Read St. Clair (Gives Light Series) Online
Authors: Rose Christo
"I looked at your scans," Dr. Demain said to me.
"And your biopsy. First of all, I'm terribly sorry
this happened to you."
But nothing had happened to me. I didn't feel any
different than I usually did.
"The cordectomy is a very simple procedure.
There's no need to make an incision. I'll use a
laryngoscope, like the kind your pediatrician used
to examine you. There will be no pain except for
some soreness after the surgery. A speech
therapist will need to teach you how to swallow
again. Your throat will be structured a little
differently when your vocal cords are gone."
I thought about Rafael, against my will.
"After the surgery," Dr. Demain said, "you'll have
about a month's worth of radiotherapy." She
clenched her teeth in a peculiar smile. I didn't
know what to make of it. "To kill the metastasis."
"And then he'll be healthy," Dad urged. "Right?"
"I won't lie," Dr. Demain said. "Given that this
cancer is metastatic, there is a possibility it will
come back after treatment. If it doesn't come back
within five years, I'd consider him safe."
I had the faint notion, erroneous though it was, that
they were talking about someone else, not me.
This just didn't sound like anything that could
happen to me.
"If it comes back?"
"More radiation, maybe chemotherapy."
And then I thought the dumbest thought in the
history of thoughts. I thought: I don't want to lose
my hair. Rafael likes it this way.
Dr. Demain made an appointment for the surgery,
and then she drained her teacup and left. A week
from now. She was going to cut out my vocal
cords in a week from now. I guess speedy service
is a perk when you live on a small reservation.
Granny let out a sigh. I thought it sounded
disappointed.
"It's cold in here," she said. "One of you, light the
hearth."
I took the flint from the tinderbox and knelt in front
of the fireplace. I stared at the freshly cut timber.
I felt cold, too. Cold on the inside. Cancer. It
didn't sound real. It wasn't real. It couldn't be.
All of a sudden I thought about Balto. I smiled
wryly. Balto used to love climbing into the
fireplace.
I struck the flint, swallowing a sigh of my own.
Flames came to life on top of the firewood, the
flickering glow burning my eyes.
The atmosphere in the house remained unsettlingly
gloomy, even when Racine came over with the
kids and Granny told them the story about the Gray
Bear and the first snowfall. Racine offered me a
box of Christmas cookies and I smiled, but felt
guilty that I couldn't eat them.
I went to bed early that night--about eight o'clock,
which isn't like me. I wasn't tired. On the
contrary, I was wide awake. I sat on the edge of
my bed, chilly winter wind streaming through the
open window, and drummed my fingers against my
knees. I gazed around my bedroom and
reacquainted myself with the familiar details.
Photographs on the closet door, my friends'
likeness staring back at me. Two oil lamps, one
by the door and one on the bedside table. A
dreamcatcher and a creepy cat-shaped clock. An
obnoxious yellow poster proudly declaring,
"California or Bust."
I touched the charcoal sketch sitting on my bedside
table. I traced the lines of my mother's face. I
hadn't seen her in twelve years. Oddly, all I
wanted was to see her now. She knew what it was
like to die. Maybe she could help me through it.
You're not dying, I told myself. Stop being a
moron.
"Did I seriously draw that?"
It didn't entirely surprise me when Rafael climbed
through the window.
Rafael dropped down onto the bed. He shook out
his hair, his braids hitting me in the face. His gray
jacket was zipped up to his collarbone. His
glasses were askew.
I smiled at him. I think my face was just
programmed to smile whenever he was around.
He reached for the charcoal drawing and examined
it.
"I can do better than that," he said. "I'll draw you a
new one."
I took the drawing back definitively. I didn't want
a new one. I wanted this one.
"You sure?"
I nodded, replacing it on the table.
"Okay," Rafael said dubiously. "Oh, I got a new
tattoo."
He turned his head and lifted his lank hair. On his
neck was the word "Family" in black, the skin
around the letters already starting to flake.
I touched his neck, but winced. Getting your throat
cut hurts like hell; I can't imagine that stabbing it a
thousand times with an ink needle is any better.
Worse still, I knew from experience that Rafael's
tattoos were all self-administered.
"Nah," Rafael said, lowering his hair. "Doesn't
really hurt."
I showed him my suspicious face. I guessed he'd
forgotten that I knew otherwise. He had given me
a tattoo a couple of years ago, an atlas moth on my
upper arm.
"I don't know what you're talking about. You just
have a low threshold for pain."
Rafael's complexion never allowed him to blush,
but I could tell when he was embarrassed anyway.
He looked embarrassed now. I wondered what he
was thinking about, but didn't press the matter.
"Uh," Rafael said. "Anyway, Mary's stupid
girlfriend is coming to the reserve next month. I
guess winter break looks different when you're in
college. The Navajo have their own college, it's
crazy. They're not as rich as the Pequot tribe,
though. Mary thinks she's so hilarious, she's sitting
there swearing up and down there's a gay gene in
the family, telling Rosa to watch out for her kid--
Rosa's way too timid, I told Mary to shut up--"
I listened to him talk, because he was like a
flooded reservoir, overflowing with thoughts and
in need of a place to put them all. I was always
happy to be that place.
