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Raven Mocker

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by Don Coldsmith




  WHISPERS OF EVIL …

  “But what if”—the girl lowered her voice carefully—“what if she is a Raven Mocker?”

  There was a gasp and a stunned silence. Snakewater found it hard to discipline herself to remain quiet. She must hear this.

  “Think about it,” said the same voice. “How old is she?”

  “I—I don’t know. Do you?”

  “No … No one knows. She is older than anybody in the town, is she not?”

  “I don’t know.”

  “Neither do I. But my mother can think of no one older. So, how does one become older than anyone else? Maybe by stealing a part of the lives of others.”

  “A—a Raven Mocker …”

  The voice was tentative and full of wonder.

  “My mother told me to stay away from her,” went on the talkative one. “She may be able to suck the breath from your lungs to feed her lifetime! She is dangerous!”

  ALSO BY DON COLDSMITH

  Trail of the Spanish Bit

  The Elk-Dog Heritage

  Follow the Wind

  Buffalo Medicine

  Man of the Shadows

  Daughter of the Eagle

  Moon of Thunder

  The Sacred Hills

  Pale Star

  River of Swans

  Return to the River

  The Medicine Knife

  The Flower in the Mountains

  Trail for Taos

  Song of the Rock

  Fort de Chastaigne

  Quest for the White Bull

  Return of the Spanish

  Bride of the Morning Star

  Walks in the Sun

  Thunderstick

  Track of the Bear

  Child of the Dead

  Bearer of the Pipe

  Medicine Hat (Norman, 1997)

  The Changing Wind

  The Traveler

  World of Silence

  The Lost Band (Norman, 2000)

  RIVERS WEST: The Smoky Hill

  Runestone

  Tallgrass

  South Wind

  The Long Journey Home

  To my Cherokee friends, the “Real People”

  1

  The old woman woke and lay there for a few moments, not quite ready to face the day. It had been a chilly night, and her bones told her so, with the dull ache that seemed to settle nowhere …or everywhere …. She wasn’t sure which.

  She’d need to get up in a little while to go and empty her bladder. Maybe she could catch just a little more sleep first. No, better not ….

  She gave a great sigh and raised to an elbow. It must be almost day, because she could see the outline of objects outside through the doorway of her little hut. She pulled herself up, her knees creaking just a bit as she rose to her full height. That was taller than most, even though she had shrunk down some in recent years …. Never thought a body could shrink that much …. Yet she’d managed to stay active. That had been a big effort sometimes, but it had worked. If you keep movin’, they can’t cover you up, the old granny had told her.

  That had been years ago, when she was a child. The granny woman had been her friend, one of her few. And she realized later that old Snakewater, the granny, had had very few friends either. People had been afraid of the wizened little woman. They came for her spells and potions but left as soon as they could, glancing back fearfully over one shoulder. They wanted and needed Snakewater’s medicine but didn’t really like her. Feared her; maybe even hated her.

  So Corn Flower, tall and gawky, a little girl with no friends, had been drawn toward the granny woman, short and wrinkled. They must have made quite a pair, the two of them. She smiled to herself, even now, as she thought how they must have appeared to others. She had spent more and more time with the “witch woman.” It was exciting to know that this greatly feared person who had deep secrets, and powers given to few, was her friend. It gave a status and pride to young Corn Flower that she never could have achieved otherwise.

  Her mother had died almost before she could remember. Her father, an important man in the town, was usually busy with the other men. His new wife, Frog, had little use for an unwanted stepchild, and no objection at all to Corn Flower’s absence, which by now was almost continuous. When, a few years later, Flower’s father had been killed in a skirmish with white men, she simply moved her few possessions to the hut of old Granny Snakewater.

  That had been long ago. So long, in fact, that she could no longer remember her own age. The seasons seemed to follow each other in a rapidly accelerating sequence that became almost a blur. She had seen many people born, live their lives, and die. There was probably no one older in the whole nation of the Cherokees, she thought. Certainly none in this town. At least none she could think of. And her mind was clear. For that she was grateful.

  Corn Flower sighed again and shuffled outside, toward the customary area where she could attend to body functions. A little while on her feet… slowly, mobility returned. It was always that way, and had been for a long time. It took a little longer now. That was all.

  Granny Snakewater had given young Corn Flower her medicine before she passed on. It was a logical thing, not a decision. The younger woman had learned the use of the herbs and plants, the purpose of each, and the rituals involved in the search and harvest of the most important. Some could not even be gathered until seven had been located and the first six rejected. There had been very little instruction. Mostly merely a comment: No, not like that …. Do it this way …. Little praise either—usually just a nod and a tight smile when something was right. A frown when it was wrong.

  The last few seasons of her life, old Snakewater would often turn a request over to the younger woman: Here …Fix a potion for Little Dog, there …for the stomach.

  By the time Granny Snakewater died, her understudy was nearly twenty. Corn Flower had never married. There had been no suitors. She had wished, sometimes, that … No, there was nothing to be gained by what if …. The young men were afraid of the witch woman with whom young Corn Flower lived.

