Read St. Clair (Gives Light Series) Online
Authors: Rose Christo
I touched my fingers to my throat. I wondered how
long it would be before the shadows of our past
stopped haunting the reservation. For me,
probably never. I could still feel the thirteen-year-
old scars stretched across my neck. Scars my
mother's murderer had left with me for life. Scars
his son had tried his hardest to kiss away.
I was due for a cancer checkup in August.
The back doorknob rattled. The door didn't budge,
of course; it was bolted shut. All the same, I sat up
slowly, my spine running cold.
Alright, I thought. This is ridiculous. I turned off
the computer monitor and stood up. I climbed the
staircase to my bedroom lightly, heat from the
hearth rising after me. Nights are always cold in
Nettlebush. I blame the xeriscape.
I went into my father's bedroom. The cold air of
unlived-in neglect hit me like a brick to the
forehead. Just standing in here, I felt as though I
were drowning. I felt as though the house were
trying to pull me down beneath its musty
foundation. Back into the earth whence all Plains
People came.
I threw open Dad's closet and found his baseball
bat. I picked it up; it felt familiar in my hands. It
felt horrible.
I missed him so much.
I climbed back down the staircase, Dad's bat over
my shoulder. I unlocked the back door. I stepped
out into the rushing, cold night air and snapped the
door shut behind me, leaning against it with my
weight.
The oak trees rustled in the wind. The pines stood
their ground, rooted and firm. I scanned the terrain
with my eyes. I didn't see any coywolves. I heard
the soft hooting of the owls as they hid behind the
foliage, wise eyes keeping a watch for
unsuspecting prey.
The water pump next to the outhouse was dripping
with fresh water. The lumber box was knocked on
its side, cut firewood fallen to the ground.
Hesitant, Dad's baseball bat at my side, I
approached and righted the lumber box. My eyes
darted back and forth between the timber and the
back door; if someone with malintent was really
lurking out here, no way was I letting him get to
Granny without bashing his skull in. I inched over
to the water pump. I lodged the lever back and the
faucet stopped dripping. I looked again at the
doorway. No one. Nobody was here.
I knew somebody had been here.
Nettlebush was silent in the dead of night. No
sound except for the wind when it touched the
treetops, or when it pressed against the old
foundations of the log cabins.
I wondered, suddenly, what Nettlebush must have
looked like two hundred years ago, when the
Plains Shoshone first fled south after the Bear
River Massacre. Were there log cabins here?
Probably not. Shoshone used to use tipis and
wickiups back then. I tried to imagine what
Nettlebush had looked like when everyone lived in
animal hide houses and brush lodges. I tried to
imagine the men and women wearing deerhide and
elkskins without calling them regalia.
It was quiet enough that I could hear a second
doorknob rattling. This time it came from the front
of the house.
I ran through the back door, the warmth of the
firelight washing over me. I wedged the door shut
and locked it. I strode across the room; into the
front room; I threw open the front door.
No one was there.
Come on, I thought, frustrated. I was starting to
feel like I was in an Alfred Hitchcock film. I
trudged back inside the house. I closed and locked
the door.
I turned the computer monitor on. I closed my
mostly-blank template and clicked on the tribal
website's "Chat" button.
Very few people were online. Not that I had
expected many people to be online. I typed a
quick message:
does anybody else have a creepy stranger
trying to get in their house?
Nope, Stuart wrote. Jeez, thanks a lot.
you're getting that, too? Daisy wrote.
somebody tried to open our door. dad's
getting paranoid!
Uu ha tsoapichia ti'iwanna? Immaculata
wrote.
The general consensus was to stay indoors. Stuart
started acting businesslike, which I took as my
official cue to sign off. I said a quick goodbye and
shut off my computer, lost in thought.
Who would have tried to enter both my house and
Daisy's? Maybe some drunkard had wandered in
off the turnpike. Maybe I ought to call the tribal
police. The tribal council had given all of us
pagers in the event that we needed help. My pager
was upstairs; I'd left it on the bedside table.
I climbed the staircase again. I was starting to feel
groggy. I padded into my bedroom. I scooped the
pager into my hand, stifling a yawn.
Dad, I suddenly thought.
I carried the pager and the baseball bat back down
the staircase. I threw open the front door. I
stepped onto the porch and locked the door behind
me with the key in my pocket. And I started down
the north road.
I'm sure it sounds sad. But what if Dad had
somehow escaped the penitentiary? Or what if
Nola had found another brilliant legal loophole to
get him out of serving time? Of course he would
first try to enter his own home. Finding it locked,
it made sense that he would move on to Mr. At
Dawn's house. Mr. At Dawn was his best friend.
I stopped outside the At Dawn house, just north of
the country lane. The oil lamps were glowing in
the front windows. Nobody was outside.
I frowned slowly. And the more I thought about it,
the dumber it was. Dad wouldn't try to open Mr.
At Dawn's door. He would probably knock.
Somebody came walking down the dirt road
toward me. I steeled myself, my grip on Dad's
baseball bat tightening. But I saw the beam of a
flashlight; and I saw the strong hand holding it; and
I realized it was only Rafael.
I almost burst out laughing. He was carrying his
hunting spear.
