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The Curse of the
Morrigan

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Photo used with permission. Thanks.
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| July 14, 2001 |
Bastille Day |
A sunny, sleepy Summer day in a
small resort town along the Russian River in Northern California. A parking lot
at the main intersection of town is partially taped off for a rally. Early
comers set up tables in the shade of the trees, where they spread out their
fliers and buttons and petitions. Reggae blares from the sound truck.
People begin to arrive. A pickup
full of giant puppets brings them to marchers to carry. A big blue "Spirit of
Water" with lots of smaller fishes on poles; a bigger green "Goddess of
Compassion" with red hearts for her attendants. More people arrive and wander
around surveying the scene. A bus delivers people from the Bay Area; another
unloads protesters from Humboldt in the North. A big, beautiful image of Nuestra
Señora de Guadalupe Hidalgo surrounded by fresh flowers forms the centerpiece of
an altar on the back of a flatbed truck.
Things drag along. Some folks go
down to the river to put their feet in the cool water, to watch the geese and
ducks and kayakers pass by while they're waiting for the rally to begin. A few
people go around selling lefty papers, asking for donations, passing out fliers
for upcoming events.
The parking lot gradually fills
with folks, about 300 at most. News media, people in tie-dyes, with dreads,
jeans, Doc Martens, rope sandals, a couple with doumbeks. Mostly locals from the
rural neighborhoods up and down the redwood-shaded river. Speeches, blessedly
limited to two minutes each, begin. For the most part, they're dull. It's hard
to disagree with any cause they espouse, and they don't much inspire. A few
people stand in clusters of two or three, quietly talking while the speeches
drone on.
Finally the flatbed with Guadalupe
begins to lead the march out of the parking lot. Some people carry signs, most
don't. The bright festive puppets bounce here and there above the heads of the
crowd, adding color and encouragement. The walkers move across the bridge, not
in the middle but on the sidewalks on either edge.
Down below on the sandy beach
beneath the bridge, a black-clad woman fastens a mask to her face. Two men on
the shore hand her a pin-striped suit, a white shirt and a tie and a jar of
blood. She pours the blood on the clothing, then wades into the shallow river
among bathers and canoers. She dips the clothing in the water, lifts it high
dripping blood and water. She rotates her red-eyed, hollow-cheeked, grey-white
visage, mouth agape, teeth bared in a silent shriek. She shows her terrifying
face to those above on the bridge and those around in and near the river. Above,
on the side of the bridge, two freckled, fair-haired collaborators, a woman and
a man, point to her crying, "Witness the washer at the ford, washing the blood
of corporate greed out in the river!" There, below, the Morrígan gazes up, as a
plume of blood flows from the business suit down stream.
The phantom queen, the great
triple Morrígan, is angry. She portends the death of corporate greed.
~ M. Macha NightMare
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