Family may be found - A tale of the pueblo, religion, commercialism, family, and the past. |
The Family The piney scent of sunbaked sage breathes tangles in my hair and sends whirlwinds of dirt to arrest my nostrils and grate in my eyes. I feel the heat And hear the voices long past- My father sits on the rickety bridge of wood that crosses the small cool stream that courses through that baked earth - Throwing bits Of stone-baked Bread To thin, weather-worn dogs Sunglasses on, he smiles into the sun and at the dogs who pander for more- My mother walks stoically: sunglasses, camera dangling from her neck - stark against her dark pink shirt My mother and I Approach the church- Bone dry, mudbrick arch Dead like the rest of this lonely place My mother says, "Smile!" *Click* We move on The courtyard - Pinion incense guards the door- -Benches small and kneelers worn wooden boards -Groaning floor boards, doggedly taste the present but yearn for the past while Colorful Jesus and Mary await us Barren Cold We stare and hear ancient voices whisper Gone Alien Outside We choke on wafting incense- We breathe warm air - Brown, baking sage Dusty men and women with dusty dogs Large ladders and blue doorways And the graveyard -Embraced by the mountainside and snuggled within the Pueblo's heart A drum pulses Deep warm tones Men and women dance around the twilit fire And we all dance Feeling the rhythm of centuries Desert-cool air dries our faces Until the Mountain casts her final Shadow And we drive away |