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Blue Birds

Page 7

by Caroline Starr Rose

returned to her mending.

  Father told me to dry my tears.

  It was Uncle

  who sat nearby,

  held my hand,

  whispered of strange and glorious creatures

  until dreams found me.

  Now

  it is only in my dreams

  Uncle holds me close.

  Alis

  Before day breaks

  the men stumble back,

  eyes like embers,

  knees muddied.

  George is the last to enter,

  a too-big musket

  strapped across

  his narrow back.

  Governor White

  holds his head

  in his hands.

  “How could I know?” he says

  over,

  and over,

  until Ananias Dare

  leads him away.

  “What has happened?” Miss Lawrence asks.

  No one answers.

  The men

  disappear in the darkness.

  If there had been victory,

  they would have stood solid,

  told of their valor.

  If there had been defeat,

  some would be missing.

  What could be wrong?

  A few women follow their husbands,

  but most stay,

  a sturdy semicircle

  wanting more.

  Manteo is the only one to remain,

  his words louder than I’ve ever heard before:

  “We ambushed the camp.”

  He stops,

  shuts his eyes for a moment.

  “But the Roanoke were gone.

  My people

  were there

  instead.”

  I cannot help but gasp.

  Mrs. Archard glares,

  young Miss Lawrence puts a finger to her lips.

  I pay no notice.

  Kimi’s people were gone!

  She is somewhere safe.

  But why were the Croatoan

  at the Roanoke village?

  I fade into the crowd,

  search for George.

  Surely he knows more.

  I find him near the empty animal pens,

  alone,

  his shoulders hunched,

  the musket still across his back.

  My footsteps slow.

  Things were strange

  last time we spoke.

  His father’s death,

  the lie I told,

  how carelessly I spoke of Kimi.

  But I must know

  what happened.

  “George?”

  He lifts his head.

  “Tell me,” I say.

  Alis

  “We crept to the village,

  started firing.”

  George’s face is vacant,

  empty as a broken promise.

  “The Indians scattered,

  seeking cover in the reeds.

  The darkness filled with voices

  shouting Manteo’s name.

  Even I understood their pleading.

  “When he recognized his tribe,

  Manteo fell to his knees.

  But it was too late.

  Several already lay dead.”

  I try to imagine

  what it was like for Manteo:

  Attacking our foes,

  finding family instead.

  “The Roanoke

  had abandoned their camp.

  The Croatoan told us they’d come as promised,

  left their island early, so as not to miss

  the opportunity to talk peace.

  When they discovered the empty village,

  they stayed to gather the corn

  the Roanoke had left in their haste.”

  George’s head falls back

  against a fencepost.

  “And so,

  we attacked

  our friends.”

  Alis

  “Alis!”

  Father calls to me.

  “I must go,” I say.

  George doesn’t answer,

  just stays as he is,

  staring into nothingness.

  “Alis!”

  Father’s voice is a fire,

  his white shirt soiled and untucked.

  “Where have you been?

  I could not find you.”

  He pulls me with him.

  I try to match my stride with his,

  but I cannot keep pace.

  “The Governor holds out hope

  the Croatoan will forgive us,

  but I cannot believe it.

  We have two enemies now.”

  Father doesn’t release my arm until our door,

  where Mother busies herself with sweeping.

  “Stay with your mother when you are outside.”

  Cold rushes over me.

  Outside, he says.

  Surely Father doesn’t know

  I leave the settlement.

  “What do you mean?”

  “Stay near to her!

  What more must I say?”

  “Alis.”

  Mother sings my name,

  a warning to take care.

  Eager to make peace,

  she reaches for Father’s hand,

  places it in mine.

  “Alis cannot always be with me.

  She cares for the little ones

  while I cook and launder,

  goes home when she is done.”

  Guilt stabs me.

  Many days

  I roam

  outside

  the village walls.

  “We’ve made quick enemies,” Father says.

  No one is safe.”

  “Dyonis, our daughter will not be unwise.”

  Mother turns to me,

  her eyebrows raised,

  looking for my confirmation.

