Read St. Clair (Gives Light Series) Online
Authors: Rose Christo
I never did figure out how to hide my thoughts from
him.
Rafael gazed again at the sky. His fingers worked
underneath the pilot whale trinket wrapped around
his wrist.
"I think I wanna get married someday," he said.
I wondered whether I had heard him correctly. My
stomach felt like it was boiling.
"Yeah," he said, still without looking at me. "I
wanna get married. The reverend doesn't
recognize two-spirit marriage, but the shaman
does. I wanna get married someday, and I wanna
have a daughter. And she'll be awesome and
kickass, like Nai Nukkwi, or Charlotte Doyle."
Nai and Charlotte. That's a respectable name
pool.
"Because I think if you work hard enough, you'll be
with the same person for the rest of your life.
Because I think once you love someone, you'll
always love them."
I knew what he was getting at now. I turned on my
side. It's funny; I could scarcely stand to look at
him, but at the same time, there was nothing I
wanted to do more.
"If we had a kid, would she be a Gives Light, or a
St. Clair?"
Gives Light
, I signed.
She needs a Plains name.
"Yeah, but St. Clair is a Plains name, too. Or it
was adopted by the Plains People, anyway.
Remember that peyotist guy, the one who brought
peyote songs to the Plains Shoshone? White St.
Clair."
I showed him a smile, amused.
Nai Nukkwi St.
Clair is a weird name
, I joked. Boy, did that take
a long time to fingerspell.
"She's not gonna be called Nai Nukkwi, dumbass,"
Rafael said. "If we adopt a kid, she'll probably
already have a name. You don't think?"
I showed him a bemused smile.
"I read about this online. Most people in America
who want to adopt children will only adopt a kid
between the ages of one and five. Once an orphan
is older than five, her odds of getting adopted drop
to 17%. And her odds drop with every year.
She's going to be stuck in foster care for the rest of
her life. It's like older kids stop being cute, or
something stupid like that, so white folks stop
wanting them."
I thought about Danny Patreya.
"But I want them. I don't care how old or how cute
they are. I don't care if they've got three legs and
four eyes. They still need a home. Taking care of
a kid shouldn't be about what the parent wants. It's
got to be about the kid."
I'd never even thought about any of this before. It
kind of disgusted me that children who really
needed homes got overlooked while people who
wanted to adopt so often resorted to stealing
Native American kids who already had families.
It made adoption sound like a frivolous whim.
Like window shopping for a puppy. It made me
think that Native Americans were less than human
in the government's eyes, so whatever injustices
happened to them were just par for the course.
Did I even want to have children? I think I'd
always considered it an impossibility given that I
was mute. A mute parent can teach his kids sign
language, but he can't march up to school and talk
to the principal when his kid's being bullied. He
can't cheer for his kid's soccer matches. He's
worthless.
Worthless if he's a single parent. Years ago I
never would have thought someone could love me.
Someone who wasn't obligated to love me.
I never counted on meeting Rafael.
"St. Clair, though," Rafael said. "That's a good
name for a kid."
I couldn't help but smile. I smiled until my face
hurt. I knew it was kind of crazy that we were
sitting here, discussing a hypothetical kid who
wouldn't exist for a good ten years. But even the
idea that I was going to be with Rafael in ten years'
time--that he would still want me by then--
I'd better cut it out before I get too sappy.
St. Clair, I thought. Maybe the kid would like
peyote songs, too.
"I just hope she doesn't like Cem Adrian," Rafael
said harshly.
I picked up my plains flute and hit him with it.
The Bureau of Land Management came back to the
reservation at the end of November.
"Skylar, man," Zeke said during school, kicking me
under the table, "the contractors are here! I saw
their trucks in the parking lot off the turnpike!
What do we do?"
It was early in the morning still, and Mr. Red Clay
had yet to show up for class. I looked up, alarmed,
at Zeke's warning.
Immaculata shoved her face between Zeke's and
mine, her crazy eyes bulging, her livewire hair
standing on end. "Hakani naattaimma?"
The men who want the lake came back
, I signed.
Immaculata smiled dissonantly.
Let us make
carnage.
"What are you guys saying?! I don't speak deaf
language!"
I waved away Zeke's shouts as Annie, Lila, and
Joseph walked through the doors. I reached over
and tapped Stuart's shoulder.
"Yes?"
I jostled Zeke.
"Hey! Oh. Stu! They're here for the lake! What
do we do?"
"They're here?" Annie asked.
"Who's here?" Daisy At Dawn asked.
"My entourage is here," Lila said loftily.
Stuart stood up. "Let's go down to the lake so we
can watch what happens."
"But Mr. Red Clay!" said Autumn Rose, two tables
in front of ours.
Siobhan Stout chuckled, flashing her colored
braces. "Imagine his surprise when he walks in on
an empty classroom. Maybe we can make him
think it's a Saturday."
Holly, Daisy, and the In Winter kids hurried out the
doors. Rafael walked in. He paused. He looked
over his shoulder, baffled.
"What the hell?"
"I'm bustin' outta here!" Jack Nabako yelled, and
ran out the door after his big brother, Andrew.
Zeke started laughing madly, a nervous hyena. I
grabbed Rafael by his elbow and tugged him out
the door.
