Read St. Clair (Gives Light Series) Online
Authors: Rose Christo
take his keys out of his pocket. He threw open the
front door and we walked inside, dusk glowing
through the north-facing windows. He flipped a
light switch and the sitting room lit up. Thankfully,
there weren't any dead animals hanging from the
rafters.
"Want lemon pie?" Rafael asked, and went into the
kitchen.
I stared after him, incredulous. I knew he had one
monster of a sweet tooth, but the timing was pretty
inopportune.
A few seconds later and he emerged uncertainly
from the kitchen, no pie in sight.
"Should I take a shower or something?"
I pointed at his bedroom door.
"Right, sorry," he muttered, and skulked away.
I breathed deeply, silently. Calm down, I told
myself. It's Rafael. It's okay if it's Rafael. It's
always okay with Rafael.
I followed him into his bedroom and found him
sitting on the edge of his bed. His back was bent
forward, his hands folded. He looked distracted.
I set the plastic shopping bag on the floor. Not an
easy task: From old paperback novels to
neglected sketchbooks to unwashed laundry,
Rafael's room was incredibly cluttered. I fished
around inside the bag and took out Rafael's library
books. And...you know. The other stuff.
"Are you sure--"
I shot him a silencing look. It was very effective.
I sat next to Rafael on the bed. He sat up straight,
his back stiff. It occurred to me just how tense he
was. I ran my hand up and down his back, rubbing
his tight muscles. I felt him relax.
His hand rested on my knee.
Tentative, I lifted my hand; Rafael's eyes jumped
and followed its path. I slipped the glasses off his
face. I folded them up and set them aside, on a
stack of books at the foot of the bed.
He tucked a braid behind his ear. He paused,
realizing--as I did--that there was already a pencil
stub tucked back there. I laughed softly. Bashful,
he dropped the pencil to the floor. It rolled under
the mattress, far from sight.
Again I lifted my hand. Again he watched me. I
touched the side of his face. My fingertips trailed
down his skin, soft and brown, to the square line of
his hard jaw.
He took my hand in his. He kissed my open palm,
his lips warm. He kissed the underside of my
wrist. The blood in my veins singed, tingling; I
felt it in my knees.
I hooked my thumbs around the folds of his gray
jacket. I slid his jacket down his shoulders and
hung it on the bedpost.
He raised his fingers, haltingly, to my shirt buttons.
My throat felt like it was caving in, burning from
the inside out. My heart felt cold and heavy in my
chest, each breath weighted with ice. I didn't want
him to take my clothes off. I didn't want him to
look at me. I wasn't much to look at. I was pale,
thin, swimming in freckles; my chest was so flat, it
was almost concave. I was repulsive. I wasn't
sure what Rafael found appealing in me.
"You're not."
I looked at him.
"You're not," Rafael said. His voice was low and
quiet. His eyes were trained on mine.
It might sound crazy. I'm sure it will. But I felt as
though no physical barrier existed between us
two. No skin. No clothes. Nothing but he and I.
And really...when you have a safety net like that,
the fall just doesn't look so scary.
"When you're finished, turn your paper over and
put your pencil down. If you cheat, I'll know about
it. I've got eyes in the back of my head."
Mr. Red Clay walked up and down the rows of
tables and handed out stacks of paper. Otherwise
the schoolhouse was silent, save for the reedy
cackling of the grackles outside the windows.
Occasionally a cloud covered the weak autumn sun
and cast the whole room in darkness.
Mr. Red Clay set an unmarked test paper on the
table in front of me. I smiled at him. He returned
it, to my surprise, while he continued down the
table to the At Dawn Twins.
Rafael's knee was pressed against mine, the
warmth of him seeping through the fabric of his
jeans.
"You may begin," Mr. Red Clay announced.
I turned over my test paper and read the first
couple of questions. I read them a second time; a
third. They didn't really sink in. I couldn't focus
on anything except for Rafael, Rafael's knee on
mine, Rafael's jacket sleeve rolled up over his
tattooed arm, Rafael's long hair brushing the aged
surface of the wooden table.
The clouds covered the sun again. The room
delved into shadow. Rafael's hand brushed against
mine beneath the table. I tangled our fingers
together, his palm curving into mine. I found it
awfully convenient that he wrote with his left hand
while I wrote with my right.
Aubrey started jabbering the moment Mr. Red Clay
let us leave for the day.
"The autumn pauwau was extraordinary this year!
The Hopi told their creation story. Did you
know? The Hopi believe that every time human
beings muck things up on Earth, God destroys the
whole world and starts over with a new one. This
is the fourth Earth."
"It's rather disconcerting, if you think about it,"
Annie said serenely, unaffected. "Shall we go to
the grotto?"
We walked the dirt path out to the woods. We
veered off the beaten path, Annie at the lead, and
sat together by the mouth of the cave. I watched
the trickling water carry the fallen autumn leaves
out to the right-tributary.
"I wonder where Zeke is," Annie said.
"Wherever he is, I'm sure we'll hear about it in
excessive detail," Aubrey said gently.
Rafael pulled his math book and a pencil out of his
worn gray backpack.
