Read St. Clair (Gives Light Series) Online
Authors: Rose Christo
both Dad and Granny were busy helping their
friends to make preparations for the festivities.
Any manner of tasks still needed to be completed,
from the construction of the pageant stage to the
knitting of the children's costumes.
Every day I tried to play the plains flute, but with
no success.
Mostly I just lay in my hospital bed and slept. I
don't know whether it was sickness, or
restlessness, or a combination of the two, but
whatever it was, I just couldn't keep my eyes open
longer than a few hours. My dreams were really
nutty, too. No more Skinwalkers, thankfully, but a
couple of winged raptors put in a decent
appearance. Danny Patreya would have liked
those.
The real surprise came when I woke in the middle
of the night--from a dream about Hannibal Lecter,
go figure--to find a God's Eye, a beadwork eagle,
and countless charcoal and color drawings pinned
to the hospital room walls, the lamp behind my bed
glowing dimly.
I reached behind me to raise the light and saw
Annie and Rafael curled up in the visitors' chairs.
Momentarily I thought I was still dreaming. Annie
was sleeping, snoring, her hair falling over the
side of her armrest. Rafael was awake, a
pendleton blanket folded at his side, a sketchbook
open on his lap and colored pencils behind his
ears.
He looked up when I adjusted the lamp. His eyes
widened in a way I didn't know how to read.
He set his sketchbook and his pencils aside. He
got up and strode over to the bed. He sat on the
side of the thin mattress, his leg tucked beneath
him.
His voice was low, so as not to wake Annie.
"Why didn't you tell us? We had to find out from
your grandma."
I rolled my shoulders in a shrug. I remembered to
smile.
"Don't give me that crap." His eyes were still
wide. "You could have e-mailed us about it. Do
you know how scared I am right now?"
I started to wave my hand, but I figured he
wouldn't appreciate that. I took his hand in mine.
It startled me when I realized his fingers were
trembling. But he gripped my hand, hard, and the
trembling seemed to stop.
The pilot whale bracelet around his wrist glinted
in the lamplight.
"When do you get out of here?"
January
, I signed. He read my hands without
recognition. I probably hadn't taught him the hand
signal for January yet.
January
, I fingerspelled,
slowly.
"And you'll be all better by then?"
I flashed him a teasing smile.
"It's not a joke, Sky. God..." Rafael ran his hands
over his face. "It's like that bastard keeps coming
back from the dead..."
I was alarmed. I'd never heard Rafael refer to his
father as "that bastard."
"You know what's funny? I thought I still loved
him. He did terrible things to a lot of people, but I
still loved him. How do you stop loving your
dad? But he almost killed you. Twice. I can't... I
don't love that."
I'm fine
, I signed.
"No. You're not. You've got poison in your body.
How can you call that 'fine'?"
I'll be fine
, I signed irritably. It wasn't Rafael I
was annoyed with. It was the way everyone kept
treating me like a delicate daisy.
I don't even like flowers.
"What happened?" I heard Annie say groggily. I
looked over in time to see her sitting up in her
chair, an imprint from the armrest shining on her
forehead.
"Sky's awake," Rafael said.
"Oh! Skylar, how
could
you--" Annie gasped.
"What time is it?" she asked.
"Late," Rafael said dryly.
"Oh, no, Granddad must be worried--"
"Why would he be worried? It's not like you're the
most radical person on the rez."
"Why, you--"
I tried whistling to get their attention. I couldn't do
that, either.
"Skylar," Annie said, and bent over the side of her
chair, scooping up a burlap bag. "I brought you
some almond cookies. I hope you can eat them."
That was really nice of you
, I signed.
"Don't be silly. We're friends. Just because you're
going to miss Christmas doesn't mean we can't
bring Christmas to you."
"You gonna dress up like the Gray Bear and put on
the pageant for him?" Rafael asked.
"If it comes to that, yes," Annie said firmly. "And
if I do, then I'll expect you to pitch in. Don't think
I've forgotten you played the Black Bear when you
were five."
"There's no way that costume still fits me."
I laughed sorely.
You guys don't have to do that
, I
signed.
Just get Zeke to dress up as Coyote and
we're solid.
"Hmm," said Annie, "now that you mention it, the
Coyote stories sound just like Zeke, don't they?
Yes, I'll guilt him into it. But Skylar, I'd better go
now. I told Granddad I'd be home by eight and
it's--
"Eleven-thirty," Rafael said.
"Terrific," Annie said. "Oh, well. I'll be back
tomorrow."
She took the cookie package from her burlap bag
and laid it on the table next to my bed. She kissed
me on the cheek and hastened out the door, her bag
hanging from her shoulder.
Rafael looked up at the towering IV bag. When he
looked at me, I thought I saw intimidation on his
face.
"You have no idea what it's like, seeing you like
this."
I touched his cheek. Above all else, I just didn't
want him to worry. I hate that, when someone you
love is in pain and there's nothing you can do to
stop it.
I wondered: Didn't he have to be home, too?
Rafael scowled. "I already told Uncle Gabe to
shove it. I'm staying here." The scowl wiped
away, his face softening. He linked his fingers
with mine. Unconsciously, like it was a built-in
reflex, he kissed the inside of my hand. Funny how
that still makes my knees feel weak.
