110 pages • 3 hours read
Silvia Moreno-GarciaA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more. For select classroom titles, we also provide Teaching Guides with discussion and quiz questions to prompt student engagement.
Vucub-Kamé visits Xtabay. He can feel his brother’s lingering presence and walks the same path along the floor Hun-Kamé did, wanting to feel their similarities and differences through their shared steps. He chastises Xtabay for failing to enthrall Hun-Kamé. Xtabay remarks that Hun-Kamé is the Lord of Xibalba, putting an extra emphasis on “the,” which reminds Vucub-Kamé “who was the firstborn child and who was the pretender, the traitor” (169).
The words unsettle Vucub-Kamé. He paces the room as he interrogates Xtabay about his brother’s visit. Xtabay reports that Hun-Kamé is turning mortal quickly and that the reflection of Casiopea was in his eye. Disturbed by this, Vucub-Kamé kills Xtabay’s pet bird to read another prophesy. He can no longer his brother’s arrival in Baja California. Instead, he sees a fleeting image of Hun-Kamé upon his throne before also seeing himself as the Lord of Xibalba. The new uncertainty unsettles him. He returns to Xibalba and sits upon his throne, pressing his hands into the stone to reassure himself “it was there, it remained his, it would not vanish” (173).
By Silvia Moreno-Garcia