Read St. Clair (Gives Light Series) Online
Authors: Rose Christo
"It's a good thing you're so damn white," he said
gruffly. I raised my eyebrows. "You're like
paper." The pencil tip was starting to tickle. And
then a shadow fell over the both of us, and Rafael
was forced to put down his pencil and look up.
It was Mr. Owns Forty, looking very unkempt.
Mr. Owns Forty was Zeke's dad. His hair was
long, curly, and loose, his face haggard and in need
of a shave. His clothes looked like they belonged
on a body two sizes bigger than his--or maybe it
was just that he was very lean.
My stomach tightened; my nerves steeled. The last
time I'd really seen Mr. Owns Forty was about a
year ago, during the Navajo pauwau. He'd gotten
drunk--I don't know how, because alcohol isn't
allowed at pauwaus--and decked Rafael across the
face.
I could feel Rafael tensing at my side. Rafael's
father had claimed a lot of lives. Zeke's sister--
this man's daughter--was one of them.
The three of us were silent, motionless. I could
actually hear the creaking of the metal windmill
blades as they picked up on the spring breeze.
Mr. Owns Forty sighed, rubbing his elbow. He
looked away.
I can't explain what really went through my mind. I
just wanted to hug him. Don't get me wrong; I don't
think it's okay that he took out his anger on a kid.
Two kids. Zeke never admitted it, but I knew his
father had struck him in the past. It's just... I don't
know. Dad said something to me once. "Loss
changes people. Sometimes it destroys them." I
could believe that, and it made me feel lousy.
I didn't hug him; and he didn't say a word. He
went on walking past us, to his house on the other
side of the field.
"Poor guy," Rafael mumbled, so faint that I almost
didn't pick up on it.
I can definitely pinpoint that as the moment when I
fell in love with him all over again.
"Was your speech therapist really Lakota? You
know, they were enemies of ours, centuries ago. I
don't mean 'enemies' as in we killed each other, but
we certainly counted coup millions of times."
It was a Sunday evening, and Annie and I were
standing together at the firepit with dozens of men
and women, cooking frybread to bring to the
upcoming Navajo pauwau. Frybread's easy to
make as long as you've got a skillet and oil. If
you're clumsy, though--and I kind of am--you'll
probably get burned a few times.
I rolled the dough between my hands and Annie
stretched and pulled on it. She took the dough
from me and dropped it onto the cast iron. It
sizzled and burned a golden brown.
I wiped my hands on a wet towel.
So who usually
won?
I signed.
"The Lakota did," Annie said fairly, but with a
spark of rivalry. She flipped the bread over with a
pair of tongs. "They were a scary bunch. You
know, it's strange how two people can be so
different, but so alike. They believed in the Great
Spirit of the universe, too. Only they called it
Wakan Tanka and we called it Tam Apo. But the
vision quest, the sun dance, even the way we
dressed--we could have been twins. I suppose
that's why we fought so much. We were too alike."
A few boys sat on the ground and split apart the
haunches of a big-horned sheep. I nearly vomited
on the spot. I quickly turned away.
"You know that's where warbonnets come from,
don't you?" Annie said. "I'm talking about the
feathered headdresses you sometimes see Plains
People wearing at a pauwau. They're very
sacred. In the old days, a warrior was permitted
to wear an eagle feather in his hair for an act of
bravery on the battlefield--or counting coup.
Touching your enemy and running back to your
side without getting caught. The more acts of
bravery you committed, the more feathers you
wore. White feathers if you got away unscathed,
red feathers if you sustained a wound." Annie
picked up the frybread with her tongs and laid it on
a platter on the ground. "You could tell how
accomplished a warrior was just by looking at the
length of his warbonnet. Some warbonnets were
so long, they reached the ground! Nowadays we
don't count coup, of course, but sometimes we
wear our ancestors' warbonnets out of respect for
the past." Annie smothered what looked to me like
a pang of bitterness. "It positively
infuriates
me
when you see non-Natives wearing warbonnets
like it's something fashionable, or a Halloween
costume. Just think; our ancestors in the Indian
schools were beaten to death if they wore their
Native dress, and now the descendants of the
people who put them there steal our symbols and
wear them like they're nothing..."
I sat on the ground and mixed the flour and
powdered milk for a second batch of frybread.
That was when Rafael came running over to the
firepit.
"Sky, c'mere for a sec," Rafael said.
I looked up.
Annie rolled her eyes. "You know, he's not
actually at your beck and call, Rafael."
"I'm not talking to you, Little Hawk." I noticed
Rafael wasn't covered in mutton blood like the
other boys. He was carrying a thick library book
under his arm. "You got a sec?" he asked me.
I stood and smiled, bemused.
Annie sighed. "We're on the last batch as it is. I
suppose I can let him go--"
Rafael didn't wait to hear another word. He seized
my hand and dragged me off.
I wondered where we were headed in such a
hurry, but I couldn't very well ask him when his
hand was around mine. We walked past clusters
of bull and pinyon pines and out on the dirt road. I
realized, mystified, that he was taking me to the
hospital.
We walked through the hospital's sliding doors.
Ms. Bright rolled her eyes when she saw me. I
stared. Was this woman ever off duty?
Rafael hunched over the receptionist's desk. He
put his library book down. "Who do I talk to about
science stuff?"
