Crimson
Mud, Drying Blood by Jay Lake
We
lashed the lolly to Big Man's bones the day I turned fourteen, same morning I
got my facing done. Ma'am
had sent for the best Inker within six days' walk, with his three bone needles
and one of iron and secret inks from clays within the sacred banks of the
Flywater River. Dawn abloomin' in
the east, four of Ma'am's other boyos held me down and Inker-man chewed his
leaves until his eyes rolled back with a cry like a hawk's, then blind and
trembling drew my destiny upon my face in tiny stabs that hurt so good I cried
to laugh. Then
they let me up, packed my face with mud and grass and swore me off washing or
looking in pools of water for a week and a day, and we all went back to Big Man.
Even Inker climbed up to do a turn on the scaffolds, old-folded as he was
by time and sunlight to a piece of drawn-ass hide. Ain't
it great, how you start out life pretty and you end up wise, but the two are
like a river's head and mouth -- the springs never meet the sea. There
I was, face itching like someone had laid a masking chantry on me, anchoring the
far end of the load rope while the lolly went up.
It was medium hard work, and I welcomed the salty sweat and the arm
strain to keep my thoughts from my face. We
had us good metal pulleys, found deep in a hole by the Tunnel Runners and
brought up to advance Big Man's dreaming years so much the faster.
Our pulling ropes weren't half the worth, like as not break if you hefted
a hundredweight, but by river and forest, them pulleys would outlive us all. They
had already, hadn't they? Outlived
the Little Men who made them, scratching at the metal with fine files and tiny
saws in their stone caves of long ago, before light came into the world for good
and all. Up
went the lolly, me holding down the rope with three boyos pulling in front of
me, past the first deck of the scaffold, and past the mountain deck -- so called
on account of you could see the mountains good from there -- and past the high
deck, and past the hawks' deck and on to the new deck, which was always the top
deck of the scaffold no matter whether it had been built further or stood for
years. The lolly itself was a work
of art, wrested from a gnarled old cypress that grew over a slab of Little Man
blackstone. It was one of Ma'am's
sometime studs that done the deed, after a weasel showed him the way in
dreaming. The
sometime stud, it might have been Barkdust Bill, I forget 'cause Ma'am drove
them all off come last winter so as only to have her boyos' mouths to fill
instead of her bedmates' beautiful, useless bellies, he drug that thing home
still crusted in roots and bark and dirt and shiny bits of blackstone.
Bill and the other studs cleaned it off and freshened it with flower dyes
and little secret weaves they had the making of, and presented it to Ma'am like
she was to have some doing or other with it. Ma'am,
she laughed her real laugh, not her festival laugh, and had some of us boyos who
were dancing attendance on her lay it in the high place above her sandbed, then
she invited her sometime studs in and we drew the leafy curtains and they
squealed until sundown, missing evenchant and nearly missing moonrise chant.
Preach wasn't happy, but he ain't never happy. Now
spring was here again, and since the winter the sometime studs were out living
on the ridges and running rocks and wrestling for the right to claim favor here
in the wooded valleys. We were back
on Big Man, taking another step toward Heaven, and Ma'am decided the lolly had
to go up. The
studs' weaves and dyes had fallen off over the winter, and it was just a dented
circle again, with the curves shaved off to eight straight edges, still a bit of
red underneath -- a fortune of metal in its face and the stick below.