"Oh, you wanna know something? Rosa makes this
really good elk steak--sorry, I forgot you don't eat
meat, forget I said anything--"
So Kaya was visiting the reserve. I ought to mail
her a Christmas card, I thought.
"Are you okay?"
I smiled quizzically at Rafael.
Rafael had been in a talkative mood seconds ago.
Now he looked guarded. Actually, he looked
tense, his jaw taut, an emotion I couldn't identify
wavering in his stormy blue eyes.
"You keep touching your neck," he said. "More
than usual."
I thought: No I don't. But then I realized my
fingers were resting on my throat even while I
denied it.
I felt the rigid scars beneath my fingertips and
quickly dropped my hand.
Rafael fell silent. Like most Shoshone, he didn't
fare well at addressing tension. I wondered
whether I should go get him some oatmeal candy
from the kitchen downstairs, but Dad and Granny
were still awake. I didn't want one of them to
corner me. I didn't want to talk about--it.
Not that they were likely to talk about it. I mean,
Dad waited twelve years to tell me we weren't
related, and the only reason he relented was
because I'd stumbled across the truth myself.
Rafael put his arm around me.
I can't explain why, but I shivered. Maybe it was
the night air blowing through the window. Maybe
it was the inexorable truth that Rafael always knew
what I was feeling, whether I wanted him to know
or not. He knew something was wrong. He
couldn't possibly know what it was; but he knew it
was wrong.
I laid my head on his shoulder--hesitant, at first,
because I'd never done such a thing before. I liked
it when he laid his head on my lap, when he buried
his face against the crook of my neck, but I'd never
tried to do the same to him. It was more
comforting to give comfort than to receive it. I
didn't want to be the weak one. When you're
weak, people take advantage of you. Six-year-
olds are weak.
Rafael's fingers sifted into my hair. He teased his
fingers through my curls, winding them around his
knuckles. He grazed my scalp with his fingernails.
If I had to be weak, at least he was the only one to
see it.
If you're big on Christmas, then you definitely want
to attend the Nettlebush solstice party.
Every year we get together and throw a big feast
for the winter solstice, a festival in which every
game and every confectionary you could possibly
imagine suddenly become a reality. The children
put on a play about the Black Bear and the Gray
Bear, an age-old story that relates the Gray Bear's
trip to eternity through the freezing white snow of
the north. At the very end of the celebration the
men and the women perform the warm dance, a
giant, joyful circle dance the Shoshone invented
thousands of years ago in order to send blessings
to the wild animals who might not otherwise
survive the cold nights. When the Quakers and the
Mormons forced the Shoshone to recognize
Christianity, the annual solstice celebrations got
conflated with Christmas; so Reverend Silver
Wolf always reads Bible passages about
Bethlehem and King Herod and the Massacre of
the Innocents. But other than that morbid little
tangent, it's the most amazing time of year to be a
Shoshone.
So you can understand how miffed I was when
Robert told me I was probably going to miss it.
"Oh,
don't
give me that sulky face," he warned.
The cuff around my arm tightened. Robert was
checking my blood pressure. "You need to stay in
the hospital for the duration of your treatment.
Radiotherapy's going to compromise your immune
system, and your immune system's pretty crappy to
begin with." He eyed me suddenly. "Have you
been sleeping lately?"
I hadn't. I do this weird thing when I'm stressed
out: I turn into an insomniac. I don't know how
common that is, but for me, it's really annoying.
"Pish," Robert said. "Oh, well. Hold still, honey,
I've got to take your blood."
I hated needles, but it couldn't be helped. Robert
readied a syringe and slid it into the juncture of my
elbow, cackling while affecting a fake Hungarian
accent, Bela Lugosi style. I think it was meant to
make me relax. I watched the bulbous plastic cap
fill up with blood. You know, people always say
that blood is blue when it's deoxygenated, but that
blood sure looked red to me. Or maybe the
blood's already oxygenated when it's in your
veins. But then why do the veins under your skin
look blue? Does anybody actually know?
"Calm down, Cubby," Dad said. "It's alright."
Dad and Granny were in that room with me, each
sitting in a bulky brown visitor's chair. I felt bad
that they were here in this stuffy hospital room
with me and not out getting ready for the holidays.
To her credit, though, Granny had brought a stack
of magazines and a ball of yarn.
I smiled at Dad, my eyebrows raised. Of course it
was alright.
"Okay," Robert said. "Stress test time."
Robert attached a bunch of electrodes to my
pulses--about ten in total--and watched the monitor
next to the bed. Predictably, I failed the stress
test. Robert gave me a sedative.
It was after the ECG that a whole team of
physicians came streaming into the hospital room
and introduced themselves to us one at a time.
Shaking all those hands was kind of dizzying.
There were surgeons and surgical nurses, an
anesthesiologist, a blah-blah-blah, a this-and-that--
no Dr. Demain, though. Maybe she was already in
the OR.
Even Dr. Stout came by for a visit, patting me on
the shoulder. "You're fine, Skylar," she kept
saying. I knew she was trying to reassure me--and
it was really nice of her--but if anything, it was
making me anxious.
Most of the surgical team eventually filtered out of