The whole group of us--about fifty or sixty kids--
ran down the country lane and into the main
neighborhood. I saw Mr. Little Hawk carrying a
boat over his shoulders; he gazed openly at us,
puzzled. We dashed past the firepit and the butter
churns and down the forest path.
"Off the path!" Stuart commanded. "Follow the
beeches to the pines. We don't want to be seen."
All at once, we split up; we veered off the dirt
road and darted through the trees.
I wound up hunched behind a bull pine with
Immaculata and Holly. I pressed a hand against
the rough bark and the three of us peeked through
the boughs. I grimaced, pine needles in my mouth.
At least it wasn't one of the dead pine trees.
"Ma punni," Immaculata whispered.
"Shut it," Holly whispered back.
There were six men standing by the lake, a long,
black hose lying on the ground. One of the men
bent down and pressed his eye against the
theodolite perched on top of the tripod. He stood
up straight. He turned around to say something to
his coworkers--but what, I didn't know.
I glanced around the pine grove, skittish. I saw
Stuart crouch forward, like a tiger, and dart from
one tree to the next in order to get a closer look.
One of the men took a cell phone out of his pocket.
I hid a grin. He wasn't going to get a signal out
here. Nettlebush wasn't close enough to a cell
phone tower. He seemed to come to the same
conclusion. He snapped his phone shut,
frustrated. He stuffed it into his pants.
The men reached down and started fitting a white
plastic sleeve over the hose.
I jolted. Holly turned sharply at the same time.
"What's going on?" she said.
Zeke and Aubrey and Allen Calling Owl ran out of
their hiding places and over to the men, yelling.
Stuart joined them shortly. Annie crashed through
the trees and grabbed my arm.
"I don't know what to do!" she shouted. She had
to; that clearing was so loud, both the men and our
classmates screaming at one another, I couldn't
hear myself think.
"Let's follow the hose," Holly suggested.
Come with us
, I signed to Immaculata.
We ran together, retracing our steps through the
reserve.
The thick black hose ran along the eastern half of
the reservation and out to the hospital parking lot.
The sight of it was sickening. I held Annie's hand
so she wouldn't fall behind.
I didn't really know what Holly's intention was. I
just knew it was better to do something rather than
nothing. We skidded to a halt in the parking lot,
my throat burning with exertion. I followed the
hose with my eyes. It was attached to a clunky,
rust-colored motor--which, in turn, connected to a
bulky white siphon. The siphon fed into the side of
a huge, sleek truck.
The motor whirred noisily.
We rushed forward, none faster than Annie. No
doubt she thought she could destroy the motor
before it was too late. But the motor was
monstrously heavy. Only in working together did
we manage to pick the thing up, but even when we
tossed it to the ground, it kept humming, unfazed,
the metal warm to the touch. We tried pulling and
tearing at the hose itself, but it was tough and
rubbery and wouldn't come apart.
"Come on!" Holly yelled at the thing, like it might
be persuaded to our cause.
I crouched down to get a closer look at the motor.
In a groove along the motor's underside was a
sturdy glass valve--borosilicate, the kind they use
in laboratories because it's less likely to break.
Even the toughest glass is weaker than ceramic,
though. I think it's because ceramic's a 9 on the
Mohs Scale. Glass is only a 6.5. That's why
punks on the street like to steal the spark plugs first
whenever they junk a car. A hammer won't even
put a dent in a car window; but a ceramic spark
plug will decimate it. If you ever want to break
into a storefront or somebody's home without
tripping the acoustic/shock sensors, all you have to
do is tap the window with a spark plug and watch
it crumble quietly, like powder. I'm not
recommending it, so don't look at me if you test it
out and get caught.
I jumped up, my head pounding. I had a spark plug
at home. I'd stolen one half a year ago when
Danny and I were on the run from foster care.
"Where are you going?" Holly called after me.
I waved apologetically and sprinted down the dirt
road.
It was frustrating, because it felt like my legs and
my lungs were conspiring against me. I ran as fast
as I could; even that didn't seem fast enough. I
breezed past Ms. Siomme and Mrs. In Winter and I
think I heard Mr. Red Clay calling after me, but I
didn't stop to check. I dashed up the porch steps,
threw open the front door, and raced into my home.
"What on earth?" I heard Granny say. She and
Reverend Silver Wolf were together in the sitting
room.
I climbed the staircase to my bedroom two steps at
a time. I burst through my bedroom door and
opened every drawer within reach, tossing the
contents to the musty wood floor. Where the heck
was that spark plug?
I found it at last beneath a bag of arnica leaves in
my bottom bedside drawer.
My pulse leapt with victory. I closed my hand
around the spark plug, so small that it disappeared
inside my fist. I thundered back down the
staircase, stumbling, and out the door. I'm sure I
forgot to close it behind me.
My lungs were bursting by the time I made it back
to the parking lot. I dropped to my knees by the
motor--too quickly; they skinned--and tapped the
spark plug against the valve. The valve shattered.
The motor hummed slowly, then stilled.
"Are we safe?" Annie asked incredulously.
"No idea," Holly said morosely.
"Tsao!" Immaculata yelled. She jumped to her feet
and pumped her fists in the air. It looked like fun,
so I joined her.
Definite confirmation came several minutes later