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Authors: Beverley Andi

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BOOK: A Kachina Dance
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“You’re on time.” He gives me a slight smile.

“I think it’s rude not to be. I hate to be kept waiting.
I’m sure everyone feels the same.”

He hands me a helmet and puts one on himself.

“Oh? This is your motorcycle?”

“Hmm.”

             
“I’ve never ridden on one. This will be my first time.
Is it safe?
I have a rental car
, we could take that
.”

“You’ll be fine. Just hold on to me.” He gives me that sli
ght smile again and
I cave.

Knowing no
alcohol i
s allow
ed on the reservation, I figure
we
have to go to Flagstaff.
Jay rides
to a little ro
adside café along the highway that’s about fifteen minutes away.
When we dismount, h
e
asks how I liked the ride.


I like th
e feel of the wind blowing through
my hair and the scen
ery rushing past and the way the bike
corners
with your body
,” I say
,
but I don’t mention that I like holding
on to his firm
body
,
too
.
Kate, I tell myself, it’s been too long since you’ve had a BF.
When I take off the helmet, I realize my long hair is dry already so I give it a quick brush.

We walk
into a rather
seedy looking bar with some pretty rough Native characters hanging around.
  All heads
turn and stare
at
me,
the only
non-Native in the place
.
It’s dark inside with some overhead fans whirring. There are some
flashing neon signs and the juk
e box is playing country.

“Why don’t you grab a couple of beers and
we can sit outside,

I say
to Jay.
 

I’m not a
beer
drinker
, wine is more my style
,
but this wasn’t the place to be di
fferent.
Thankfully,
I’m not
a bl
onde
.
My
dark hair blended in with the other women.
But there’s nothing I can do with my blue eyes and freckles.
We walk outside and si
t a
round a rusty wire table
.
It is still hot but there
are
warm breeze
s
blowing.

“Those are pr
etty mean looking dudes,” I say
,
as I nod
toward the bar.

“Oh, they’re Navaho.”
He smiles
.

The
y’
re not from my
rez
.

“Do you hang out here often?

“Me? No
, this doesn’t do much for me.
I’d rather be in the mountains on my bike.”

“Hm
m, that sounds
cool
especially
on a hot
evening
like tonight.”

“Tell me about yourself, Ms. Manhattan.”


How do you know I come from NYC?”


That i
sn’t hard to figure out. You sure don’t look like anyone from these parts.” He has his half smile on again.


Wait a
sec,
I’m wearing jeans and
cowboy boots like everybody else
.” Of course, I know mine are designer jeans and the
boots are a
bit trendy
,
but still
.

He stifles a laugh.
“Yeah, but yours are
spankin
’ new and I bet pretty expensive.
We’re all in faded jeans and worn boots
, see the difference?

I have to laugh. “OK, point well taken. Next time I come
,
I’ll remember to pack my grubby clothes and forget about buying new clothes for the trip.”
I take a swallow of beer as Jay’s eyes smile at me. “What?” I feel like his eyes can see right through me.

“Oh, I was just imagining you in your grubby clothes.
Now tell me about
yourself
,

he says with his
quiet voice
.


Well, my name is
Kate Knig
h
t
ly
as you may have found out already from the motel
.
I work for the
American
Museum of Art
in Manhattan
or
AMA as it’s called. I’
m an assistant curator.

“Hmm
, impressive.”
He nods and give
s
that slight smile again.


It sounds like a wonderful position and it is
,
but
,
remember
,
the museum is huge
and has many curato
rs and many assistant curators.
I have always been interested in art and history.
” I stop and take a swallow of beer as his gaze unsettles me.
 


I guess I
began reading about the Anasazi
in my early twentie
s
and became fascinated with the beauty of their pottery and their my
sterious disappearance
.
M
y first trip
was
to the Four Corners Area
to visit the cliff dwellings
.
Of course, in doing so I fell head over heels in love with the beauty of this land.
So every vacation I can, I end up back here learning a little bit more about the c
ulture. That’s why seeing the
K
a
china
da
nces is
so important.
Your
people are the descendants of the Anasazi.
I am trying to understand the
society.
Oh
,
and one more thing…I’m not the kind of woman who
usually goes off with men I’ve
j
ust met, especially on the back
of motorcycles.”

