Read St. Clair (Gives Light Series) Online
Authors: Rose Christo
view of the milky, mist-white clouds and the
childlike canyons was breathtaking. Rosa knelt
and laid out dishes of grilled chicken and corn
soup. Mary sat plucking the strings of an acoustic
guitar. I heard a dove cooing softly from the
mossy, gnarled limbs of the southern oak.
"Have you been thinking about baby names, dear?"
Aunt Cora asked Rosa. I helped her sit on the
ground. "These old bones don't work the way they
used to," she told me with a chuckle.
"Rafael wants the name Eurydice," Gabriel said,
and pulled a face. "I don't think that's happening."
Rafael scowled. His back was against the tree
trunk, his visage dark.
"One day your face is going to get stuck that way,
Raf," Gabriel cautioned. "So--how's everyone
doing?"
I thought the conversation was a little awkward;
because, of course, everyone was trying very hard
not to bring up Kelo v. New London and the
uncertainty of the reservation's future. I glanced
curiously at Rafael, wondering whether he'd
mentioned the pine beetle plan to either Gabriel or
Rosa. His face, smoldering, betrayed nothing.
Then again, his face was always smoldering--but
not on purpose. He just couldn't help it.
I sat next to Rafael and playfully flicked his
braids. He ducked his head away from my hand.
"I need to talk to you," he said.
Oh, great.
Mary started regaling our families with lovely
anecdotes about food poisoning. Rafael and I
walked around the side of the house for privacy.
Rafael suddenly looked furious.
I couldn't understand. Rafael was a very moody
boy, it's true; but his moods always followed a
precise pattern. For example, if he was angry
about the Bureau of Land Management, he would
have said as much when we first found out what
they planned on doing to the reserve. Belated
anger wasn't like him.
I pressed my fingertips into the grooves of his
dimples. I tried to stretch his mouth in a silly
smile. He batted my hand away.
I deflated. If I was the one he was angry with--
"I'm mad," he said, and his voice was low. "I'm
mad because somebody hurt you, and I can't do
anything about it."
I stared at him. I smiled slowly, though I wasn't
feeling very humorous.
"You can't talk; but I can learn sign language. You
can't sing; but I can make you a flute. What am I
supposed to do when somebody rapes you?"
I felt like my head was exploding. I gave his
shoulder a quick shove--maybe a little too quick. I
wasn't--that was disgusting. I wasn't a girl.
"Do you even get it? That somebody hurt you?"
It didn't hurt
, I signed.
"You know what I mean," he snarled.
I'm not some helpless
--
"You were."
My head was killing me.
"You know Joseph Little Hawk? Annie's brother?
He's, what, seven?"
Seven and a half.
"How would you feel if someone tried to have sex
with him?"
I can tell you how I felt. I felt like I was going to
throw up.
"Yeah," Rafael said bitterly. "That's how I feel.
Only multiply it by about a thousand."
I let my face fall into my hands. I slid down
against the side of the house.
Rafael sat next to me.
"You know how you always freak out when you
have to undress in front of someone? And how you
always act like your body's really ugly? You ever
think there's a reason for that?"
I didn't like this. I really didn't like this. I just
wanted him to shut up.
"You're not ugly. Sky, you're-- You know when
you first came to the reservation, and everyone
was like, 'Holy crap, it's a white boy'? My
thoughts were more like, 'Holy crap, why can't I
stop looking at him?' And it wasn't because you
were ugly."
I didn't know what to say. I wasn't too keen on
meeting his eyes. I still wanted him to shut up; but
by the same token, I could feel the warmth pooling
in my belly, the heat flooding my face.
"Look," Rafael said, sounding flustered. "I can't...I
don't know how to change the past. I wish I did.
But if you give me her name--I could take a blood
law on her, they can't arrest me if I come back to
the reservation--"
I looked at Rafael, mortified. I didn't want him to
kill anyone.
Rafael looked down at his knees. "You're too
soft," he mumbled. "I told you. I'd only known
you for a few months before I figured out what
kind of a person you were. You've never had a
bad thought about anyone. Don't act like it's not
true. It is."
I didn't think it was.
"It is," he said stubbornly.
I shrugged, too weary to argue.
"Anyway... Guess we'd better head back before
they start thinking we eloped."
I love you
, I signed.
Rafael looked at me.
I love you
, I signed. There are two ways to say it
in sign language. The easiest way is to hold your
hand up and bend your middle and ring fingers.
Metalheads like to use it when they're moshing,
although it obviously doesn't mean what they think
it means. The other method is a lot simpler; even
people who don't speak sign language will know
what you're saying. All you have to do is gesture
to yourself--then your heart--then whoever it is that
you love.
Rafael regarded me, for a moment, in soft silence.
He pressed his lips to my temple.
"Moron," he said. And I could hear it in his
voice:
I love you, too.
August was a month of remembrance. At night the
whole community went out to the badlands to
celebrate the ghost dance, a dance that reunites the
souls of the living with the souls of the dead. "We
dance this at home, too," Marilu told me. I didn't
exactly dance, but I did provide the music. I
played a couple of peyote songs on my plains flute
while our friends and relatives formed circles
around the bonfire, one circle within the other, and
hit their hands against their hand drums and shook
the turtleshell rattles tied to their legs. I really
liked those peyote songs; but I had a favorite song,
a supplication song, and it touched me, in a way, to
hear the Shoshone men and women singing along,
the words timeless.
