Read St. Clair (Gives Light Series) Online
Authors: Rose Christo
ourselves..."
"A tractor could carry it," June Threefold said.
"My grandma's farm has a tractor. It carries about
thirty tons when you attach it to a four-by-two."
"Who here knows how to drive a tractor?" Stuart
asked.
Daisy and Aubrey raised their hands. Reuben
nodded.
"Ooh! Ooh! Me! Me!" Mary said. "Let me drive
it!"
Something told me her intentions were less than
pure.
"We'll see," Stuart said testily. "Anyway, if we
can fill up a thousand gallon tank of water every
day and drive it out to the badlands, that should be
enough to cause some alarm when the Bureau
comes back."
"I hate to be the bearer of bad news," Holly said.
"No, you don't," Daisy said.
"But those tanks don't belong to us. The owners
aren't going to let us use them."
"I never said we were asking for permission,"
Stuart said.
"Oh yeah," Mary said, grinning like the devil's
cousin. "Grand Theft Water, here we go."
And it came to pass that every night, without fail, a
gaggle
of
overly
enthusiastic
teenagers
congregated behind Ms. Siomme's ranch with a
forklift and a tractor. In the stealth of the night, in
utmost secrecy, they loaded up the water tank on
the back of Mrs. Threefold's trailer and drove it
across the reserve. And it's been said that Mary
Gives Light, that champion of underdogs, could be
heard howling unto the night winds, a triumphant
litany that echoed across the badlands and
confused even the coyotes.
On the Nettlebush Reserve, if you want to get
married, you have to do it in November.
The practice actually comes from our longtime
neighbors, the Paiute. In the old days, the Paiute
were superstitious about everything from weddings
to geese formations to the position of the moon in
the sky. The Paiute believed that unless you got
married in autumn, the marriage was doomed to
end in failure. And because there once was a time
when the Shoshone intermarried heavily with the
Paiute--around the early 1800s--the superstition
transferred from their tribe to ours.
The problem is, Nettlebush had two different
officiators--and neither one wanted to share his
authority.
"
Please
stop yelling at my parishioners!"
Reverend Silver Wolf cried.
Reverend Silver Wolf and Shaman Quick stood
outside the little white church, arguing loudly in
both Shoshone and English. Those two very rarely
got along. Reverend Silver Wolf was a Christian,
and Shaman Quick followed the traditional
Shoshone religion, and one considered the other a
"traitor to the true way" while the other considered
his counterpart an ancient relic and a quack.
Granny and I stood outside the church doors and
watched the argument with interest. Granny
always found arguments interesting.
"Yokottsuku!" Shaman Quick bellowed.
I didn't know exactly what he'd just said, but it
must have been bad. Poor Reverend Silver Wolf's
face turned bright red.
"What's going on here?" Gabriel asked.
I turned and smiled, taken off guard. Rosa and
Gabriel were both wearing their traditional
regalia, Rosa in salmon orange elkskin and yellow
creosote leggings, Gabriel in russet and brown.
That could only mean one thing: Rosa and Gabriel
were here to get married.
Rosa looked like she wanted to say something.
She turned toward me, timidly. "May I speak with
you?"
I looked back at Granny and she approved with a
nod. I put my hand on Rosa's shoulder and
followed her to the side of the church.
For a moment I thought: Maybe Rosa found out
we've been sabotaging the lake. But if that were
the case, what would she really get out of talking
to me about it? It wasn't like I could talk back.
"Will you tug-of-war with me?" Rosa asked.
I opened my mouth. I closed it.
I tilted my head.
Rosa shifted nervously. She must have been five
months pregnant, maybe six, because her round
belly was starting to show. I kind of wanted to
touch it, but I didn't know whether that was
appropriate.
"When a Shoshone woman takes a husband," she
explained slowly, "it is traditional that her mother
and her mother-in-law fight over her in a tug-of-
war."
Oh, I thought. I knew why Rosa had come to me. I
smiled at her with a twinge of remorse. Rosa
didn't have a mother. The same killer who took my
mom from me twelve years ago took Rosa's from
her, too.
In that respect, we were bound beyond words.
Rosa must have realized that my smile meant
acceptance. Her face lit up; she took me into a
swift, soft hug. I laughed without sound and
returned it.
"Excuse me, now, I must go!" she said, and raced
past me to the little church, her fringe flying around
her elbows.
I went to Annie's house after the encounter, and we
candied yams and walnuts for dinner.
"I wonder what it's like to get married," Annie said
dreamily. "Daddy was quite a bit older than
Mom. Granddad never really approved, but he's
been good since Daddy had his stroke."
When you marry
, I signed,
can I be your best
man?
Annie looked puzzled. "What do you mean?"
I guessed a Shoshone wedding was different from
what I was used to.
Dinner was more raucous that night than usual. All
the newly married brides were teased by the men,
who chased after them and offered them gardenias
and lilacs--a bawdy joke, because lilacs for the
Shoshone represent virginity. Dad gave Gabriel a
necklace of eagle feathers and Gabriel laughed
loudly, a thundering laugh, clapped Dad on the
back, and wore the feathers with pride. The
couples cut locks of each other's hair and tied them
together for a relative to place somewhere safe.
