Read St. Clair (Gives Light Series) Online
Authors: Rose Christo
St. Clair
Rose Christo
"Hello. I'm Cem Adrian."
I stared at the world-renowned singer and thought:
I know who you are, you gorgeous bastard, you.
And really, if you ask me, you'd have to be deaf
not to know who Cem Adrian is. He's the only
man on the planet who can sing in any vocal range
from soprano to bass. The guy's amazing. And
gorgeous. Did I mention gorgeous?
"What are you doing on my reservation?" I asked.
"You're not Native American. You're Turkish."
"I am Native American now," he said.
"I'm sorry," I said, "but that doesn't make much
sense."
"I know. You're dreaming."
So I woke up.
At first I was only aware of the schoolhouse, warm
and stuffy, windows sealed shut. Small wonder I
had fallen asleep. Who can stay awake in an
atmosphere like that? The table beneath my cheek
was wooden and uncomfortable; sorely, I sat up
straight. I took a bleary look around and realized
the teacher, Mr. Red Clay, was nowhere in sight.
Huh. Maybe I was still dreaming.
"Did you have a nice nap, sleepyhead?"
I turned to my left and grinned sheepishly at Annie
Little Hawk--probably my best friend on the entire
reservation. That Annie was a real cutie, small-
statured with delicate features, ash-brown skin and
burnished brown hair. Her hair fell just past her
shoulders. It used to be a lot longer, but she had
cut it when her mom died, about a year ago. Plains
People cut their hair when they're in mourning.
Where'd Mr. Red Clay go?
I signed.
I may not be deaf, but I'm mute. My throat was cut
twelve years ago--I'd rather not think about the
specifics--and my vocal folds just never healed.
The nice thing about Annie, though, was that she
knew sign language about as well as I did. Sign
language was the "lost Indian art," as Mr. Red
Clay always said: Plains People originally
invented it as a way to communicate with other
tribes when they didn't know each other's native
languages. That aside, Annie's little brother,
Joseph, had been born deaf. His whole family had
learned sign language just so they could talk with
him.
Annie raised her eyebrow matter-of-factly. "Just
how long have you been sleeping? It's the last day
of school."
The start of summer vacation, I thought, with an
internalized cheer of delight. No more books. I
hated books.
"Mr. Red Clay's taking us outside, one at a time,"
Annie said serenely. "He always speaks with us
privately at the end of the school year."
Had I grown up on the Nettlebush Reserve, I
probably would have known that to begin with. I
had been born here, but I hadn't grown up here.
My dad had taken me to live in the city when I was
five. It was only in my teens that we'd returned.
I looked to the colonial windows, where the
majority of the student body had gathered. The
older and younger students alike were scrunched
nosily between the book cases, straining their ears
to hear whatever Mr. Red Clay was saying
outside. I wondered why they didn't just open the
windows--especially considering how warm it
was in here.
"Because they don't open," said a surly Rafael.
This time, I looked to my right. Rafael Gives Light
was Annie's opposite in every way you can think
of. I mean, there's the obvious--one was a girl, the
other a boy--but while Annie was small, quick,
friendly, and at times fiery, Rafael was a hulking,
skulking loner. I viewed it as a kind of minor
miracle that we had managed to become friends
with him at all. His appearance was pretty out
there: Long, lank hair knotted with dove feathers,
square blue glasses, a pierced ear, a mean jaw, a
chain tattoo on his right arm, and the muscle mass
of a grown man. And I suppose he was a grown
man--sort of. He was eighteen.
He was in tune with my every thought. Like how
he'd known about the windows. Sometimes I felt
like I'd known him a lot longer than I really had.
Why don't they open?
I signed. He and I had spent
the past year practicing sign language together.
Rafael was a slow learner, but dedicated.
"Because some dumbass painted them shut."
"Language," Annie said mildly.
"What's wrong with my language? If you paint a
window shut, you're a dumbass." One thing you
couldn't
accuse
Rafael
of
being
was
dispassionate. "I think I'm gonna fix it over the
summer. I've got a knife that works good with
paint. Anyway, what were you dreaming about?"
he asked me. "You had a weird look on your
face."
"Now you're going to tell him how he should look
when he's asleep?"
"I'm not talking to you, Little Hawk. I'm talking to
Sky."
Cem Adrian
, I signed.
Rafael read my fingers slowly. A stormy scowl
overtook his face. "Who the hell is that?"
I grinned impishly.
My new boyfriend.
"Who the f--"
I'm kidding. He's a singer.
I realized I hadn't
taught Rafael the word for singer. I fingerspelled
i t .
He can sing all the parts in an opera by
himself. His vocal cords--
I tapped my throat. -
-
are three times as long as a normal human's.
"Oh," Rafael said. He calmed down. "Well," he
said, and I could tell that one of his moments of
great wisdom was imminent. "I'm gonna write to
him," he said. "Ask him to chop out the parts he
doesn't need. That way you can have 'em."