That metal had been the real value of the studs' gift, of course, but men
like them will lay eyes on a color and forget everything that matters. And
there's me at one end of the pulling rope, and Inker up on the scaffold and
someone's found some good line Ma'am had us trade downriver for -- though there
was grumbling about losing tenweight of cured salmon for something you couldn't
even rightly chew let alone swallow. And
there's the lolly swinging from the new deck pulley and Inker and two boyos
guide it in and Miracle -- she's our girl-woman -- takes that traded-for line
with its memory of the taste of salmon and lashes the lolly to one of Big Man's
ribs, on the inside, where it might serve him for a heart. Damn
all our eyes if that lolly don't rattle in the wind, and shift around to find a
good place to hang its weight on the traded-for line, and thump three times on
the rib like it just might be a heart. Ma'am
stirred in her sandbed, which I knew on account of the shouting and yelling, and
four of the boyos helped her in her hundredweights out of her grotto, and she
put her thigh bone whistle to her lips and belted out the tune for a festival. "It's
a sign," called Inker in his old-folded voice, though it carried loud as
any falling tree. "Big Man's
going to wake from dreaming some day soon, and carry us all to Heaven on His
shoulders!" Then
they swarmed down from the scaffold, Inker and the boyos and Miracle, and even
Preach found a stale little smile somewhere to wear on his face for a while. We
danced reels among the barley shoots, and we did the watersnake below the
beavers' second dam, and we sung down the sun with a rowdy even chant fueled by
last autumn's corn wine and this spring's first berry beer, and then we sung up
the moon like a pack of coyotes, yipping and howling until the furry brothers in
the hills howled back. It was the
best party we'd had in a while, the kind of noise that would attract the
sometime studs back from their lonely heights.
"Winter's good and over, studs," our singing said, and our
stomping feet set the tread that called them in. Long
about the middle hours the littler boyos had gone to sleep in the fir branches,
and most of the bigger ones were thrashing together in the bushes or night
swimming with the beavers. I found
myself sharing a basket of shallots with Miracle, who I ain't never been alone
with to talk to. "You
believe in Big Man, Larkin Grouselegs?" she asked, the greens crunching in
her mouth and making us both smell like a freshet. "He's
right there," I said, waving toward the scaffolding.
I set my arm back down, kind of on accident touching hers, so our little
goose bumps rubbed together, and my fine pale hairs tingled. Even
with the shallots, she smelled better than any boyo.
Different, kind of a crisp, sharp smell, like warm snot and worksweat and
blood and flowers all mixed together. Last
fall she'd taken to wearing hide shirts over her wool kilts, about the time she
got tall as most of the boyos. "That's
not Him," said Miracle. "Not
those built-up bones." I
gasped, for Preach would cuff my ear bloody for such talk. She
went on, unconcerned, protected by her woman-girlhood.
"It's the idea of Him. It
keeps Him here with us. The real Big
Man, He's dreaming, and maybe He's in our dreams." My
dreams mostly concerned themselves with butt-wrestling with Stumpwater Rob or
the Firehair twins, or more often than not, just flickery images of Ma'am's
people and lands, like firelight in all the colors of nature.
I couldn't recall ever seeing Big Man in my dreams, but I wasn't going to
admit that. "Uh-huh," I
said. Always
safe, that one. Miracle
chewed on another shallot a while, then spat a bit of pulp.
Her arm wrapped over mine, skin close enough for warmth and me to feel
her pulse. "Ma'am, she talks to
Big Man in her dreams. And sometimes
even Little Men. That's how she
knows where to send boyos to find things." And
maybe send the sometime studs to find the lolly, I thought.
Had Ma'am done that?
"Was it time for Big Man to have His heart?" "It
was time for you boyos to have your hearts."
She smiled, her teeth gleaming in the starlight.
"There's a change coming soon to Ma'am's people."
Her other hand slipped beneath her wool kilt, then she touched my chin
with her finger. It was damp
and prickly. "Inker left me a
spot of color for you." After
she ran into the darkness, silent as a deer, I touched my chin where she had.
It wasn't covered by Inker's work, though my cheeks and nose and forehead
were. Her mention of the old man had
set my face to prickling beneath the mask of leaves and mud, but I was vowed and
sworn to a week and a day. I
found dampness in her touch, which I tasted. Musty
blood. She'd drawn blood from within
the secret places of her body and set it upon me.
