Read St. Clair (Gives Light Series) Online
Authors: Rose Christo
the tribal council.
Everybody started milling over to the enormous
firepit. A pauwau always opens up with a prayer,
although I'm not sure why. We linked arms and
bowed our heads and Reverend Silver Wolf, the
shy, meek preacher, stammered his way through the
prayer, thanking the planet for its generosity and
our ancestors for the blood in our veins.
"Now what?" DeShawn whispered to me.
I pointed south. He followed my eyes.
The visiting tribes came pouring into the windmill
field, all at once. The Shoshone shouted and
cheered and waved, which is exactly the way it
should be at a pauwau. I grinned and waved at the
Kiowa tribe, Plains relatives of ours; they planted
their tribal flag in the ground, a sky blue banner
emblazoned with a gold star. The Hopi were as
solemn as ever in dark, heavy regalia and crazy
hairstyles Princess Leia might find cutting edge.
The Navajo were their polar opposite in bright,
dramatic silks with short sleeves, showy mantles
tumbling from their shoulders like seraphic wings.
This year the Timbisha Shoshone had come for the
pauwau, too. The only difference between a
Plains Shoshone and a Timbisha Shoshone is that
one used to be nomadic while the other stayed in
the desert.
Dad said something to Racine--I couldn't hear it--
and she burst out laughing and clapped her hands.
Whatever it was, it must have been good. Granny
came hobbling over to us in white and royal blue,
looking severe. Following her was a woman who
could have been her twin--except for the sunny
smile--and an eleven-year-old girl in round
glasses.
I beamed and waved. I hadn't seen my little cousin
since January.
"Hi, Skylar!" Marilu said. "I'm so glad we get to
stay at your house this summer!"
"Hello there," DeShawn said with great interest.
"Cut it out, Casanova," Racine said.
"You kids might want to sit down," Dad said with
a fleeting smile. He folded his legs beneath him
and sat on the brown grass. "The opening
ceremony is about to begin."
The whole field fell respectfully quiet. A row of
girls--mostly
twelve-year-olds--lined
up
underneath the whirring windmills, Lila among
them. An old man began banging on a double-skin
drum. The girls began to jingle dance.
The jingle dance has a rich history among Plains
tribes. The story goes like this. Long ago, an old
shaman
was
terribly
upset
because
his
granddaughter had fallen devastatingly ill. The
little girl wouldn't even rise from her slumber.
Then a dream came to the shaman, and in the
dream the Great Spirit told him to weave dresses
adorned with bells and give them to all the women
to wear. So he did; and the women danced every
single night, the bells on their dresses ringing all
throughout the Plains. One night the sick little girl
suddenly rose from her buffalo skin bed, curious,
and ran outside to see what was the matter. Plains
women have been jingle dancing ever since. It's a
really interesting dance, too. The girls kick and
twirl so precisely that the bells chime with every
beat of the drum. One step out of rhythm and the
whole dance is screwed up.
Everyone burst into applause at the end of the
dance. Lila clasped hands with Prairie Rose In
Winter and the girls all took a bow. Conversation
broke through the field. Now that we were done
showing off, it was time to relax.
"I wanna dance like that!" Jessica told me. She
flopped across my lap, splayed out like a belly
surfer, and kicked her legs.
"I'm going to get some frybread," Marilu said.
"Does anyone else want some?"
"I'll come with you," DeShawn said quickly.
Annie and Siobhan Stout and Autumn Rose danced
a shawl dance together. The effect was sort of lost
on Annie, who had given her shawl to Jessica to
wear. Granny and Aunt Cora and Racine sat
sharing a big bowl of buttered acorn squash while
Aunt Cora bragged about her daughter, an
anesthesiologist in Carson City. Rafael trudged
through the crowd in his muted gray regalia and sat
next to me with a heavy thump.
"Mary's pissing me off," he said.
I pat him on the knee and smiled, humoring him.
Rafael and Mary butted heads about as often as a
pair of rams. I took it as proof that they loved each
other.
"Yeah, well, that's not even the half of it. And
she's going everywhere with that girlfriend of hers-
-"
Girlfriend?
Rafael pointed darkly at the firepit.
I spotted Mary prancing flamboyantly around the
bonfire, pinching unsuspecting young boys on their
bottoms. Poor kids. Her partner-in-crime was a
Navajo girl in scarlet taffeta. Wait a minute. I
knew that girl. She was a friend of mine, Kaya,
from the Three Suns Reservation.
I guess you never really know until you know.
Rafael's uncle Gabriel and his girlfriend Rosa
came over to chat with Dad and the women.
Granny and Aunt Cora and Racine gathered around
Rosa and crooned about baby things, Rosa's round
face glowing shyly. I smiled at them and planted
my hands in the grass behind me, gazing around the
pauwau site. Mr. Red Clay and Ms. Siomme were
looking pretty competitive, Mr. Red Clay's arms
poised for the grass dance, Ms. Siomme's arms
behind her back for the smoke dance. I saw the
coquettish looks Ms. Siomme kept tossing Mr. Red
Clay, and the splotchy blush at Mr. Red Clay's
throat, and I almost felt like blushing myself. The
At Dawn girls started beating the double-skin
drum. The battle began.
"Oh! Oh!" Jessica tugged on my arm. She pointed
at Ms. Siomme. "What's she doing?"
