THE MAYAS WERE RIGHT!
Their Unliving Golem Delivers Their Message!
The tourists ran screaming as the wooden statue walked to the center
of the platform, pulled a scroll from its chest cavity, and raised its
dagger.
-----
The statue was a Wooden Man of the Third Creation, from before the
Corn Men of the current age. It drew its sustenance from wood, much as
the Corn Men fed on corn. But Corn Men lived quickly like a stalk of
corn. Like wood, the Wooden Man never slept, but it lived slowly over
centuries.
The Wooden Man served the priesthood of the Corn Men. Though their
priests no longer existed, the Corn Men did, so they needed its
services.
Its job was to watch the sun every day. Every 400 years at the end of
a Long Cycle, the Wooden Man would rise from its crypt, recalculate
the holy calendar, and subtract or add a festival day as necessary.
In the 397th year of the 13th Long Cycle, the Wooden Man saw the sun
jump closer. The sun had started a new course. The Moon had
disappeared, as had Mercury, but two new planets replaced them. The
heavens had changed, so the Wooden Man went out early.
At the end of the last Long Cycle, it had found foreign pirates upon
its temple. It drove them off, of course. Its wooden body still held
the metal slugs they'd fired at it then.
This time, foreigners again walked on the temple. They did not walk
like priests or warriors, but they aimed box-like devices at the
Wooden Man. It raised its ceremonial dagger in response.
The intruders fled, and the Wooden Man was left alone. It pinned its
calendar to the altar with the dagger, then returned to its crypt to
resume its watch.
-----
Serge Reese came back to the top of the temple after the Wooden Man
left. He saw the scroll, and recognized it... "My God, it's redone the
Mayan calendar!"
Serge was an amateur archaeologist, on vacation to the Mayan ruins. He
knew the Mayas observed simultaneous interlocking years of 260 and 360
days. The 260-day cycle marked the typical growth of crops and
pregnancies.
The new calendar stopped the current 260-year period after only sixty-
five days, so the next period would start at the 2009 winter solstice.
From then on, two 260-day years would closely fit Earth's new orbital
period. The 360-day year (plus the five Nameless Days each year, plus
regular adjustments to fit the seasons) would continue as before, to
mark Earth's old annual cycles. But the next Long Cycle would start
three years early.
Serge knew the Mayas had not predicted an apocalypse in 2012. If they
had, they'd have been wrong. Apocalypse had already come and gone,
when the rogue planet Iv went through the solar system earlier this
year. But the Mayan calendar was still prophetic, because it was ready
for the new shape of the heavens. The Mayas were right after all.
-----
Author's Notes: This story is on the Web at
http://www.eilertech.com/stories/2009/trillions.htm#mayas . It
immediately follows the story "Iv". You might say, I went to a lot of
effort to produce an astronomical situation for the Mayas to be right
about.
The "Wooden Men" actually are part of Maya creation legend, at least
if one believes Wikipedia. I trust they're artificial enough for this
challenge.
Wikipedia was unclear on whether the Mayan "long" year was 365 days or
only 360. Either case requires a regular calendar adjustment. I
chose to believe the Mayan priesthood was capable and willing to
adjust their calendar to the heavens (instead of vice versa). And
that's pretty much the whole story.
> Serge knew the Mayas had not predicted an apocalypse in 2012. If they
> had, they'd have been wrong. Apocalypse had already come and gone,
> when the rogue planet Iv went through the solar system earlier this
> year. But the Mayan calendar was still prophetic, because it was ready
> for the new shape of the heavens. The Mayas were right after all.
...*awesome*.
Win for subverting 2012ishness in a way that actually understands what the
Long Count is about.
> Author's Notes: This story is on the Web at
> http://www.eilertech.com/stories/2009/trillions.htm#mayas . It
> immediately follows the story "Iv". You might say, I went to a lot of
> effort to produce an astronomical situation for the Mayas to be right
> about.
Ahhhhhh. XD
> Wikipedia was unclear on whether the Mayan "long" year was 365 days or
> only 360. Either case requires a regular calendar adjustment. I
> chose to believe the Mayan priesthood was capable and willing to
> adjust their calendar to the heavens (instead of vice versa). And
> that's pretty much the whole story.
Andrew "NO .SIG MAN" "Juan" Perron, makes sense!