Read St. Clair (Gives Light Series) Online
Authors: Rose Christo
hijack the airwaves?"
"I'll help," Sarah said.
"Me too," Sage In Winter said.
"I'm sure we can work something out of this mess,"
Aubrey said kindly.
If our parents and grandparents noticed anything
unusual over the next few days--like a huge group
of kids camping outside the radio tower, quilts and
kindling fires and all the works--they never
mentioned it. By day I sat on the studio floor with
Annie and Zeke while Aubrey, Sarah Two Eagles,
and Sage In Winter messed with the consoles. I
definitely didn't understand what the heck those
three were doing, especially when they started
talking among themselves about oscillators and
algorithms. Annie watched Aubrey with lovey-
dovey eyes. Zeke and I mostly spent our time
teasing her.
"Man, we can't keep doing this, though," Zeke
complained one night. We sat underneath the stars,
serenaded by the plashing of the lake's dark
waters, and built a small fire out of forest brush.
"We've got nine days. Nine days! It's like that
song!"
I had no idea what song he was talking about.
"And then we're gonna have to go back to school
soon. We're heroes, we shouldn't have to go to
school!"
"Robin and Superboy and Impulse all have to go to
school, and they're superheroes," Siobhan Stout
pointed out.
"Who are those jerks?"
"You never read the Young Justice comics?"
"Do I look like I read?!"
I swung my duffel bag at Zeke's head.
Rafael came over to the small kindling fire and sat
with us, looking disgruntled. "Annie and Aubrey
are still in there," he said, jerking his head back in
the direction of the recording studio. "If Sage and
the Tyke weren't with 'em, I'd swear they were up
to something else."
Rafael always called Sarah Two Eagles "the
Tyke." Neither one of us knows why.
"Raffy!"
Mary came running over to our makeshift camp,
her teased hair flopping around her head. Rafael
unfolded his legs and stood.
"Save it," Rafael said gruffly. "You can tell Uncle
Gabe I'll come home when the reservation's safe."
"Not that, dufus. Rosa popped!"
That Mary sure had a way with words.
Rafael's face went slack with apprehension; I saw
it in the wavering light from the kindling fire.
"She...seriously? But--"
"I know, I know, it's early still. We didn't even put
up her isolation tent. Uncle Gay brought her to the
hospital. She's in delivery." Her eyebrows
danced lewdly. "Wanna come toss your cookies?"
Rafael looked to me for confirmation. It was kind
of flattering, but I didn't know what he expected me
to do.
"C'mon," he finally said, and grabbed my hand.
"Name the kid after me!" Zeke said. "Ahahahaha--
"
We followed Mary down the long route to the
hospital. The communal firepit was still lit for the
night, the thick, rich scent of cinders wafting
throughout the reservation.
We burst through the hospital's sliding glass doors.
"Cut it out!" Ms. Bright said.
Mary led Rafael and me to the neonatal ward in the
western half of the hospital. A nurse on duty
looked up and gave us a doofy smile.
We found Gabriel pacing wanly outside the
delivery room doors.
"Times like these are when I wish men were
allowed inside," Gabriel said.
In the Shoshone world, it's forbidden for men to be
present at a baby's birth. Even the doctor or the
midwife has to be a female. That's why Shoshone
women still build isolation tents when they're
getting close to their delivery date. In fact, it's
kind of surprising that the hospital even has a
neonatal ward, considering how little use it must
see.
"You've gotta sit down," Rafael said. "Isn't there a
waiting room around here somewhere?"
Mary stood playing with the water cooler.
"Hey," the doofy nurse protested.
I grabbed Gabriel's arm and pointed at the waiting
room door. Rafael grabbed his other arm, and we
pulled him inside.
The waiting room was mostly empty. The few
people sitting in there were staff members who
must have realized they could hide from their
bosses by utilizing the least populous part of the
hospital. Rafael and I forced Gabriel into a seat.
Gabriel moaned with anxiety. Poor guy. Mary
found a second water cooler to play with. Nobody
thought to tell her off this time.
"What if something's wrong?" Gabriel said.
"Like what?" Mary asked. "The baby's born with
two heads?"
"Mary," Rafael admonished, teeth gritted.
Gabriel looked like he was about to throw up.
"Here," Rafael said hastily. He leaned over and
messed with the standing radio. "Listen to some
country music."
Country music wasn't what streamed out of the
speakers.
"They're trying to take our reservation away," Sage
In Winter's voice said. "They're going to knock all
our houses down to build a--"
"A highway, maybe," Sarah Two Eagles' voice
said.
"Right, and there's already a highway, and this isn't
fair. This is our home. Where are we supposed to
go?"
Rafael tossed me a scandalized look. He shut the
radio off.
Gabriel surveyed Rafael shrewdly. "Raf," he
said. "Was that--"
"No," Rafael said quickly.
Gabriel looked at me. I smiled angelically. To
our great fortune, he didn't get the chance to
interrogate us, because a doctor with pinned hair
suddenly walked into the waiting room.
"Mr. Gray Rain?"
Gabriel jumped up. "Are they okay?"
"Can I have the placenta?" Mary asked.
"Right this way, please," the doctor said.
Gabriel and Mary followed her out of the room.
