The Luck of the Maya. Theodore Brazeau

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The Luck of the Maya - Theodore Brazeau


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over when we started, but we wanted to get out of sight and this was the best way to do so.

      Arnulfo called a halt just before dusk, which was fine with me. I planned let him call the shots on anything to do with the actual traveling. He knew what he was doing. Much as I loved the forest, I had spent too much time away from it the last few years. I hoped I wasn’t becoming a city person.

      Since it was closer, we decided to head first to Kanan Ka’a, and from there to one of the others. At Kanan Ka’a we might get information as to where the Pol was.

      The ancient pyramids used to protect the Pol didn’t really have names. They were referred to as Guardian One, Two and Three—Kanan Han, Ka’a and Óox in the Mayan language.

      CARLOS

      We finished packing up the horses and mules. I was glad to see that we all had some lightweight rifles and pistols. Even though I don’t really like guns, I know how to use them and, in this case, they gave me a warm and cuddly feeling. I did some spot-checking. It looked like Arnulfo and Arnoldo, or whoever put this together, had done an admirable job. Besides the guns, we had a good supply of machetes, knives, hatchets and even some bows and arrows. The food supply looked adequate, I didn’t expect gourmet.

      My horse was a gray mare, but definitely not the proverbial old one. She was a sleek animal that looked capable of a good run. I was told her name was Mirabal.

      Mirabal and I spent a little time getting acquainted. I found some horse munchies among the provisions and there’s nothing like a little bribe to start off a good relationship. Mirabal seemed to appreciate it. I rubbed her behind the ears, talked to her for a while. We seemed to get along.

      Then it was time to saddle up and move out.

      “We won’t get far today, we’ll make camp in a couple of hours,” said Arnulfo, “but we want to be on our way and, especially, we want to get out of sight. This place might look deserted to you city folks, but there are too many eyes and ears for my taste.”

      I didn’t think we were exactly city folks, but his point was taken. We traveled for two or three hours through a varied terrain, mostly quite pleasant. We made fairly good time since, for the most part, the underbrush was minimal. Numerous fallen tree trunks caused continual minor detours and uneven terrain covered with leaf debris was a hazard to the horses, although the mules didn’t even seem to notice.

      The canopy of trees above kept us in a pleasant twilight and had prevented thick underbrush from forming by stealing most of the sunlight. It was certainly not cool, but it was way cooler than traveling in the direct sunshine. That would have been deadly. The atmosphere was still and humid, with drops of water falling from the treetops overhead. But it was not still to the ear. There were constant bird and animal calls and screeches and chattering, including some really impressive hooting and hollering by the saraguatos, the howler monkeys.

      We were constantly inundated not only with sights and sounds, but also aromas. The overall fragrance could be called ‘deep jungle’: a blanket of decaying vegetation accompanied by a melody of other smells, mostly unidentifiable. The result was, except for a false note here and there, a rather agreeable background potpourri.

      We three ‘city folks’ went single file in the center while the rest spread out ahead and behind, to the right and left, but never out of earshot. We each had our own bird or animal call to identify us and we would sound it out every now and again as an all-clear signal. I had chosen the easiest, a parrot call. Lucy had a very good spider monkey repertoire and Jeb had invented a sort of cough that wasn’t going to fool anybody. The rest had a variety of calls, just different enough from the real bird or animal to be identifiable. No one chose the howler monkey.

      Not long before dusk Arnulfo called a halt to make camp. Instead of tents, we each tied our hammock between trees wherever we could find a good spot. We then hung mosquito netting over it, propping it with sticks to provide room enough for sleeping, and laying a tarp over that to deflect the dripping water and any potential bird or monkey droppings, not to mention falling critters like scorpions. The mosquito netting had to be tied just right around the hammock ropes, otherwise undesirables like those scorpions would crawl up the rope and right on in to disturb our slumbers in nasty ways. We drew straws for guard duty. Naturally, I got one of the short ones, which meant I was going to be up and around from midnight to about three AM.

      Since we didn’t believe we were in any immediate danger, Arnulfo permitted us a small cooking fire. “Keep it small and hot,” he said, “the hotter it is, the less smoke and the faster it cooks.” Most of the food we brought with us was deliberately the non-cooking type: jerky, hard sausages, dried fruits and vegetables, cooked grains. Fresh fruit and other edible plants we could find as we traveled. Even meat if someone wanted to operate a bow and arrow but we weren’t going to be announcing our presence by shooting off guns.

      That first evening and night was actually fun, kind of like a very humid beach picnic. I felt like singing Kumbaya, toasting marshmallows and making out, but didn’t think I could talk Lucy into it. Besides we were supposed to be reasonably quiet and those activities wouldn’t qualify. Well, the marshmallows wouldn’t be too noisy.

      We updated our immediate plans. Of the three possible sites we chose to head toward Number Two, Kanan Ka’a. It was a little closer, and Arnulfo knew about where it was. We knew exactly where Number One, Kanan Hun was, too, somewhat farther off, but the location of Number Three, Kanan Óox was a bit vague. Arnulfo had a general idea where it might be, and we had directions, but it would be a little more work to find. Lalo and Licha said they thought they had been there, from the description we had, but it was a long time ago and they couldn’t be sure of finding it based just on that. Better than nothing, though.

      “Whether or not it’s at Kanan Ka’a,” Lucy said, “we’ll leave one of our replicas there. I don’t think it is going to fool anyone who knows much about the real thing but, if they don’t, it might confuse them for a while. As I’ve said, I’ve been told you can feel the real one’s presence when you’re close. No one has been able to explain to me exactly how. Some sort of vibes. They say it’s something you can’t have ever experienced before and once you have, you won’t forget it, so I guess that in itself is a description.”

      I turned in early since I had to be up at midnight for my shift. The forest was noisy, but oddly calming. The tone had changed, I supposed the day critters had gone to bed, like me, and the night critters had come out to play. I hoped none of them were hungry for juicy morsels dangling in hammocks. Arnulfo had told me to watch out for the dreaded nauyaca snake, especially if I got up in the night, as there might be one hanging out underneath my hammock.

      “They won’t go looking for you,” he said, “but if you annoy them, they’ll bite you a good one. Then you bleed out, you know, from your eyes and ears, nose and so on. The only advantage is that you die real fast. No painful lingering.”

      I was reassured.

      My shift at guard duty was uneventful, the best kind. I stayed awake and was very watchful, but I didn’t see any nauyaca snakes. No snakes at all, actually. Three o’clock came around fast, and I wasn’t even bored. Lalo relieved me and I crawled back into the hammock to nap until dawn.

      As the forest brightened from pitch dark to twilight dim, we packed up our camp, saddled our horses and moved on. The day proved long and without surprises. Later the evening and night were repeats of yesterday except that I drew the early shift. I was in the hammock by midnight and sleeping five minutes later.

      The next day, however, did harbor an ‘event’. We were, as usual, plodding along at our horse’s walking speed, a little slower than we had been. The trees had thinned slightly, letting more underbrush get a foothold. It was beginning to impede our progress and I hoped it wouldn’t get thicker. Arnoldo assured me there was nothing to worry about. In terms of brush, at least.

      LUCY

      The next day was uneventful. I love riding through the forest, especially on Nelda. I think she enjoys it, too. I hadn’t realized how tense I had gotten. When people shoot at me it tends to tense me up. There was no good


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