Read St. Clair (Gives Light Series) Online
Authors: Rose Christo
"Alright," Dr. Stout said, her voice sounding kind
of strained. "Look, here's the deal. I'm almost
positive the cancer metastasized."
"What does that mean?"
"It means it spread. I don't know how far. I know
it's in his lymph nodes."
I wondered what a lymph node was.
Dad put his face in his hands. His neck was bent,
his shoulders hunched. He looked like a statue to
me, so still, so silent. Worried, I reached out and
touched his back. His head shot up on his
shoulders.
"Normally," Dr. Stout said, "the oncologist would
try to preserve as much of the vocal folds as
possible, so the patient retains the ability to speak.
But Skylar's vocal folds are already paralyzed.
And given the extent of the lesions--"
I knew what she was getting at. The surgeon was
going to rip my vocal cords out.
I thought: I guess Rafael won't be fixing my voice
after all.
"But is he going to be alright?" Dad pressed on.
I'd never heard him sound so weak before. "He's
going to live, isn't he? Aisling?"
"Oh, he'll be fine, Paul." Dr. Stout ran a hand
through her hair, looking distracted. I noticed she
wasn't meeting our eyes. "I'm going to make sure
the X-ray technician's still around," she said.
"Robert will come along in a few seconds to take
you for a CT scan. Okay, Skylar?"
I smiled.
Dr. Stout walked out the door, leaving Dad and me
alone in the pearly white lab.
Dad covered his face with his arm. I saw his
shoulders begin to shake. I realized he was crying.
I don't know whether I can explain just how
terrifying that was. Dad was not a man who cried.
He didn't cry when his wife died. He didn't cry
when he found out it was his best friend who had
killed her.
I climbed down from the lab table and approached
him carefully. I put my hands on his shoulders. He
didn't relent. I wrapped an arm around his
shoulders; he didn't react. Don't cry, Dad, I
thought, heartbroken. I hugged him, my arms
around him, but he wouldn't show me his face. He
kept turning his head away. I didn't mind. I just
didn't want him to cry.
A quick rap sounded on the door. The nurse
walked in, but drew short. Dad broke away from
me and rubbed his face with his hands. When he
looked up, his eyes were wet, a winter water gray.
The nurse--Robert--did a good job of pretending
he hadn't noticed. He smiled sunnily. "Okay, you
guys," he said. "I'm just going to take Skylar to the
CT room. If I can remember the way, that is. It
hasn't seen use in years. You can come along if
you'd like, Mr. St. Clair."
Dad's last name was Looks Over, not St. Clair, but
Dad didn't bother correcting him.
Robert wasn't kidding when he'd said this part of
the building didn't see a lot of use. He led us to the
far back of the hospital, the tiny nurses' station
vacant and covered in shadows. He flipped the
lights on with difficulty, like the switches were
swollen with neglect. He showed us through a
side doorway and into the CT room.
The CT machine was a giant tunnel in the middle
of a huge white box. It sort of reminded me of a
torture device. I glanced warily around the room.
I saw the X-ray operator behind the windowed
partition, who waved at us and gave me a thumbs
up. I saw a calendar on one wall. According to
the calendar, it was still 1999.
"Here," Robert said, and handed me a hospital
gown.
I'd forgotten I'd need to take my clothes off. I
guess parts of my mind were skilled at blocking
out unpleasant memories. I think Robert expected
me to get changed right in that CT room, too. We
were all guys.
Guys or not, I felt like I could throw up. I wished
my body were somebody else's. I hated that body.
There was only one person I wanted looking at it.
I slid the hospital gown on right over my clothes
and tied it in the back. I shucked off my pants and
my undergarments; they pooled to the floor. I
tugged off my shirt through the neck of the gown.
Ha, I told my body. I win. You lose.
"Park it here," Robert said, and gave the CT bed a
couple of pats.
The bed was stiff and chilly, more like a slab of
metal than a mattress. I lay back and felt cold.
The bed started sliding through the narrow ring of
the tunnel. I felt like I couldn't breathe. Cancer, I
thought. That doesn't make sense. You have to be
sick to have cancer. I wasn't sick. Just hungry.
I closed my eyes to block out the sight of the
confining tunnel around me. I could hear Robert as
he tried to make conversation--with me or with
Dad, I wasn't sure--but I couldn't distinguish one
word from the next. The scanner buzzed and
banged; my ears went numb. It sounded like
death. I'd never thought of death as something
audible before.
It felt like the CT scan took hours. In reality, it
only took minutes. Robert and the X-ray
technician left the room to look at the images and
Dad followed them without reluctance. Later on,
he would tell me that he was hoping Dr. Stout was
wrong.
She wasn't. I had metastatic laryngeal cancer.
That's a fancy way of saying the scars in my throat
spawned a bunch of evil cells that ran off to do
battle with the rest of my body.
It's funny. I still don't know what a lymph node is.
"Those contractors haven't been back ever since
the lake incident! Isn't it wonderful?"
Annie and I decorated her house with pine needles
and poinsettias. I'm sure you can figure out whose
idea that was.
(Not mine.)
Maybe they're admitting defeat
, I signed. I don't
know whether you've ever seen the sign for
"defeat," but it's really kooky, like the snapping
jaws of an alligator. Makes sense, I guess. You
come across an alligator in the wild, it's probably
going to defeat you.
