Read St. Clair (Gives Light Series) Online
Authors: Rose Christo
Dr. Stout to Dad. I felt a hopeful smile threaten to
split my face in two.
Dad, in contrast, looked miserable, a deflated,
flightless hawk. "No," he said, and his eyes were
on the door instead of mine. "I can't tell you how
many doctors I've taken him to over the years,
hoping... Both of his vocal cords are paralyzed."
Oh, well, I thought.
"Anyway," said Dr. Stout with a sigh, "keep him
home for at least a week. Really, considering his
health history, I recommend two. If the problem
persists longer than that, page me. I'll come to
you
."
"Thank you, Aisling."
Two weeks at home? I counted quickly. My
spirits sank. I was going to miss the raft race.
I
hated
this summer.
Four days stuck in the house and I wanted to stab
my eyes out with my plains flute.
Of course I didn't. But the temptation was still
pretty strong.
"You need to rest," Granny said irascibly, day
after day, and fed me strong cups of peppermint
tea. I wasn't a big fan of peppermint tea. On
Granny's orders, Dad had set up a cot by the hearth
so Granny could tend to me without tromping up
and down the stairs.
Being the recipient of that much attention made me
kind of uncomfortable.
On day five I sat in the sitting room and played the
plains flute while Granny worked at her loom.
"I'm making you a new quilt," she announced.
"That old one must be raggedy if it made you
sick." Pneumonia doesn't work that way, but of
course I couldn't say as much. I played Land of
Enchantment, mystical and mysterious, and the
Song of the Golden Eagle, majestic and proud. I
played a couple of peyote songs, haunting, sacred
pieces written in honor of the Great Spirit. I think
Granny liked that, because she nodded along with
the rhythm while she plucked her heddle rod and
warped the threads. I was halfway through Sai
Paa Hupia, a playful little melody, when I lost my
breath. I sank feebly on my cot and closed my
eyes. Granny rushed at me with the bottle of
amoxicillin, a horribly thick, sticky, syrupy pink
drink that'll make you want to vomit after one
spoonful. This was my ninth.
"We'll sweat the sickness out of you," Granny
announced, and lit the hearth long before nightfall.
The average daytime temperature in Nettlebush is
ninety degrees. The house was sweltering within
minutes.
"Mother," Dad said one afternoon, stilted, fanning
himself with a pale yellow tribal passport, "I
really don't think..."
"You never think! I'm aware of that. Are you
going to tell me how to take care of my own
grandson?"
Embarrassed, I ducked my head under my new
quilt.
Zeke came to visit me the next day. "Shy Lorna's
raft sank!" he told me, a manic gleam in his quick
eyes. "Man, was she embarrassed! She kept
looking around for you, too. I swear, she's got it
for you. It's like she doesn't realize you're a
homo. Why is it so hot in here?"
Annie stopped by the day after that with a bouquet
of crabapple blossoms for Granny. "You'd better
hurry up and recover," she told me mildly.
"Rafael's growing rather tetchy without you."
I hoped that meant Rafael wasn't angry with me. I
didn't know what to think after the last time we'd
talked.
That same evening, I heard a knock on the front
door and thought it might be Rafael. Granny got up
to answer the door--she didn't want me anywhere
near the night air--and stepped back to let him
inside.
It wasn't Rafael. It was Stuart Stout, a boy from
my class.
I couldn't possibly have been more confused.
Stuart and I got along just fine, but I wouldn't have
called us friends. I think he'd said a total of two
words to me all year. That's the thing with Stuart,
though. As far as I knew, he got along better with
adults than with kids his own age.
"Hey, Skylar," he said. Another thing about
Stuart: He always looked tired, even when he
wasn't. I'd grown accustomed to the dark circles
under his pale eyes, the lines on his dark face.
"Would you sign my petition? I've already asked
your grandmother and father."
We sat together on the sitting room floor. He
handed me a packet of paper and a pencil. He
tucked his long, red-brown hair behind his ear.
I read the packet's first page. It was a petition to
Congress against the Bureau of Land Management.
I looked at Stuart, perplexed.
"The site of the Bear River Massacre belongs to
us
," Stuart said. "The Mormons stole it from us in
1863, but now it's just sitting there and nobody's
using it. Every time we raise the money to buy
Bear River back from the government, the Bureau
of Land Management changes its mind and raises
the price. So I'm asking Congress to make them
stop."
The Bear River Massacre was the biggest
wholesale slaughter of Native Americans in the
history of the United States. About five hundred
Shoshone were slain one winter morning because
the Mormons wanted their land--and didn't feel
like sharing. I'm sorry to say that even today, a
disgusting plaque sits on the site, extolling the
bravery of the soldiers who blindsided and
butchered the peaceful village.
I scribbled at the top of the paper:
You should ask
the Northern and Western Shoshone to sign, too.
And the Death Valley Shoshone.
"I'm trying to, yes. And I'm going to mail copies to
the Bannocks and the Paiute. They've always been
our friends."
I erased my note and flipped through the rest of the
pages. Mostly they were just signatures. It looked
like Stuart had gotten a third of the reservation's
signatures already. I added mine to the list and
handed the petition back to him with a smile.
