How The Iron Shirts Came Looking For The Seven Cities Of Cibola
by
TOLD BY THE ROAD-RUNNER
From Cay Verde in the Bahamas to the desert of New Mexico, by the Museum trail, is around a corner and past two windows that look out upon the west. As the children stood waiting for the Road-Runner to notice them, they found the view not very different from the one they had just left. Unending, level sands ran into waves, and strange shapes of rocks loomed through the desert blueness like steep-shored islands. It was vast and terrifying like the sea, and yet a very pleasant furred and feathered life appeared to be going on there between the round-headed cactus, with its cruel fishhook thorns, and the warning, blood-red blossoms that dripped from the ocatilla. Little frisk-tailed things ran up and down the spiney shrubs, and a woodpecker, who had made his nest in its pithy stalk, peered at them from a tall sahuaro.
The Road-Runner tilted his long rudder-like tail, flattened his crested head until it reminded them of a wicked snake, and suddenly made up his mind to be friendly.
“Come inside and get your head in the shade,” he invited. “There’s no harm in the desert sun so long as you keep something between it and your head. I’ve known Indians to get along for days with only the shade of their arrows.”
The children snuggled under the feathery shadow of the mesquite beside him.
“We’re looking for the trail of the Iron Shirts,” said Oliver. “Alvar Nunez Cabeza de Vaca,” added Dorcas Jane, who always remembered names. The Road-Runner ducked once or twice by way of refreshing his memory.
“There was a black man with him, and they went about as Medicine Men to the Indians who believed in them, and at the same time treated them very badly. But that was nearly four hundred years ago, and they never came into this part of the country, only into Texas. And they hadn’t any iron shirts either, scarcely anything to put either on their backs or into their stomachs.”
“Nevertheless,” quavered a voice almost under Oliver’s elbow, “they brought the iron shirts, and the long-tailed elk whose hooves are always stumbling among our burrows.”
The children had to look close to make out the speckled fluff of feathers hunched at the door of its hogan.
“Meet my friend Thla-po-po-ke-a,” said the Road-Runner, who had picked up his manners from miners and cowboys as well as from Spanish explorers.
The Burrowing Owl bobbed in her own hurried fashion. “Often and often,” she insisted with a whispering whoo-oo running through all the sentences, “I’ve heard the soldiers say that it was Cabeza de Vaca put it into the head of the King of Spain to send Francisco Coronado to look for the Seven Cities. In my position one hears the best of everything,” went on Po-po-ke-a. “That is because all the important things happen next to the ground. Men are born and die on the ground, they spread their maps, they dream dreams.”
The children could see how this would be in a country where there was never a house or a tree and scarcely anything that grew more than knee-high to a man. The long sand-swells, and the shimmer of heat-waves in the air looked even more like the sea now that they were level with it. Off to the right what seemed a vast sheet of water spread out like quicksilver on the plain; it moved with a crawling motion, and a coyote that trotted across their line of vision seemed to swim in it, his head just showing above the slight billows.
“It’s only mirage,” said the Road-Runner; “even Indians are fooled by it if they are strange to the country. But it is quite true about the ground being the place to hear things. All day the Iron Shirts would ride in a kind of doze of sun and weariness. But when they sat at meals, loosening their armor buckles, then there would be news. We used to run with it from one camp to another–I can run faster than a horse can walk–until the whole mesa would hear of it.”