"Your teacher, hon."
"That's not funny," Rafael said darkly.
"What's going on here?" asked Robert the nurse.
He approached us in hospital scrubs, a clipboard
in his hands.
"Nothing.
I'm
just
showing
these
two
troublemakers out the door," Ms. Bright said.
But Robert was already gaining on me, grabbing
me by my shoulders. His clipboard lay forgotten
on the floor.
"Back so soon!" He shook me, my eyes rattling.
"It's not time for your checkup, silly. Or did you
just miss me that much?"
"Uh," Rafael started.
Bad move. Robert turned on him now. "Oh, it's
you
," he said slyly. "If I were ten years younger--"
Rafael looked genuinely frightened. I was glad my
laughs were soundless; I was laughing so hard, I
could feel the stitches in my stomach pulling taut.
"Robert," said an irritable Ms. Bright, "isn't there
something you should be doing?"
"Not really. My walk-in walked out. Terribly
rude." He scooped his clipboard off the floor.
"What can I do for you, gentlemen?"
Rafael collected himself. "I need to...is there a
research doctor around here?"
"Nope. Sorry. We haven't had one of those since
Tish left the rez."
Rafael fumed. "An ENT? Anyone? Who's Sky's
doctor?"
"Aisling's not on duty." Robert checked the clock
on the wall. "Look, if it's an emergency--"
Seriously, I thought, what's all this about?
"I wanna regrow Sky's vocal cords," Rafael
blurted out.
I didn't know what to think. Neither did Robert,
from the looks of it. He smiled slowly. "Oh.
Honey--"
"No, I've been reading, okay? A
lot
. And I read
about this--the vocal cords are made of lamina,
right? But the vein inside a human umbilical cord
is made out of the exact same lamina. Isn't it?
Sir?"
Robert actually seemed to consider him. "That's
true," he said at last.
"So if you took the umbilical vein and attached it
to the laryngeal nerve, wouldn't he start talking
again? Can't you do that?"
"I can't do that," Robert said.
"But--"
"First of all, I'm a nurse," Robert said. "If I tried
to operate on him, I'd bungle it. Badly. Second of
all, that's called stem cell research, and it's not
quite legal at the moment."
Rafael was so quiet, I could practically hear the
gears turning in his head.
"Why?" Rafael asked.
"Crazy Catholic fundies. They'll go up in arms if
you experiment with a baby's umbilical cord.
Don't ask why me why, it's not like the baby's using
it once he's born."
Rafael sank his fingers into his hair and pulled,
frustrated. "But Sky could talk again!"
"You think crazy Catholic fundies care that your
boyfriend can't talk? Honey, please. They're
already convinced the two of you belong in hell.
Wait until you find out you're not even allowed to
donate blood!"
"Who do I talk to to change their mind?"
"The president of the United States?" Ms. Bright
tossed in.
Rafael yanked his hair. I thought he was going to
punch someone. I put my hand on his shoulder and
he jumped. I ran my hand down his arm; he slowly
calmed down.
It's not worth getting worked up
, I
wanted to say.
"I'm really sorry, boys," Robert said. "For what
it's worth," he said to Rafael, "I think you're one
very
smart cookie. Now if you'll excuse me, I've
got to go look like I'm busy."
Rafael watched him walk off. He kept closing and
opening his eyes, like he wasn't quite sure whether
he'd woken up this morning.
I tapped on his shoulder until he noticed and
looked at me. I picked up my plains flute half-
heartedly. Maybe I could play Ring of Fire now, if
he still wanted.
Ms. Bright was starting to get tired of us crowding
around her lobby. She pointed emphatically at the
double doors and we left the hospital, Rafael
dejected. I felt so bad for him. I put my arm
around his back and drew his shoulder against
mine. He turned toward me, his shoulders
slouched.
"Sky," he said. "I'm sor--"
I kneaded his shoulders and smiled.
"I want you to talk," he said. "And sing. And all
the other things you've wanted to do. I thought I
could give you that. I suck. I'm sorry. I'm so
sorry."
I sat down on the hospital steps. Once he realized
I wasn't going anywhere, he sat with me. I took his
face between my hands. I brushed his hair behind
his ears.
You
, I wished I could say,
do not suck. You the-
opposite-of-suck.
And even if I could have
spoken, I don't know that I would have had the
words to tell him exactly what he meant to me.
How enormous it was that he combed through
boring medical books to try and find me a voice.
That's more than love. That's... I don't even know
what that is.
Rafael stayed silent and moody over the next few
days, even the very day before the Navajo
pauwau. To be fair, that was also the day Rafael
found out his uncle wasn't driving us.
"Charity's much too little for all that excitement,"
Gabriel told him at dinner that night. "Rosa and I
are staying home. I'm sorry, kiddo. I'm sure you
can find someone else to drive you."
"Whatever," Rafael mumbled.
Gabriel looked very nonplussed. He didn't know--
he couldn't know--what Rafael was really upset
about.
Rafael and I sat together underneath a ponderosa
pine. We watched Lila Little Hawk skip circles
around the bonfire to the calls of her father and
grandfather. I tried to get him to eat a roasted
apple. He wouldn't.
That's crazy, I thought, and bit into it myself. Food