It was then that I felt the wind of Big Man's dreaming, so I climbed to
the new deck to listen to His lolly heart rattle against the yet-highest rib in
that breeze and feel His breath dance upon my prickling skin. *
* * Big
Man walked across the mountains like I might step over a stick, His feet
striking the ground to dig new lakes for all the Ma'ams and their people and the
animals of the lands. He was
grinning fit to split the sky, teeth chiseled from the dark of the old moon --
for that brightness had to go somewhere -- and eyes that flared like a summer
bonfire. He
leaned down and plucked me from the Earth, like I was an ant and He a child.
Big Man laid me in His palm, and I grew just enough fit to speak with
Him, so that the cyclone of His voice would not bloody my ears, and my own words
wouldn't be the buzz of a lacewing to Him. His
hand was warm, and even the roughness of it was like the lines the water made on
a sand bank, all natural and firm and in a rhythm with my ribs. "Larkin
Grouselegs, Heart-of-the-Aspen," He said, calling me by my first and second
names. No one but me knew my second
name. No one, not even me, knew my
third name, the one that wrapped around my soul.
Only Ma'am did, and she wouldn't tell. "Big
Man," I said, and for a moment I had a flash of butt-wrestling and
wriggling salmon and the day that lightning struck the highest spruce, like my
real dreams were come knocking. "Welcome
to Ma'am's lands." He
laughed, in the voice that the spring floods use when an ice dam busts somewhere
high up, and his breath smelled like snow on stone.
"All the land is mine, Aspenheart.
The dirt and the air and every breathing thing." I
got my stubborn on, that sometimes got me a beating.
"Welcome anyhow, since you been away." "Ain't
that me down there?" Big Man asked, "with my metal heart rattling in
my open ribs?" I
remembered what Miracle had said. "It's
you and the idea of you, but you're here with me." He
laughed again, this time smelling like fir and spruce and the first greens of
spring. "It's you with me,
little Larkin Aspenheart. I've come
to tell you there's change afoot, and to mind your step.
Ma'ams grow old, and new Ma'ams come.
You can take the knife and be a boyo all your life, or you can take to
the hills and be a sometime stud. But
every time and again, someone has to be a Da to Ma'am.
Just like I'm Da to the Ma'am that is the world." When
he said that, I swear the mountains smiled and stars gleamed with pride and I
heard the trees in the valleys below us whisper all three of my names, even the
one I didn't know. Then
Big Man closed His hand and shook it, like I was a knucklebone fit to be cast
into the circle. I cried to be let
out, but when I jumped to my feet, I nearly fell off the new deck and there was
only the lolly rattling against the yet-highest rib, beating out the rhythm of
my three names. *
* * Later
that day, when I was tickling fish out in the lake, Ma'am sent Darling Jack, one
of her last, littlest boyos for me. "The
wanth to thee you," he said from a muddy perch in the shallowest shallows,
grinning until drool piddled his face. I'd
been out on the lake for some quiet peace, wanting to be lonely as a pinecone
and think on Miracle and what Big Man had said in my dreams, but there's no
running from Ma'am. I smiled at
Darling Jack. "I'll be along
shortly." He
toddled off with the news while I bid farewell to the lazy trout.
I had thought, but got no more from it than a little smoke.
Ma'am would know, she always did, if I could find the words to ask. She
was on her sandbed in her grotto, leaf curtains half-drawn, being fed stewed
wild oats by some of the boyos. Darling
Jack cuddled between her breasts, each one a sack bigger than that
almost-littlest boyo, her nipples pink and huge like sun and moon in a fleshy
sky. "Larkin Grouselegs,"
Ma'am said, "and welcome to your own home."
She shooed Darling Jack and the oat-bearing boyos, then patted the huge
dome of her belly, as if I might want to lie between her breasts as well. "Ma'am,"
I said, "thank you and no. I'll
stand." My face was
prickly and hot, and somehow the salty smell of her reminded me of Miracle,
which made my woodstick stir as if there was boyo butt-wrestling to be had close
to hand. My woodstick hadn't ever
before stirred around Ma'am, and I felt my body had become a traitor. "You
have the makings of a fine sometime stud," she said quietly, which took me
for a shock. Ma'am would no more
live quietly by choice than a mountain storm, and there wasn't much in the world
that would force Ma'am to anything she didn't choose.