Rafael looked sideways at me. He struck me as
kind of skittish, like he wasn't sure whether he was
allowed to accompany them. I shook my head with
disbelief. I pulled him out of his chair and put my
hands against his back, herding him down the
hallway.
Rosa was in a clean white hospital bed, her round
face glowing and beautiful, a tiny, squirming
bundle in her arms. There was an almost tangible
current on the air, something intense, something I
can't describe. Gabriel took two steps closer to
the bed. He bent his head to kiss his daughter, then
his wife; then his daughter again. We were all
spellbound. Even Mary was behaving herself.
"I wanna hold my sister," Rafael said.
"
I
haven't even held her yet," Gabriel said,
sounding tremulous.
Charity Gray Rain was born three weeks early in
late winter, six pounds, seven ounces. She had
round cheeks, an imperious yawn, and a very
doting family. And I hoped--I knew--her life was
going to be very different from her namesake's.
"Quiet, please, while I take attendance."
I couldn't believe there was still school when the
reservation was scheduled for a steamrolling in
seven days. I should have known. School doesn't
stop for cancer; why would it stop for the end of
the world?
Mr. Red Clay bent his head over his lectern,
marking our names in his little white book. Most
of the students were shifting restlessly in their
seats. Siobhan Stout turned her back on her table
to whisper with Autumn Rose In Winter. Annie,
sitting next to me, looked very tired.
Mr. Red Clay looked up from his notebook. He
pursed his lips with disapproval. "Where's
Rafael?"
His aunt and uncle just had a baby
, I signed.
"Unless Rafael was their surrogate, that's no
excuse to miss school."
Zeke groaned. I didn't blame him. Going to school
when the reservation was in danger felt like a total
waste of time. I was tempted to just get up and
walk out. I couldn't, though. I'm not like Rafael; I
need people's approval. That's kind of pathetic, I
know.
A faint rumbling sounded outside our windows. I
probably wouldn't have noticed it if not for the
silence in the schoolhouse.
Annie and I looked at one another, Annie frowning
with uncertainty. The rumbling didn't sound
mechanical; more like...a very concentrated
conversation, a loud one, but too distant to pick up
on. Mr. Red Clay noticed it, too. He put his
pencil down and walked over to the east-facing
window, sliding it open. I guessed Rafael had
fixed it after all.
"What the..."
It was all the permission we needed. Half of us
crowded at the window to peer outside with Mr.
Red Clay. The other half rushed out the doors.
I held Annie's hand as we stood below the school
steps, gazing through the pinyon trees. I held my
left hand over my eyes. "I don't see anything,"
Annie told me. "What was Mr. Red Clay looking
at?"
I pointed east. I felt Annie's hand tighten around
mine.
We ran together, Annie's sundress flying about her
knees. We dashed from the school road to the
main road, then down to the unlit firepit. We
skidded to a halt. Annie nearly flopped right out of
her sandals and I put my arm around her back,
steadying her.
The reservation was filled to the brim with
strangers. I took in the incredible sight of them
all. Old men in flannel shirts, teenage girls who
were obviously supposed to be in school right
now--I tried counting heads and couldn't.
"My goodness..." Annie started shaking her head.
"Let's go find your grandmother."
We snaked around the firepit, the throng of
strangers difficult to navigate. Finally we made it
back to my lawn, where Granny's loom stood
abandoned. Granny was standing by the sundial,
talking to a middle-aged blonde in a fanny pack.
"It's just ridiculous," said the woman as Annie and
I drew closer. "What kind of country is this when
they can snap up our homes at a moment's notice?"
"That's what I've been saying!" Granny retorted
emphatically.
"Well, Rod and I are coming back here every day.
I'd like to see them try and explain themselves to
all these people."
Mr. Little Hawk came walking over to us. His
fishing boat lay abandoned next to Granny's loom.
"Annie?" he said, sounding as confused as a five-
year-old. "Why aren't you in school?"
"Mr. Red Clay said it's alright to leave," Annie
lied impeccably.
But Mr. Red Clay came charging up the lawn
toward us now. Oh, boy, I thought, and considered
diving behind the pinyon trees.
"What were you
thinking
!"
"Caias," Granny said, "do you honestly think the
children can focus on their studies when they're
worried sick? Let it go already!"
"Skylar, come with me," Annie said. "Let's go
make sure Lila and Joseph are alright."
We walked back to the schoolhouse, where most
of the students were still gathered outside. We
found Lila and Joseph on the playground out back,
Lila pushing Joseph on the rope swings.
Lila shrugged when she saw us. "Whatever's going
on's got nothing to do with me."
It was the same song and dance over the next
couple of days. Strangers came to the reservation
from all over Arizona to offer their support and
some words of encouragement. A couple of them
carried handmade signs. Some of them even
brought collapsible camping tents, and Mr. At
Dawn led them out to the windmill field and
helped set them up for an overnight stay. This was
crazy, I thought. Crazy, but cool. How cool is it
that all these people cared enough to help us? The
Shoshone, obviously touched, provided their
guests with boiled blue corn and roasted quail, elk
steak and sagebread and frybread. Dinners in
Nettlebush were always a group project; but those
dinners were really something, thousands and
thousands of people squished into the community
center, sharing the warmth of the bonfire. I didn't
know what to make of it all.
"Nettlebush feels like a theme park," DeShawn