Father, help me
, the song
went.
Father, I want to live. Father, I know you
did this to me. Father, have pity.
I wished I believed in a God. Sometimes I did and
sometimes I didn't. If I'd believed just then, I
would have asked him to take pity on us. This
reservation was all the Southern Plains Shoshone
had left of their ancestral lands. It didn't seem
right to me that someone else had the power to take
it away.
Dad took Marilu and me out on the lake one day in
Mr. At Dawn's boat. He showed Marilu the
jumping bass and she clapped her hands together to
try to catch them between her palms. I scooped a
handful of floating cress out of the water and
handed it to Marilu, and she nibbled on it while the
sun warmed our heads and stroked our backs. I
breathed in the fresh air; I drank it in through my
pores. The boat plashing through the water was a
melody all its own. I whistled the first couple
verses of Sai Paa Hupia. I thought it was
appropriate.
"How's your mother doing these days, Marilu?"
Dad asked.
"Oh, she's good," Marilu said, with a mouth full of
watercress. "She's working real hard to build our
new house. Otherwise she would have come to
Nettlebush with Grandma and me. She says you
should e-mail her, she doesn't have the new phone
set up."
We took the boat off the lake around one o'clock.
"Let's head home for some lunch," Dad suggested.
I helped him pick up the boat, and we carried it
together to the forest path.
"Sky-loser! Wait!"
I looked over my shoulder, puzzled. Zeke came
charging toward us, his long hair flying.
Dad and I set the boat down.
What's wrong?
I
signed.
"The contractors are here! Hurry!"
I looked at Dad for confirmation; but he was
already running to the woods. Marilu scooped up
my hand and we followed Zeke.
"Shh!" Zeke said loudly. He stopped at a grove of
beech trees. He threw his arms around a trunk and
shimmied his way up to its strong limbs--where he
sat, perched, peeking through the leaves.
Marilu and I did the same on the next tree over.
Dad didn't. I think he was afraid the branches
would snap.
The view from the top of the beech tree was
impressive. I could see the entirety of the forest
from here, the blue star glade and the black bears'
den, the brooks and the creek and Annie's willow
tree. I could even see a hint of the Sonoran Desert
past the tops of the ponderosa pines. I trained my
eyes on the ponderosas. The pines on the
easternmost boundary of the forest looked really
ill, the bark red and chalky and splotched with
blue. I zeroed in on the ground. I saw a man in a
neat black suit, and a couple of men wearing tool
belts. One of the contractors gestured
emphatically at the dead pine tree nearest him. I
wished I could hear what they were saying. The
contractors abruptly stormed off, the man in the
black suit chasing after them.
"Hurray!" Marilu said, and slid down the beech
tree. I followed her quickly to the ground.
"What is it?" Dad asked. "What happened?"
"Pine beetles, that's what!" Zeke yelled. He broke
into a very interesting dance.
Dad looked at me. "What aren't you telling me...?"
"Uncle Paul," Marilu said, "could we have some
lunch now?"
Dad nodded slowly, awkwardly. He scratched the
back of his head with a pawlike hand. He started
back to the forest path and we trailed after him,
Zeke dancing after us. We picked up the boat on
our way back to the neighborhood and dropped it
off at Mr. At Dawn's house. From there we
headed home.
"Odd," Dad murmured. I opened the front door
and Zeke and Marilu piled into the house. Dad
perused me silently. I smiled noncommittally and
went into the kitchen to pour us some iced juniper
tea.
"We are the bomb-diggity!" Zeke yelled.
I gave him a weird look.
Marilu took the honey biscuits out of the icebox.
Dad turned on the radio to catch up on baseball
scores. Zeke invited himself to use our computer.
"I'm gonna e-mail Steeeew," he announced. I gave
him another weird look. Marilu kicked her legs
under the kitchen table and sipped her juniper tea.
"Are you sure you don't have anything to tell me?"
Dad asked.
I smiled innocently and bit into a honey biscuit.
Lunch was a really weird affair that day. Between
Zeke yelling at the computer and Dad yelling at the
radio, Marilu and I didn't get much talking done. I
guess I should say Marilu didn't get much talking
down. I had a hard time swallowing, for whatever
reason, and had to keep hitting my gut to spit the
bread back out. It sucks when you don't have a
coughing reflex.
"I was thinking," Dad said, when the radio turned
to a commercial break. "Maybe I should build a
new house."
I looked at him, surprised.
"Not for us," he said. "For..."
I grinned mischievously.
"Please don't make fun of me," Dad said feebly.
"Will you come see our house in January, Uncle
Paul?" Marilu asked.
"I can't, honey. I'm sorry."
"Aw... That's okay. I'll send you pictures."
"Thank you. That's very nice of you." Dad poured
me more tea when he saw that I was choking.
"Drink this," he said. I shot him a grateful look.
September came much too soon for my liking. Dad
and Granny and I saw Aunt Cora and Marilu to the
bus stop off the turnpike. I looked left and right,
paranoid, to make sure the cops weren't hanging
around. The laws of the reservation didn't protect