Read St. Clair (Gives Light Series) Online
Authors: Rose Christo
He patted my waist and my hips, each arm, each
leg. He patted between my legs. I had this crazy
idea that I was six years old and about to bite him,
but then an even crazier idea told me he'd smack
me if I tried. At least he didn't make me undress.
"Go right in," he said, nodding at the door.
I practically bolted through.
On the other side of the door was the most dismal
and drab room I had ever seen. The walls were
heavy blocks of cement packed on on top of the
other. The floor was scratchy concrete. A table
stood between two doors, thin plastic, neon green,
reminding me of Racine's car. The surface of the
table was chipped and dented where countless
handcuffs had rested in the past.
Dad sat at the table in an orange jumpsuit, his
hands shackled on the table.
He wasn't surprised to see me. I hadn't expected
him to be. What unnerved me was that he didn't
look upset, either. He looked the way he always
looked. Melancholy. A portrait. A snapshot in
time. You can look at the snapshot and wonder
what was going on at the time when it was taken.
But you'll never be able to ask the subject himself.
I ran to Dad. I tried to hug him. The guard
overseeing us must not have liked that, because he
grabbed my upper-arm and wrenched me away, his
hand tight enough to bruise.
It was with a great deal of reluctance that I sat at
the table. I couldn't interact with Dad; now I
couldn't even touch him.
The clock ticked loudly on the wall.
"I'm so very sorry," Dad said, his face crumpling.
I reached across the table for his hand, but froze.
The guard probably wouldn't like that, either.
Don't say anything incriminating
, I wanted
desperately to advise.
"I honored our traditions. I honored my wife and
child. I did what our ancestors told us to do."
Dad looked at me through his winter-water eyes
like they were the veil that hung between us. "I
don't regret that."
The horror finally settled in. This wasn't
hypothetical. This was happening. Dad was going
to prison. Premeditated murder was a life
sentence. No more pauwaus for Dad. No more
boys' night in with Mr. Little Hawk and Mr. Red
Clay. No more fishing on the lake with Mr. At
Dawn. I was never going to see my father marry a
woman who really loved him. He was never going
to see me have children of my own.
I was never going to hug him again.
It's funny. It's really, really funny. I felt like a pair
of floodgates; I felt like I could open up and start
crying and never stop. But I didn't cry. I don't
know why that is. I remember when I was eight
years old and I fell off my bicycle. The spoke
went right through my leg. The scar's still there;
it's sitting on the back of my calf. But I didn't cry
that day. I was eight years old and I didn't cry. I
was eighteen years old and I didn't cry.
I love you
, I signed, my fingers shaking. It's the
easiest sign in the world. Everybody knows that
sign.
"I know, Skylar," Dad said. "I love you, too. I
always will."
I sat on the edge of my bed. My window was
open, cold air blowing into the room, wolves
baying at the moon beyond the pine trees.
I stared blankly at the photos on my closet door.
Photos of my friends in regalia, Zeke in that
ridiculous coyote costume. A photograph of Dad
and me at the summer pauwau, my fingers forked
behind his head.
My eyes felt tight, like I had a cold.
I slid my window closed and dug through my
backpack. I'd really overdone it, I thought. I
hadn't needed anywhere near as much money as I'd
packed. Nor the spark plug. Nor the change of
clothes. I turned my backpack upside-down. I
shook it out over the mattress.
My copybook tumbled out.
Or Rafael's copybook, really. It wasn't like I'd
ever written in it before. Rafael had made more
use out of it in one afternoon than I had all year.
I wondered what he had drawn in there. Curious, I
opened the cover.
There weren't any drawings. Puzzled, I flipped
through the blank pages. Had he ripped the
drawings out without my noticing? But it didn't
look like there was any frayed paper sticking out
of the spine.
I saw it. It wasn't a drawing. It was a list. My
face burned with a strange mix of humiliation and
fondness.
"Top Reasons Why I Love You," the list read, in
Rafael's cramped handwriting.
With a heading like that, of course I had to read it.
You can spit really far
, the first bullet read.
I laughed. I remembered sitting in the kitchen with
Dad and Rafael, spitting chokecherry pits across
the room. That felt like ages ago.
Your nose is pointy (it pokes me when we kiss)
.
Hey, I thought, frowning. That wasn't true. I
rubbed my nose unconsciously. Ow. Okay, maybe
it was a little true.
You talk with your eyes
, the list went on.
Sometimes I had to. It's tough when you speak a
different language from everyone else.
You joke with your eyes.
I was glad someone had noticed.
You're funny.
I guess that part's debatable.
You never get mad at anyone.
I still wasn't sure whether that one was true.
Your hair's curly. You smell like lavender oil.
Also the saxophone sucks.
Those were fighting words, I thought, succumbing
to a second laugh.
You feel good in my arms.
I swallowed. That was something we agreed on.
You love me back.
And really, there was nothing as true as that.
I closed my notebook and set it atop the bedside
table. I turned off the low-burning oil lamp, the
moon shining through my window.