Maybe winter's sharp teeth, or a flood, but not much else. "Don't
want to be a sometime stud," I said, matching her unnatural quiet with my
own. "Figured,"
she said, and grinned me a few of her teeth.
"How was your talk with Big Man?" "I..."
What surprised me was that I wasn't surprised.
I knew Ma'am walked in dreams.
Everybody knew that. I just
didn't know she walked in mine. "He
was big, Ma'am." "Sometimes,"
she said, and her voice was even softer, "sometimes I think on Big Man.
He's an idea of the land, more than any kind of person." "We're
building Him, Ma'am. He's our hope,
like Preach always said." She
flapped a soft, meaty hand. "Preach
ain't nothing but an old sometime stud without the courage of his woodstick no
more. Good as a winter warmer for
me, and keeps the boyos in line, but he's an old sister.
Don't be listening to Preach too much." "Then
why we building Big Man?" I asked. Her
words made my eyes sting. Ma'am's
boyos were in the world to bring back Big Man, and Big Man was our ticket to
Heaven. "His bones are out
there, taller than six sometime studs laid end to end, and that lolly heart's
now rattling in His chest. Or did
you forget?" Ma'am
didn't never forget nothing, which I knew, but she just smiled at me.
"Did you ever think we were living in Heaven now, my sweet
Heart-of-the-Aspen? Little Men, they
lived in stone caves and worked their fingers to nubs.
We get cold in the winter, and wet in the spring, but there's almost
always plenty to eat, and we don't do too much work other than building Big Man.
What does Heaven have that we don't?" "Blackstone
pathways," I said, "and air-voices, and the gift of flight, and all
the things the Little Men had." "Maybe
your Heaven," she said tartly, "but sure as winter ice not mine.
Now, listen up Larkin Grouselegs. In
a week your face comes clean and we see what Big Man told Inker to place on
there. But you got to choose." My
woodstick chafed my leather shorts again, like it was listening too. She
smiled at that. "You want to be
a boyo the rest of your days, feeding and carrying Ma'am around, that can be.
Preach will cut you and you can butt-wrestle and swim and holler in the
trees for the rest of your natural life." Just
a few days ago, I would have thought that was the future for me, but Big Man had
come to me, and I wanted to see His change afoot. "You
want to be a sometime stud, I reckon there's Ma'ams in other lands that'd take
you in now. A few winters on the
ridges, grown into your height, you might be the mountain king, with your pick
of Ma'ams to roll with. Maybe
someday be an old Preach, live a good long life dipping your woodstick into more
Ma'ams and boyos than you can ever keep count of." That
didn't sound so bad, either, when I thought about it.
Live long enough to see the world move through the years. "And
that's one more choice than most boyos get, I can tell you.
But..." She held up one great finger, fat as an elk's woodstick.
"You got another choice. One
most boyos never hear of." "Da,"
I said, the word rolling unfamiliar in my mouth.
I knew what it meant, but I hadn't heard it spoke upwards of five or six
times in my life. There was just
Ma'ams and boyos, and rare as an albino salmon, women-girls. "Da,"
she said, smiling. "Ain't no
bigger job in the world. Big Man
comes into a boyo, when he sets out to become a Da.
I won't lie, ain't a long job, for no Ma'am can abide a Da once she's
ready to pop out boyos for the rest of her days, but a woman-girl just set out,
she needs a Da. For a little
while." "Where
do old Das go?" I asked. Ma'am's
smile closed down, her lips settling like a grandfather catfish.
"Once Big Man comes into a Da, He never really leaves.
When a Da is done, Big Man takes him back." That
dream-hand would close in a fist around me, and squeeze like the biggest
sometime studs could squeeze an acorn, and I would be no more than a blood drop
on Miracle's chin. My
woodstick slipped back up like a trout backing into sand, and my shoulders fell.
I wanted to live, smell the pines at every season and see winters in
their dozens and play through every spring.
