and the party for me was during the Summer Dance. At the
end of the party, there were horse games and races, for the Summer people
had come down from Chukulmas.
I had never been on horseback. The boys and
girls who rode in the games and races for Telina brought a steady mare
for me to ride and boosted me up to her back and put the rein in my hand,
and off we went. I felt like the wild swan. That was pure joy. And I could
share it with the other young people; we were all joined by the good feeling
of the party and the excitement of the games and races and the beauty and
passion of the horses, who thought it was all their festival. The mare
taught me how to ride that day, and I was on horseback all night dreaming,
and the next day, rode again; and on the third day I rode in a race, on
a roan colt from a household in Chukulmas. The colt ran second in the big
race when I rode him and ran first in the match race when the boy who had
raised him rode him. In all that glory of festival and riding and racing
and friendship, I left my childhood most joyously, but also I went out
of my House, and got lost from too much being given me at once. I gave
my heart to the red colt I rode and to the boy who rode him, a brother
of the Serpentine of Chukulmas.
It was a long time ago and not his fault or
doing; he did not know it. The word I write is my word; to myself let it
be brought back.
So the Summer games were over in our town
and the horse riders went off downriver to Madidinou and Ounmalin; and
there I was, a thirteen-year-old woman and afoot.
I wore the undyed clothing I had been making
all the year before, and I went often to the Blood Lodge, learning the
songs and mysteries. Young people who had been friendly to me at the games
remained friends, and when they found I longed to ride, they shared the
horses of their households with me. I learned to play vetulou and helped
with caring for the horses, who were stabled and pastured then northwest
of Moon Creek in Halfhoof Pasture and on Butt Hill. I said at the Doctors
Lodge that I wanted to learn horse doctoring, and so they sent me to learn
that art by working with an old man, Striffen, who was a great doctor of
horses and cattle, I would listen to him. He used different kinds of noises,
words like the matrix words of songs, and different kinds of silences and
breathing; and so did the animals. But I never could understand what they
were saying.
Once when I came to the Obsidian heyimas for
a Blood Lodge singing, a woman, I thought her old then, named Milk, met
me in the passage. She looked at me with eyes as sharp and blind as a snake's
eyes and said, "What are you here for?"
I answered her, "For the singing," and hurried
by, but I knew that was not what she had asked.
In the summer I went with the dancers and
riders of Telina to Chukulmas. There I met that boy, that young man. We
talked about the roan horse and about the little moonhorse I was riding
in the vetulou games. When he stroked the roan horse's flank, I did so
too, and the side of my hand touched the side of his hand once.
Then there was another year until the Summer
games returned. That was how it was to me: There was nothing I cared for
or was mindful of but the Summer and the games.
The old horse doctor died on the first night
of the Grass. I had gone to the Lodge Rejoining and learned the songs;
I sang them for him. After he was burned I gave up learning his art. I
could not talk with the animals or with any other people. I saw nothing
clearly and listened to no one, I went back to working with my father,
and I rode in the games in Summer. My cousin had a group of friends, girls
who talked and played soulbone and dice, gambling for candy and almonds,
sometimes for rings and earrings, and I hung around with them every evening,
There were no real people in the world I saw at that time. All rooms were
empty. Nobody was in the common places and gardens of Telina. Nobody walked
upriver grieving.
When the sun turned south, the dancers and
riders came again from Chukulmas to Telina, and I rode in the games and
races, spending all day and night at the fields. People said, "That girl
is in love with the roan stallion from Chukulmas," and teased me about
it but not shamefully; everybody knows how adolescents fall in love with
horses, and songs have been made about that love. But the horse knew what
was wrong: He would no longer let me handle him.
In a few days the riders went on to Madidinou,
and I stayed behind.
Things are very obstinate and stubborn, but
also there is a sweet willingness in them: They offer what they meet, Electricity
is like horses: crazy and willful and also willing and reliable. If you
are careless and running counter, a horse or a live wire is a contrary
and perilous thing. I burnt and shocked myself several times that year,
and once I started a fire in the walls of a house by making a bad connection
and not grounding the wires. They smelled the smoke and put out the fire
before it did much harm, but my father, who had brought me into his Art
as a novice, was so alarmed and angry that he forbade me to work with him
until the next rainy season.
At the Wine that year I was fifteen years
old. I got drunk for the first time. I went around town shouting and talking
to people nobody else saw. So I was told next day, but I could not remember anything
of it. I thought if I got drunk again, but a little less drunk, I might
see the kind of people I used to see, when the ways were full of them and
they kept my soul company. So I stole wine from our house neighbors, who
had most of a barrel left in bottle after the dance, and I went down alone
by the Na in the willow flats to drink it.
