EXCERPT Kali and Noreen dressed in green shaded sarongs, and walked the beach to Point
of Rocks. Kali inhaled the fresh sea air, praising the god Ih P’en and
goddesses Ix Kanan for their fertility and guardianship over growing things.
Whenever she thought of the strange consort of gods and goddesses, she felt
closeness with everything surrounding her.
Kali’s senses were high, the smells cleaner, and her vision more astute. Her
hidden senses were sharper as well, and that is what led her knee deep in water
along the side of the rock pier, and holding Noreen’s hand as her feet slipped
on slick limestone boulders. She gazed down into a pool of salt water. There
were seahorses, crabs, and an octopus in the small pond, and Noreen tightened
her grip when Kali reached into the water. Her hand roamed around the algae
covered limestone rocks until she felt an opening on the southern wall.
Something smooth was inside, and Kali twisted and tugged, finding holes for her
fingers… and she pulled up the clear crystal skull with her thumb and forefinger
threaded through the eye sockets.
Their Sabbat ceremony that night included the crystal skull, centered on the
altar. Kali had been sharing Noreen’s visions for decades, and the two of them
were surprised when the Chief and Shaman were both looking at them with their
arms spread. Jonathan and Tommy rose to their feet, and slowly more of the
tribe joined them until everyone was standing.
When the cakes and wine had been spilled to the earth in offering to the
goddess and the four quarters closed so that their circle was broken, Noreen
finally whispered, “Oh dear god.” She silently picked up the skull and locked
it in the safe embedded in the yellow tile floor in her bathroom.
Kali already had two glasses of the elderberry wine that Noreen had made last
fall for their Mabon Sabbat, sitting on the table in front of the fireplace.
“How many?” Kali asked nervously.
“I don’t know,” Noreen answered uneasily. “I never considered that we would be
gaining new members… but truthfully I’ve never questioned any of this before.
With Jonathan and Tommy there, it just seemed right to be following the Shaman
and Chief.”
“Did you see the shadow behind them?” Kali was nervously picking through the
end of her braid with the hand not holding the wine glass.
“It’s Brad… the son,” Noreen answered with certainty. “Don’t ask me how I
know, but I always have. I thought it was his father when I first saw it.”
Kali waited for a moment before she spoke again. “No, it’s more than that,
Noreen. I saw a form in the shadow, and all I could think of was destruction…
and I think it’s going to happen soon, so these people better start showing
up.”
They did. The next morning seven older women pulled into the driveway,
arriving in a conversion van with a bumper sticker proudly announcing that
others should ‘Play nice on the Road… My other car is a Broom’. They piled out
of the van in matching pink tee-shirts, with a winking happy face wearing a
black pointed witch hat. At first, a few of them looked nervous, as if they
were afraid they would be turned away if they hinted at the nonsense vision they
had had during their coven ceremony the night before.
They were slightly calmed by the sighting of Noreen’s totems, and were quickly
put at ease with a welcoming ritual of wine and homemade bread. Cinda was their
unofficial leader, and owner of the ark… the name they had christened the van.
For the past thirty years they had come together, moving into Cinda’s farmhouse
in eastern Manatee County. Two of the women remembered several of Noreen’s
family from their youth, when they hung around the handsome tanned fishermen on
the docks. Eventually the village was busted, and the women learned they could
have visions without the ready supply of marijuana.
All of them had been drawn to Cinda, who had a non-sanctioned holistic medical
practice on the outskirts of town. She never advertised, guaranteed, or used
any illegal herbs, so the county left the eccentric alone. Word of mouth kept
her healing business thriving, and as the household grew they added a tarot card
reader, one who healed with crystals, a numerologist, a horoscope expert with an
extensive astrological background, a palm reader and a runes practitioner… all
under one roof.
