THE NORTH WIND BLEW
On its way down through
The god-forsaken Valley of the Dead.
And the icy, brittle rain
Battered, but didn't stain,
And spattered on what used to be a head.
The dark clouds gazed,
And the icy rain glazed
The skull peering skyward with sightless eyes.
All its other bones
Were scattered in the stones
With teardrops where its lover still cries.
Lightning split the sky
And something catches the eye
Of the young Indian warrior with his horse.
He utters a command,
Stills the stallion with his hand,
And strides to iv'ry sticks in his course.
Thunder rumbled 'round
And shook the rocky ground
As if it knew what was happening this night.
The Indian sniffs the air,
Looks through his matted hair,
Pushing his senses beyond his sight.
Warily he proceeds;
This last of fateful deeds:
It's time this boy became a man.
In the dark the chain gleams,
He's seen it in his dreams,
'Tis time to conclude the elder's plans.
He kneels down low,
His motions too slow,
And looks into empty eyes of doom.
He handles the old skull
And tries an ancient lull,
Wishing for the safety of a womb.
With hands like a vise
And fingers cold as ice
He pries open the grinning jaws of death.
Probing deep inside
He feels a sense of pride.
He draws out a disc and holds his breath.
The golden doubloon,
Like a yellow moon,
He holds in his strong but quaking hands.
It was pierced upon a chain,
He sees in his brain,
By a man who was killed where he stands.
It's told in ancient tales,
As the wind around him wails,
'Bout a soldier sent from far-off lands of old
To maim and kill the people
And desecrate the steeple,
In search of a worthlessness called gold.
And this, the final test,
"Fetch Cortez' coin by the crest,
Return to the native village and alive."
Preceded by the four,
None had succeeded before,
And he was the curse'd number five.
He tucks the disc away
For the light of the next day
And strides back to his escort, his horse.
He climbs on board,
Says a prayer to his Lord,
And prods the steed back onto its course.
Sightless sockets stared,
As they were prepared
For what happens next in this great scheme.
The broken jaws did grin
At the innocence of the sin;
It was all like a horrible crazed dream.
The rain stopped cold,
And the Indian was bold
To gaze at the thunderclouds above.
Silence stung like death,
The horse, it held its breath
As if it knew what these signs were thereof.
Lightning splits the sky
And the Indian screams a cry
That echoes in the timeless walls of doom.
His body writhes around
As the lightning strikes him down.
The coin hits the ground where life had grown.
Thunder rolled around
And made a deathly sound
As if it knew what its mighty deed had done.
The rain spattered pain
And the wind blew again.
For Nature reigned; it had won.
The horse which was spared
Stood silently and stared
At the rocks where its master's prize did lay.
It slowly turned around,
And the sky, it looked down
On the lifeless body's staring eyes of clay.
The Brave would not return.
In his village they would burn
In effigy, his soul, a warrior hero.
The elders would send another,
Possibly a brother.
To his doom, number six would soon go.
And midst the damned wet dirt
Where the disc lay unhurt,
Gleams an inner golden light from a seed.
The golden doubloon,
Sent from a yellow moon,
Awaiting a young lad to do his deed.
*******
To be continued in "Into The Purple Sky"
*******
Kind Readers,
Thank you for reading the next chapter of my book, The Box Has Twelve Sides. If you liked this story, please consider giving it a vote and recommending the book to similarly-minded readers.
Please return here as I will be updating this story every few days or so.
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MKBagwell
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The Box Has Twelve Sides: Thirteen Curious Tales to Delight and Disturb
General FictionA homeless man discovers a mysterious box which transports him back to his childhood. On each side of the box, both inside and out, a new world reveals itself to him: He experiences another man's worst day of luck. An old, dying man befriends an...