I drank the first bottle and made some songs,
then I spilled most of the second bottle and went home and felt sick for
a couple of days. I stole wine again, and this time I drank two bottles
quickly. I made no songs. I felt dizzy and sick and fell asleep. Next morning
I woke up there in the willow flats on the cold stones by the river, very
weak and cold. My family was worried about me after that. It had been a
hot night; so I could say I had stayed out for the cool and had fallen
asleep, but my mother knew I was lying about something. She thought it
must be that I had come inland with some boy but for some reason would
not admit it. It shamed and worried her to think that I was wearing undyed
clothing when I should no longer do so. It enraged me that she should so
distrust me; yet I would say nothing to her in denial or explanation. My
father knew that I was sick at heart, but it was soon after that that I
set the fire, and his worry turned to anger. As for my cousin, she was
in love with a Blue Clay boy and interested in nothing else; the girls
with whom I gambled had taken to smoking a lot of hemp, which I never liked;
and though the friends with whom I rode and looked after the horses were
still kind, I did not want to be with humans much or even with horses.
I did not want the world to be as it was. I had begun making up the world.
I made the world this way: That young man
of my House in Chukulmas felt as I felt; and I would go to Chukulmas after
the Grass this year. He and I would go up into the hills together and become
forest-living people. We would take the roan stallion and go to Looks Up
Valley, or farther; we would go to the grass dune country west of the Long
Sound, where, he had once told me, the herds of wild horses run. He said
that people went from Chukulmas sometimes to catch a wild horse there,
but it was country where no human people lived. We would live there together
alone, taming and riding the wild horses. Telling myself this world, in
the daytime I made us live as brother and sister, but in the nights, lying
alone, I made us make love together. The Grass came and passed; I put off
going to Chukulmas, telling myself that it would be better to go after
the Sun was danced. I had never danced the Sun as an adult, and I wanted
to do that; after that, I told myself, I would go to Chukulmas. All along
I knew that if I went or if I did not go it did not matter, and all I wanted
to do was to die.
It is hard to say to yourself that what you
want to do is die. You keep hiding it behind other things, which you pretend
to want. I was impatient for the Twenty-One Days to begin, as if my life
would start over with them. On the eve of the first day, I went to live
at the heyimas.
As soon as I set foot on the ladder, my heart
went cold and tight. There was a long-singing that night. My lips got numb,
and my voice would not come out of my throat. I wanted to get out and run
away, all night, but I did not know where to go.
Next morning three groups formed: One would
go over the northwest range into wild country in silence; one would use
hemp and mushrooms for trance; and one would drum and long-sing.
I could not choose which group to join, and
this distressed me beyond anything. I began shaking, and went to the ladder
but could not lift my foot to climb it.
The old doctor named Gall, who had taught
me sometimes at the Doctors Lodge, came down the ladder. She was coming
to sing, but the habit of her art distracted her, and she observed me.
She turned back and said, "Are you not well?"
"I think I am ill."
"Why is that?"
"I want to dance and can't choose the dancing."
"The long-singing?"
"My voice is gone."
"The trances?"
"I'm afraid of them,"
"The journey?"
"I can't leave this house!" I said loudly
and began to shake again.
Gall put her head back with her chin sunk
in her neck and looked at me from the tops of her eyes. She was a short,
dark, wrinkled woman. She said, "You're already stretched. Do you want
to break?"
"Maybe it would be better."
"Maybe it would be better to relax?"
"No it would be worse."
"There's a choice made. Come now."
Gall took my hand and brought me to the doorway
of the inmost room of the heyimas, where the people of the Inner Sun were.
I said, "I can't go in there. I'm not old
enough to begin the learning."
Gall said, "Your soul is old." She said the
same to Black Oak, who came from the gyre to the doorway: "This is an old
soul and a young one, stretching each other too hard."
Black Oak, who was then Speaker of the Serpentine,
spoke with Gall, but I was not able to listen to what they said. As soon
as we had come into the doorway of the inner room, my hair lifted up on
my head, and my ears sang. I saw round, bright lights caming and going
inside the room, where there was no light but the dim shaft from the topmost
skylight. The light began to gyre. Black Oak turned to me and spoke, but
at that time, as he spoke, the vision began.
I did not see the man Black Oak, but the Serpentine.
It was a rock person, not man nor woman, not human, but in shape like a
heavy human being, with the blue, blue-green, and black colors and the
surfaces of serpentine rock in its skin. It had no hair, and its eyes were
lidless and without transparency, seeing very slowly. Serpentine looked
at me very slowly with those rock eyes.
I crouched down in terror. I could not weep
or speak or stand or move. I was like a bag full of fear. All I could do
was crouch there. I could not breathe at all until a stone, maybe Serpentine's
hand, struck my head a hard blow on the right side, above the ear. It knocked
me off balance and hurt very much, so that I whimpered and sobbed with
the pain, and after that I could breathe again. My head did not bleed where
it had been struck but began swelling up there.
I crouched, recovering from the blow and the
dizziness, and after a long while looked up again. Serpentine was standing
there. It stood there. After a while I saw the hands moving slowly. They
moved up slowly and came together at the navel, at the middle of the stone.
There they pulled back and apart. They pulled open a long, wide rent, or
opening in the stone, like the doorway of a room into which I knew I was
to enter. I got up crouching and shaking and took a step forward into the
stone.
