Read St. Clair (Gives Light Series) Online
Authors: Rose Christo
though. I had to do
something
. I wondered
whether we could take advantage of the fact that
the Department of Transportation fell through on
their eviction warning. Their property rights
expired in a year, Racine said. If we could
convince a court that Dad had been convicted
under unlawful circumstances...
The truth is that I wanted to scream. I wanted to
rip my skin off my bones and scream until my lungs
burst. I wanted to hug my father. I wanted him
here. I wanted him safe. I wanted him surrounded
by the people who loved him.
Helplessness and despondence make for a
powerful combination.
"Come on, Sky," Rafael said. "I'm serious. We
have to try it. The least we can do is get the truth
out there. My dad was a scumbag who went on a
killing spree. The FBI didn't want to deal with it,
and now they're punishing your dad for doing their
job."
And that's it exactly.
I thought: If people don't know the truth, how can
they change anything? And people don't know the
truth. They don't know that the FBI ignores 52% of
all murders that happen on Indian reservations.
They don't know that 35% of all Indian women are
going to be raped if they try to leave their
reservation. They don't know that foster care
kidnaps thousands of Indian children every year so
they can make money off of their adoption. They
don't know that the law won't let Indians do
anything about it. They don't know we're still
living in the 1800s.
They don't know because the people in charge
don't want them to know.
I want them to know.
I sat down on the stone basin of the unlit firepit. I
couldn't breathe. And for the first time in a really
long time, I actually wanted to cry.
I couldn't do that, either.
The Nettlebush Reserve always hosts a raft race in
June.
Actually, there's a historic reason behind the race.
Long ago, when the Shoshone were free to roam
the Plains, the men and women used to build rafts
to travel the rivers. Tribes all over America
would come out of their tipis and their wickiups
and watch the Shoshone floating on by. It's kind of
a funny thought.
It felt so surreal. Exactly one year ago, I was
planning to enter the raft race with Dad. I was
healthy--or I thought I was healthy; I didn't know a
thing about cancer. I didn't know anything except
my friends and my family.
"Skylar, I like that tree."
I summoned myself from a sullen daydream. I felt
the breathy summer sunlight grazing the back of my
neck. Jessica tugged on my hand and pointed at the
towering beech tree. Its spread limbs reached for
the sky as though in envy of the clean white clouds.
DeShawn gulped, a cord of rope hanging from his
shoulder. "I hope we're not cutting down the
whole
tree," he said.
I picked up my rusty old handsaw and threw my
free arm around the trunk. I found a knot in the
bark and stepped on it for leverage.
"Yay! Go! Go!" Jessica said, hopping on her
heels.
I hooked my arm around a lower branch. I stuck
my head through the leaves and pointed for them to
stand aside. DeShawn took his sister's hand and
pulled her back from the base of the tree.
The kids were cute, whooping and yelping as the
sawed-off branches toppled to the ground. I wasn't
sure just how many we were going to need.
Usually in Nettlebush, you recycle your old raft, or
combine it with someone else's; but Jessica and
DeShawn didn't have an old raft. We were starting
from the ground up.
I dropped to the ground, crouched, and stood. I set
the handsaw against the trunk of the tree.
DeShawn was already unfurling the rope.
"I learned all about this in Boy Scouts," DeShawn
said sagely.
"Uncle Paul's gonna play, too," Jessica said.
My heart felt heavy in my chest. I palmed the
warm crown of her head. I didn't know how to
correct her. Even if I'd had a voice, I don't know
that I would have said anything.
I let DeShawn arrange the wood however he
wanted. Jessica was more interested in picking
the wild centauries that grew on the forest floor.
"What do we do about the leaves?" DeShawn
asked, pushing his glasses up the bridge of his
nose.
I picked up my handsaw and started cutting them
away.
You know, it's weird; I kind of felt like I was
cutting a part of myself away. The part of me that
leaned on my father. The part of me that couldn't
stand on its own.
"Jess," said DeShawn, panting, "stop sprinkling
flowers and help me lash the wood."
"I'm making the raft look pretty."
We spent hours cutting and tying wood. More than
a few splinters were sustained. We tried picking
up the raft a couple of times before deciding the
lashing wasn't taut enough. We tightened the
ropes.
"It's small," DeShawn said. "I think we're going to
need more wood."
"Does it float?" Jessica asked.
"Well, how would you know? You didn't do any
of the work."
"Shawny, I wanna see it float."
"Skylar?"
I nodded. We hoisted up the half-finished raft and
carried it to the forest path.
The lake was glistening and blue beneath a high
sun. Joseph Little Hawk and Jack Nabako were
already on the water, their knees muddy and wet.
"Throw the raft in!" Jessica yelled, shaking her
braids.
DeShawn winced. "You can't
throw
it, you've got
to
ease
it..."
We slid the half-raft onto the shallow water.
Jessica whooped and clapped when it started to
drift.
"Don't let it get
too
far!" DeShawn panicked. He
ran into the lake, water splashing around his
thighs. Jessica giggled at her brother's plight.
