Albert carefully climbed a small hill, almost losing his balance as he neared the top. His heart raced and the legend was stopped short for lack of breath. Cresting the hill Albert bent over and fought for air, his heart pounding inside his chest like a loud drum. He was getting too old for this. Soon, maybe next year, some younger member of his clan would have to claim these lands for his people, but for now the heavy responsibility was his.
Albert felt a great exhilaration as he faced north. Black Butte rose like a dark sentinel, a lone mountain of basalt, the remnant of a long extinct volcano that had once turned the land around it into a fiery cauldron, only to be swallowed over millennia by a vast inland sea. According to Hopi mythology, Black Butte was the navel of the earth and the northwestern boundary of Hopiland. And beneath its near-vertical stone walls lay the secret shrine.
There were eight major Hopi shrines marking the boundaries of traditional Hopi country. One was to the east at Tokonave, or
Albert resumed his journey, following the ridge line that ran toward the solitary peak. The old man’s thoughts rambled from his childhood, to his fields of short-eared corn that lined the terraces above
This last thought was troubling. It was the trap of false pride, like bragging or pretending you were something special when you really were not, and it was not the way to peace and salvation. Over the course of long time, such thoughts had nearly destroyed the Hopi people and the first three worlds they had once inhabited. Wisdom, harmony, and respect for the Guardians were all that really mattered in this, the
The Kachinas guided the spiritual journey of life for the Ancestral Puebloans of the American Southwest, which included the Hopi, Zuni,
The Hopi personified the Kachinas in two very interesting ways. First, there were the ceremonial dances where the participants dressed ornately like particular Kachinas and danced in reverent obedience to the
Albert reached into a small deerskin pouch that hung from his belt and pulled out a pinch of yellow corn meal. As he walked through the chilly
To his right, Albert could just make out the faint outline of the crumbling walls of an Anasazi pit house. He smiled. The Hopi road of life had passed this way many, many years in the past, when Albert’s ancestors had first arrived in this world. The Ancient Ones had lived atop this ridge around 900AD, overlooking the place of their emergence, and they had practiced spiritual harmony together. And today their children, the Hopi, followed the same weathered course on their three mesas to the southeast. For the past thirteen hundred years his people had been retracing their migration path to Pota Ve Taka. At this exact time every year, on the fourth day of the Hawk Moon, the ceremonial leader of the Fire Clan brought the humble offerings of a thankful people.
How would the gods receive him tonight?
Every year Albert wondered this same thought as he neared the shrine. For the past thirteen years he had waited anxiously for a sign that the Guardians took notice of his people’s allegiance to the creator’s plan. But they never answered his call.
“Why should they?” Albert chided himself.
Albert sprinkled his corn meal on the ground in front of where he was walking and spit again in disgust. The evil in each man ran so deep it was hard to separate the good from the bad.
The terrain became rockier as he neared the looming mountain.
Albert focused intently on the ground and prayed he did not fall. Faith was the key. He would not stumble because he knew the right path.
Nearing a grove of wind-bent juniper trees, Albert stopped and surveyed the scene. Junipers symbolized the holiest plant of this, the
Albert approached a misshapen old tree that reminded him of himself. The tree had stood atop this mesa for several hundred years. Lightning had recently grazed its side, leaving a sap-filled scar. Albert caressed the wound and tried to soothe his brother’s pain.
“You are old like me, my friend. Our time is short. Soon we will return to the dirt where we belong. But tonight I need your help. I need a small piece of your arm to give to old Masaw, so that he will know we still love him like a father and are following the true ways.”
A gust of wind came from the west and rustled the branches of the junipers. The sound was musical, like water trickling over pebbles in a stream. The smell of cedar filled the air like incense.
As was the Hopi custom, Albert would never take an offering from the first tree he asked. That would have been disrespectful. After all, the juniper was being asked to give up a part of itself, and one did not make such a request without truly feeling the pain that would come from such a noble sacrifice.
Albert moved on to a younger and healthier tree that was sheltered from the direct force of the wind.
Again, Albert asked permission of the tree before cutting a small branch with his pocket knife. A tear ran down his leathery cheek as he gathered the offering and placed it in his weathered old pack.
