Read St. Clair (Gives Light Series) Online
Authors: Rose Christo
Mary elbowed me, her eyebrows going crazy on
her face. "You wanna help us build the little
creep's new room? It'll be fun."
I thought of Rafael with a sinking feeling. I wasn't
sure he wanted me around.
"Thank you, Miss," said Morgan, "but Mom doesn't
trust me with hammers."
I could see the gears turning in Mary's head, in her
devious hazel eyes. She was the type of girl who
lived for corrupting the youth. I grabbed Morgan's
hand and quickly walked him home.
I went home for lunch and found Granny boiling
fish on the wood-coal stove. My stomach turned.
Eating meat in general bothers me, which is why I
don't do it. But actually, I was thinking about
Balto again. Bluegill was one of his favorite
snacks.
Stop moping, I told myself. I hate moping. I'd
rather smile, even if I don't mean it.
I turned on the computer in the front room and
checked the calendar on the tribal website.
Nothing new--just the usual reminders about the
raft race and picnic and the pauwau in July. My
chest was starting to feel heavy, like I'd been
running for a long time, but of course I hadn't. I
didn't pay it much thought. Instead a new button on
the website caught my eye: "Intertribal Chat."
My hands moved of their own accord. The mouse
moved. I clicked on the button and watched the
gray-white chat room window fill up the computer
screen.
At first I was lost in a flood of textual banter.
There had to be about forty different people logged
on at the same time, and they were typing fast--and
some of them in languages I didn't recognize. I sat
back in my chair and stared at the computer screen,
lost in thought.
Finally I typed a question.
Have any of you lost kids to foster
care?
The whole chat room slowed to a stop.
And then it picked up again--and my breath caught.
I have two nephews and one niece, one
person wrote. A social worker showed up
one day and took them off the rez.
Didn't even say why. We called the cops
but they wouldn't do a damn thing. My
sister writes letters every month asking
why she can't see her kids. Her letters
go ignored. We're Seminole.
My baby was taken from me, wrote somebody
else. I was seventeen and unmarried. My
mother and my older brother were going
to help me raise her. I named her
Maureen. I gave birth to her and she
was so beautiful. My mother and brother
were in the hospital room with us and
then a social worker came in. She said,
"I'm taking your baby away. You can't
give her the life she deserves. I'll
give her to a family with plenty of
money and she'll have whatever she wants
in life." I started crying and I begged
her to let me keep my baby. My big
brother yelled at the woman to leave the
room.
But
the
police
came
and
restrained my brother and the social
worker took my baby away. My baby is
four now. I don't know where she is.
I am of the Cheyenne River Sioux tribe,
wrote another. My daughter and her husband
were killed in a car crash. The
children came to live with my husband
and me. I had new beds made for them.
I saw them off to school one morning,
the same as always. I waited for them
at the bus stop that afternoon. They
never came back. A social worker had
taken them in the middle of the day.
Apparently the state has decided my
grandbabies are better off with white
strangers than with their grandparents.
The youngest is being adopted by a
family
on
the
other
side
of
the
country. My grandbabies aren't even
going to grow up together. I can't do a
thing
about
it.
I'm
not
allowed
visitation.
My hands were shaking. My breath kept catching
in my throat, chest heaving breathlessly. I turned
off the monitor, my fingers numb. White hot anger
was swimming behind my eyes.
"Cubby?"
I looked blandly up at Dad as he walked in through
the front door.
Dad's face went from somber to wary in a split
second. He walked over to me in a single quick
stride and took my face in his hands, examining
me.
"You're sick."
My eyebrows furrowed. I wasn't sick. Just angry.
"You're sick," he said again. "After all these
years, do you really think I can't recognize
pneumonia?"
When I was little, I used to catch pneumonia all the
time. There's a fairly straightforward reason for
that. When you cough, your vocal cords close up,
blocking out foreign pathogens. My vocal cords
don't close; so I can't cough; so all the harmful
germs most kids avoid travel straight down to my
lungs. Even now I tend to get sick in the rain.
I looked at Dad, alarmed. If he said I had
pneumonia, then I had pneumonia. But I didn't
know where I'd picked it up from. Maybe the dirt
I'd dug up on Aubrey's farm. Maybe the sunflower
seeds I'd eaten at lunch.
"Let's go," he said quietly. "I'm taking you to the
hospital."
He put his bearlike arm around me and led me out
to the porch.
The reservation hospital was south of our house.
By the time we reached the parking lot, we were
practically on top of the turnpike. Dad led me up
the steps between the wheelchair ramps and in
through the sliding doors. The receptionist, a
curly-haired woman named Ms. Bright, rolled her
eyes at us. "You again," she said. I smiled
weakly. I was a regular here.
Dad and I sat together in the waiting room, an old
Shoshone chant playing over the speakers in the
ceiling. He rubbed my back and smiled at me,
though like all of his smiles, it was short-lived. I
elbowed him; and when I had his attention, I
mimed wavering water with my hand.
"What about the lake?"
I gestured between the two of us.
