Too Many Chiefs
Ang Tuin's temple was large and airy and mostly painted white, which he
did not like. All through his second life there had been wood panelling which
had filled the space with a rich scent of beeswax and nutmeg, but the tall men
had come to make another of their changes. They had levered off the panels, the
long nails screeching painfully as they pulled from their holes That had upset
him. He had managed to make them sick and he thought one might have died. But
the effort had just made him even weaker & he had slept.
When he awoke the trees outside the arched windows on the far
wall were lush with summer foliage. But were now dwarfed by great stone and
metal buildings which had not been there before. Far away, machines crossed the
sky itself, gliding in silence like distant albatrosses. Ang Tuin watched them
go, remembering the ages he had spent watching far horizons and the distant
specks that had sometimes crossed them. There was a box on the wall next to him
with a red light on it too. It hummed low and soft and he didn’t mind that.
Some time later a man came to attend to the needs
of the box. He was a short man with a belly that his overalls barely contained.
His overalls said he was Brian. Ang Tuin reached into his head. He found that
Brian was perhaps as angry and frustrated as Ang Tuin himself. Someone had
shouted at him while he was driving his car. (Ang Tuin knew what a car was.
This wasn’t the first head he’d reached into.) Brian knew this man by many
names; git, twat, cretin, Brian had a list. He had accosted Brian and struck
his car with his fist in an argument in the street. There were images: a queue
of cars, a contorted face leering through a window. Ang Tuin cut through them
and placed a single bright thought into Brian's head. “I am not a whipping boy,
I am the one who whips.”
Even this gleeful action was an effort, and he had to sleep
again. As he rested for season after season he cast his mind back. To the days
when he was newly born, called into life by the priests. Venerated at a great
wooden altar in front of the other statues of the Rapanui heads. He had had
power back then, as had all the gods; they had been strong. His territory had
extended down the forested slopes of the volcano that was called Terevaka and adjoined
that of Ang Kai who was the god of the eight huge statues on the western slopes
of a smaller hill. Ang Kai who had ruined them all. Ang Kai who had reduced Rapanui
to an empty island, battered by wind and wave. An island of great stone heads that
slowly shifted on their earth foundations, leaning and toppling according to
the whim of the remorseless winds.
At the start of Ang Tuin’s second life the tall men had raised his
statue up in a city greater than he would ever have imagined existed. A temple had
been created for him. Who knew what gods must assist the tall men in their
endeavours for them to prosper on such an extraordinary scale. His worshippers
came to the temple all through the daylight hours; men in different kinds of
hats, with clothes that fitted tight to their bodies, waistcoats bedecked with gold
chains. They had hair on their faces and were serious in their disposition.
Ladies in their finery, dressed with feathers and long flowing skirts, hats
perched on their heads like tall ships cresting waves. They gathered in front
of the statue, its blank eyes staring unseeing at them and through them. They
were hushed in reverence, reading the neat white cards set out for them by the
priests.
“Moai Monolithic Head. Devotional
statue. Rapanui Polynesia, Southern Pacific Oceanic region. Est. 1500 BC.
Solidified Volcanic Ash. 20 tonnes weight. 23 feet height.”
Sometimes a priest would tell them stories about how the Statue
came to be and what service it performed. The worshippers would politely ask
questions and some would reverently run their hands across the statue’s rough
surface.
Ang Tuin felt loved, the worshipper’s reverence filling him with
energy. In return he diminished their troubles. A married man, a merchant,
wracked with suspicion over his young wife’s infidelities found himself
relaxing; she loved him, he was sure of it; these were just idle worries, that he
could afford to ignore. A young boy, commissioned as a midshipman on the Royal
Sovereign, and mortally afraid he would cry like a girl from homesickness was
suddenly so very tired of the confines of his parent’s house and longed for the
horizon. Ang Tuin performed his role, they performed theirs. All was in balance
again, as it should be.
The priests filled Ang Kai’s temple with other items to aid
worship. There were displays in glass cabinets edged with dark wood and more names
on white cards. Fragments of pottery, stone, wood and metal from long dead
peoples. They were many and various and called names like Romans or Inuits or
Macedonians or Aboriginals. He wondered how they had lost their power and been
brought to this great room far from their cities. Had their gods failed them
too? Were they all so greedy?