  Besides, there were plenty of more attractive young women in the town. More eligible females of marriageable age than men, always. Young men were always getting themselves killed in skirmishes with their neighbors.

  She didn’t care much, she always tried to tell herself. It was apparent that women who had a man also had more problems than Granny Snakewater did. If a young man came along with romance on his mind, she’d think about it. Meanwhile others had noticed that the young assistant to the granny woman had come to look more and more like Snakewater herself. By the time of the old woman’s death there was an eerie feeling that the strange and isolated Corn Flower had taken over not only the house and the medicine of the old granny, but maybe even the person of Snakewater too. The younger woman had been partly aware of this. Sometimes people would call her “Snakewater” and then show great embarrassment over the mistake. That brought a certain vengeful satisfaction, so she let it happen.

  But all that had been decades ago. Now she answered to either name, but was mostly called by that of her mentor, Snakewater. There were few still alive who remembered that she had once been known as Corn Flower. Maybe she had become Granny Snakewater after all.

  She finished her necessary body functions and went on to the stream. The most important ritual of the day was that of Going to Water, men in one area, women in another.

  There were a few people already there when she arrived, wading in as far as waist-deep to fulfill the cleansing ritual and welcome the sacred joy and gratitude of a new day. A few nodded or spoke, and she returned their greetings, but would as soon be alone. She disrobed and followed a narrow gravel bar out toward the center of the stream. As expected, no one else followed her. She made othe
rs as uncomfortable as they made her, she had decided. Well, so be it! Still, there was a certain satisfaction in the fact that most of these people, at one time or another, had sought her help. They had been forced to do so. A healing potion, one to attract the attention of a lover, a medicine to correct some ailment—she alone could furnish them, and this brought a perverse pleasure each time it happened. It was better to be feared and respected than to be pitied and loved, she always told herself, though she knew it was a lie.

  She dressed, shivering a little, and started back to her house. It had been her house ever since the death of the granny, a lifetime ago. No one else had wanted it, even. It was outside the town, outside the protective wall of logs set on end, which encircled most of the houses. This hut was not really one that most people would consider worth claiming. Old Snakewater had no family, and her successor had been already living in it, so… No one had given it much thought, not even Corn Flower. Her most pleasant memories were here, helping Snakewater pound and mix some of the dried roots or seeds or foliage.

  There was always an odor around the dwelling. It was a not totally unpleasant mixture of drying herbs, tied in bundles and hung from pegs in the rafters. After all the years the smell was the same as she remembered from her childhood. Of all the senses smell incites the most vivid memories of long ago, and the events connected with it. In this case the scent of the hut was the same, and for the same reasons. The plants for medicine were the same, handled in the same way, for the same purpose, but by different hands.

  The old woman strode purposefully up the slope, along the protecting wall, and past the entrance where the wall overlapped. There was a space of a few steps where, entering or leaving, there was only space for one person at a time. This feature had assisted in the defense of the town for many generations. The first few attackers through this cleverly devised chute would face certain death.

  She hurried on to the hut, wondering idly what the day would bring. The day was warming rapidly. At this season, early autumn, nights were cool and days warm and sunny. There was a ripe smell in the air, a spicy mix of warm scents and the perfume of flowers and ripening fruits. Maybe this afternoon she’d take a walk and collect some herbs for medicine. She could use some more sassafras …. Maybe there would be pecans and hickory nuts, too, to gather, just for her own use. Usually, she had plenty of food, and of good quality: in exchange for the ointments and potions and charms that she could furnish, people brought her things of value. No one would risk giving an inferior gift to someone with as much power as the witch woman. Corn Flower was not quite sure of the limits of her power. She doubted, sometimes, that it was as effective as some people seemed to think. Yet what was to be gained by minimizing it? Let them think what they would.

  Publicly, of course, she was always modest: No, I have no special powers …. I do a little medicine, that’s all …. Misuse of such a gift would surely be dangerous to the one who sought to invoke it for wrong purposes, and might even be disastrous.

  It was nearly noon before she was really ready to go and begin her gathering. Sun had climbed up the inside of the sky dome and was ready to pause at the house of her daughter for the noon meal. Snakewater cocked an eye upward and lifted her basket for gathering plants. Now, where …Oh, yes, there it is. She picked up her favorite digging stick, and put it in the basket.

  “Come on, Lumpy,” she said. “I’ll need your help today.”

  Anyone watching would have assumed that the old woman was talking to herself. This, of course, helped to encourage the idea that maybe she was a little crazy.

  She had first seen the Little People when she was about twelve, she thought. Old Granny had always talked to herself, or to someone not seen by others. The girl had asked her about it.

  “Who are you talking to?”

  “Nobody… Just the Little People.”

  “Little People?”

  “Of course. You know about them, don’t you?”

  “I have heard—”

  “That they look after children who are unsupervised?” The old woman chuckled. “That they are in charge of lost objects?”

  “Well, yes …”

  “That’s true.” The granny laughed. “But more … I could not do the things I do without my helper here.”

  “What does he look like?” asked the girl.

