Read St. Clair (Gives Light Series) Online
Authors: Rose Christo
defeated.
I looked sideways at Rafael, his jaw square, his
hand curling and uncurling in a fist. I took his hand
and threaded his fingers with mine. There was
nothing we could do right now, and he'd only get in
trouble if he tried.
The ride back to Arizona was eerie. The eight of
us sat in silence, so distant from one another that
we might as well have stood on opposite ends of
the world. No one turned on the radio. No one
said a word. Each of us was definitely upset--but
that's just the thing. If you're Shoshone, you're not
going to talk about how upset you are.
On and off I slept, scarcely even aware when we
stopped and changed drivers. I peered out the
window, half-awake, and breathed with relief
when the road sign read: Route 89. I slapped my
face to regain some awareness. It was early in the
morning when the SUV pulled onto the
reservation. I swung my duffel bag over my
shoulder and climbed out of the car, my legs like
rubber. Aubrey made his way across the parking
lot toward us and clapped me on the shoulder.
"What do you think all that was about?" he asked
dolefully.
Rafael shrugged, brooding.
The same question was on my mind. Was it really
a matter of land jurisdiction? Maybe I was being
paranoid. But the way that woman had catalogued
the crowd, like she was looking for someone...
Could the FBI have thought they'd catch Dad at the
Bear River Memorial? Well, I hated to break it to
them, but Dad was a lot smarter than that.
"Come," Granny said to me. "We'll see what your
father's up to."
I waved goodbye to Rafael and Aubrey. I put my
arm around Granny's back and we walked together
down the dirt road.
The morning sky was a soft, watercolor blue,
clouds tinted rose where the brand new sun had
graced them with its rays. Fresh leaves dusted the
topmost branches of the empty oak trees, a promise
of rebirth, and the robins sang to one another from
the refuge of their foliage. Winter was drawing to
a close. Spring was on its way. I smiled in spite
of myself. Maybe this spring would look treat us
better than this winter had.
My smile fell when we climbed the steps to our
front porch and found a notice pinned to the door.
"What on earth?" said Granny.
I could hear my heart thudding in my chest. I
ripped the paper off the door. Granny and I bent
our heads to read it together.
Pima County Consolidated Justice Court
, the
notice read.
You have just been served with an
Eviction action. You are required to relinquish
your home in twelve (12) days to the Plaintiff
(Arizona Department of Transportation).
I read the notice a second time. The blood pooling
in my fingers felt cold.
Granny drew a sharp breath. She took the paper
from my hands and sealed her eyes shut.
Bleakly, I looked around the reservation. This had
to be a dream. How could they kick us out of our
house? What had happened to the requirement that
the land had to be undeveloped before they could
steal it uncontested?
Doors all over the reservation swung open.
Families started shouting frantically to one another
across the lane. I saw Annie walk out onto her
porch, her house only thirty yards from ours. In
her hands, too, was an official white paper.
Our eyes met across the distance. In all the time
that I'd known her, it was the first time she looked
like she didn't know what to do.
"What's going on?"
"Why is everybody outside?"
"Did you see--?"
I sat down on the porch steps, the reservation
buzzing with conversation, my head buzzing with
disbelief. I folded my hands atop my knees. Okay,
I told myself. We're going to find a way out of
this. We have to.
I rubbed my eyes with my knuckles and looked
over my shoulder. Dad and Granny were sitting
together on the porch.
"...Racine pick up the kids," I heard Dad say.
"I'm going to talk to Nola," Granny said firmly.
She stood from her chair and shuffled past the both
of us, down the steps and out on the lawn.
I didn't know what to do. Should I just pretend this
was any other day on the reserve? Eat breakfast,
set up Granny's loom, head to Annie's to help her
cook?
Dad rubbed his face with his palms.
"You know what this is about," he said to me
through his hands. "Don't you?"
My nerves jumped. I didn't know for sure. Dad
didn't know for sure.
"I'm going to turn myself in," Dad said.
I jumped up. I don't know what I was thinking.
Maybe I thought I would physically stop him.
"Please," Dad said, sounding as though he wasn't
up for arguing. "Do you really think I should let
our friends lose their homes? It's obvious the
government only wants this land so they can
prosecute me on it. To be fair, I did commit a
crime."
Fair? I stared at him. How was that fair? I didn't
like what he'd done any more than the government
did, but there's a difference between coldblooded
murder and stopping a serial killer. Did Dad
really think Rafael's father stopped at seven lives?
I didn't. Not for a second.
"I have to go," Dad said.
I lifted the hem of my shirt. I grabbed his hand and
put it on my stomach tube.
It's really low. I know it is. But I wanted to tell
him:
I'm sick. The disease is gone, but it could
come back. I can't swallow and I feel like I'm six
again and I need you to stay here. I need you to
stay safe.
He looked so dejected, it broke my heart in two.
"I don't see how your friends are going to fix it this
time," Dad mumbled.
I was glad I couldn't admit it: I didn't see how,
either.
All day that day, families sat on their porches and
rarely went inside. I think they figured if they
were sitting in front of their homes, no one could
tear them down. I recalled the threat about the
SWAT team at Bear River and thought otherwise.