Ang Kai had been greedy. Ang Kai’s tribe called themselves the
Kavanui. Meaning they were the Chosen ones, the Selected. They worshipped Ang
Kai in much the same way that Ang Tuin’s tribe (who were unnamed) worshipped
him; offerings, sacrifices, devotion and fire. In return the gods rewarded
their people. Rapanui was windswept, wet, often cold. For tribes who sated
their gods it was none of those things. Or rather it still was, but only on the
outside. Viewed through the prism of the tribes, the island was a paradise. It
was blessed with fresh breezes, nourishing rain and occasional warmth. With the
help of the gods the island could be seen as a beautiful place. It was a matter
of perception. See things the right way and life was good. Crops grew,
livestock grazed, social structures were maintained. Ang Tuin and his like nurtured
thoughts in the heads of their devotees; they attended to their needs, spoken
and unspoken. In cold winters they fed thoughts of warm springs to come. When
crops were sparse they revived memories of feasts gone by and the promise of
more in the future. They made shy girls into devoted wives, turned shy boys
into brave warriors. The small communities that populated the island had
occasional feuds & occasional alliances. They married, they died and they
were re-born. All was well, life was in balance.
But Ang Kai was not content with simply being, he had encouraged
his tribe to bring him more. When they ran out of resources he sowed the idea
of taking territory from other tribes and they swept through the island like a
plague. A few generations was all it took and Ang Kai had it all. And a few
generations was all it took for him to lose it. They stoked the fires ever
higher and burnt everything, gave him everything, they starved and froze and
died and were reborn. But fewer and fewer were re-born and they died younger. Until
one fine spring morning the last flame went out, a smouldering heap of ash
cooled and streaked away in the sea breeze. The few emaciated tribe members
stood round the great heads mumbling prayers, eyes cast down. And Ang Kai saw
too late that he was lost.
Then they were alone, so many small gods in so many stone heads.
And so, towards the end of Ang Tuin’s first life, tall ships had
come with tall pale men in strange clothes. They laboured under bright blue
skies, digging at the hard earth until they dragged one of the statues down the
hillside onto the flat plain. Under a huge timber frame they raised it onto the
back of a cart towed by 6 beasts and then onto one of their tall ships. Ang
Tuin was reborn.
Just as things had changed on Rapanui, Ang Tuin saw things change
in the city of the Tall Men. The glass cabinets were rearranged constantly for new
exhibits. Men came and removed all the cabinets containing the axe heads,
flints and pottery shards. Ang Tuin wondered where they went. Shelves were put up,
filled with artefacts, then taken down again. Different cases replaced them. These
ones had lights in them. The priests wanted things to be more exciting, more
interactive. There was now a stuffed polar bear rising up in the Inuit section.
Amongst the Romans there were swords and spears and armour. An Aboriginal
hunting party crouched in a cave-mouth. The Native Americans had a wooden totem
pole reaching to the ceiling. The devotional scripts were removed and now brightly
coloured stickers showed people where things were from and what they did.
The distant shores from where the worshippers came were hidden
from Ang Tuin, but he heard them; at the start there were hooves clattering on
stone streets and the clamour of voices, then cars that had motors that belched
black fumes and crashed and banged. Then more cars, less hooves, more people, more
noise, it was never really quiet anymore. The tide of worshippers washed in,
objects were laid out for them, were revered, were removed and the tide washed
out again. Through it all his Stone Head stood imperious and unmoved.
Hand in hand with the changes in and outside his temple walls
Ang Tuin saw changes in the people themselves.
More worshippers came in bigger numbers; rails were put up, the
priests asked people not to touch the exhibits. The worshippers changed. They wore
different hats in softer materials, their clothes became looser and then more
colourful and looser still. The men started to wear their gold on their wrists
not their waists. The women showed their ankles, then calves, then thighs. Then
no one wore hats.
Worshippers no longer strolled through the temple pausing at
each exhibit and marking the contents and the words. Ang Tuin watched them move
more & more swiftly, their pauses becoming rarer, their attentions easily
distracted. Sometimes they missed out whole sections of the displays. They started
to eat and drink as they walked. They were hardly worshipping at all. They
spoke more loudly; to each other, to devices held to their ears. They brought
their children! Why would they bring mewling children to a temple?
These were surely signs of a people’s downfall; when temples
became market places and school rooms; when gods were no longer given due reverence;
Ang Tuin felt himself become weak as he was overlooked.
His congregation ignored him, drifting through the room, perhaps
sparing him the occasional glance, but not caring about him any more than they
cared about a pet dog. These rational, yet irrational people with their constant
need for comfort and convenience but with no idea of how to obtain it. No
respect, no awe. They knew everything and knew nothing. He resented them,
resented their blank expressions and their unseeing eyes. Their ignorance and
constant need to chatter about their inane lives. They had left him and now
they had what they deserved; a sour, weak unworshipped god alone in his great
hall.