“Thank you, little one. You are generous beyond your years. And your sacrifice will light the fires for another long year.”
At the edge of the juniper forest the flat ridge ended and there was a gentle drop-off to a dry wash below. Albert traversed the gravel slope like he was skiing down a hill and when he reached the bottom of the rocky hill his momentum sent him crashing through the underbrush and up the other side of the wash. He felt childlike and out of control.
He did not see the stick until he had already tripped over it. It sent him tumbling to the ground like a bag of old bones. Albert struggled to his knees and glared at his mystery assailant.
“What is this thing?” he muttered out loud.
Albert reached out to touch the odd wooden object.
“Bahana!” growled Albert as he yanked the survey stake out of the ground and angrily flung it into the bushes.
Bahana was a derogatory Hopi word for the white man, and Albert’s wrath was directed at the uranium miners who had recently desecrated this hallowed ground with their greedy land claims.
Albert stood up and brushed himself off. His legs were wobbly and his left side felt like it had been stuck with a hot knife.
The nighttime silence was suddenly broken by the piercing snarl of a mountain lion. Albert’s eyes widened with alarm and wonder. The mountain lion was one of the guardian spirits of the
Would the lion come for him?
The thought brought laughter. He would not make much of a meal but it would be an honor to perish at the claws and teeth of Toho, the great cat.
Five minutes passed and nothing happened, so Albert continued his solemn midnight trek. The first moon was now higher in the eastern sky but it seemed like it was darker than it had been when he first began his walk. The pinyon pine trees that covered the hill seemed to close in on him and drown out all of the light. Albert squinted as he wound his way through the towering trees.
Pota Ve Taka was one of the most important shrines in all of Hopi culture, but in comparison to the important places of worship in the Western World it was hardly noticeable, nothing more than a circular pile of rocks with a small opening facing to the east and the rising sun.
Albert laid his pack on the ground and went to work. He reached into the leather satchel and retrieved four Pahos. These consisted of the feathers from a golden eagle, wild turkey, and mountain bluebird that had been bound into individual bundles, using yarn spun from native Hopi cotton.
Albert walked up to the nearest pinyon tree and hung one of the Pahos from a low branch. As he did this he softly sang the Song of Emergence, the story of the Hopis escape by raft from the
When he had finished this task he turned to face the shrine. Inside the circle of stones there lay three round balls of black obsidian representing the first three worlds which the Hopis had once inhabited.
Albert embraced the juniper branch and stiffly dropped to his knees. He grimaced in pain as he planted the shaggy green branch in the center of the circle and then sprinkled some corn meal over the offering.
He had now come to the part of the song where the Hopis made landfall and encountered Masaw. Masaw had been the God of Death in the
From the darkness to Albert’s left there came the sudden sound of a branch breaking underfoot. Albert turned to face what was approaching, half-expecting to see a mountain lion come bounding out of the trees. What greeted him was not animal, but rather, something from an ancient dream.
Vaguely human, the creature approached with great care. It glanced from left to right, its eyes bulging in their sockets as if they might explode. Its head and face were colored an ashen gray and crowned with a headdress of black vulture feathers. The mouth formed a large circle, the bright red lips covering three sharp teeth – two on the top and one on the bottom. From deep in its throat there came a low growl. The body of the beast resembled a man, the upper part adorned with bands of exotic seashells and the skulls of small animals like chipmunks and field mice.
“MASAW!” cried Albert as he pointed a trembling finger at the fearsome Kachina.
The monster’s teeth clicked together as it lurched forward. From behind its back Masaw produced a long, black obsidian blade that seemed to shine in the faint moonlight. A sound like hollow laughter filled the air.
“I knew that you would come one day,” said Albert as he kissed the ground in divine worship.
Masaw towered over the prostrate medicine man and slowly raised the blade to the sky. It hung there for a brief instant before slashing down with deadly accuracy.
The blow was aimed perfectly at the Hopis’ wrinkled neck and the results were almost surgical, severing head from shoulders in one clean cut.
Albert’s head landed inside Pota Ve Taka’s ancient ring of rocks and came to rest with his black eyes staring up at the stars. A small trickle of blood ran down his chin and his mouth was framed with a tired smile.
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