Read St. Clair (Gives Light Series) Online
Authors: Rose Christo
filling my ears with music.
I followed the dirt road to the beaten path out east.
I walked through the dark woods, the waning moon
high above the black clouds. I could hear the gray
wolves howling at the end of their night hunt. I
thought of the ancient Shoshone with their travois.
Shoshone were the only race in the history of
mankind that figured out how to tame wolves.
They harnessed a team of wolves to a travois--a
wooden sled--and the wolves pulled their
belongings across the Great Plains. It was a
relationship between man and wild. A
relationship we're never going to see again.
I stopped at the edge of the lake, the dark waters
uncommonly still.
The Water Ghost turned slowly to face me. He
was scrawny--all Water Ghosts are. He was as
wispy as a phantasm. He was as light as air. He
looked to me about twelve years old, a strange
median between boy and man. I could see the
remnants of the boy in his gangling limbs; I could
see the man he would someday turn into in the
sharpness of his face. His hair, light brown,
reached his shoulders. His clothes were tattered
and faded. His shoes were missing. In the shade
of the night, I couldn't make out his eye color. I
knew they were an olive green.
His voice, when he spoke, was as scratchy as
neglected silk.
"Can you take me home?" Danny asked. "Skylar?"
I started forward. I stopped. In a way, I couldn't
believe it. In a way, I'd known it all along.
I didn't care whether he liked it or not. I reached
for Danny; I took him into a hug. He slumped
against me, to my incredible surprise, and didn't
try to push me away.
"Sorry," he mumbled. "I remembered you. I
thought you could take me home. I've forgotten the
way."
I could do that much, I thought. It was the very
least that I could do. That anyone could do.
I put my arm around his back. He let me.
We walked together, the Water Ghost and I, his
shoulders bony, his feet bare. My heart exactly
where it belonged.
* * * * *
Shoshone Glossary
Atapu - Uncle (lit. "Little Father")
Sai Paa Hupia - Boat [and] Water Song
Pocatello - Middle Road Maker
Dosabite - White
Mii yukwii satu - He said so
Awisu - Wait
Hakatu sampe kimmakinna - Somebody just came
in
Haa, asun tammappu - Oh, it's that idiot
Newe nangkawi - Speak Shoshone (lit. "Speak
the People's language")
Mitukkaano pusikwa! - Learn English! (lit.
"Know English!")
Nu kee tunaakasuwanna - I don't want to
Hinni? - What?
Mi'akwan - Go away
Noyokowa'ippu - Bitch (lit. "Woman having
intercourse")
Sacajawea - Corruption of "Tsaikka Tsa Wea" -
Carries a Burden
Washakie - Shoots [Buffalo While] Running (lit.
"Runs and Hits")
Cameahwait - Corruption of "Kee Mi'ah Wailt"
- He Never Walks
Wadze Wa'ippu - Lost Woman
Po'i Naipi - Little Grass Girl (lit. "Grass Roots
Young Girl")
Nai Nukkwi - Girl [Who] Ran
Shundahai - To be one
Uu pusikwatu? - Do you know how?
Yokottsuku - Miserable old bastard (lit. "Sex-
deprived old man")
Mukua - War, Spirit
Hakani naattaimma? - What happened?
Ma punni - Look over there
Tsao! - Good!
Wachikatu puningkun - Hide the evidence
Aikupi - Cactus
Wahni Naipi - Little Fox Girl (lit. "Fox Young
Girl")
Tso'i - Pick it up
Kimma - Come
Kee so'o nangkawi! - Shut up! (lit. "Don't speak
so much!")
Tam Apo - The Great Spirit (lit. "Our Father")
Uu ha tsoapichia ti'iwanna? - Are you afraid of
ghosts?
* * * * *