There's nowhere for you to sleep
, I cautioned,
when he finally let go of my hand--but not a second
earlier.
"Annie's forehead says otherwise."
I snickered. He saw it and grinned. His grin was
so innocent, so irresistible, I wanted to throw him
down and kiss him, sickly as I felt.
I took a moment to admire the drawings on the
walls. I recognized the iconic Nai Nukkwi, a tiny
little girl bravely staring down the bears that stood
between her and her homeland. I laughed over a
sketch of Aubrey and Zeke, arrows helpfully
labeling them as "Ass Man" and "Bigger Ass
Man."
"Just in case you woke up with amnesia," Rafael
said. "You know, like when the chick wakes up
from surgery and asks, 'Where am I?' "
Somebody's been listening to too many soap
operas, I thought.
We stayed up until about one in the morning and
talked about everything and nothing. That's always
the way it is with Rafael. Occasionally the nurse
on call looked in on us and clucked her
disapproval, but didn't intervene. Rafael crumbled
up Annie's almond cookies and tried to feed me
some, but I pointed demonstratively at the IV bag.
"Okay," he said. "I'll make eggs when you're
feeling better." As much as it flattered me that he'd
remembered my favorite food, it terrified me that
he was considering going near a stove.
Rafael looked around for a clock. There wasn't
one. There wasn't a window, either. "You had
better go to sleep," he said ill-temperedly. "Not
that you haven't been sleeping all day, but you need
your rest if you're gonna beat this thing."
I wasn't really tired, but I suspected he was. I
smiled and lay back on the hospital bed. I patted
the spot next to me.
Rafael paused. "You sure?" he asked. "I'm okay
with the chair."
Don't be ridiculous
, I wanted to say.
He always knew what I wanted to say.
Tentative, Rafael lay next to me. It was kind of a
tight fit, but I didn't mind. I liked it. He turned
toward me, lying on his side. I could see the
uncertainty on his face. "You sure you're
comfortable?" he asked. I rolled my eyes. I
picked up his arm and draped it across my
shoulders.
He pressed his lips to my temple, then to my curls.
He breathed deeply. It felt like an elixir to me. It
sounded like a song. In that moment, I didn't mind
so much that I couldn't make music of my own.
Rafael was as good as his word. He stayed with
me the next day, and the next, and the next, and
pretty soon I realized he planned on staying in the
hospital for as long as I was confined. In
retrospect, it's really incredible that the staff didn't
throw him out. All he needed, he insisted, was his
sketchbook, his pendleton blanket, and a couple of
changes of clothes. Whenever I woke up, he was
next to me, drawing or arguing with the radio.
Whenever I went down the hall for radiation, he
walked with me, his hand on my back, if not
around mine, and waited outside the door until I
was finished. Walking out of those grueling
treatments to see Rafael sitting on the floor with
his sketchbook on his lap, his head bent, his hair
spilling over his shoulder, his earring dangling
next to his neck--it felt like a gift. I know that
sounds nuts. But everything about him was a gift.
Annie and Aubrey and Zeke came around during
the daytime and kept us up to date with whatever
was happening on the rest of the reservation. "No
sign from the contractors yet!" Zeke said. He was
actually wearing a coyote costume
. "And no
news is good news, of course," Aubrey added
gently, while he hung a piece of Indian holly from
the ceiling, known for its unique white berries.
"Look! It's mistletoe!" Aubrey said. "Well, not
real mistletoe, we killed all the real mistletoe--we
had to, you know, they were eating the ponderosas,
nasty habit of theirs--Zeke, are you alright?"
Zeke laughed himself into a fit of hysterics. Even I
didn't understand why. But then he pointed at the
bundled mistletoe, and Rafael scowled with
recognition.
"Holly," Rafael said. "Indian Holly."
The hospital was really lively on Christmas Eve.
The staff had decorated the walls with twinkling,
red-and-green lights, and there was even a plastic
Christmas tree standing next to the receptionist's
desk. The decorations, I knew, were for the
children's sake. The children's ward was jam
packed this year. Don't get the wrong impression.
Nettlebush is incredibly small; only about three
hundred people live on the reservation at any given
time. But when there are openings in the hospital,
and there usually are, Nettlebush likes to take on
patients that the big cities turned away. Most of
those patients are folks who just couldn't afford the
treatment they needed, so their local hospitals
chose to let them die instead. Money isn't an issue
in Nettlebush; since the beginning of time, the
Shoshone have employed a gift economy, the idea
that if everyone helps everyone, the Shoshone
nation thrives. I guess it works, because thousands
of years later, we're still using it. And I guess kids
must get sick easily around the holidays, because
Christmas is always the busiest time of year for the
Nettlebush Indian Hospital.
"Some kid's mom's running around with fruitcake,"
Rafael reported, sitting on the receptionist's desk.
Rafael must have gotten his hands on some,
because his mouth was suspiciously full.
"Would you get your butt out of my face?"
complained Ms. Bright, the receptionist.
I was due for my radiation treatment. Rafael
walked with me to the X-ray room.
"You don't need that IV anymore, right? You want
me to get you some fruitcake?"
I shook my head. I kissed his cheek and slipped
into the dark little room.
It was the same exhausting routine as every day.
Sit down, put on that awful mesh mask, wait for