Read St. Clair (Gives Light Series) Online
Authors: Rose Christo
pauwau?' asked Wolf. 'Oh, fine,' said Coyote.
And so the brothers left for their nightly hunt, for
even in those days, Wolf and Coyote were
nocturnal.
"The brothers returned to their den in the morning
and went to sleep. Soon they were awakened by
the sounds of a threatening war drum. Wolf and
Coyote rushed out of their den to see what was the
matter. There, below their plateau, stood Bear,
pounding on the war drum with her heavy paws.
For, you see, death was not permanent in those
days as it is now.
" 'Coyote,' Bear cried. 'You have killed me, so I
declare war!'
"Coyote dropped his tail between his legs and
trembled all over. 'Help me!' he said, and hid
behind his brother. Wolf sighed. 'Again, I must
fight your battles for you,' Wolf lamented. So
Wolf went to war with Bear. And they are still at
war to this day, which is why you see them clash
and battle whenever they meet in the woods."
"Fantastic," DeShawn breathed at my side.
"Skylar?"
I looked up. Autumn Rose In Winter was standing
at my other side, her hands clasped, her hair in a
girlishly high ponytail.
"Stuart's calling for us," Autumn Rose whispered.
"Who's Stuart?" DeShawn asked.
I got up off the ground. I gestured to DeShawn,
meaning he could follow us if he wanted to, but he
didn't notice. He had gone back to eating.
Autumn Rose and I walked together to the country
lane. It was exceptionally dark out, and I couldn't
really see where we were going. Autumn Rose
noticed, and I guess she had eyes like a cat,
because she took me gently by my wrist and helped
me along. She was a very sweet girl, if a bit
accident prone.
We found the doors of the flourmill thrown open.
Autumn Rose and I walked in together. The inside
of the flourmill was illuminated by the bright,
glowing flame resting on the palm of Stuart Stout's
hand.
Stuart looked angry.
Angry might be an understatement. Stuart's
forehead was pinched, his pale eyes blazing. His
mouth looked like it desperately wanted to curl
into a snarl. He closed his hand in a fist and
slammed it into the wall, sparks showering to the
floor. I heard Prairie Rose In Winter shriek. I
stomped hastily on the sparks before the whole
building caught fire.
I heard the gurgling of liquid in a bottle. I heard
the hiss of a cigarette lighter; I saw a blue flame
suspended in the darkness. The flame jumped,
spreading over the palm of Stuart's hand. Light
bounced off of the flourmill's walls. The anger
was gone from Stuart's face. Now he looked
politely blank.
I thought: This guy might be nuts.
"So," Stuart said. "The government's moving in on
the lake now. Solomon Knows the Woods says
Arizona Realty, Inc. is already putting up bids for
the land."
"Can they seriously do that?" Daisy At Dawn
asked. "Emptying out a whole lake? What about
the fish and the plants down there?"
"Do you really think they care about the wildlife?
This whole nation was built on avarice and self-
aggrandizement."
I found Annie standing by the grist with Aubrey.
This time Aubrey had brought his other brother
with him, Reuben, a man in his late twenties.
Reuben held his tiny daughter, Serafine, in his
broad arms. I made my way over to Annie and
Reuben gave me a stoic nod.
I'd found something interesting the other night when
I was looking up American land laws on Granny's
computer. In 1890, there was a court case called
Cherokee Nation v. Southern Kansas Railway.
What happened was this. In the late 1800s, the
Southern Kansas Railway Corporation decided
they just
had
to build their railroad on top of the
Cherokee reservation. Never mind that the
railway company could have built anywhere else
in Kansas. Never mind that the Cherokee were
only allowed a hundred tiny acres to live on.
Kansas wanted that reservation, damn it, and they
were going to get it. The Cherokee took their case
to the Supreme Court and begged them not to take
their land away. Wasn't it enough that the white
settlers had 80,000 square miles all to themselves,
and that in Kansas alone? Wasn't it enough that the
Cherokee had already walked the Trail of Tears?
The Supreme Court shot them down. The railroad,
they said, was more important than the
reservation. Everybody could use the railroad.
Only the Cherokee could use the reservation. Why
couldn't the Cherokee see how selfish they were
being?
It's eerie when history repeats itself.
"So, uh..." Zeke started. "Isn't there anything we
can do to the lake to keep them from taking it?"
Silence.
"Poison the water," William Sleeping Fox
suggested, in a vague, dreamlike voice. "Then they
won't want it."
"And then we'll kill the fish and the watercress,"
Holly said dully.
"Yeah, and those land junkies are already planning
on draining the water," said Daisy, "so I doubt they
care whether it's poisoned or not. Why are they
draining it, anyway?"
"Market value, I think," Stuart said. "If you can
build on top of it, you're going to make more
money off of it. You can't really build on top of a
lake."
I had a different idea, though. If the current law
only let the government snatch up property that
wasn't being used, then of course the lake needed
to be drained before the Bureau could stake a
claim on it. As long as there were fish in the water
and boats on the lake, the realty was technically in
use.
"So are we screwed?" Daisy asked.
"No. We just need to think. Think," Stuart urged
himself, the flame on his hand wavering. "How
can we turn off prospective buyers?"
"I've got an idea," said Mary Gives Light, a
gleaming, dangerous grin painted all over her
face. "Toss a couple of bodies in there and let the
government find them. No one's gonna wanna buy
an Indian burial ground. Which one of you wants
to volunteer your bloated carcass for the good of
our nation?"