  I nod,

  but I cannot hold her gaze.

  My mother’s trust

  is nothing I deserve.

  Her mouth’s turned down,

  her forehead creased.

  “If you are careful,

  if you promise

  to hurry home each day,

  I must believe

  you will be safe.”

  Father slumps into a chair,

  covers his face with his hands.

  “Samuel.”

  “There is nothing

  you could have done

  to save him,” Mother whispers.

  Grief floods me again.

  Will this heartache ever lessen?

  The dangers

  Father speaks of,

  how far we are from safety,

  the hurt with Uncle gone.

  All this, yet I am certain:

  Even threats of peril

  will not keep me from my friend.

  Alis

  All day the men cut slender trees,

  form wooden poles

  sunk in the ground inches apart.

  Outside the earthen wall and ditch,

  they are a third ring of protection

  to secure the village border.

  The poles are partly fence,

  partly cage.

  Father calls it a palisade,

  made in the manner of the Indians.

  One more barrier

  to hold back danger

  and keep us apart.

  KIMI

  Word come
s of what happened

  in our village yesterday,

  how the English

  attacked their friends,

  ones they’d earlier begged for peace.

  How Manteo himself,

  so hungry for their montoac,

  so changed by their customs,

  didn’t recognize his own

  until it was too late.

  If,

  like Wanchese,

  he’d returned to live with his people

  and rejected the English,

  disgrace wouldn’t mark him

  as it does now.

  KIMI

  What haste.

  What cruelty.

  The English

  attack without first knowing

  whose children they destroy.

  Alongside my cousins

  who always live in our mainland village,

  I work the fields,

  yanking at weeds so roughly,

  a bean plant loses its fragile hold.

  I remember Alis,

  her bravery

  in warning me.

  More gently now,

  I pat the soil around the bean,

  trace its growth from roots

  to spindly stalk interwoven with the corn.

  These two plants thrive together,

  make my people strong.

  There is no reason to let my anger

  uproot something good.

  Alis

  For days,

  we rush through open spaces,

  mark the distance

  from door to door.

  Surely the Croatoan steal about the edge of camp;

  the Roanoke prowl in the woods.

  Alis

  Though it’s not Sunday,

  all work is left undone.

  In the open square we congregate

  for Manteo’s baptism.

  Today he’ll officially become

  a servant of the Queen.

  Once we’ve left to begin our city,

  he’ll be the one who

  will stand for England,

  will represent our nation here.

  Voices whisper all around me,

  wondering at the Governor’s hurry.

  Some think he hopes

  two leaders will ease fears.

  Others say he wants to prove

  Manteo’s on our side.

  Governor White stands,

  holds the Book of Common Prayer.

  O LORD God of hosts, most loving and merciful Father,

  Do I imagine hesitation

  as Manteo kneels

  and the Governor rests a palm

  on his dark hair?

  We most humbly beseech thee to save and defend Manteo, Lord of the Island Roanoke, and thy servant Elizabeth, our Queen.

  Together,

  we bow our heads.

  Though it is only morning,

  the sun already blazes

  across my shoulders.

  O heavenly Father, the practices of our enemies are known unto thee. Turn them, O Lord, if it be thy blessed will, or overthrow and confound them for thy name’s sake.

  I think

  of Kimi,

  my new friend,

  Suffer them not to prevail.

  Mr. Howe,

  his body battered,

  Permit not the ungodly to triumph over us.

  We have not obeyed thy word: We have had it in mouth, but not in heart; in outward appearance, but not in deed.

  We have lived carelessly.

  the ambush on the Croatoan,

  We have deserved utter destruction.

  the way we’ve been abandoned to this place.

  But thou, Lord, art merciful, and ready to forgive. Therefore we come to thy throne of grace, confessing thee to be our only refuge in all times of peril.

  How strange to know an Indian

  is the Queen’s own man.

  Governor White says

  this has always been the plan,

  to bestow him with this title

  for his faithful service.

  Yet

  I cannot forget

  the awful mistake

  made four days past.