It was not like a room. It was stone, and
I was in it. There was no light or breath or room. I think the rest of
the vision all took place in the stone; that is where it all happened and
was; but because of the human way human people have to see things, it seemed
to change and to be other places, things, and beings.
As if the serpentine rock had crumbled and
decayed into the red earth, after a while I was in the earth, part of the
dirt. I could feel how the dirt felt. Presently I could feel rain coming
into the dirt, coming down. I could feel it in a way that was like seeing,
falling down on and into me, out of a sky that was all rain.
I would go to sleep and then be partly awake
again, perceiving. I began feeling stones and roots, and along my left
side I began to feel and hear cold water running, a creek in the rainy
season. Veins of water underground went down and around through me to that
creek, seeping in the dark through the dirt and stones,
Near the creek, I began to feel the big, deep
roots of trees, and in the dirt everywhere, the fine, many roots of the
grasses, the bulbs of brodiea and blue-eyed grass, the ground squirrel's
heart beating, the mole asleep. I began to come up one of the great roots
of a buckeye, up inside the trunk and out the leafless branches to the
ends of the small outmost branches. From there I perceived the ladders
of rain. These I climbed to the stairways of cloud. These I climbed to
the paths of wind. There I stopped, for I was afraid to step out on the
wind.
Coyote came down the wind path. She came like
a thin woman with rough, dun hair on her head and arms, and a long, fine
face with yellow eyes. Two of her children came with her, like coyote pups.
Coyote looked at me and said, "Take it easy.
You can look down. You can look back."
I looked back and down under the wind. Below
and behind me were dark ridges of forest with the rainbow shining across
them, and light shining on the water on the leaves of the trees. I thought
there were people on the rainbow but was not sure of that. Below and farther
on were yellow hills of summer and a river among them going to the sea.
In places the air below me was so full of birds that I could not see the
ground, but only the light on their wings,
Coyote had a high, singing voice like several
voices at once. She said, "Do you want to go on from here?"
I said, "I was going to go to the Sun."
"Go ahead. This is all my country." Coyote
said that and then came past me on the wind, trotting on four legs as a
coyote with her pups. I was standing alone on the wind there. So I went
on ahead.
My steps on the wind were long and slow, like
the Rainbow Dancers' steps. At each step the world below me looked different.
At one step it was light; at the next one, dark. At the next step it was
smoky; at the next, clear. At the next long step, black and gray clouds
of ash or dust hid everything; and at the next, I saw a desert of sand
with nothing growing or moving at all. I took a step, and everything on
the surface of the world was one single town, roofs and ways with people
swarming in them like the swarming in pond water under a lens. I took another
step and saw the bottoms of the oceans laid dry, the lava slowly welling
from long center seams, and huge desolate canyons far down in the shadow
of the walls of the continents, like ditches below the walls of a barn.
The next step I took, long and slow on the wind, I saw the surface of the
world - blank, smooth, and pale, like the face of a baby I once saw that
was born without forebrain or eyes. I took one more step and the hawk met
me in the sunlight, in the quiet air, over the southwest slope of Grandmother
Mountain.
It had been raining, and clouds were still
dark in the northwest. The rain shone on the leaves of the forests in the
canyons of the mountainside.
Of the vision given me in the Ninth House,
I can tell some parts in writing, and some I can sing with the drum, but
for most of it, I have not found words or music, though I have spent a
good part of my life ever since learning how to look for them. I cannot
draw what I saw, as my hand has no gift for making a likeness.
One reason it would be better drawn and is
hard to tell is that there is no person in it. To tell a story, you say,
"I did this" or "She saw that." When there is no I nor she, there is no
story. I was, until I got to the Ninth House; there was the hawk, but I
was not. The hawk was; the still air was. Seeing with the hawk's eyes is
being without self. Self is mortal. That is the House of Eternity.
So of what the hawk's eyes saw, all I can
here recall to words is this:
It was the universe of power. It was the network,
field, and lines of the energies of all the beings, stars, and galaxies
of stars, worlds, animals, minds, nerves, dust, the lace and foam of vibration
that is being itself, all interconnected, every part part of another part,
and the whole part of each part, and so comprehensible to itself only as
a whole, boundless and unclosed.
At the Exchange it is taught that the electrical
mental network of the City extends from all over the surface of the world
out past the moon and the other planets to unimaginable distances among
the stars: In the vision all that vast web was one momentary glitter of
light on one wave on the ocean of the universe of power, one fleck of dust
on one grass seed in unending fields of grass. The images of the light
dancing on the waves of the sea or on dust motes, the glitter of light
on ripe grass, the flicker of sparks from a fire, are all I have: No image
can contain the vision, which contained all images. Music can mirror it
better than words can, but I am no poet to make music of words. Foam and
the scintillation of mica in rock, the flicker and sparkle of waves and
dust, the working of the great broadcloth looms, and all dancing have reflected
the hawk's vision for a moment to my mind; and indeed everything would
do so, if my mind were clear and strong enough. But no mind or mirror
can hold it without breaking.
