Easter and the
Easter Peyote Ceremony impacted me in ways that were not at all mysterious,
given the circumstances. However, much of what occurred, the coincidences and
serendipity of several of the encounters, still gives me cause to wonder.
I spent time
with the goats but I also spent time down at the Dome with the girls and
Stanley. This had to do with it being warm, and a good place to shoot the shit
and relax, along with a bit of curiosity about the novelty of their threesome.
I involved
myself in projects getting going on the mesa. The community got together
and put up a sturdy chicken coup for some control over the laying hens and
to protect them from The bobcats, coyotes, and mountain lions, that had to
be kept away from the chickens. As in everything else the leadership was more
or less invisible… or barely visible.
Before night
fell, or during a break in the afternoon, I hung out at the Dome before going
back up on the mesa to the goat pasture. On one such afternoon, we could hear a
vehicle from a distance coming towards us on the gravel road. Visitors were few
so the graveling of tires alerted all four of us to see who it
might. We were expecting, perhaps, some more hippie tourists. We stood by
the road . An ex-speed-freak, who called himself Shep, came running up to us
from where he’d been watching the road from his freakin-post at the point of
the mesa facing the valley. From this vantage, the panorama of the whole Arroyo
Hondo village to the Rio Grande was spread out before him and that
helped to salve his paranoia.
I wasn’t sure
what we were supposed to do about it even though Shep's paranoia was sometimes
right, more often than not, in fact. Shep dashed up the hill to warn
the others on the mesa and left us wondering. Stan and the girls went inside
the Dome but I stayed out front just to see. The sedan pulled off the road in
front of the Dome. Two, crew-cut six-foot-plus, men in their thirties wearing
suites got out of the sedan. I couldn’t help but notice the spit-shine on their
shoes getting dusty. Dust was everywhere and caked everything on the road to
us. One of them held a binder and approached while the other flashed a badge.
“FBI. Do you
live here?” The man with the badge asked the obvious. I wanted to say no but
thought better of it.
“Well, up the
hill… but not here.”
Stan opened the
door enough to see what was going on but was not going to let them in the Dome.
“I live here…
what do you want?”
“We just need
you to check out some pictures and tell us whether you’ve seen any of these
people here.” The agent with the binder said in such a way that I could see he
wasn’t asking for cooperation, he was ordering it.
Stan was going
to close the door but I answered first, “Sure, won’t hurt anything.” I'd caught
a glimpse of some of the pictures and those pictures were not unlike high
school year-book pictures. I knew I could honestly say I hadn’t seen any of
these folks because this was a collection of clean cut suburban white boys and
girls in letter jackets and glee club sweaters: a world apart from anyone on
the mesa.
The agent paused
on each page. I looked at the pictures, hoping not to recognize anyone on one
hand, but thinking of how I could warn whoever it was if I did spot a fugitive
from justice, on the other. As the pages were flipped I did recognize one girl,
Candy, who had arrived only a few days before. Under her photo was her
birthday; May something, 1957. She had paired up with
Shep, coincidentally, and I knew she was very young. This birthday put her
at around thirteen. Shep was only about fifteen or sixteen himself but the girl
was… well, nowhere near ripe. I had mixed feelings about it. So many run-away
kids were on the streets in those days that a thirteen year old girl with a
sixteen year old guy hardly turned a head.
The agent caught
me hesitating at her picture and I knew it. I would have to bluff my way out of
it if I was going to trip-up this guy. I wished I could get to Shep to warn him
but decided to simply shrug my shoulders, “Naw, nothing here… haven’t seen any
of ‘em.”
“Are you sure,
now?” The agent wasn’t buying it. “You know it is a federal crime to obstruct a
federal investigation?”
That did it,
“You know, none of these kids look anything like these picture now. If I were
looking straight at someone I grew up with I couldn’t recognize them.” I took a
deep breath and made like I knew what I was talking about; “Now, this is
private property, Sir, and you've worn-out your welcome… good-bye.”
I was a little
surprised when the Feds got back in their sedan, turned it around and
went the other way towards the gate as commanded. I was expecting them to
arrest me for obstruction of injustice and plow further onto the property. I
took the same shortcut to the top of the mesa that Shep had taken before the
Feds arrived. When I got to the Pueblo everyone was already gathered together
listening to Shep.
“What did they
want?” Brian asked.
“Just showed me
some pictures. I didn’t recognize anyone…” I added, “You know, high school
yearbook pictures.”
Brian
looked at Shep and Candy… “Well, anytime some radical bombs a bank in Ann
Arbor they send up some agents the next day to see if we have any mad bombers
in hiding. If anyone has any warrants or is on the lam, it might be a good idea
to stay out of sight a few weeks.”
Shep came to me
with Candy in tow afterwards. “What should we do? I know they’re here looking
for Candy.”
“What makes you
say so?” I could understand the paranoia but the urgency with which Shep asked
was not easily dismissed.
Shep eyes
were darting back and forth and he was looking over his shoulder as though the
government sedan might be pulling up at any time. He whispered, “Her dad
is the chief of police in her home town.”
“Whew!” I didn’t
want to seem overly alarmed but Candy’s picture was in the binder and I had a
strong feeling Shep’s paranoia was well founded in this case. I asked, “How old
are you, Candy?”
Candy hesitated
but let out the usual lie… “I’m eighteen.”
“You know that
Shep can be in deep shit if you are not telling the truth?”
I felt uncomfortable
thinking about her age and rechecked the math in my mind. She could have passed
for a very young looking sixteen but eighteen was stretching it more than a
bit.
Shep offered,
“Maybe we’ll just hike up to the creek and camp out a few days until this blows
over.”

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