Nor did I think this kind of silent protest could last
very long. There was still a lot of work to be done
around the reservation, like tending to the
windmills and watering the crops.
Dad and Granny and I sat on our porch while
visitors came to chat about the eviction notice.
"Mother's at a loss," Mr. Red Clay said. He
looked like he was at a loss, too. "She's not even
sure this is legal. Claiming developed land
without a court summons?" Ms. Siomme, who had
accompanied him, remained calm. She always
remained calm. "I'm sure we'll figure something
out," she said good-naturedly. "We might have a
lawsuit on our hands."
Annie came looking for me a little after noon.
Stuart wants us
, she signed to me.
Dad frowned. He didn't know sign language, but
I'm sure he had his ideas.
Annie and I walked the lane down to the
countryside, each of us as tense as the other. I put
an arm around her shoulders and she seemed to
relax. We pushed open the aged doors to the
flourmill, the sounds of loud chatter leaking
through the chips in the wood, and stepped in.
Stuart wasn't the only one waiting inside. I did a
double take. There had to be sixty or seventy kids
in that tiny, crowded room. Some of them I'd
never even seen in the schoolhouse before, which
led me to believe they were homeschooled.
Everyone was talking at the same time. Only
Stuart wasn't talking. I spotted his auburn head in
the middle of the mob and wondered what was
going through his mind.
"I was right," Holly said. She happened to speak
up at precisely the same time that most of the other
conversations lulled. "I said they'd knock down
our houses if they had to. I knew it."
"I wish I could strangle you," Daisy said.
"But this isn't legal, is it?" Aubrey asked. "Didn't
that law say they could only take the land away if
we hadn't done anything with it?"
I jolted. This wasn't Kelo v. New London. This
was Cherokee Nation v. Southern Kansas
Railway. Way back in the 1800s, the Supreme
Court ruled that the welfare of an Indian
reservation was less important than something
everyone else could make use out of. Like a
railroad.
Arizona Department of Transportation. That's
what's going on, I thought, delirious. They can
knock down the entire reservation as long as they
plan on building something transport-related on top
of it. Like a train station, or a freeway.
"It doesn't matter," Stuart said suddenly. Everyone
turned to look at him. "If it's illegal, they'll make it
legal. That's what it means to have power. We
don't have to figure that out. What we have to
figure out is how we're going to stop it."
"The radio!" Prairie Rose In Winter shrieked.
It was pretty impressive how no one looked twice.
"I know, I know what we're gonna do!" Prairie
Rose bounced on her heels. "We could use the
radio to tell everyone we're in trouble! Then
they'll help us fight the government!"
"There's a problem with that," Sarah Two Eagles
said. "The only way anyone would hear our
broadcast is if they tuned in to the Nettlebush radio
station. And we're not a national station."
"But there are about six million people living in
Arizona," Annie said. "That's nothing to sneeze
at."
"Even so, how would we get all six million to
listen to us?"
Everyone started talking at once.
"Quiet!" Stuart said.
Daisy snickered. "Hey, Prairie Rose," she said. "I
liked your Loch Ness Monster idea better. Ow!"
Prairie Rose had bit her.
Stuart's eyes were exceptionally tired. I wondered
whether he'd slept at all since the failed trip to
Bear River. "Is there any actual way to do that?"
he asked. "Breaking into other radio stations with
our message?"
"There's got to be a way," his sister Siobhan said.
"Don't you think? The Emergency Alert System
does it all the time."
Their
little
brother
Morgan
looked
very
uncomfortable. He skulked over to Lila's side, but
Lila showed him no sympathy.
"It's like Wintermute," Rafael said. "That AI in
Neuromancer
, and how it wants to merge with the
other AI and hijack the whole network."
"Raf, you know most of us aren't nerds, right?"
Daisy said.
"Well," Aubrey said, before Rafael could blow his
lid, "actually, there is a way to interrupt radio
signals. It's not quite legal, though--"
"I don't care whether it's legal or not. Tell us,"
Stuart said.
"Aah, okay. Well, in theory, if you want to hijack
another radio station, all you need to do is figure
out what frequency they're broadcasting with, then
broadcast a stronger signal at the same frequency."
Stuart looked at him. "Could we actually do that?"
"Probably?" Aubrey winced. "Our tower relies
on an analog signal generator, so it's entirely
possible, but it would require a lot of guess-and-
check--and it's
illegal
, it's called a DoS attack and
we could all get thrown in jail--"
"We're juveniles. They're not going to put us in
prison."
"I'm eighteen," said a surly Rafael.
"Then stay away from the radio tower and you
should be fine."
Rafael scowled.
"The truth is," Stuart said, "people in power only
get that way because people without power let
them. If we could actually get enough people on
our side--millions, like Annie said--"
"Pretty big 'if,' " Holly said.
"Would you stop being such a Debbie Downer?"
Daisy said.
"Well, which one of you has a better idea?" Stuart
said.
The resultant silence was his answer: Nobody
did.
"Aubrey," Stuart said, "can you figure out how to