I didn't want to work and sweat and fight on the mountaintops, and I sure
didn't want to Da my way to a grave as early as any lost nestling ever found. Her
face closed down like her smile, and Ma'am touched her fat fingers together.
"You go, Larkin Grouselegs, Heart-of-the-Aspen, and you think on
what I said. If it pleases you, ask
Preach or Miracle for their thoughts, or climb the new deck and see if Big Man
blesses you again. I'll hear your
word when the mask comes off your face and we see what Inker wrote there." I
ran from her, without even a kiss or a farewell, through our little village of
huts and tipis, along the muddy beach of the beavers' pond, past the reedy shore
of our big lake beyond, and for miles up into the canyons and valleys.
I didn't want to speak to Miracle or Preach, I didn't want Big Man's
words or Ma'am's encouragement. All
I wanted was to be a boyo forever, just like I was, no knife cuts, no running
off for a sometime stud, and sure as hell no Da to Miracle's Ma'am, or any other
woman-girl that Ma'am might dreamwalk me to. But
the whole time I ran, my chin itched where Miracle had touched me, and the
salt-blood smell of her never left. * * * Six
days in the woods, and though I was tempted, I didn't pick at my mask nor look
for myself in streams and pools. Instead,
I ran down a deer, taking her life with a prayer to Big Man and a whispered
apology to the flickering of her dying ears.
I skinned her, and cut a cloak of her hide, though untanned it drew flies
and closed my nose up right quick. What
I couldn't eat or carry I cut and laid out for the coyotes and the wolves, and a
haunch up a tree for old mister bear. Then
I was the deer, ambling through meadows and rubbing against tree bark and
sleeping in little hollows in the ferns. The
silent drip of morning in the forest was music to me, and the rank smell soon
became my own. I tried walking on
hands and feet, but my shoulders pulled me back up. It
can't be done. I
tried not to dream, for I was afraid of Big Man and what He might say to me,
afraid of Ma'am. Afraid of myself,
mostly. Even when I slept, there
were only the dreams of the deer who was wrapped me round like Ma'am wrapped
Darling Jack. I nibbled spring
shoots and feared the cough of the cougar and worried the breeze for scented
news of friend and foe. Not
much different from waking, really. Then
on the last day I walked back to Ma'am's lands, knowing I must present my face.
After that I could leave, if I wanted to take a skin and live on the
land, but I had to come home one last time. *
* * Though
I arrived bloody and muddy, without the courtesy even of a dive into the lake,
the boyos welcomed me back. They
hugged me and touched me, these that had been my friends and brothers forever,
and I found myself thinking that Stumpwater Rob had been cut once, but the
Firehair twins had not yet, and was it different butt-wrestling with one or the
other and why did I think some woodsticks were tastier and sweeter than others,
until I had to put the whole business out of my head. Whatever
became of me, I would not be a boyo the rest of my life.
The cut was not for me. Sometime
stud, Da, or runaway animal, I would carry all my parts and pieces until Big Man
took me home for the last time. I
shrugged them off, then, throwing my deer hide cloak to the ground and shouting
until Stumpwater Rob took my hand and led me to the creek and laid me down and
washed me clean, save for the dried mask crusting Inker's marks upon my face. "Listen,
my little Larkin," he said, and I knew that Stumpwater Rob had been cut the
spring I was six and I was sure he'd never even been given the choice to be a
sometime stud, let alone everything I'd been offered.
His eyes were too far apart and he limped funny and he heard bad from the
left, and though he hugged real nice and kissed sweet as a trillium, he wouldn't
have lasted three days on the ridges with the wild studs. "Larkin,
sweet Larkin Grouselegs." Stumpwater Rob said, combing my hair with his
fingers. "Preach has been
talking, telling the boyos you were of a mind to refuse Big Man's gifts.