Maybe they think we placed
an Indian curse on them.
"Don't joke. The shaman really will place a curse
on someone if you ask him."
Lila and Joseph sat frosting anise cookies in the
alcove off the kitchen. Occasionally Lila dipped
the frosting in her mouth when she thought we
weren't looking.
"Isn't Christmas exciting?" Annie remarked. "You
really start to think anything can happen. Our
ancestors celebrated the solstice around this time
of year. Winter was so important for Shoshone.
The wise women said magic was at its most
powerful during the winter solstice."
What, they really believed in magic?
"Naturally. And people like Shaman Quick still
do. Didn't you ever hear about Man from the
Sky?"
I shook my head.
"Oh, he was the greatest shaman our people ever
knew. A long, long time ago, a sleeping sickness
fell on our tribe. It was a real epidemic; we were
on the verge of dying out. And we might have
done it, too, if not for Man from the Sky. He struck
a rock in the Lemhi Valley, and a cascading stream
poured out of it. Everyone who drank from the
stream was healed. That stream is still there to
this day. It's so sacred to Shoshone that for many
years afterward, we vowed never to drink from it
unless we were in mortal danger. It became a holy
site."
Healing water, I thought. I touched my throat
before I could stop myself.
Where's Lemhi Valley?
I asked. I spelled it
phonetically.
"In Idaho," Annie replied. She pointed to a spot
over the wood-coal stove where she wanted me to
hang garlands. I climbed up on the stepping-stool
and reached for a nail. "It's really not that far from
Bear River."
We stopped conversing while I hammered the
garland into the wall. Once the loud clanging had
subsided, and I'd climbed back down from the
stool, I asked,
How come we don't visit it in
J a n u a r y ?
January was when we visited Bear
River.
"Because we're forbidden, of course."
I showed her my confusion.
"Honestly, Skylar, don't you pay attention during
history lessons? The Trail of Tears! The
Cherokee weren't the only tribe forced to march
for miles from their ancestral grounds. It happened
t o
o u r
ancestors! Shoshone have lived in the
Lemhi Valley since the dawn of time. Pocatello
and Sacajawea called it their birthplace. Lemhi
Valley is where the name 'Shoshone' comes from,
in fact--'Valley People.' Well, the Northern
Shoshone managed to hold onto Lemhi Valley until
1905, when the whites decided Bear River wasn't
enough for them, they wanted Lemhi Valley, too.
They were nicer about it this time, though. Instead
of slaughtering the Shoshone, they ordered them to
leave--'or face consequences.' So, the Northern
Shoshone left. And our holy stream? I'm told a
hunting lodge sits on top of it nowadays. Really,
I'm surprised the white men haven't driven the elk
into extinction by now; they're so wasteful, hunting
for sport..."
We went out to Annie's sitting room, where Zeke
and Aubrey were decorating the medicine shelves
with sagebrush and juniper bark, traditional winter
tipi ornaments. The both of them sang Christmas
carols, or tried to, but Aubrey was horribly off
key, and Zeke kept bursting into laughter over the
line: "Deck the halls with boughs of Holly..."
"Skylar," Annie said. "Why don't you stick
around? We're going to play Aikupi, Joseph loves
it."
I checked my wristwatch.
Some other time
, I
signed.
Grandpa Little Hawk had joined in on the
caroling. He goggled at me, none too subtle, over
the words "Don we now our gay apparel."
"Your grandmother must want you home to help
with winter errands," Annie said with a knowing
smile.
I smiled back, glad that Annie wasn't a mind
reader like Rafael.
I went home around noon and found Granny in the
kitchen, boiling ricegrass porridge over the stove.
I touched her arm and smiled. When she looked up
at me, blinking her water-gray eyes, she looked so
misplaced, like she'd fallen straight out of a
reverie and into someone else's log cabin.
"I'm making you lunch," Granny said.
She really didn't have to do that.
"Hush," she said, though I hadn't made a sound. I
couldn't make a sound. "Ricegrass porridge is
good for you. It swallows easily."
I got a couple of acorns out of the cabinet. If
Granny was making me lunch, the least I could do
was make her tea.
It wasn't long later that Dad arrived, looking more
tired than I'd ever seen him. "Hey, Cubby," he
said. His face did this weird twitching thing; I
think he was trying to smile. "Hello, Mother."
We sat at the table together for lunch. Granny and
Dad tried to make small talk. I'm surprised I didn't
have a heart attack on the spot. Granny and Dad
making small talk was about as rare as an eagle
befriending the fox it's trying to eat. I don't mean
to imply that Granny and Dad were usually at each
other's throats. Quite the opposite: They were so
reticent, one ornery, the other melancholy, that as a
result they barely ever spoke to each other unless it
was unavoidable. Sometimes I wondered how
people who loved each other could be so distant,
especially when they were living under the same
roof.
The oncologist showed up half an hour later.
Her name was Patricia Demain. She wasn't
Shoshone; Dr. Stout had called her onto the
reserve from Tucson because we didn't have an
oncologist living in Nettlebush. She was about
fifty, and her hair was flyaway and gray.
Granny invited Dr. Demain into the sitting room
and offered her a cup of roasted acorn tea. Dr.
Demain accepted.