  “Ah, you try to trick me! You know, child, that if one sees a Little Person and tells of it, they die. If you see one, you must say nothing to anyone.”

  “But you—”

  “Ah, I did not say I saw one, did I? I only talked to him. They may be invisible.”

  “But if I saw one, what would he look like?”

  “Who knows? No one must ever admit to having seen one. I am sure, though,” she said with a twinkle in her eye, “that they would probably look like little Cherokees.”

  “But you talk to them. They help you find plants for medicine, Granny!”

  “Of course. We can talk to the Little People. They are in charge of lost objects, no? Maybe we find a knife in the woods. Somebody lost it; we can claim it. But we must tell the Little People: Hey, Little People! I’m taking the knife!’”

  Granny had held a hand aloft to show that the finder must show the custodians of lost objects what is to happen.

  “What if you don’t tell them?” asked the girl.

  “Ah, you don’t even want to know!” said the old witch woman, rolling her eyes alarmingly.

  It had been not long after that, as she now remembered it… How often, in an inactive moment, we catch a glimpse of motion from the corner of an eye. We turn and there is nothing there. Sometimes our senses tell us that we almost saw it …. A flicker of light and shadow maybe. Or a glimpse of something not intended for human eyes. That was how it had happened. Young Corn Flower had turned, and there in the dusky corner of the room was a figure, no taller than her own waist. It was lumpy and indistinct but seemed to resemble a doll or a very short person. In a moment the image was fading and was gone. Oddly, it did not strike her as unusual until after it had disappeared.

  “Hey, Lumpy, come back!” she cried with amusement. But there was nothing.

  Just then Granny Snakewater entered the doorway.

  “Who were you talking to?” she asked.

  “Nobody! I … Just the Little People,” Corn Flower stammered.

  “Oh. Of course,” the granny said, setting down her basket. Her eyes twinkled. “You didn’t see one, did you?”

  “I …” she began, and paused. “How could I, Grandmother?” she asked.

  For an instant she had thought she heard a quiet giggle from the corner, but maybe not ….

  Now she took the basket and headed out into the woods.

  “Come on, Lumpy!” she said, where to any onlooker there was apparently only empty space.

  2

  Snakewater was tired when she returned. It had been a highly successful day, and her basket was filled with herbs and roots of good quality. But it had been hard work, all the walking and climbing and digging. She reached the hut, set her basket down, and sat for a moment on a little bench that she kept outside the door. It was hot inside in the stillness of late afternoon. Maybe there would be a little breeze later. For now, she’d rest a little, before sorting and tying her gatherings. But the sun was beating down on her bench—that, too, would be uncomfortable. Over next to the stockade wall was a welcoming patch of shade. She rose and moved that way. She considered taking the bench over there, but decided against it. It would be for only a little while.

  “Get out of my way, Lumpy,” she muttered, and then felt a little remorse for her tone.

  “You were a big help to me today,” she said to apparently empty air. “What? Yes, I do appreciate it.”

  Leaning against the poles, Snakewater slid to a sitting position with her back to the wall. Yes, it was more comfortable here. She liked the wall. It separated her from the hustle and bustle of the town. Most towns had by now abandoned the use of the stock
ade wall, but hers was a bit old fashioned. Many of the citizens still held to the old ways of fixing their hair, and more traditional clothing. Not all, of course. There were even a few who wore the white man’s shirts and trousers. But only a few. The town was located off the main road a little way, and many traders and travelers bypassed it entirely. There were jokes in other towns about the backwardness of this one. Despite that, or maybe because of it, the following of the old ways had become a matter of civic pride. The old stockade wall with the offset baffled entrance was symbolic of their heritage.

  Besides, thought Snakewater, it was a good place to rest. She leaned her head back against the heavy posts, settling comfortably. There was a little hollow there, where one of the poles had a slight irregularity, a curve away from the straight growth of the one next to it. It neatly fit the back of her head. She settled in a little, leaning to pillow her head in the hollow. She had done this many times, and did so now without even thinking about it. This was a part of her world, her private world in which she was alone but happy.

  She closed her eyes to rest them from the late afternoon sun’s glare. Pretty soon she’d sort and tie the herbs in bundles and hang them in the house to dry. But first she’d rest a little.

  The sun was considerably lower when she woke with a start at the sound of voices. It took just a moment to realize where she was, and the time of day, even. She had not intended to doze, but apparently she had slept quite soundly for a little while. Maybe more …Shadows were lengthening.

  She started to struggle to her feet, and then sank back to listen. One of the voices had called her name, and the thought flashed through her mind that the voice was from the spirit world, and that her time had come. Quickly she realized that, no, the sounds were not from the Other Side of existence but merely the other side of the wall. There was a crack between two of the poles where an irregularity left a space. It was the same crooked pole, in fact, that provided her head rest. Such spaces were caulked with clay, but during summer’s heat some of the dried clay had fallen out, leaving a crack near her ear. The speakers must be no more than a hand’s span away from her ear, and it was quickly obvious that they did not realize it.

 

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