I knew it weren't true, and when you come back, Preach got real quiet,
but ever since you left Miracle's been crying in her tree house and Ma'am hasn't
even let Darling Jack into her grotto." "I'm
back," I growled. When had my
voice gotten so bearish? "We
done some more work on Big Man's bones, to raise the ribs around the lolly and
hang His arms," Stumpwater Rob said, "and we're ready to hoist the new
deck to the clavicle and build the head. I
was hoping you'd come raise that deck with me and some of the other big boyos,
and the little boyos can get to the rib deck, which is where we hung the lolly,
and fill in the chest." Work
was what I needed. He was right.
I hugged Stumpwater Rob, gave him one last kiss for luck, and jumped up. We
worked past evenchant and into moonlight, raising the next deck.
In the week I'd been gone, someone had chopped three vertebrae out of an
old cedar log, that made the spine rise. Ribs
traded up the river from the Ma'am's whose boyos hunted gray Leviathan in boats
were hung, me at the top of the beautiful pulleys instead of the bottom, helping
the older boyos guide them in. The
new new deck was almost like a collar, round and stiff encircling Big Man's
neck, and I could see where His head would go as plain as if those fire eyes
were staring back at me right then. I
looked down in the dim of the evening to see the younger boyos tossing leather
sacks in between the ribs. "Liver
and lights!" yelled one of the Firehair twins, his grin gleaming in the
starlight. Then
Miracle was there, her hand slipped into mine, and Stumpwater Rob and the other
boyos were gone as if they'd never been. I
heard the flies whining on the lake and smelled the forest, smelling Miracle as
well, though her saltiness was less, replaced with more of a Ma'am smell, woven
in with honey and mint. "You
thought about it?" she asked, her free hand fingering my back. My
woodstick surged. "I
thought about it." I'd avoided
the thought, as much as I could, but the time was come. "Boyos
are bringing Ma'am out, building a bonfire.
Your turn is soon." There'd
be others after me -- there were at least a dozen boyos with spring birthdays,
and four of them had spaced so close behind me that they'd be faced this spring
as well, but I knew Ma'am had marked me out, brought Inker in from far instead
of having Preach do it, or one of the part-time Inkers from just down the river. I
would lead this year's boyos to...to whatever lay ahead.
So I squeezed Miracle's hand, and let my finger brush her chin, and
followed her down the ladders and ropes, wishing I had some of that women's
blood-magic. *
* * The
bonfire roared, challenging the moon and stars with a brilliant orange that
could only rise from the Earth, just as the sun did every morning.
Ma'am sat on her throne, that she hardly ever used, crafted from Little
Man stuff and woven reeds and aspen posts and for all I knew the bones of our
Ma'am's long-vanished Da, father to us all. "Preach,
bring Larkin Grouselegs the bucket," she said. I
waited while an ancient Little Man bucket, colored pale muddy blue like water
with no holes at all -- something brought up by the tunnel runners -- was set
before me by a frowning Preach. He
looked like he wanted to say something, a blessing or a threat perhaps, but no
words passed. "Wash,"
said Ma'am. I
bent over, plunged my hands in the cold, cold water, then scrubbed my face.
Inker's mudpack sloughed off like a snake skin. I
didn't look into the bucket to glimpse my face.
By the light of the fire, the water would have been a bad mirror anyhow.
Instead I stared at Ma'am, letting her see Inker's handiwork. The
boyos gasped, then buzzed among themselves with quiet chatter.
Preach stared, his eyes narrow, but he still held his tongue.
Ma'am just looked at me a while, her great face unchanging except for the
shifting shadows of the fire, then she looked over at Miracle. Miracle
nodded once at me, then faded from the bonfire's light. "Well?"
I said. Usually a face was read out
to much merriment, that Deadwood John would be a hunter, or Robin Rascal had the
makings of a Tunnel Runner. Most
markings were no more than a few lines or an odd rosette, though some, like
Preach, had masks across their entire faces, curling like vines in the spring.
This silence was new to me. "There's
aught to read here but what's in your heart," said Ma'am, her voice rough.