Occasionally he would reach out to someone, instil fear or
hatred or anger. A fat man in tracksuit, stuffing fried chicken into his face found
himself suddenly afraid of the germs that surely swarmed and multiplied on his
food. But such efforts, though amusing, served only to sap his strength. He
spent longer and longer sleeping and dreaming, and each time he awoke the world
had moved on further.
This time on waking he saw there were two small boys and one
small girl gathered round about the head. They were dressed in purple
sweatshirts. On the front in white print was a tree in a circle and the words
St Jude’s Primary School. Two of them were wearing baseball caps.
“Wow” said one, looking up. “How big is that head? That’s
massive!”
“What’s it of?”
“Huh?”
“What’s it of? Who is it?”
“Dunno. Maybe someone famous from ages ago?”
“Cool isn’t it? It’d be well heavy to shift”
“Ha ha – you said the S word! I’m telling!”
“I did not! I said shift! Shift! Shift! You’re an idiot.”
“You are” There was a short interlude of poking and discussing
who was an idiot.
“Get off. Someone must’ve done it though. Someone had to get it
up here.”
“Where’s your cap Sadie?” A teacher approached from the Inuit
exhibit.
“Don’t know Mr Meacher.”
“Is it back in the lunch room?”
“Don’t know sir, it might be.”
“Go and find it then Sadie. Go and find it ! Haste girl!”
“What is this Mr Meecham?”
“This, Josh is an Easter Island Head.”
“How old is it?”
“Well shall I stay here with you and tell you or shall I wander
off and let you READ THE SIGNS!” He pointed at the writing and the pictures on
the laminated notices, then folded his arms and raised his eyebrows.
“We’ll read it ourselves sir.”
“Excellent. I love learners. Who do I love?”
“Learners sir!” giggling
“Very good. Learn away.” Ang Tuin watched Mr Meacher stalk off
to oversee a scuffle at the other end of the room.
The two boys were reading the card.
“It’s flippin’ three thousand years old! That’s older than God
and Jesus!”
“People worshipped it, is IS a god already!”
“How cool would it be to be a god! A proper god with super
powers and that could see the future.”
“That’d be so cool and you could get people to work for you and
bring you stuff”
“That’d be so sweet!” The boys ran their hands over the bottom
of the statue.
Ang Tuin felt their energy. Their awe and wonder wasn’t much,
but it was more than he’d felt for a great deal of time.
“Human sacrifices! Look Robin! Human sacrifices! It says it there!”
“Oh wow – that would be how it got its super-powers. With blood
and killing!”
“We should do that, we should make a sacrifice.”
“Huh? What’re you on about?”
“We should make a great sacrifice to the god of the head”
“If you do I’m telling.”
“We should…I could…”
Robin’s eyes rolled back and he crumpled to the floor. Ang Tuin
left the boy, making soothing noises in his small head. They had minds like
mice these little ones.
Mr Meacher arrived on the run. He checked the boy’s breathing
and took off his sweatshirt.
“Hold his legs up Josh, he’s just got too hot and probably
didn’t have enough breakfast. Millie, can you tell Mrs Tempest to come and give
me a hand? The rest of you can stop gawping, go and learn some stuff. Go! Robin
will be fine.”
Ang Tuin was thrilled. A sacrifice. He felt the rush, the world
swam into sharp focus, colours became vibrant, buzzing with energy. He hoarded this,
not tempted to use it on amusement or mischief. He held it close to him like a
priest clutching his gold.
Sacrifices had always been made of course. But of goats or
sheep. People were not livestock. Nevertheless the priests had stated it it on
their texts. Human sacrifices. It was not for him to question them. A weak one.
Worshippers would sacrifice a weak goat, a runt of the litter. A weak person
would surely serve that purpose. Then he would have power, he could help his
worshippers and they in turn would revere him. Recognise him for what he was
and not be distracted by their mundane lives encroaching on Ang Tuin’s temple.
More seasons went by.
One day the girl came. Her hair was dark, streaked with the
cherry red of a dying fire’s embers. The chair she sat in was covered in stickers
of many different colours and designs. She gazed at Ang Tuin’s statue. Ang Tuin
gently reached into her mind so as not to upset her. Her name was Alice. There
was a feeling of sadness, a great weight within her. Ang Tuin was pleased. This
was the girl, she was meant to be sacrificed.
Alice sat there for a long time, staring up at the impassive
granite face; she did not notice the woman in the sunhat come up behind her.
