Read St. Clair (Gives Light Series) Online
Authors: Rose Christo
"Ack! Hm? Oh, I'll probably go on helping
Reuben and Isaac with the farm."
An uncomfortable silence hung in the air. I
understood
that
silence
to
mean:
If the
reservation is still here.
"Zeke?" Annie said politely.
"Uh..." Zeke laughed nervously. "I'll be the guy
who stops dads from hitting their sons."
The second silence was just as uncomfortable as
the first. No one wanted to acknowledge that
Zeke's father had been hitting him. It was one of
those things you didn't talk about if you were a
Shoshone. Or, you know. Mute.
"Oh, Skylar," Aubrey said, breaking the ice. "I just
found something funny in our history book. It says
right here that the Indian who created Shoshone
peyote songs was named White St. Clair! Maybe
he's your ancestor!"
I couldn't keep a straight face.
Makes sense
, I
signed.
I'm as white as they come.
We separated just before evening, and each of us
went home. I couldn't find Dad anywhere. I found
Granny in the front room, trying her hand at the
computer, and wrote her a quick sticky note, asking
about his whereabouts.
"Hmph," she said. "Can't you see that I'm busy?
He's off building a house. I don't know why."
I knew why. I thought it was obvious. He wanted
Racine to move to the reservation.
Against my better judgment, I started to get
excited. If Racine and DeShawn and Jessica came
and lived here, we wouldn't have to wait for
parties and holidays to see each other. Maybe Dad
and Racine would get married. Maybe Annie
would let me show Jessica the grotto--
Was Dad so sure the reservation would be here in
two or three years?
Stop that, I told myself, irritated. Stop looking for
the worst case scenario.
"Keep an eye out for bergenias," Granny
instructed. "I would like some for a bouquet."
Bergenias are an autumn plant. You'd know them
if you saw them: They've got really unusual
leaves, heart-shaped, a burnt shade of red.
As September melded into October, the bergenias
bloomed from the ground. I collected the leaves in
a willow basket for Granny. I collected the oak
leaves, too, fallen foliage in shades of sunny
yellow and blazing orange. The weather didn't
really feel like autumn--I guess that's what happens
when you live close to the desert--but the wildlife,
lush and untamed, hadn't gotten the memo.
I stood up with Granny's willow basket and came
face-to-face with Rafael.
"You have to see this," he insisted.
He took me by the hand before I could inquire and
dragged me off to the farmland. It was all I could
do to keep Granny's plants from spilling out of the
basket.
The apples were round and heavy in the treetops,
the autumn sun pale and bright. Rafael led me to
Aubrey's farm--and then, to my bewilderment, right
through the gates. He tugged me over to the
pasture and came to a stop, his hands on the
wooden fence. Inquisitive, I followed his gaze.
A part of the pasture was sanctioned off. A little
bull calf was feeding at a low trough. His mom,
on the other side of the gate, lowed loudly in
longing. I felt sorry for her.
"She'll get used to it," he told me. His face was
alight with a boyish grin. "Isn't it cool? Reuben
says the calf's two days old."
If you've ever seen a newborn calf before, then
maybe you'll understand why I wanted to jump the
pen and put my arms around his neck. I refrained,
of course, but the sentiment was strong. So
innocent, so new to the world, I'd seldom seen
anything as beautiful as that bull calf, his ears
floppy and his coat gleaming and black. I laughed
fondly, silently. He went on eating his cracked
corn and his cane molasses, oblivious.
The ranches all over Nettlebush teemed and
burgeoned with their autumn output: chives and
lettuce and leeks, onions and snowpeas and
potatoes, radishes and soybeans and gigantic
swollen pumpkins with big, woody stems. Mr.
Red Clay let us out of school early for the next few
days while we went out to the farmland with our
families to pick up crops from our neighbors.
Again I looked around for Balto, heartsick when I
didn't see him. He used to love huge gatherings of
people, especially when fresh food was involved.
I wondered whether he'd found a mate out in the
wild. Maybe he had babies of his own. I couldn't
really picture that. After all, I'd known him since
he was five months old, no more than a baby
himself.
"Come here!" Stuart Stout hissed suddenly.
I was helping Dad to gather eggplants and cherry
tomatoes when I heard him. I looked up; and I saw
Stuart gesturing to me, then to the flourmill, his
auburn hair tucked behind his ears.
I looked to Dad for permission. He frowned
pensively. He knew we were up to something.
"Go on," he said. "I'll chat with Martin for a
while. But please be back by three."
I thanked him with a smile and jogged off to meet
with Stuart. Already I noticed that the At Dawn
sisters were hurrying over to him, and his sister
Siobhan, and a couple of ninth grade boys I didn't
know by name.
"In there," Stuart said, jerking his head toward the
flourmill.
The doors were already open. We filed neatly into
the flourmill, and I saw why. Ms. Siomme was at
the grist, pouring acorns into the feeding tray.
Ms. Siomme looked over her shoulder and smiled
at us, warmth in her pretty green eyes. She
churned the heavy hand crank with impressive
ease. The acorns in the feeding tray crunched and
ground noisily. A fine white powder spilled out of
the mouth of the grist and into the paper sack at her
feet.
"Hey, kids," she said. "You here to make flour,
too?"
