The Delight Makers eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 557 pages of information about The Delight Makers.

The Delight Makers eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 557 pages of information about The Delight Makers.

The visitor paid no further attention to the uncivil woman.  He passed in front of her unceremoniously, and entered the cave.  The apartment was like those we have previously described, with the single difference that it was better lighted, somewhat larger, and that the household effects scattered and hung around were of a different character.  Implements of warfare,—­a bow and a quiver with arrows, a shield—­convex and painted red, with a yellow disk, and several green lines in the centre,—­were suspended from the wall.  The niches contained small vessels of burnt clay and a few plume-sticks.  A low doorway led from this room into another, and beyond that there was even a third cell, so that Hoshkanyi Tihua, the civil chief of the Queres, enjoyed the luxury of occupying three apartments.

Still this was not the dwelling which he commonly inhabited.  His wife descended from the Bear clan; and her home, and consequently his also, was higher up the gorge, among the caves belonging to the people of the Bear.  But as his father had recently departed this life, and his mother was left alone, she had begged her only son to remain with her until one or the other of her brothers or sisters might be ready to take her in charge, either by moving into her abode or by her going to them.  Hoshkanyi, therefore, had temporarily gone to live with his mother, but his portly consort was careful not to let him go alone.  They had no children, and she felt constrained to keep an eye upon the little man.

In the room which Topanashka had entered, his executive colleague was sitting on a round piece of wood, a low upright cylinder, whose upper surface was slightly hollowed out.  Such were the chairs of the Pueblos in olden times.  With the exception of that well-known garment peculiar to Indians and babies, and called breech-clout, the governor’s manly form was not concealed by any vestment whatever.  But while he evidently thought that at home the necessities of costume might be dispensed with, he had not abandoned the luxuries of ornamentation.  He wore on his naked body a necklace of wolves’ teeth, ear pendants of black and green stones, and wristbands of red leather.  The latter he carried in order to relieve his heart, still heavy under the severe blow that he had experienced through the death of his father.

The tapop was also at work.  By means of the well-known fire-drill he was attempting to perforate a diminutive shell disk and thus transform it into the shell bead so essential to the Indian.  So intent was he upon this arduous task that he failed to notice the coming of Topanashka; and the latter stood beside him for a little while, an impassive observer.  At last Hoshkanyi Tihua looked up, and the visitor said to him,—­

“Umo, you have sent for me and I have come.  But if you are engaged, or have no time now, I do not mind returning again.”

There was a decided irony in the manner in which the old man uttered these words, and Hoskanyi felt it.  He rose quickly, gathered a few robes, and spread them on the ground.  In short he was as pleasant and accommodating, all at once, as he and his wife had been careless in the beginning.  Topanashka settled down on the hides, and in the meantime the woman also entered the room and quite unceremoniously squatted beside the men.  Hoshkanyi said to her,—­

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The Delight Makers from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.