Mary encroached on Allen Calling Owl. Allen
gulped, his eyes bulging with fear.
"Would you stop that?" Rafael said, his teeth
gritted.
"Aww, Raffy, are you volunteering? You brave
soul--"
"Focus, please," Stuart said hoarsely.
"I have an idea!" said Prairie Rose, bouncing on
her heels. "If there was a monster in the water,
like the Loch Ness Monster, then we could say
we're protecting it and then the government can't
take the water away."
"Sure," Holly said unenthusiastically. "Rafael, do
you have any Loch Ness Monster eggs in your
freezer?"
"
Don't
pick on me!" Prairie Rose warned.
Mary crept over to Prairie Rose and tried to pinch
her cheeks.
"Focus!" Stuart snapped.
Everyone fell accordingly silent. I think we were
all afraid he'd punch the wall again.
"Focus," Stuart said again. "We
need
to save our
land. What can we do to convince the Bureau of
Land Management that the ground underneath the
lake is worthless?"
Suddenly I knew exactly what we should do.
Eagerly, I opened my mouth.
Oh, wait. Damn. Stupid voicebox.
"Skylar?" Annie said pleasantly.
I gave her a grateful smile. That girl is an angel, I
swear.
Sinkholes
, I spelled. Mr. Red Clay had taught us a
while back that America's Great Lakes were sitting
on top of sinkholes. It was actually pretty cool.
As the groundwater eroded the soil underneath the
lakebed, whole hosts of primordial organisms
were rising to the surface of Lake Huron.
If the
government thought there were a sinkhole
beneath the lake, they wouldn't be able to build
on top of it. Anything built on top of a sinkhole is
just going to collapse into the soil.
Annie repeated what I had said.
"That's...pretty intelligent, actually," Stuart said. I
wondered whether I ought to be offended that he
sounded surprised.
"No it's not," Holly said. "I can't see how we're
going to convince anyone that there's a sinkhole
under the lake."
Well, yeah, that had me stumped, too.
"Does the Bureau of Land Management know how
deep the lake is?" Stuart asked.
"I don't know?" Zeke said. "They had this camera
thing--"
"A camera?"
"A box," Rafael said. "A box on top of a tripod."
"That's called a theodolite," Aubrey said. "And
yes, it lets you measure area and angles.
Elevation, too. It's really handy!"
"Then they'll already know that the lake is seventy-
five feet deep," Stuart said.
"Well, yes, probably," Aubrey said.
Annie's eyes took on a knowing gleam. "So if a
few inches of water were suddenly to disappear..."
"Then it would look as though the lake were sitting
on top of a sinkhole," Stuart agreed.
"Wait a minute," Rafael said. "That lake's
seventy-five feet deep, right? And ten acres total.
So we'd need to drain a quarter million gallons of
water to lower the lake just one inch. Where are
we gonna put all that water?"
"And will it hurt the fish?" Autumn Rose asked.
"I don't think it'll hurt the fish," Daisy said
cheerfully. "The catfish might not like it, but they
mostly stick to the bottom of the lake."
"Yeah, but where are we gonna put the water?"
Rafael said, returning to his point. "Never mind
that. How are we gonna get it out?"
"We'll each grab a pail," Holly said dispiritedly.
"Yeah, I've got a pail!" Zeke said. "From when I
was a kid," he said quickly.
"The irrigation canals," I heard an unfamiliar voice
say.
It took me a while to realize Reuben had spoken.
In all the time that I'd known Aubrey's family, I'd
never heard Reuben speak before. Everyone
turned simultaneously to look at him. He didn't
really notice. He had Serafine dandled on his
shoulder, and she was fast asleep.
"Oh, that's right!" Aubrey said. "Some of the farms
get their water from the lake! Not ours, of course--
we've got a pond--but--"
"Grandma's farm uses lake water," June Threefold
said.
"Hey, so does Meredith's ranch!" Zeke said.
"So...wait a minute," Rafael said, "we wanna flood
the farms? And kill the crops?"
"Sure," Holly said. "Sounds good to me."
"Please focus," Stuart said, exhausted, for the
umpteenth time. "This is a serious problem. If we
don't have a safe place to store the water until the
Bureau leaves, then this plan isn't going to work."
I tapped Annie's shoulder rapidly and she turned,
patient.
The badlands
, I signed, grinning.
"The badlands," Annie repeated, a spark of
rebellion on her face.
We high-fived each other.
"What about the badlands?" Stuart asked.
Rafael seemed to have caught on, too. "There are
gullies out there," he said. "Huge trenches in the
ground where the weather wore down the terrain.
If we could reroute the canals to the gullies, we
could store all the water out there until the FBI
leaves."
"Well, how are we going to do that?" Stuart asked.
Everyone, amusingly, looked at Reuben. Reuben
stared blankly back.
"Uu pusikwatu?" Aubrey asked him.
"The lake's canals are underground," Reuben said.
"Farmers operate hand pumps to draw water from
the canals. The pump stores the water in an
aluminum tank until the farmer needs it."
"Is that how the hand pumps outside our houses
work, too?" Autumn Rose asked excitedly.
"No. Those rely on groundwater, not lake water."
Stuart asked, "How much water does a tank like
that store?"
"A thousand gallons," Reuben replied--with great
dignity, I thought.
Stuart frowned. "That's about eight thousand
pounds. We'd never be able to carry it