I smiled lightly, amused.
I'm sure he'll sign right
up and do that.
"Well, yeah," Rafael said. He grinned bashfully.
"It's for a good cause. The best cause."
"Miss Little Hawk, you're up."
Everyone turned around in their seats--the nosy
onlookers scampered back to their chairs--to see
Mr. Red Clay standing in the double doors. There
was something poetic about him, about his strong,
angular face and his loose ponytail, that reminded
me of the Plains warriors of old. He was middle-
aged, sure, but put even the smallest paring knife in
his hands and he looked like he was off to fight the
good fight. The ironic part, of course, is that the
Plains Shoshone were never a warring tribe. We
fought in exactly one war--the Pony Express War,
when we sought revenge against the Expressmen
who had brutalized two of our girls. That was
almost two hundred years ago.
"Well," Annie said, and rose from her seat, "wish
me luck."
"Sure," Rafael said. They bickered like cats and
dogs, those two, but in their hearts they were the
best of friends. I loved that about them. "Wanna
go to the grotto after? I think that's where Aubrey
went."
"I would love to," Annie said sweetly, and
traipsed outside after Mr. Red Clay.
The doors slapped shut with finality. I smothered
a sigh--one of the few sounds you can actually
make when your vocal cords don't work. I wished
Mr. Red Clay would prop those doors open. It
was stifling in here.
Rafael nudged me. I indulged him with a smile.
"Uncle Gabe joined the reservation police."
Nettlebush had started its first police force this
spring. We'd never really needed one in the past.
There were only three hundred of us, and with the
exception of one isolated incident twelve years
ago, there had never been any violence on the
reservation.
Why did the council start the police force?
I
asked.
Do you know?
"Why'd he join the police force?"
The council
, I repeated, slowly, patiently.
"Oh. Uncle Gabe says it's about all the crap that
happened last year. First the FBI bugging us, then
the social workers--the tribal council thinks it'll be
easier if we have our own cops who can just shut
that stuff down before it happens. I mean," Rafael
said hastily, "he's not going to patrol the
reservation, if that's what you're thinking. The old
ways work well enough for that."
The doors opened again, Mr. Red Clay glancing
inside. "Mr. Stout?" he said. "Stuart," he
clarified, when both Stuart and Morgan Stout rose
from their seats. I watched Stuart walk out the
door, back and shoulders straight, auburn hair
hanging around his waist.
"Quick," whispered Prairie Rose In Winter, a
seventh grader, inching back over to the window.
"Maybe I can read lips!"
"No, but maybe Skylar can," Sarah Two Eagles
said.
"I'm finally bustin' outta here!" yelled Jack
Nabako, a chubby first grader.
"Relax, Spartacus," said the dour Holly At Dawn.
"You'll be back in three months."
"Mr. St. Clair?" I heard Mr. Red Clay say.
I shot Rafael a smile as I rose from my seat, my
bookbag over my shoulder, and went out the doors.
Nettlebush was beautiful no matter the time of
year, but with summer so close at hand, everything
just looked so vivid; so verdant. I could hear the
goldfinches chirping from the oak trees, the leaves
full and glossy, and the cicadas chirping back from
the pines, afternoon their favorite time of day. The
sky was so blue, you could just fall into it; and if
you tilted your head back and gazed at its depths
long enough, it was like swimming in the stillest
waters.
Mr. Red Clay was waiting for me just beneath the
school steps. I smiled and waved, joining him
shortly.
"Your grandmother should have your report card
by now," he said. "And I'm happy to tell you how
well you've done this year."
I knew what he really meant. "Well" for me was a
B average. I've never been a very good student.
I smiled gratefully.
"Your junior year of high school is the most
important school year," Mr. Red Clay said. "If
you're thinking about going to college, it's this year
they'll be looking at. Are you thinking about it?"
I paused. No, I hadn't considered it. But there was
a good reason for that.
I can't talk, sir.
Mr. Red Clay raised his eyebrows. "I'm aware of
that, but I don't see how it's relevant."
I mean
, I began,
I'd have to talk if I were to be a--
He picked up on my hesitation. "What is it that
you'd like to be?"
I thought about last spring, how foster care had
taken me away from my grandmother for something
as stupid as us taking a trip to see our family in
Nevada. I thought about how I'd had to run away;
and I thought about the little boy who had run with
me, Danny Patreya, a Paiute boy. I thought about
how some family in Central Arizona had adopted
him without his father's knowledge, and gotten
away with it, just because he was Native
American.
I thought about how happy he had been to finally
go home, and how that white couple had come
back for him and ripped him right out of his
father's arms.
A lawyer, I think
, I admitted.
Mr. Red Clay appraised me. "That's a respectable
choice," he said. "We could definitely use more