Dad smiled again. "You want to build a raft
together? Yes, I think that's a fine idea."
This time I mimed a telephone.
Dad's face took on a sheepish undertone. "I don't
really think..."
Dad had a girlfriend of sorts, Racine, a police
officer he got on with fairly well. And Racine had
herself a couple of kids, DeShawn and Jessica. I
thought a raft race would be fun for the two of
them.
"Come on, you two," said the nurse, who glanced
into the waiting room and waved his clipboard at
us.
Dad and I went down the hall to an empty exam
room where the nurse weighed me and took my
blood pressure. The nurse kept giving me these
dark, reproachful looks. I wasn't sure what that
was about. "Somebody hasn't been eating his
spinach," he clucked. Well, yeah. I don't like
spinach. He left us presently; and then Dr. Stout,
Morgan's mom, came in with a stethoscope and
listened to my lungs.
"Preposterous!" she shouted. She was kind of a
loony lady.
"I think he has aspiration pneumonia," Dad said
awkwardly. "He had this a lot when he was a
child. If you could just give him amoxicillin
before his breathing gets bad..."
Dr. Stout insisted on doing things her own way. "I
want him to have a chest X-ray," she said firmly.
"Sorry, Cubby," Dad mumbled.
Dr. Stout led us out of the room and down another
hallway. I saw a sign on one of the walls labeled
"X-Ray Lab." We veered to the right and stopped
outside a small room. "Wait here," Dr. Stout said.
She walked off somewhere and returned with a
paper hospital gown, which she stuffed into my
hands. She pointed at the door. "Get changed,"
she said. "And make sure you take off that flute
around your neck. The X-ray technician will be
with you when he's ready."
I trudged into the dark, cramped little room and
closed the door behind me. I sat on the X-ray table
and tugged the plains flute over my head, the
leather cord tangled in my fingers. Rafael made
this flute for me about a year ago. I put it aside;
my skin felt bare without it. I touched the front of
my throat. Two thick red scars ran across my neck
from ear to ear, uneven, overlapping at my
voicebox. There used to be a time when I was
afraid to let people see my neck. I wasn't afraid
anymore.
I took off my shirt, messy curls getting caught in the
collar. I folded it and set it aside.
Now
I was
afraid. Something about my body just struck me as
repulsive. I didn't like being alone with it; never
mind somebody else looking at it. Hastily, I pulled
the hospital gown over my head. A sensation of
relief settled over me--followed by pain. My
chest felt sharp, like it was trying to rip away from
the rest of my body. I guessed the sickness was
settling in. Dad knew me better than I knew me. I
was really grateful for that.
I wound up having to wait about twenty minutes for
the X-ray technician; apparently he wasn't on call
today and Dr. Stout had had to page him. He
finally came into the dark little room with an
apology and made small talk while I smiled,
because there was nothing else I could have done.
He pulled a clunky machine down from the ceiling
and pressed it to my burning chest. I jumped the
first time the X-ray machine let out a loud bang.
I'd forgotten they did that.
"Alright," he said, "you can go now."
He left the room and I changed as fast as I could,
wrapping my plains flute around my neck. I went
outside and found Dad reading a surgical chart on
the wall. That's how I knew he was bored. I
touched his arm and we went back to the exam
room to wait for Dr. Stout.
"Just as I thought," said Dr. Stout, when she
arrived with the X-rays a few minutes later,
pinning them up on the wall. "He's got aspiration
pneumonia."
Dad and I exchanged a look. I tried to keep the
mischief off my face.
"Robert will bring you your medicine! You know,
Paul, next time this happens, you can just put a
mustard plaster on his chest. Works just as well
and you won't have to come running to the hospital
in a tizzy."
"Thank you."
Dr. Stout eyed me suddenly. I smiled
inquisitively.
"I want to see something," she said.
She pulled on a new pair of latex gloves and
pressed her fingers to my throat. I felt a little
nauseous. I don't like people touching my throat.
"Swallow for me," she said.
I swallowed.
"Hrmm..."
"What's wrong?" asked Dad.
"His larynx is fine. So it's just the vocal folds that
never healed?"
"Yes," Dad said. "They're paralyzed."
"He has no trouble eating?"
"He did. Up until he was seven. He had to eat
through a stomach PEG. When he was seven, I
took him to a speech therapist. She helped him
learn how to swallow again."
I kind of missed that feeding tube. The kids in
kindergarten thought it was cool. They used to pay
me in quarters to watch me pump water into my
gut. The way the doctor plants it in you is pretty
neat: right through your belly button, so it doesn't
leave a scar.
Dr. Stout turned on me. She rapped her knuckles
on my shoulder.
I frowned, confused.
"Would you let me stick a camera down your
throat?"
I twisted my mouth in a mortified grimace. I shook
my head.
"Why?" Dad asked.
"I was thinking. If it's only one fold that's
paralyzed, we could surgically move it to the
center of his throat. The other fold would meet it
halfway. He'd get his voice back."
My heart leapt and bound and I swore I could feel
it rising through my throat. I looked quickly from