"That's the smoke dance," Rafael filled in. I shot
him a grateful smile. "See how she twists her
arms, then her waist, then her legs? She's imitating
the way smoke moves."
"What about him?" DeShawn asked, nodding at
Mr. Red Clay.
"Grass dance. Long ago, we didn't have lawn
mowers. So when Plains men wanted to get the
grass to lay flat, they danced all over it. That's
why he's stomping."
Mr. Little Hawk got up and joined the grass
dance. Sarah Two Eagles joined Ms. Siomme.
"Skylar," Jessica said. "I wanna dance, too."
I got up off the grass and reached for her hand.
She hopped up and down and I led her out to the
dancing grounds.
Jessica spun around and around in dizzying
circles. It wasn't any dance I'd ever seen before,
but it was incredibly sweet. I took her by her
hands and twirled her around. I twisted and
turned, coiling, playfully mimicking the smoke
dancers. I probably shouldn't have. The smoke
dance is a girls' dance, and it's kind of
inappropriate for boys to perform it. It's a lot of
fun, though. The only dance faster than the smoke
dance is the shawl dance; so when you're smoke
dancing, there's this need to balance constant
fluidity with raw energy. If you can make the
audience think you're the wick of a burning candle,
then basically you've succeeded.
Daisy At Dawn struck the drum one final time and
the dancers all came to a halt. The spectators
applauded. Mr. Red Clay gave Ms. Siomme a
courtly bow. Ms. Siomme looked him up and
down and turned away with a small smile. I
wouldn't have been surprised if Mr. Red Clay had
a heart attack on the spot, because something told
me all his blood had gone south. How do women
do that, anyway? Just one look and they've got
grown men doing backflips. They must have a
secret handbook.
Jessica held my hand tightly and I walked her back
to her family. I sat between Annie and Rafael and
watched the Hopi perform their butterfly dance.
Or I tried to--but I realized I was the one being
watched.
Rafael's eyes were on me. I felt it before I saw it.
I looked at him, and I gave him a smile; he turned
hastily away. That wasn't like him. I examined his
profile briefly and noticed embarrassment on his
face. There was something else on his face, too.
And when I realized that he had watched me
dance--when I realized he had looked at me the
same way Mr. Red Clay had looked at Ms.
Siomme--I knew I had to do something about it.
I just didn't know what.
Marilu and I sat together at the breakfast table and
listened to the weather broadcast on the radio.
Granny and Aunt Cora were out on the porch,
talking about whatever it is that old people talk
about.
"I'm done," Marilu said, and pushed aside her
empty bowl. "After we cook, can we go fishing on
the lake?"
I washed our dishes in the wash basin and dumped
the water out the window. I took a yellow post-it
pad out of my shirt pocket. Marilu offered me a
pencil from the little table next to the kitchen
archway.
NO!!!
, I wrote, in big, dramatic letters. At heart,
I'm really one of those crazy animal rights
activists. The only difference is that I can't stand
around yelling on street corners the way the rest of
them do. I'm yelling in spirit, though.
"Can we go swimming on the lake, then?"
You swim. I'll watch.
The last time I'd gone
swimming was with Rafael--almost a year ago--
and I'd hated it. Not the swimming itself; just the
part where I'd had to undress. "Contaminate the
water" my ass. I hated undressing in front of
anyone, Rafael or otherwise.
Marilu and I went out to Annie's house after
breakfast. I introduced Marilu to Annie and Annie
let us inside. The hotbread was already cooking
over the hearth. Whoever first thought of mixing
sugar and tamales was a genius.
"Would you like to go to the grotto?" Annie asked,
when we'd taken the rosemary dumplings off the
stove.
Marilu looked from Annie to me so quickly, it was
like she was watching a tennis match. "You have a
grotto?"
We went outside to wash our hands at the water
pump, and then we set out to the woods.
Rafael was already at the grotto, a book on his lap
and his throwing spear at his side. He must have
come home from the hunt early. He looked up and
waved at us vaguely. Aubrey came along some
minutes later, beaming and covered in dirt. Marilu
looked around with awe and started climbing the
willow tree.
"You know what I like to do?" Annie called up to
Marilu. "Look in the branches for mourning
cloaks."
"Ooh, what are those?" Marilu called back.
"Butterflies, of course! They live in willow trees.
They're a lovely brown. The edges of their wings
are white."
I sat by the willow's hanging boughs and watched
Marilu with careful eyes, afraid she might fall.
"It's not that big of a fall," Rafael said at my side,
his hair behind his ear, his face buried in his
book. "Anyway, falling's good for a kid."
"I wasn't aware you were the resident expert,"
Annie returned.
"Was I talking to you, Little Hawk?"
I looked curiously at the book Rafael was reading.
The plastic cover told me it was a library book.
Principles of Voice Production
, the book read.
I think Rafael knew I was watching him. I noticed
his eyes weren't moving.
"Why the hell is cutting hay so hard, man?!"
And here came Zeke.
"It's not hard," Rafael shot at him. "You're just an
ass."
"Your ass is an ass! Ass man."
"I don't think you should use that language in front
of the C-H-I-L-D," Aubrey said nervously,
glancing toward the willow tree.
"I can spell," Marilu replied, puzzled.
Marilu slid down the trunk of the willow tree and
sat next to me, showing me a toothy smile. I
ruffled her hair and she playfully crinkled her
nose.