There was a descent or drawing away, and I
saw some things that I can describe. Here is one of them: In this lesser
place or plane, which was what might be called the gods or the divine,
beings enacted possibilities. These I, being human, recall as having human
form. One of them came and shaped the vibrations of energies, closing their
paths from gyre into wheel. This one was very strong and was crippled.
He worked as blacksmith at the smithy, making wheels of energy, closed
upon themselves, terrible with power, flaming. He who made them was burnt
away by them to a shell of cinder, with eyes like a potter's kiln when
it is opened and hair of burning wires, but still he turned the paths of
energy and closed them into wheels, locking power into power. All around
this being now was black and hollow where the wheels turned and ground
and milled. There were other beings who came as if flying, like birds in
a storm, flying and crying across the wheels of fire to stop the turning
and the work, but they were caught in the wheels and burst like feathers
of flame. The miller was a thin shell of darkness now, very weak, burnt
out, and he too was caught in the wheels' turning and burning and grinding
and was ground to dust, like fine, black meal. The wheels as they turned
kept growing and joining until the whole machine was interlocked cog within
cog, and strained and brightened and burst into pieces. Every wheel as
it burst was a flare of faces and eyes and flowers and beasts on fire -
burning, exploding, destroyed, falling into black dust. That happened,
and it was one flicker of brightness and dark in the universe of power,
a bubble of foam, a flick of the shuttle, a fleck of mica. The dark dust,
or meal, lay in the shape of open curves or spirals. It began to move and
shift, and there was a scintillation in it, like dust in a shaft of sunlight.
It began dancing. Then the dancing drew away and drew away, and closer
by, to the left, something was there, crying like a little animal. That
was myself, my mind and being in the world; and I began to become myself
again; but my soul that had seen the vision was not entirely willing. Only
my mind kept drawing it back to me from the Ninth House, calling and crying
for it till it came.
I was lying on my right side on earth, in
a small, warm room with earthen walls. The only light came from the red
bar of an electric heater. Somewhere nearby people were singing a two-note
chant. I was holding in my left hand a rock of serpentine, greenish with
dark markings, quite round as if waterworn, though serpentine does not
often wear round, but splits and crumbles. It was just large enough that
I could close my fingers around it. I held this round stone for a long
time and listened to the chanting until I went to sleep. When I woke up,
after a while I felt the rock going immaterial so that my fingers began
sinking into it, and it weighed less and less, until it was gone. I was
a little grieved by this, for I had thought it a remarkable thing to come
back from the Right Arm of the World with a piece of it in my hand; but
as I grew clearer headed, I perceived the vanity of that notion. Years
later the rock came back to me. I was walking down by Moon Creek with my
sons when they were small boys. The younger one saw the rock in the water
and picked it up, saying, "A world!" I told him to keep it in his heya-box,
which he did. When he died, I put that rock back in the water of Moon Creek.
I had been in the vision for the first two
days and nights of the Twenty-One Days of the Sun. I was very weak and
tired, and they kept me in the heyimas all the rest of the Twenty-One Days.
I could hear the long-singing, and sometimes I went into other rooms of
the heyimas; they made me welcome even in the inmost room, where they were
singing and dancing the Inner Sun and where I had entered the vision. I
would sit and listen and half-watch. But if I tried to follow the dancing
with my eyes, or sing, or even touch the tongue-drum, the weakness would
wash into me like a wave on sand, and I would go back into the little room
and lie down on the earth, in the earth.
They waked me to listen to the Morning Carol;
that was the first time in twenty-one days that I climbed the ladder and
saw the sun, that day, the day of the Sun Rising.
The people dancing the Inner Sun had been
in charge of me. They had told me that I was in danger and that if I approached
another vision, I should try to turn away from it, as I was not strong
enough for it yet. They had told me not to dance; and they kept bringing
me food, so good and so kindly given that I could not refuse it, and ate
it with enjoyment. After the Sun Risen days were past, certain scholars
of the heyimas took me in their charge. Tarweed, a man of my House, and
the woman Milk of the Obsidian, were my guides. It was now time that I
begin to learn the recounting of the vision.
When I began, I thought there was nothing
to learn. All I had to do was say what I had seen.
Milk worked with words, Tarweed worked with
words, drum, and matrix chanting. They had me go very slowly, telling very
little at a time, sometimes one word only, and repeating what I had been
able to tell, singing it with the matrix chant so that as much as possible
might be truly recalled and given and could be recalled and given again.
When I began thus to find out what it is to
say what one has seen, and when the great oomplexity and innumerable vivid
details of the vision overwhelmed my imagination and surpassed my ability
to describe, I feared that I would lose it all before I could grasp one
fragment of it and that even if I remembered some of it, I would never
understand any of it. My guides reassured me and quieted my impatience.
Milk said, "We have some training in this craft, and you have none. You
have to learn to speak sky with an earth tongue. Listen: If a baby were
carried up the Mountain, could she walk back down, until she learned to
walk?"
Tarweed explained to me that as I learned
to apprehend mentally what I had perceived in vision, I would approach
the condition of living in both Towns; and so, he said, "there's no great
hurry."