"Go up to the new deck and see what Big Man has to say." So
I left the bonfire and climbed the darkness to the little round platform with
the hole in the middle and the cedar spine rising at the back.
I knew I wouldn't take the knife, but the rest of it was still a mystery.
Facing was supposed to be an answer. When
I got to the new deck, it was no surprise to find Miracle there, though she had
laid aside her hide shirt and wool kilt. Her
breasts were small, no bigger than my open hand could cover, not like the great
wellsprings of milk that lolled on Ma'am's ample chest.
Since our long-vanished Da, no one but the sometime studs had ever seen
the salty cleft of Ma'am's legs, them and Preach, when he brought forth boyos in
our long-borning litters across the years. But
now Miracle's legs were folded as she sat, still showing me a twist of hair dark
and curly as what had sprouted around my woodstick. Which,
to think of it, was sprouting as hard as it ever had for butt-wrestling. Then
she opened up her arms and I made my choice under the stars, Big Man's voice
booming in my ears as the wind whispered my three names within the tops of the
forest. *
* * Dawn
came with no dreams, and I found myself tangled with Miracle, one hand closed
upon her breast and the other resting on her back. "My
face," I whispered to her as she slept.
"What was upon my face?" Miracle's
eyes opened, and she smiled. She had
not been sleeping, I saw, just waiting for me.
"Nothing, my sweet." She
touched my chin. "Nothing and
everything. Inker had needled your
own face upon your skin, that you would be free to choose." "What
happens now?" She
wriggled her hips. "I'll close
myself tight, let all the little boyos in my body be found by your white
swimmers, then I'll adopt a few of the big ones from Ma'am and set out to find
my own lands." Her
fate was not mine, though I supposed this was the change Big Man had said was
afoot. "What
about me?" "Stay,"
she said, "and see." Then
she stood, picking me up as if I were Darling Jack, though the night before I'd
had almost a foot of height and several tenweights advantage over her, and
carried me around the platform to sit upon Big Man's cedar spine. "Wait,"
Miracle said, "for Big Man to find you." Then
she was gone, like summer fog upon the lake. A
Da was everything and nothing, I realized, absent sire to a generation of boyos
and their deeds. Like Big Man to all
Ma'am's people, though a Da's job was as short as pleasure, while Big Man's went
on forever. The thought brought me
patience, so I sat on the spine and waited.
After a while Stumpwater Rob came up to hoist a wickered cage of
willow-wands. He fitted it to Big
Man's collar, never saying a word even as he closed me within it. Later
some of the other boyos, the Firehair twins and the little ones, brought leather
and woven wool and draped the willow cage, which had almost made a head.
Someone's arm hung firepots in the lamps of the eyes, and a mouth was cut
below where gleaming chunks of pale stone were set in for teeth.
Mud was pushed through the nostrils, filling the head with good, honest
soil, though it steamed red as if fresh from slaughter. I
sat and dreamed, looking for Big Man though He did not come to me, then for
Ma'am, but her face was turned away. I
thought I heard Miracle calling me, but it was just her laughing among the
wooded valleys, running like a deer from the sometime studs, her adoptive boyos
scrambling after. Then I awoke from my dreaming and stood tall, a web of ropes and wood falling away from me. The crimson mud had set, and a dried fingerprint of blood still itched upon my chin as I strode across the lake. I took none of my children with me on my shoulders, for they already dwelt in Heaven. It was only for me to walk the mountains and watch over their dreams, my metal heart clashing in my chest to remind me always who we had been and would never be again.
Copyright © Joseph E. Lake, Jr. 2004 Photo Copyright © Eric Marin 2004 About the Author: Jay Lake lives in Portland, Oregon. In 2004 his fiction will appear in a wide range of markets, including Asimov's, Lady Churchill's Rosebud Wristlet, and Realms of Fantasy. His collection, Greeting from Lake Wu, was a Locus Recommended Book for 2003. Jay can be reached via his web site at http://www.jlake.com. Lone Star Stories * Speculative Fiction and Poetry with a Texas Twist * Copyright © 2003-2004
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