She yanked headphones off Alice’s head and spun her round to face her. The
woman’s face was an older version of the girl’s; but the years had etched
bitterness into it. The woman bent over yammering into Alice’s face, berating
her for her misdeeds. She just sat there with eyes downcast as if discovered at
some guilty pleasure. She was always doing this, wandering off in a daze, why do
I have to come and find you, why couldn’t you stay where we’d agreed, she was
useless, a dreamer.
Ang Tuin felt all this as he reached out for the mother’s mind
and found screeching madness, a cacophony of conflicting voices full of anger,
fear and resentment. He placed an image in there amongst the yapping and
snarling. An image of the sword in the display behind her, that sword in her
hand, that sword in the chest of her daughter. Then she would see, finally she
would see what a sacrifice her mother had made all her life; finally she would
be sorry for what she had put her mother through.
The mother abruptly got up and strode to the Roman diorama. The
gladius was the standard issue sword for Roman soldiers. It is a short stabbing
sword, not for fencing or swashbuckling. It is very functional, very Roman. She
hefted it in her hand.
At this time several of the small children, buzzing around in
the hall being interactive with everything, turned their attentions to the
Archimedes Screw in the Macedonian section next to the Easter head. They suddenly
thought they could move it if they hung off it. That would be fun.
The mother walked back to the girl, standing in front of her,
raising both her voice and the sword. The girl watched her in a resigned
fashion, as if this was commonplace. Ang Tuin watched and waited.
Meanwhile two pregnant mothers with buggies like tanks, making their
way down the aisle to break up the party on the Screw became panicky. They
suddenly realised that if they didn’t get there their kids would die, simple as
that. They both broke into a run. Coming from two different directions,
focussing on their charges, they collided. Their buggies knocked out the lynch
pins of the screw and it flew free like a ram, swinging from the steel cable
that held it to the ceiling.
It collided with the top of the statue’s head knocking it
forwards and Ang Tuin was suddenly looming over the tableau of Alice and the mother,
sword arm still upraised. Slowly at first then gathering massive momentum as
tonnes of weight succumbed to gravity, the statue tipped over.
He was going to crush them both, this would be a great sacrifice
indeed. But then everything changed. Inexorably it all slowed to a dead stop.
He hung inches above their heads like a gull scanning for mackerel.
The mother slid forwards on the smooth floor. Not a part of her
body moved; but she and the chair and Alice glided beneath him all the same.
Then he was falling again, the mother’s ludicrous sunhat filling
his view and the giant flat nose drove itself onto her head like a thumb on a drawing
pin.
Vocanic ash, under stress reacts like glass. The statue crushed
the life out of the woman and then as it met the marble floor it shattered into
a thousand small pieces. Ang Tuin felt the rest of his power draining away.
Some of the pieces flew into the next section where Heimdall the
watchman of the Norse people was ironbound in his ceremonial shield. Finally he
had managed to convince some small ones to swing on that screw. He could see now
the green space beyond the great window to the South. With the stone head gone,
the sightline across parkland down to the river was opened up. At last His temple
was now fit for a Watchman.
Across in the Macedonian exhibit, a crudely curvaceous clay statue
of a woman stood next to a collection of pottery artefacts. Ishtar the
Lightbringer goddess of love, sex and fertility felt the power within her
temple and was contented. The women with the pushchairs had been her idea. She
had thought to call them and their unborn children to her. They brought with
them the fresh life and fertility that she revelled in. It had been many
seasons since she had received such close attention.
Amarok in his ceremonial reindeer hide had once been the taker
of those Inuits who would hunt alone at night in the Arctic snows. He had only
wanted the woman, not the girl. Two would have been a waste, an offence even,
against the sparse ways of the Inuit. He was pleased that he had thought to
make that happen; he had all he needed now; he had culled one from the herd;
one that needed culling. He had no need of a temple, but the white walls were
the colour of snow, and in this warm land it would have to do. He didn’t really
miss the frozen wastes anyway.
Later, for the tall men there was of course an inquiry. People
were blamed, promises were made, compensation paid.
None of
these details concerned Kalseru the ageless, the Great Creator Serpent, the
Aboriginal Dreamtime God existant in the red-earth dusted cave paintings in their
hermetically sealed display cases. Kalseru who was of both the earth and the
air and from the time before time. He called all things to return to him, even
the gods of men when they forgot their purpose. These small gods. Their lives
were so short; like may-flies. He passed his all-seeing eye over and through
the sixteen remaining deities in His temple, weighing their desires, guiding
some, leaving others to their own devices. All was well now. All was back in
balance.
The statue was irreparable but some of the pieces were just big
enough to stick bar codes on. In his third life, such as it was, Ang Tuin found
himself in something called a gift shop.