I said, "But it will take years and years!"
He said, "You've been at it for a thousand
years already. Gall said you were an old soul."
It bothered me that I was often not sure whether
Tarweed was joking or not joking. That always bothers young people, and
however old my soul might be, my mind was fifteen. I had to live a while
before I understood that a lot of things can only be said joking and not
joking at the same time. I had to come clear back to Coyote's House from
the Hawk's House to learn that, and sometimes I still forget it.
Tarweed's way was joking, shocking, stirring,
but he was gentle; I had no fear of him. I had been afraid of Milk ever
since she had looked at me in the Blood Lodge and said, "What are you here
for?" She was a great scholar and was Singer of the Lodge. Her way was
calm, patient, impersonal, but she was not gentle, and I feared her. With
Tarweed she was polite, but it was plain that her manners masked contempt.
She thought a man's place was in the woods and fields and workshops, not
among sacred and intellectual things. In the Lodge I had heard her say
the old gibe, "A man fucks with his brain and thinks with his penis." Tarweed
knew well enough what she thought, but intellectual men are used to having
their capacities doubted and their achievements snubbed; he did not seem
to mind her arrogance as much as I sometimes did, even to the point of
trying to defend him against her once, saying, "Even if he is a man, he
thinks like a woman!"
It did no good, of course; and if it was partly
true, it wasn't wholly true, because the thing that was most important
of all to me I could not speak of to Tarweed, a man, and a man of my House:
and to Milk, arrogant and stern as she was, and a woman who had lived all
her life celibate, I did not even need to speak of it. I began to, once,
feeling that I must, and she stopped me. "What is proper for me to know
of this, I know," she said. "Vision is transgression! The vision is to
be shared; the transgression cannot be."
I did not understand that. I was very much
afraid of going out of the heyimas and being caught in my old life again,
going the wrong way again in false thinking and despair. A half-month or
so after the Sun, I began to feel and say that I was still weak and ill
and could not leave the heyimas. To this Tarweed said, "Aha! About time
for you to go home!"
I thought him most unfeeling. When I was working
with Milk, in my worry I began crying, and presently I said, "I wish I
had never had this vision!"
Milk looked at me, a glance across the eyes,
like being whipped in the face with a thin branch. She said, "You did not
have a vision."
I sniveled and stared at her.
"You had nothing. You have nothing. The house
stands. You can live in a corner of it, or all of it, or go outside it
as you choose." So Milk said and left me.
I stayed alone in the small room. I began
to look at it, the small warm room with earth walls and floor and roof,
underground. The walls were earth: the whole earth. Outside them was the
sky: the whole sky. The room was the universe of power. I was in my vision.
It was not in me.
So I went home to live and try to stay on
the right way.
Part of most days I went to the heyimas to
study with Tarweed or to the Blood Lodge to study with Milk. My health
was sound, but I was still tired and sleepy, and my household did not get
very much work out of me. All my family but my father were busy, restless
people, eager to work and talk but never to be still. Among them, after
the month in the heyimas, I felt like a pebble in a mountain creek, bounced
and buffeted. But I could go to work with my father. Milk had suggested
to him that he take me with him when he worked. Tarweed had questioned
her about that, saying that the craft was spiritually dangerous, and Milk
had replied, in the patient, patronizing tone she used to men, "Don't worry
about that. It was danger that enabled her."
So I went back to working with power. I learned
the art carefully and soberly, and set no more fires. I learned drumming
with Tarweed, and speaking mystery with Milk. But it was all slow, slow,
and my fear kept growing, fear and impatience. The image of the roan horse's
rider was not in my mind, as it had been, but was the center of my fear,
I never went to ride, and kept away from my friends who cared for the horses,
and stayed out of the pastures where the horses were. I tried never to
think about the Summer dancing, the games and races. I tried never to think
about lovemaking, although my mother's sister had a new husband, and they
made love every night in the next room with a good deal of noise. I began
to fear and dislike myself, and fasted and purged to weaken myself.
I told Tarweed nothing of all this, shame
preventing me; nor did I ever speak of it to Milk, fear preventing me,
So the World was danced, and next would come
the Moon. The thought of that dance made me more and more frightened: I
felt trapped by it. When the first night of the Moon came, I went down
into my heyimas, meaning to stay there the whole time, closing my ears
to the love songs. I started drumming a vision-tune that Tarweed had brought
back from his dragonfly visions. Almost at once I entered trance and went
into the house of anger.
In that house it was black and hot, with a
yellowish glimmering like heat lightning and a dull muttering noise underfoot
and in the walls. There was an old woman in there, very black, with too
many arms. She called me, not by the name I then had. Berry, but Flicker:
"Flicker, come here! Flicker, come here!" I understood that Flicker was
my name, but I did not come.
The old woman said, "What are you sulking
about? Why don't you go fuck with your brother in Chukulmas? Desire unacted
is corruption. Must Not is a slave owner, Ought Not is a slave. Energy
constrained turns the wheels of evil. Look what you're dragging with you!