Now it was official: The lovers couldn't divorce
unless they found the locks and burned them.
"Skylar, c'mon!" Mary said.
I got up from the picnic table, grinning. Mary and I
grabbed Rosa's arms and began to fight over her.
Rafael's maternal grandmother lived on the Fort
Hall Reservation in Idaho, at least twelve hours
away, which was why Mary was filling in for her.
"Mukua!" somebody shouted.
The husband's side of the family was supposed to
win--the tug-of-war was just a symbolic formality-
-so after a good long while of jostling poor Rosa,
her hair flying and her eyes rattling, I let go and
she toppled into Mary, winded. Mary caught her
expertly, the crowd around us breaking into
applause.
I sat down with Rafael and Annie in time to catch
an uncommonly bright smile on Rafael's face, his
head ducked. He must have been so happy for his
uncle, the uncle who had raised him like a father
would.
"Let's have a song!" Gabriel said, his face
radiating with unparalleled happiness.
He got several songs. The whole crowd chimed in
for a couple of verses out of the Shoshone love
song. A few of the older folks sang O Morning
Star. The younger generation didn't really know
it. I played There She Sits on my plains flute and
caught sight of the nostalgic look on Dad's face. I
wondered whether he was thinking about Mom or
Racine.
"Uncle Gabe knows," Rafael whispered when I
had finished.
I gave him a confused smile.
"We went hunting together in the badlands
yesterday. We didn't follow the usual route, we
were looking for the elk. They go scarce this time
of year. Anyway, Uncle Gabe saw the water in the
gullies and stood staring at it for about ten
minutes. So I blabbed." He looked sheepish.
"Sorry," he mumbled.
"Oh, don't be," Annie joined in. "It's for the sake
of the reservation, isn't it? I'm sure he can
understand that."
"I think so. He just laughed."
I looked out to the firepit, Gabriel dancing with his
new wife, Rosa's face glowing. That's what it
means to be Shoshone. No matter whatever
misfortune befalls you, you don't let it control your
life.
The weddings continued well into the month of
November. One Sunday, after mass, I had an idea
for a joke. I caught up with Rafael as he was
following Rosa out the double doors. I grabbed
him by the arm.
"What is it?"
I gestured between the two of us. I nodded toward
Reverend Silver Wolf, still standing by the pulpit,
with a wicked smile.
He grinned broadly, an innocent grin belying a
mischievous intent. He took my hand--I locked our
fingers together on impulse--and we started down
the aisle toward the altar.
"Reverend Silver Wolf," Rafael said. "We wanna
get married, too."
Reverend Silver Wolf looked up from the pulpit, a
soft smile shining on his kind old face.
He looked at the two of us and sputtered, a blush
spreading down his throat.
I waved.
"That's, um," Reverend Silver Wolf said. He
thumbed through his Bible with jittery fingers. "I
don't know if. I don't think that..."
The poor guy. I don't know that there's anyone on
earth shyer than Reverend Silver Wolf.
Rafael and I ran from the church and laughed, my
sides aching with laughter, Rafael's dimples
swallowing up his face. Either I was still holding
his hand, or he was still holding mine. Whichever
it was, neither one of us let go.
We stopped when we had reached the big
ponderosa on the edge of the windmill field. He
pulled me behind the tree trunk, his hands on my
hips, and kissed me.
I tasted the laughter on his lips; I grabbed fistfuls
of his shirt and felt the hard planes of his chest
beneath my fingers.
I was breathless when I sat down with my back
against the tree. Rafael sat next to me, his hands in
the grass.
"Hope he's not having a heart attack back there," he
said.
I laughed all over again.
Rafael lay on his back, his hands on top of his
belly, his eyes on the gray November sky. I
propped myself next to him, prone, and played
with his glasses. He shot me a quick, dark smile
and batted my hand away. When I wouldn't desist,
he seized my hand in his and held it to his chest.
His heartbeat felt like a familiar song, primeval, a
song I had known before I'd even known myself.
I watched the traces of his bashful, unapologetic
smile fade away from his features. I watched
contemplation usurp their place.
I nudged his shoulder questioningly.
"Why do you think people get married, anyway?"
That struck me as a peculiar thing to ask. I
thought: Because they love each other, that's why.
"Like, why the official ceremony and whatever?
Do they think they've gotta prove something?"
I didn't know that it was about proving anything. I
thought it was more like a promise of sorts. You
assume the person you're marrying is going to be
with you forever. You want them to know it.
It doesn't always work out that way. I thought
about Mom and Dad with a pang of regret. Even if
Mom hadn't died, their marriage probably wouldn't
have lasted. Dad's feelings for her had very little
bearing on that.
I wondered what made people fall out of love. I
thought it was a scary concept, that we as human
beings couldn't control the course of our emotions.
Somebody we loved one day, we might grow
indifferent toward the next. I didn't like that
concept. I didn't understand it. I loved Dad and
Granny; I could never imagine not loving them. I
couldn't imagine not loving Rafael.
I felt Rafael's eyes on my profile. I turned my head
and gave him a fleeting smile.
"I don't think people split up because they stop
loving each other," he said. "I think they split up
because their differences get in the way."