We were supposed to be studying Cartesian
coordinates--whatever that means. I was too busy
studying Rafael. I studied his lightless black hair
as it spilled over his shoulder, his blue wire
eyeglasses perched on the bridge of his flat nose. I
studied his square jaw as it pulled, then relaxed,
while he erased his botched equations and wrote
them anew. I studied the dimples in his cheeks, the
way they deepened when he chewed on his bottom
lip. I studied the fingers wrapped around his
pencil, short and hard and firm, and the clipped
fingernails and the dove's feather hanging next to
his pierced ear.
I tried to be discreet about it. I really did. But I
saw the way his mouth flickered, like he was
struggling not to smile. He knew I was watching
him.
"I really don't understand this graph," Annie said.
"Here," Aubrey offered, "you can look at mine."
Rafael closed his textbook, his pencil marking his
place. He set his book on the ground and stalked
off around the willow tree. I got up and followed
him a second later.
We walked between the alder trees, the sounds of
the creek growing distant behind us. I raked my
eyes across the contours of his back, around the
memorized curves of his broad shoulders.
"Ran out of orange," he murmured, and flaked the
alder bark with his fingertips. Rafael liked to
draw in his spare time. Ground alder bark makes
for a good orange ink.
Leaves crunched under the soles of my sneakers.
Rafael turned around to face me, his back against
the tree trunk.
A blue moon isn't really blue. But when it's late at
night, and there's a blue moon hanging over your
roof, you can see the clouds as clear as day, silver
and glowing in a dark blue sky.
That's how Rafael's eyes looked to me. Dark blue,
cloudy, but emanating with a hidden light. I
thought about how his eyes had looked when he
was draped across me; how wide and distorted the
blacks of his eyes were, the most incredible thing
I'd ever seen. I thought about the chain tattoo
running up his right arm, and its twin wrapped
around his right leg, ending inside his thigh.
I laid my hands against his arms and folded into
him. I smiled at him, a dare behind my smile; and
when he smiled back I saw his sharp, lupine teeth
and the tooth missing at the back of his mouth, his
innocence, his heart.
It was second nature to kiss him, to lay my body
against his and feel his hands on my hips, his hip
digging into mine. I pressed close enough to him
to feel every sinew of his body, every ghost of a
breath gliding across my lips, every rough and
imperfect angle beneath the soft stitches of his
worn clothes. It was like heaven; it was like
home; and there was a sort of perfection to that
imperfection, something like a missing puzzle
piece that was meant to fit into me, just me, mine
alone. And at some point, we blurred together, he
and I, and there was only one of us, and I didn't
know which one of us that was.
It may sound strange to you, but there's no word for
"love" in the Shoshone language. The closest
equivalent is
shundahai
, which more or less
means "to be one and the same." In the old days, if
a Shoshone man wanted to tell his wife he was in
love with her, he would say "I am you," or "You
are me." I think I understand that now.
Rafael buried his face against the crook of my
neck, tickling me; I laughed, and he must have felt
it, because he laughed too, his chest rippling under
the palm of my hand, his mouth moving against my
skin in warm kisses. I fitted my leg between his,
subtly, and felt him tense against me, his broad
back stiff beneath my hands; I felt him breathe
against me, a great big sigh that seemed to contain
within itself a thousand smaller sighs; I took his
face between my hands, his coarse hair sliding
through my fingers, and brought his mouth back to
mine, where it belonged.
My train of thought--insofar as I actually thought--
was interrupted by the sound of a loud yip.
Rafael and I broke apart. I looked around for the
source of the noise, but didn't find it.
"Over there," Rafael said, and pointed toward a
copse of barberry bushes.
The red autumn tendrils rustled on the ends of their
thick brown shoots. I worried about that;
barberry's perfectly edible, if a little tangy--in fact,
it's a good remedy for a stomachache--but the
bushes generally have thorns, which means it's not
a good idea for a wild animal to poke his nose into
one. I drew a little closer to see what had gotten
tangled up in the shrubs.
Nothing had gotten tangled up in the shrubs. But
Balto came padding through the bushes and
stopped right in front of me.
It was like he had grown even more since the last
time I'd seen him, almost the size of a full-blooded
wolf. I scarcely remembered anymore what he had
looked like as a baby, but I knew it was him by the
gray on the tip of his golden ear. His eyes, too,
were unmistakable, dark and black, worlds wiser
than any human'll ever be.
Immediately I began to worry. Grown coywolves
don't travel without their packmates. Why wasn't
Balto in a pack yet?
He sprinted north.
"Maybe he was looking for you," Rafael said.
I didn't know whether that was true. If it was, I
couldn't leave him hanging. I ran after him; and I
heard Rafael behind me and knew he was
following, too.
Balto took us through the beech trees and back to
the forest road. A pair of siblings on their way
east pointed, puzzled, at the three of us. Balto
outstripped the siblings, and it was all that I could
do to keep up. Rafael, slower, crashed through the
forest brush yards behind us.
The forest opened up onto a clearing, and then the
lake. I stopped to catch my breath. Rafael caught
up with us minutes later, none the worse for wear.
"The hell is going on?" Rafael said.
I followed his gaze to the lake. I stood up straight
and frowned.
A woman in a black coat and suit stood flanked by