How can you run the gyre, how can you handle power, chained like that?
Superstition! Superstition!"
I found that my legs were both fastened with
bolts and hasps to a huge boulder of serpentine rock so that I could not
move at all. I thought that if I fell down, the boulder would roll on me
and crush me.
The old woman said, "What are you wearing
on your head? That's no Moon Dance veil. Superstition! Superstition!"
I put up my hands and found my head covered
with a heavy helmet made of black obsidian. I was seeing and hearing through
this black, murky glass, which came down over my eyes and ears.
"Take it off, Flicker!" the old woman said.
I said, "Not at your bidding!"
I could hardly see or hear her as the helmet
pressed heavier and thicker on my head and the boulder pushed against my
legs and back.
She cried, "Break free! You are turning into
stone! Break free!"
I would not obey her. I chose to disobey.
With my hands I pressed the obsidian helmet into my ears and eyes and forehead
until it sank in and became part of me, and I pushed myself back into the
boulder until it became part of my legs and body. Then I stood there, very
stiff and heavy and hard, but I could walk, and I could see and hear, now
that the dark glass was not over my ears and eyes but was part of them.
I saw that the house was all on fire, burning and smoldering, floor, walls,
and roof. A black bird, a crow, was flying in the smoke from one room to
the next. The old woman was burning, her clothes and flesh and hair smoldering.
The crow flew around her and cried to me, "Sister, get out, you'd better
get out!"
There is nothing but anger in the house of
anger. I said, "No!"
The crow cawed, saying, "Sister, fetch water,
water of the spring!" Then it flew out through the burning wall of the
house. Just as it went, it looked back at me with a man's face, beautiful
and strong, with curly, fiery hair streaming upward. Then the walls of
fire sank down into the walls of the Serpentine heyimas where I was sitting
drumming on the three-note drum. I was still drumming, but a different
pattern, a new one.
After that vision, I was called Flicker; the
scholars agreed that it's best to use the name that that Grandmother gives
you, even if you don't do what she says. After that vision, I went up to
the Springs of the River, as Crow had said to do; and after it I was freed
from my fear of my desire.
The central vision is central; it is not for
anything outside itself; indeed there is nothing outside it. What I beheld
in the Ninth House is, as a cloud or a mountain is. We make use of such
visions, make meanings out of them, find images in them, live on them,
but they are not for us or about us any more than the world is. We are
part of them. There are other kinds of vision, all farther from the center
and nearer to the mortal self; one of those is the turning vision, which
is about a person's own life. The vision in which that Grandmother named
me was a turning vision.
The Summer came, and the people came down
from Chukulmas. My brother of the Serpentine did not ride his roan horse
in the races; a girl of the Obsidian of Chukulmas rode that horse, and
he rode a sorrel mare. The roan stallion won all races and was much praised.
After that summer he would race no more, but be put to stud, they said.
I did not ride, but watched the races and the games. It is hard to say
how I felt. My throat ached all the time, and I kept saying silentiy inside
myself, goodbye, goodbye! But what I was saying goodbye to was already
gone. I was mourning and yet unmoved. The girl was a good rider, and beautiful,
and I thought maybe they are going to come inland together; but it did
not hurt or concern me. What I wanted was to be gone from Telina, to begin
living the life that followed the turning vision, that followed the gyre.
So in the heat of the summertime I went with
Tarweed upriver, to the Springs of the River at Wakwaha.
On the Mountain I lived in the host-house
of the Serpentine, and worked mostly as electrician's assistant at odd
jobs around the sacred buildings and the Archive and Exchange. In the morning
I would come outdoors at sunrise. All beyond and below the porch of that
house I would see a vast pluming blankness, the summer fog filling the
Valley, while the first rays of the sun brightened the rocks of the Mountain's
peaks above me, and I would sing as I had been taught:
"It is the Valley of the puma,
where the lion walks,
where the lion wakes,
shining, shining in the Seventh House!"
Later, in the rainy season, the puma walked
on the Mountain itself, darkening the summits and the Springs in cloud
and gray mist. To wake in the silence of that rainless, all-concealing
fog was to wake to dream, to breathe the lion's breath.
Much of each day on the Mountain I spent in
the heyimas, and at times slept there. I worked with the scholars and visionaries
of Wakwaha at the techniques of revisioning, of recounting, and of music.
I did not practice dancing or painting much, as I had no gift for them,
but practiced recalling and recounting in spoken and written language and
with the drum.
I had, as many people have, exaggerated notions
of how visionaries live. I expected a strained, athletic, ascetic existence,
always stretched towards the ineffable. In fact, it was a dull kind of
life. When people are in vision, they can't look after themselves, and
when they come back from it, they may be extremely tired, or excited and
bewildered, and in either case, need quietness without distractions and
demands. In other words, it's like childbearing or any hard, intense work.
One supports and protects the worker. Revisioning and recounting are much
the same, though not quite so hard.