  Does Governor White

  also give this honor

  to atone for the attack?

  Manteo,

  what causes you to stay?

  What truly holds you to us?

  KIMI

  The sun is a burning fire,

  makes my work

  unbearable

  in its unforgiving heat.

  I sit,

  thankful for the water gourd,

  and wipe the sweat and dirt

  from my face.

  “Kimi.”

  The young ones who play

  among the corn and beans

  go still,

  silent.

  Wanchese has come to the fields

  where men only enter

  to help the women

  break up ground

  before the planting time.

  Uncle has come for me.

  KIMI

  We rest together

  in the shade of cedars.

  I can almost pretend

  things are

  as they were

  when I was younger,

  that Wanchese

  is only here to speak

  of the teeming fish

  he’s trapped in the weir,

  the new canoe

  he hollows.

  But things

  are different

  now.

  “You must tell me

  how you learned

  that word,” Wanchese says.

  Four days

  I’ve dreaded this,

  have had no way

  to answer him

  that would not lead to lies.

  I grasp a stick,

  swirl patterns

  on the ground.

  “What is it, Kimi?”

  I have no one, Uncle.

  An English girl

  has shown me

  how lonely I have been.

  But I cannot tell him.

  The silence grows uncomfortable,

  but I will not fill it.

  I continue with my drawings,

  loops and lines and circles.

  Uncle brought me here.

  He should be the one to speak.

  He stills my hand.

  Finally I look to him.

  “It’s not yet time to harvest.

  The mainland stores are almost gone.

  We’ve become a burden

  with so many here to feed.

  We leave tomorrow.”

  He stands.

  “Stay away from the English village.

  Go nowhere near them.

  Do not let your curiosity

  risk our safety.”

  Uncle,

  I want to say,

  I’ve brought no harm,

  but our security.

  Alis

  News comes hours later

  from those at the beach.

  Mr. Florrie rushes from door to door,

  his wild hair on end,

  telling all to stay inside.

  Indians came ashore,

  surrounded those unloading cargo,

  grotesque paint covering their bodies.

  His escape is a miracle!

  Is Mother safe with the other women?

  Has Father left to help the men
?

  The boys fret to go outside.

  I distract them with songs,

  by counting fingers, knees, and noses.

  They cry for their mothers.

  How I want mine also,

  but I must be the one to comfort.

  An hour passes, more,

  before the men return

  and it is safe to leave the cottage.

  It was the Croatoan,

  Manteo’s people.

  They were poised to attack,

  but Manteo persuaded them

  to put down their weapons,

  promised our friendship once again.

  How I hope

  our fragile bond

  has been renewed.

  Mother rushes to me,

  cups my cheek in her hand.

  “My Alis.”

  Like the little ones,

  I cling to her, so grateful we are safe.

  Alis

  We are all of us

  still shaken,

  though the present danger’s passed.

  “Hurry home,” Mother tells me.

  “Stay close to the buildings.”

  Around me,

  shadows reach like snakes,

  deepen into darkness.

  I clutch my cloak,

  though the evening stifles without a breath of air.

  It is then I see George,

  striding like a soldier toward a cluster of boys,

  which grows tighter as he enters.

  George swings a musket over his shoulder,

  marches in place with his chest out,

  the picture of a fighting man.

  He boasts about the ambush

  and his bravery that night,

  brags he would have shot a Croatoan

  at the shore today.

  The others cheer him on.

  To see him act like this,

  to hear him speak as though

  he enjoyed the fight,

  it is like the shock of cold metal

  held against my skin.

  KIMI

  We pole our boats

  until the land falls away

  and all around is endless ocean,

  the early morning sun.

  Paddles pull

  as the dugouts

  cut the waters,

  where one thrashing wave

  could overcome us,

  wash us to the dark world

  swirling below.

  Beside me, Mother stops,

  stays focused on the shore.

  “Remember how Alawa danced?”

  My sister’s name stirs images

  of her twirling with the ribbon,

  running through the lapping currents,

  so alive to wonder.

 

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