I know I sound petulant--but it's really not fair. Eli
Gives Light killed seven women, one after
another. The reservation begged and begged for
help and the FBI never came. But the minute Dad
took matters into his own hands, the FBI came
swarming out of every sewer and every mousehole
and crushed him as fast as they could. What kind
of crappy version of justice is that? What kind of
country is this? I guess it looks nice on the
surface. But people know how to show you what
they want you to see. You don't hear politicians
talking about how they'll stop white adoption
agencies from kidnapping Native kids. You don't
hear them talking about the thousands and
thousands of broken treaties that have most tribes
living like third world countries. We're lucky in
Nettlebush. We didn't get shoved onto the worst,
cheapest land available. We didn't have our
property rights ripped out of our hands. We don't
have factories contaminating our water. You think
I'm joking? There's a uranium factory sitting right
outside the Pine Ridge Reservation. That factory
still dumps its toxic waste in the reservation's
drinking water. Little babies are being born over
there with seizures and collapsed lungs. I wish I
were making this up. It's too sick to belong
anywhere but fiction.
Once, during a pauwau, I met a young woman from
the Standing Rock Sioux tribe. I don't think I
should mention her name. But she told me
something, something really haunting; something
I've never been able to get out of my head. Her
eyes filled with tears. She had been drinking--and
although that's not allowed at a pauwau, I couldn't
entirely blame her. Not when I heard what she had
to say.
"When I was twelve," she told me, "my mother
took me to Planned Parenthood. I didn't know
what was going on. We sat down with the
clinician, all three of us very silent. Finally, my
mother said, 'I need to learn more about birth
control for when my daughter gets raped.' "
I don't want to raise my kids in a country where
that's the status quo.
The reservation was lined with tables and stalls.
May was crafts month, when we invited outsiders
onto the reservation and sold them jewelry, quilts,
and cornhusk dolls. It was a good way to boost the
reservation's revenue. This year we were
particularly looking forward to the visitors; most
of them were the same people who had helped us
fight the government in winter.
I didn't really feel like being around so many
people at once. I hid at the grotto with my friends.
"How's your father?" Aubrey said quietly.
I nodded. I smiled faintly and looked away. Mrs.
Red Clay had whittled down his sentence. Life in
prison, but at least he was getting parole in twenty
years.
Twenty years without Dad. My throat felt
constricted.
"How about school?" Annie piped up.
"Ah, man," Zeke said. "My grades were lousy.
Dad's gonna see if I can get into a community
college. But--"
He trailed off and gave me a funny look. I waved
it away. I was glad he was talking to his father
again. He didn't have to watch himself around me.
"I barely just got in," Rafael grumbled.
"I think I'm going to hold off," Annie said. "I'm not
comfortable leaving Lila and Joseph just yet."
She peered meaningfully at me. I waved my hand
again. I hadn't opened my letter. I didn't feel like
doing much of anything lately.
"I'll miss you when you're all away. You won't
forget me, will you?" Aubrey said seriously.
"Oh, who could forget you?" Annie said, in a way
that made Aubrey's face light up.
"We should throw a party for Mr. Red Clay!" Zeke
said frantically. "The bastard put up with us long
enough--"
"What if we made him a cake?" Annie chimed in.
Usually there's nothing I enjoy more than my
friends' company. But I guess I wasn't feeling up
to it right now. I slipped away while they were
talking. I went for a walk in the woods.
The beeches were at their best during the spring,
full and thick, like canopies. The cicadas sang
lazy sonnets. It was hard not to feel at peace out
there. Somehow I managed it anyway.
There had to be a way. There had to be a way to
get Dad out of prison...
I must have been deeper in thought even than I
realized. I started out of my reverie when I heard
the indignant yipping of a coywolf pack.
Had I accidentally wandered into their territory? I
looked around. I sucked at directions, but this part
of the forest was pretty close to the lake. I had
never seen coywolves by the lake.
The creosote bushes rustled, and the coywolf pack
came charging at me. And I realized it wasn't a
pack, but a family. A coywolf, his mate, and their
four pups.
I broke into a smile and went to my knees. Balto
batted my nose and I rubbed his muzzle. I hugged
him around the neck. His pups yipped with
curiosity, faint and infantile; his mate inched
forward, suspicious. I let go of Balto and his wife
put her nose to my nose, staring me down. I didn't
look away. Placated, she licked my mouth.
Later, as I sat on the forest floor, as I watched them
traipse off to their hidden home, I thought about
how perfect the world looked when humans didn't
interfere with it. Sometimes I wondered whether
behavioral modernity was really such a good
thing. Sometimes it just seemed to create more
problems than it solved.
I went back to the grotto before long; I didn't want
my friends thinking I'd wandered off and gotten
eaten by a bear. Afterward we all decided to head
home.
I found Granny and Racine on the lawn outside our
house, Granny's pendleton blankets stacked high on
the sales table. Jessica chased DeShawn in circles
around the sundial while he yelped, begging for
mercy.
"--own our homes?" Granny was saying.