The group of us exchanged uncertain looks.
"No, ma'am," said Allen Calling Owl, a neurotic
eleventh grader who had apparently been born
without the lying gene. "We're here for a
clandestine meeting regarding a matter which we
dare not discuss in front of you for fear of legal
repercussions."
Daisy At Dawn smacked her forehead. Allen's
right eye twitched.
"Okay. Have fun."
Ms. Siomme picked up her flour sacks and left the
mill. Holly At Dawn turned on Allen and began to
shake him violently.
Stuart sighed loudly. "Daisy," he said. Daisy
stood up straight, attentive. "Has your father said
anything lately about the Bureau of Land
Management?"
"I don't see why you're asking her," Holly said
sullenly. Poor Allen was huddled in the corner of
the flourmill, rubbing the feeling back into his
head. "He's my father, too."
"Right," Daisy said cheerfully, "but Dad likes me
better than you!"
The At Dawn twins began bickering. This was a
very bad thing. Once those two got started, they
could argue for hours without surfacing for air. I
wanted to ask Stuart:
Why didn't you just talk to
Ms. Siomme while she was here?
Ms. Siomme
was as much a member of the tribal council as Mr.
At Dawn was. I couldn't say a word, though,
because none of the kids present knew sign
language.
I caught Shy Lorna's eye. She blushed noticeably
and looked away.
"Well," said Stuart, "I'm going to assume that no
news is good news. At any rate, those contractors
haven't been back since August. So long as the
government thinks they can't make a profit off our
land, we should be safe."
"Maybe we should try self-immolation next time,
like the Plains Shoshone of yesteryear," Daisy
suggested, snickering. I was surprised she had the
presence of mind to drag herself away from
quarreling with her sister. "The government sees
us lighting ourselves on fire and they run the other
way."
And then we have a population shortage, I thought
grimly, and infanticide.
Not long after the autumn harvest came the pauwau
on the Hopi reservation.
The Hopi lived on the Black Mountain
Reservation, a few hours north of Nettlebush. I
suppose attending their pauwau was a way of
thanking them for having attended ours. Really,
though, those Hopi were a solemn bunch, and their
pauwaus were less like parties and more like
processionals.
On the afternoon of the pauwau, I told Dad I wasn't
going.
"Why not?" he asked, surprised, when he read my
sticky note.
I shook my head. I just wasn't in the mood, I
guess. I didn't like that Dad was confined to the
reservation while the rest of us were free to come
and go as we pleased.
"Really? Well, Racine's coming over. Would you
like to have dinner with us?"
I shook my head quickly. No way did I want to
crash Dad's date.
"Are you sure you don't want to go to the pauwau,
Cubby? You'll be bored out of your mind."
No, I wouldn't, I thought with a smile. I liked
Nettlebush. Everything about the land was
amazing to me. It's impossible to be bored when
each sight is enthralling, ever-changing; when the
earth, unchanged, speaks to you across the ages.
Granny came out of her bedroom in her white and
blue regalia and scolded me with stern gray eyes.
I smiled apologetically. She showed me the back
of her snow-white head and tromped out the door
arm-in-arm with Reverend Silver Wolf.
Not long later, I went upstairs to sort through my
bags of medicinal herbs. I rooted around in the
drawer beneath my bedside table and tossed a
spark plug and a beeper on the mattress. Mainly I
was looking for some licorice ferns to soothe my
throat; I'd had trouble swallowing again at
lunchtime.
I didn't get very far in my search when Dad called
up the stairs to me.
"Cubby! Rafael's here."
I puzzled over that. I hurried down the stairs and
to the front door. And sure enough, Rafael was
standing on the other side--in a white t-shirt and a
light gray jacket. Where was his regalia?
"Your grandma said you're not going to the
pauwau. You wanna hang out?"
I smiled before I could stop myself. It had been a
while since we'd spent time together without a
third party.
Rafael smiled, too. He had a really nice smile, the
kind that lit his eyes, dark blue as they were, and
crinkled the corners of his mouth. I liked the way
he looked in gray.
I went upstairs to grab a fleece jacket. Nettlebush
may be xeric, but the later it gets, the colder it
gets. I darted back down the stairs and found
Rafael waiting for me in the front room.
"Wanna go to the library? There's a book I wanna
check out."
Why wasn't I surprised? I rolled my eyes, but
smiled my consent. I tossed an arm around his
shoulders. Gruffly, he wrapped his arm around my
waist. I felt warmed from the inside out.
"Don't stay out too late," Dad called from the
kitchen.
I'm not sure why that embarrassed me as it did.
Nettlebush looked strange when it was vacant. It
was about five o'clock, the sun inching toward the
horizon, and the reservation was devoid of its
usual bustle of activity: neighbors walking to and
from each other's houses, children playing on their
front porches, the sounds of idle chatter and long-
traveling laughs. I knew there were a couple of
old folks who'd stayed behind--the shaman, for
example--but I guess they were all locked in their
houses. I'd never known Nettlebush to be so
lifeless, or so silent. It felt like a ghost town. I
looked around at the empty lanes, at the cold
firepit, and my imagination ran away with me. I
imagined that this was Nettlebush after the
government had taken it away from us. It was a
really creepy thought.
Rafael walked at my side, his arm around my