"Thank you." He tucked his pencil behind his ear.
It reminded me so strongly of Rafael that my heart
clenched. "I'll be going now."
Granny closed the door as he left the house.
"Well, then," Granny said sternly. She eyed me as
she hobbled off to the kitchen. "You're looking
much better than yesterday. I suppose you can go
back to your room tonight. But keep the window
closed, for heavens' sakes!"
I returned to my bedroom that night and set the
amoxicillin on my bedside table. I hung my plains
flute around the bedpost and turned off my lamp.
A flashlight beam streamed past my window.
I scrambled out of bed so fast, it was kind of
pathetic. I turned my lamp on and opened my
window--the one thing Granny had warned me I
shouldn't do. I stuck my head outside, and there
was Rafael on the ground, a backpack on his
shoulders.
He didn't call to me like he usually did. He turned
the flashlight off, placed it on the ground, and
climbed the wall to my window. I sat back to let
him inside and he toppled ungainly over the side of
my bed. I closed the window quickly. It was cold
outside, about fifty degrees.
"Here," Rafael said. He unzipped his backpack
and dug out a mound of candy bars, which he
promptly offered to me. I was very flattered.
I unwrapped a chocolate bar and bit off the edge. I
don't really like candy, but I thought it would be
rude to refuse. Rafael picked up the amoxicillin
bottle and squinted at it, adjusting his glasses.
"What's this?"
Medicine
, I spelled with a mouthful of candy.
"Oh. Does it taste like strawberry?"
Not even close.
Rafael pulled a face and set the bottle down on the
table.
"Uh," he started, staring at my closet door. "I
wanted to come see you. But we've been kind of
busy lately. Uncle Gabe and Rosa are having a
baby--"
I know
, I signed, and smiled.
Remind me to
congratulate them.
I couldn't read the expression on Rafael's face. I
set the candy bar aside. I touched his arm; I didn't
take my hand away until he looked at me.
"You hear about Stu's petition?"
I smiled blankly.
Rafael took off his glasses. He rubbed his eyes
with his wrist. In all the time that I'd known him,
I'd never once seen him do that.
He replaced his glasses and went on staring at the
closet door.
I tapped his shoulder until I'd reclaimed his
attention.
If you're mad at me
, I signed,
you need to tell me.
I suppose talking about your feelings isn't very
Shoshone; but then, a lot of things about me weren't
very Shoshone.
Rafael started. "Why would I be mad at you?" he
asked.
I didn't know what to say to that.
A silence settled between us, a silence I didn't
like. I put my hand on Rafael's knee.
He closed his hand around mine, warm and solid,
but didn't look my way.
"I wish you would've told me."
I really didn't understand why it was so important
to him.
"How am I supposed to know? If I'm hurting
you... How?"
I looked at him starkly. This was starting to grate
on my nerves. It was like he thought I was some
delicate little flower he'd pulled too quickly out of
the ground.
"I never want to hurt you. I don't want to be like
my dad. I don't want to hurt anyone. But you
especially. I
never
want to hurt you. You get that,
right? You get that I love you, right?"
I just about melted on the spot. Sappy, I know. I'm
a sucker when it comes to that boy.
"Anyway,"
Rafael
mumbled--was
he
embarrassed? "Hope you feel better in time for the
pauwau."
I did feel better in time for the pauwau. I put on
my deerhide regalia early in the morning and
rushed over to Annie's house and we baked
sunflower cakes and cornbread, Annie humming
placidly. "I'm dancing the jingle dance this year,"
Lila told us importantly. I guessed the change was
over. It took the entire day for Annie and me to
finish cooking. Lila got dressed in her regalia, a
white-and-red elkskin gown, and I helped attached
the bells to her leggings. Joseph and Mr. Little
Hawk and Grandpa Little Hawk helped us carry
our covered pots out to the pauwau grounds, a
windmill field behind the farming country. The
tribal council was lighting the stone firepit.
"You're looking very industrious, Cubby," Dad
said to me.
I grinned at him. I was really glad that the July
pauwau was held in Nettlebush. Dad was
confined to the reservation for legal reasons and
had had to miss out on a lot of out-of-state events.
I held my hand to my ear and mimed--again--a
telephone.
Dad looked abashed. "Yes, yes, I called her..."
"Skylar!"
I smiled broadly at the little girl running my way.
Her braids tossed in the breeze. She tossed her
arms around me in a hug.
"How's it going, Skylar?"
I hugged Jessica and waved a hello to Racine, a
short, stocky police officer whose stature, I knew
from experience, belied her attitude. I tousled
Jessica's braids with my hand. Jessica giggled.
Her big brother, DeShawn, stared adamantly
around the pauwau site with the eyes of a soldier
in the heat of reconnaissance. He was twelve
years old.
"Oh, my," said Annie as she joined us. "What a
lovely little friend you've got there, Skylar."
"Can I wear a dress like yours?" Jessica asked.
"Would you like to wear my shawl for the rest of
the night?"
"Yes please."
"I smell doughnuts," DeShawn said brightly.
He probably meant the frybread. Frybread tastes
about the same as doughnuts, only savory.
"Gather around for the opening prayer!" boomed
Mr. At Dawn, a giant of a fellow, and a member of