My words rush out; I talk fast when I’m nervous.
 

“So why did you come?”


Hmm, good question.
Well
,
let’s just say I had a h
unch you weren’t like those guy
s inside.
Ther
e’s something about you…”
I ta
k
e
a breath.

I sense an artist
ic
nature in you, am I right?

“So it shows…you are
very clever.”
He
gi
ve
s
that
slight smile
.
“Yes, I am a painter.

“A painter!
I knew it.
Your hands gi
ve you away.
You have rema
rkable hands for a man.
They foretell
your art
istic nature even before you speak
.
There’s something else…
your voice
..
.”
I stop, trying to find the right words as he gazes at me with a quizzical look.
I sit up in my chair more animated, more
excited
.
“I
know what it is.
Your voice is soft but
has a sensitive quality to it.
I can image you reading poetry or even playing a guitar
and singing
…”

“Whoa, you do get carried away.” He grim
aces
and drops his head.

“Sorry,” I say softly, knowing I’ve embarrassed myself. “Have you ever been to New York?”

He looks up.
“Yeah,
I worked in Manhattan for a
while in my twenties
,
as an art handler for some of the galleries in SOHO.
That was right after my
two years at community college.
Something I did for my mother.
She wanted one of her son
s to go to college so I went.”
He takes
a swallow of beer. “That’s when I first knew I had to paint…tha
t first college painting class.
I was never much good at expressing feelings in words but once I got a paint b
rush in my hand I could talk.”
H
e smiled
ever so
slightly
again
.
His voice is soft; his manner is calm.

“Did you go to New York to study painting?”


No, I couldn’t afford classes.
I could hardly live on what they pa
id me.
No, I was young and foolish and thought I
’d take the art world by storm.
It didn’t happen and
I felt suffocated after
a while
by the city.
I couldn’t see the sky, some
thing a Hopi needs to breathe.
So I came home.”
He drinks his beer and looks off in the distance.


I’
m sorry;
I guess we all have those knoc
k-
em
-dead daydreams in our twenties
.
There’s more to your story
, would you go on…single? 
m
arried
?”
I feel myself drawn in.
I sip my beer and wait.

“Divorced.
Well, painte
rs can’t live off their paintings
unless their work
hangs in
mega
museums like yours.
So I work at the Hopi Cultural Center in th
e s
ummer and do odd jobs around.
S
ometimes I work for galleries
in
Flagstaff, Se
dona, and even Santa Fe.”

“So you’re a bit of a drifter
.”

“Or a
wanderer
.”

“That looks like quite an expensive bike you’re riding
.
I would guess you’re not in the poor house.”

He lau
ghs and his brown eyes twinkle.
“The bike is my Nirvana.
My escape.
My freedom…and it’s good on gas!”


Of course.”
  I laugh, too, noticing how
relaxed I feel
now
. “
I’m going to be around here until the weekend
.
If it doesn’t seem like I’m imposing could I
see some of your paintings?  Or
you
could show me slides?

Jay looks surprised.
“Sure, you can see them.
I have a series that I just finished that I’m
kinda

excited about. I’d appreciate your feedback.
Nobody here has ever asked me about my work.”

We sit and talk
for a few hours
.
We have
more
in common then we both realize
bec
ause of our art connection.
We discuss artist
s
we
like, exhibitions we’ve
see
n
and interesting people we’ve met along the way
.
We have
another beer and when he
suggest
s
dinner,
I say
Dutch treat.
We go
to a din
er and
continue our
talk
, order
coffee and talk until he looks
at his watch.

“I better get yo
u home.
W
e have to leave at 5:00
a.m.
tomorrow morning if you want to see the
K
achinas
come out of the k
iva.”

BOOK: A Kachina Dance
4.71Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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