In the host-house I fasted only before the
great wakwa; I ate lightly, with some care of which foods I ate, and drank
little wine and watered it. If you are going into vision or revision, you
don't want to keep changing yourself and going in a different way - through
starving one time, the next time through drunkenness, or cannabis, or trance-singing,
or whatever. What you want is moderation and continuity. If one is an ecstatic,
of course it's another matter; that is not work but burning.
So the life I led in Wakwaha was dull and
peaceful, much the same from day to day and season to season, and suited
and pleased my mind and heart so that I desired nothing else. All the work
I did in those years on the Mountain was revisioning and recounting the
vision of the Ninth House that had been given me; I gave all I could of
it to the scholars of the Serpentine for their records and interpretations,
in which our guidance as a people lies. They were kind, true kin, family
of my House, and I at last a child of that House again, not self-exiled.
I thought I had come home and would live there all my life, telling and
drumming, going into vision and coming back from it, dancing in the beautiful
dancing place of the Five High Houses, drinking from the Springs of the
River.
The Grass was late in the third year I lived
in Wakwaha. Some days after it ended and some days before the Twenty-One
Days began, I was about to go up the ladder of the Serpentine heyimas when
Hawk Woman came to me. I thought she was one of the people of the heyimas,
until she cried the hawk's cry, "kiyir, kiyir!" I turned,
and she said, "Dance the Sun upon the Mountain, Flicker, and after that
go down. Maybe you should learn how to dye cloth." She laughed, and flew
up as the hawk through the entrance overhead.
Other people came where I was standing at
the foot of the ladder. They had heard the hawk's cry, and some saw her
fly up through the entrance of the heyimas.
After that I had neither vision nor revision
of the Ninth House or any house or kind.
I was bereft and relieved. That terrible grandeur
had been hard to bear, to bring back, to share and give and lose over and
over. It had all been beyond my strength, and I was not sorry to cease
revisioning. But when I thought that I had lost all vision and must soon
leave Wakwaha, I began to grieve. I thought about those people whom I had
thought were my kinfolk, long ago when I was a child, before I was afraid.
They were gone, and now I too must go, leaving these kinfolk of my House
of Wakwaha, and go live among strangers the rest of my life.
A woman-living man of the Serpentine of Wakwaha,
Deertongue, who had taught me and sung with me and given me friendship,
saw that I was downcast and anxious, and said to me, "Listen. You think
everything is done. Nothing is done. You think the door is shut. No door
is shut. What did Coyote say to you at the beginning of it all?"
I said, "She said to take it easy."
Deertongue nodded his head and laughed.
I said, "But Hawk said to go down."
"She didn't say not to come back."
"But I have lost the visions!"
"But you have your wits! Where is the center
of your life, Flicker?"
I thought, not very long, and answered, "There.
In that vision. In the Ninth House."
He said, "Your life turns on that center.
Only don't blind your intellect by hankering after vision! You know that
the vision is not your self. The hawk turns upon the hawk's desire. You
will come round home and find the door wide open."
I danced the Sun upon the Mountain, as Hawk
Woman had said to do, and after that I began to feel that I must go. There
were some people living in Wakwaha who sought vision or ecstasy by continuous
fasting or drug taking, and lived in hallucination; such people came not
to know vision from imagination and lived without honesty, making up the
world all the time. I was afraid that if I stayed there I might begin
imitating them, as Deertongue had warned me. After all, I had gone wrong
that way once before. So I said goodbye to people, and on a cold, bright
morning I went down the Mountain. A young redtail hawk circled, crying
over the canyons, "kiyir! kiyir!" so mournfully that I cried myself.
I went back to my mothers' household in Telina-na.
My uncle had married and moved out, so I had his small room to myself;
that was a good thing, since my cousin had married and had a child, and
the household was as crowded and restless as ever. I went back to work
with my father, learning both theory and practice with him, and after two
years I became a member of the Millers Art. He and I continued to work
together often. My life was nearly as quiet as it had been in Wakwaha.
Sometimes I would spend days in the heyimas drumming; there were no visions,
but the silence inside the drumming was what I wanted.
So the seasons went along, and I was thinking
about what Hawk Woman had said. I was rewiring an old house, Seven Steps
House in the northeast arm of Telina, and while I was working there on
a hot day, a man of one of the households brought me some lemonade, and
we fell to talking, and so again the next day. He was a Blue Clay man from
Chukulmas who had married a Serpentine woman of Telina. They had been given
two children, the younger born sevai. She had left the children with him
and left her mothers' house, going across town to marry a Red Adobe man.
I knew her, she was one of the people I had gambled with as a child, but
I had never talked to this man, Stillwater, who lived in his children's
grandmother's house. He worked mostly as a chemist and tanner and housekeeper.
We talked and got on well and met to talk again. I came inland with him,
and we decided to marry.
My father was against it, because Stillwater
had two children in his household already and so I would bear none; but
that was what I wanted. My grandmother and mother were not heartily for
anything I did, because I had always disappointed them, and they did not
want three more people in our house, which was crowded enough. But that,
too, was what I wanted. Everything I wanted in those years came to be.