I sat on the lakeshore, my hands in the wet soil. I
closed my eyes and breathed.
"Do something about this," Granny had said to me.
"So that the generation after yours will have
opportunities you don't."
How do you change the law when the law's built to
keep you quiet? How do you change anything
when you're already quiet?
You find a way, I thought. Find a way or make
one. Roger O'Kelly didn't let the law shut him up.
The day of the raft race was arid and dry, which
could only mean one thing: No smooth sailing.
The whole of Nettlebush went down to the lake for
a picnic on the grass. I helped DeShawn and
Jessica set up their raft on the opposite lakeshore.
"USS Flowers," Jessica had named it. "With a
name like that," DeShawn grumbled, "no one will
ever take me seriously."
I sat beneath a ponderosa with Granny and Racine,
Granny laying dishes of wojapi on the pendleton
blanket. Mr. At Dawn blew his whistle; the kids
jumped on their rafts. Spectators on the other side
of the lake leapt up and cheered.
I watched Gabriel and Rosa sitting under the sun,
their heads bent, Charity on Rosa's lap. Little
Serafine ran circles around the families, Joseph
chasing after her.
Rafael sat down next to me, his long legs stretched
out, a dove's feather knotted in his hair.
"They're not going anywhere," he remarked. "This
wind sucks."
I smiled, humoring him.
"Wanna go for a walk?"
I looked back at Granny and Racine. Racine stood
and clapped for her children. Granny was too
wrapped up in conversation with Mrs. Threefold
to notice much of anything else.
I nodded and followed Rafael.
We walked the forest path together, the cicadas
noisy in their trees. We walked west, idly,
comfortable silence hanging between us.
"Hey," Rafael said suddenly.
I looked up with a smile.
"Don't smile if you don't mean it," he chastised.
"You're always doing that."
I shrugged.
He fell into another silence. We were coming onto
the neighborhood, the end of the forest path. I
wondered just how far he wanted to walk.
"We're going to the same school," he said.
"Right?"
I nodded.
Rafael coughed. "Maybe..." He muttered and
trailed off, sheepish. What was that about?
"Maybe we could try and get in the same
dormitory."
I looked at him.
"I mean," he said, and he was starting to sound
irritable--a pretty good sign that he was
embarrassed. "It would be practice."
Practice, I thought.
Practice. Practice for when we come back to the
reservation. Practice for when we live together.
We're going to be a family, I thought, feeling
slightly tremulous.
And then I thought: We already are.
I smiled. This time I meant it. Rafael must have
known. He always knew. He smiled shyly; he
reached for my hand with visible relief.
I'm going to be a lawyer. He's going to be a
speech therapist. If he gives me my voice back,
that's another person I'm indebted to. Somehow, I
wouldn't mind being indebted to him for an
eternity.
There are a million things I want to change about
this country. I want it to be a place where we're
really
equal--not just on the surface. I want us to
stop sweeping it under the rug when an entire
people's still suffering the consequences of their
ancestors' democide. Because I think Annie's
right. I think the world is mostly good.
I know it is. I've met a lot of good people.
The computer monitor buzzed at me, the screen
glowing bluish-white. I rubbed my temples at the
onset of a headache.
"Don't stay up too late!" Granny shouted to me, just
before her bedroom door snapped shut.
I pulled up the tribal website, grimacing at the
bright orange background. I clicked "Login" at the
top of the screen and pulled up a blank template.
I faltered. I knew what I wanted to say. I just
didn't know how to put it into words. How was I
supposed to sum up the past thirteen years?
How could I get people to care about Dad as much
as I did?
I heard the coywolves yipping in the trees outside
my window, winding down for a night of rest. I
started to smile.
The computer screen leered tauntingly at me.
Go
on
, it said.
Make an ass out of yourself.
You know how I hate reading? Turns out I hate
writing, too.
I slouched in my chair. I tapped my fingers against
my knee. Maybe I should start with a random
statistic, I thought. People like random statistics.
It makes them feel like the world is orderly.
Something sounded loudly just beyond the front
room window--something like the lumber box
tipping over outside. I turned, but I wasn't
worried. The coywolves are very nosy little
creatures. If they think there's food around, they'll
go looking for it.
I stared at the empty computer screen. I pulled on
my eyelids until my eyes rolled back in my head.
Cut it out, I thought, annoyed. Just write
something.
But what?
My fingers hovered above the keys. Without really
thinking about it, I started to type.
My father always told me,
If I'm gone
for three days, call the police.
I froze. I wasn't imagining it--I could hear the
squeaking of the outhouse faucet as somebody
worked the water pump.
My heart thundered so quickly, my chest actually
ached. Nettlebush is a very close-knit
neighborhood. I'm not saying that a stranger using
our water pump was cause for alarm. But at the
same time, I sort of am. It was only thirteen years
ago that the first and last serial killer terrorized the
female community. We still put padlocks on our
doors at night.
It's sad, I thought, Dad and Eli at the back of my
mind. When your own friend turns out to be
untrustworthy, you must feel, deep down inside,
that you can't really trust anyone.