"Hey," Rafael said, sounding puzzled. "Someone
tried to get into our house. Was it you?"
I shook my head. I gestured to the baseball bat.
"You too, huh? The hell's going on?"
I shrugged helplessly.
"Well," he said, "Uncle Gabe called the other
guys--I mean the police guys, whatever--and
they're scoping out the reserve. Actually," he
admitted, "he told me to stay indoors. But I hate
staying indoors. You got any idea where the creep
went?"
I gestured toward the At Dawns' house.
"C'mon," he said. "Let's check around back.
Probably not there anymore, though."
We walked around the back of the At Dawns'
house. I walked close to his side.
He was right, though. As far as I could see, there
was nothing out here. Daisy had left her hunting
knife on the windowsill, but that was about it.
"It better not be those goddamn land junkies,"
Rafael swore.
I smiled quizzically. Why would the Bureau have
come back here? They already had what they
wanted.
Mr. At Dawn must have heard us moving around.
He opened his back door, alert. He relaxed when
he saw it was only us. Rafael stood and chatted
with him for a while. Finally we were forced to
admit that the trespasser, whoever he was, had
moved on.
"I don't wanna leave the girls for too long," Rafael
said. "Do you wanna get your grandma and bring
her back to my house? I'm kind of freaked out by
this."
With good reason, I thought. The serial murders
from not so long ago were still fresh on everyone's
minds.
Rafael walked me home. He waited in the sitting
room while I knocked on Granny's door.
"
What
?" Granny demanded, shuffling out irately in
her nightgown.
"Uh, Mrs. Looks Over?" Rafael said. "There's a
trespasser on the reservation. You wanna come
back to my house? There's more people there, so
we can protect you better."
It was all Granny needed to hear. She pulled a
coat on, and the three of us went out the front door.
The tension in the air was so thick, you could cut it
with a knife. I didn't see anyone walking around
outside; but I knew how news traveled in
Nettlebush. The doors were locked and double-
locked. Families were sitting wide awake,
wondering whether we had a second Eli on our
hands.
That's how it was in Rafael's house. Mary, Rosa,
and Charity were all gathered in the kitchen. All
three of them were in pajamas. I guessed they
didn't feel comfortable in the sitting room with all
those windows.
"Maybe it's a Water Ghost," Mary said with a dark
grin.
The Shoshone believe--well, believed--that ghosts
inhabited rivers and lakes. Sometimes they were
helpful. Sometimes they were malevolent.
Rosa held her baby close, worry written all over
her face. I could tell what she was thinking. Her
child's namesake had died the last time a man
broke into her home.
"Do you want, uh, tea, Mrs. Looks Over?" Rafael
said.
"No, thank you. Has anyone seen what this
trespasser looks like?"
"C'mon, Mrs. Looks Over," Mary said. "You
know what a Water Ghost looks like. It looks like
a ghost."
"You fool girl! A Water Ghost wouldn't knock!"
Clearly, I thought wryly.
Rosa handed Charity to Mary. She took over at the
stove where a clueless Rafael had tried to boil
water.
Gabriel came home about a half hour later while
Rosa and I were sipping tea. "If he's still around,"
Gabriel said, "he must be hiding pretty well. We
checked the farms and the church. I'm pretty sure
he's gone, Racine's telling everyone to stay
indoors."
"Really," Mary said, "it was probably just some
bum who came in from the city. Remember
Christmas four years ago? The skinny guy dressed
like Santa?"
"The guy with the booze on his breath?" Rafael
said. "Didn't he just get off the bus at the wrong
stop? Man, that guy was weird."
"Catherine," Gabriel said, "if you'd like me to
walk you home, I'd be happy to."
Granny preened, but declined. "I've got my
grandbaby," she said. "I don't see that I need your
help."
I very nearly blushed at that.
We said goodbye and headed through the sitting
room. Rafael saw me off at the front door and
handed me Dad's baseball bat. "Be safe, okay?"
he said. I kissed him on the cheek. He grinned at
me, innocent and mischievous all at once.
Granny and I set off together, the door closing
behind us.
I was feeling pretty tired by the time we made it
home. I unlocked the front door and Granny
shuffled inside without a backwards glance. I
snapped the door shut behind me and sighed.
Just because Dad hadn't come home tonight, I
thought, didn't mean he wasn't coming home. I
looked toward the computer, the machine turned
off. I could still hear the owls in the distance. I
couldn't hear the coywolves anymore.
I locked the front door and went upstairs to bed.
With each step I climbed, my heart thawed.
I slid into bed, the covers cold, friends and family
hanging on my closet door.
I don't know for sure whether I fell asleep that
night. Sometimes there's that half-sleep between
dormant and awake; your thoughts are messy and
frantic; you don't know whether you're thinking or
dreaming.
All I know is that something--and I don't know
what to call it--roused me from my bed. It was
like an instinct; I couldn't ignore it. I lit the oil
lamp on the side table.
I thrust open my window and scaled the side of the
log cabin.
The crickets sang softly from the tops of the pines.
The night sky was a dark slate blue, a blue that
reminded me of Rafael's eyes.
My nerves were singing; my mind was at peace.
Water Ghost, I thought, the rushing of the treetops