Stillwater and the little boys and I made
a household on the ground floor of Seven Steps House, where their grandmother
lived on the first floor. She was a lazy, sweet-tempered woman, very fond
of Stillwater and the children, and we got on very well. We lived in that
house fourteen years. All that time I had what I wanted and was contented,
like a ewe with two lambs in a safe pasture, with my head down eating the
grass. All that time was like a long day in summer, in the fenced fields,
or in a quiet house when the doors are closed to keep the rooms cool. That
was my life's day. Before it and after it were the twilights and the dark,
when things and the shadows of things become one.
Our elder son - and this was a satisfaction
to my grandmother at last - went to learn with the Doctors Lodge on White
Sulfur Creek as soon as he entered his sprouting years, and by the time
he was twenty he was living at the Lodge much of the time. The younger
died when he had lived sixteen years. Living with his pain and always increasing
weakness and seeing him lose the use of his hands and the sight in his
eyes had driven his brother to seek to be a healer, but living with his
fearless soul had been my chief joy. He was like a little hawk that came
into one's hands for the warmth, for a moment, fearless and harmless, but
hurt. After he died, Stillwater lost heart, and began longing for his old
home. Presently he went back to Chukulmas to live in his mothers' house.
Sometimes I went to visit him there.
I went back to my childhood home, my mothers'
house, where my grandmother and mother and father and aunt and cousin and
her husband and two children were. They were still busy and noisy; it was
not where I wanted to be. I would go to the heyimas and drum, but that
was not what I wanted, either. I missed Stillwater's company, but it was
no longer the time for us to live together; that was done. It was something
else wanted, but I could not find out what.
In the Blood Lodge one day they told me that
Milk, who was now truly an old woman, had had a stroke. My son came with
me to see her and helped her in her recovery; and since she was alone,
I went to stay with her while she needed help. It suited her to have me
there, and so I lived with her. It was comfortable for both of us; but
she was looking for her last name and learning how to die, and although
I could be of some help to her while she did that and could learn from
her, it wasn't what I wanted myself, yet.
One day a little before the Summer I was working
in the storage barns above Moon Creek. The Art had put in a new generator
there, and I was checking out the wiring to the threshers, some of which
needed reinsulation; the mice had been at it. I was working away there
in a dark, dusty crawl space, hearing the mice scuttering about overhead
in the rafters and between the walls. Presently I noticed with part of
my attention that several people were in the crawl space with me, watching
what I was doing. They were grayish-brown people with long, slender, white
hands and feet and bright eyes: I had never seen them before, but they
seemed familiar. I said, while I went on working. "I wish you would not
take the insulation off the wires. A fire could start. There must be better
things to eat in a grain barn!"
The people laughed a little, and the darkest
one said in a high soft voice, "Bedding."
They looked behind them then and went away
quickly and quietly. Somebody else was there. I felt one little chill of
fear. At first I couldn't see him clearly in that twilight of the crawl
space; then I saw it was Tarweed.
"You never ride horses anymore, Flicker,"
he said.
"Riding is for the young, Tarweed," I said.
"Are you old?"
"Nearly forty years old."
"And you don't miss riding?"
He was teasing me, as people had teased me
once about being in love with the roan horse.
"No, I don't miss that."
"What do you miss?"
"My child that died."
"Why should you miss him?"
"He is dead."
"So am I," said Tarweed. And so he was. He
had died five years ago.
So I knew then what it was I missed, what
I wanted. It was only not to be shut into the House of Earth. I did not
have to go in and out the doors, if only I could see those who did. There
was Tarweed, and he laughed a little, like the mice.
He did not say anything more, but watched
me in the shadows.
When I was done with the work, he was gone.
When I left the barn, I saw the barn owl high
upon a rafter, sleeping.
I went home to Milk's household. I told her
at supper about Tarweed and the mice.
She listened and began to cry a little. She
was weak since the stroke, and her fierceness sometimes turned to tears.
She said. "You were always ahead of me, going ahead of me!"
I had never known that she envied me. It made
me sad to know it, and yet I wanted to laugh at the way we waste our feelings.
"Somebody has to open the door!" I said. I showed her the people who were
coming into the room, the kind of people I used to see when I was a young
child. I knew they were indeed my kin, but I did not know who they were.
I asked Milk, "Who are they?"
She was bewildered at first and could not
see well, and complained. The people began to speak, and after a while
she answered them. Sometimes they spoke this language, and sometimes I
did not understand what they said; but she answered them eagerly.
When she grew tired, they went away quietly,
and I helped her to bed. As she began to go to sleep, I saw a little child
come and lie down beside her. She put her arms around it. Every night after
that until Milk died in the winter, the child came to her bed to sleep.
Once I spoke of it, saying, "your daughter."
Milk looked at me with that whipping look in her one good eye. She said,
"Not my daughter. Yours."
So I keep that house now, with the daughter
I never bore, the child of my first love, and with others of my family.
Sometimes when I sweep the floor of that house, I see the dust in a shaft
of sunlight, dancing in curves and spirals, flickering.