Kali and Noreen were amazed that the women seemed to blend their talents
together, confirming one another’s visions instead of trying to overshadow them
with their specialty. Their mystical practices supplied income, but they also
had gardens and sold vegetables and fruit at a canopied stand at the end of the
driveway. That, and eggs from free range chickens, kept them well-funded.
Next to arrive was Mandi, thundering up the driveway on a huge black motorcycle
she had named ‘Chopper’. For all the black leather and henna tattoos… Mandi
refused to paint herself permanently because the designs in her visions
constantly changed… she was rather soft spoken. Still, when the five other
solitary gothic-garbed women arrived, they formed their friendships around
Mandi. Their group consisted of an assortment of talent, basically centered on
natural foods from plants that grew in the wild. They brought back nuts and
fruits from trees on the property that Noreen and Kali had been unaware of.
The largest group to arrive pulled up in two station wagons. It was a coven of
fifteen that had been drawn together over the years, and they lived in various
spots from the Everglades to the west coast. They were primarily mapmakers and
geologists, and at night they would study scrolls of where the old Indian mounds
and canals used to be located. They had diverse knowledge in anything
concerning the makeup of rock and shell, and they knew where to locate the
finds. They did not seem to have a distinguishing leader, and maintained a
close camaraderie of spending time sharing their studies.
The group of eight from Naples were historians, focused on ancient religions.
The others constantly badgered them for information on the tribe in the visions.
It was then that they learned the Indians were Calusa, and extinct for two
hundred and fifty years. There was precious little the women could tell them,
as the Calusa had left few records. They had melded the studies with the Mayan
after agreeing that they shared origins.
As the original tribe split off, with small factions forming the descendants of
Native American Tribes and the mound builders such as the Cahokia in Illinois
and throughout different aspects of North America, a small true bloodline of
Calos had traveled to Florida. The Naples coven became a favorite of everyone,
though they had no apparent physical skills. Their manic research had kept them
bent over books and computers, absorbing the religious wisdom of the ages.
Next was the strange group of nine from Estero. The women only mixed lightly
with the rest, and spent virtually all of their waking moment on the dock or at
the beach. They obviously were attuned to the water, and Noreen gradually drew
out that the women had been holding their ceremonies on Jatung’s temple mound.
They were uncomfortable, because their visions had led them to perform their
rituals to an underworld god of fishing, and they were afraid they were being
set up to somehow destroy the group.
Kali and Noreen reasoned with them that because they had shared their concern
it was not likely to be the case. The rest of the group agreed, but no one was
ever able to get really close. The Estero coven remained aloof, quietly
studying the water, and only sometimes asking questions of the historians from
Naples.
Last to arrive was Arnell, chugging up the driveway with her two young friends
in a sedan that coughed its last breath when she turned off the engine. Arnell
climbed out, red ponytails flashing copper in the sun, turned and pointed her
finger at the car and symbolically shot it. It would be a while before the
three youngest shared their specialty… they were the warriors.
When the weather warmed enough at night, tents were set up in the backyard to
relieve the cramping in the house. Ceremonies and protective spells were being
held all over the property, and when their clan grew to fifty, the power of the
Midnight Pass estate was palpable.
The women made regular trips to the quartz beach, and nine who came from near
Estero had been encouraged enough by the rest of the clan to accept their role
to devote their rituals to Chak Uayab Xoc in hopes that they would be spared if
the battle raged towards the sea. Their concern about their placement in the
clan relaxed, and they allowed themselves to feel empowered with their rituals
honoring the sea god. With the Naples coven support, and Kali and Noreen behind
them, their compulsion to praise and acknowledge Chak Uayab Xoc began to make
sense, as they needed a faction of their clan to try to offset the nine tyrants
of the underworld. They were extremely hopeful that their offerings would help
to balance things.
At the Beltane Sabbat on May first, the group knew that their number had
stopped at the fifty. Kali was uncomfortable with the almost reverent treatment
she received, and someone was always handing her a glass of iced chamomile tea
to calm her. Noreen thrived on all the activity… until the vision that
evening.
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