Steal the North: A Novel
Page 10
“I still owe the hospital. I have layaway payments at Kmart.”
“The money will show up,” she said. “I can cut back on groceries.”
“No, you can’t.” I tried to eat at work to save groceries. The cook would sneak me a chicken fried steak with gravy or a patty melt with the bowl of soup or side of fries I actually paid for. “And how will the money show up?”
“Matt can ask his parents.”
“They’ve done enough.”
“I can go to work at one of the factories,” she offered.
“In your long dress? Who will watch Emmy? And the factories are making layoffs, not hiring. Remember, I tried?”
“I’ve been praying.”
“Don’t bother. I found a way to make money.”
I waited for her to start sobbing. Or to quote the Bible. She did neither. She picked up the plastic basket of folded laundry and chucked it across the front room and into the kitchen. It was such an unexpected thing for her to do—like Mom, Beth rarely got angry—that I actually started laughing. Just for a second and not cruelly.
“You’re not going back there,” she insisted. “I’m going to tell Matt everything. He’ll know what to do.”
I jumped up. “You can’t tell Matt.” I grabbed her arm. “I couldn’t bear the shame.” She looked determined. “If you do, I’ll—I’ll leave town.”
I didn’t mean it.
Her determined look turned back to one of horror. She grabbed my other arm. “You can’t leave me.”
“Then promise you’ll never tell Matt. This is between sisters.”
She promised. Then she tried to get me to promise her that I’d never again turn a trick. I told her I’d ask for more shifts at work. But I’d already asked the manager twice for more hours and been shot down on both occasions because I refused to follow him out to his Bronco.
“Go take a hot bath,” Beth said. “I’ll make us grilled cheese sandwiches.”
After Mom died, Beth and I ate grilled cheese sandwiches every day. It was all we knew how to cook until Dad insisted I learn to fry a pound of ground beef and plug in a crockpot.
I took a bath, and then we ate our sandwiches together, sitting close, as if we were still little girls. We savored each bite, as if our white bread, margarine, and American cheese sandwiches were gourmet. As if our problems had been solved and the very next evening I wouldn’t climb into another trucker’s cab. As if I would never leave her.
And I wouldn’t have, sister. You know this. Only you know this.
6
Reuben
As soon as I get out of the shower, I’m heading next door to help Emmy make a birthday cake for her aunt. It’ll be the sixth time we’ve hung out, and yes, I am keeping track: two times the first Sunday we met; then Tuesday morning for a few hours after her aunt left to clean the church; then Wednesday evening, when her aunt and uncle went to prayer meeting and she had me drive her into town for cake supplies; then Friday, the best day, for almost five hours when her aunt left again to help at the church. The hours I’m not with Emmy, I’m thinking about her.
I think about how she’s the quietest girl I’ve ever known. She didn’t say more than two words the entire drive into town, but she smiled whenever I looked over at her, which I did a lot. Usually with quieter girls, I try to talk more to compensate and to bring them out of their shells. I don’t feel the need with Emmy. She’s not in a shell. Well, maybe she just recently crawled from under her mom’s shell. I can’t tell for sure. But I don’t think she’s ever hidden herself intentionally from the world.
Emmy does hide her body a bit more than most girls her age who aren’t overweight, and even some who are. She probably doesn’t dress quite as modestly in California. Don’t get me wrong, she doesn’t, like her aunt, wear big, baggy dresses that could double as wagon tents. She wears tank tops, for example. Who doesn’t love a girl in a tank top, right? And nothing else, Ray would say. But she always has a shirt overtop—unbuttoned at least. I’d like to see her shoulders and maybe a bra strap. I got a peek at her belly button once when I snagged her hippie hat and teasingly made her reach high for it. I turn the water to cool. Some girls, and especially some women, usually the curvy type, have bodies that don’t stop speaking, even when hidden under layers. Emmy’s body isn’t like that. She’s thin, and I would say graceful, only she’s also kind of clumsy. Guys at her school might walk right past her without a backward glance. But her body definitely speaks to me. I turn the water to cold. I can’t tell if she’s a virgin. I’ve never really cared about that with girls, as long as the white ones haven’t slept with half the football team and the Indian ones haven’t slept with Benji.
My hair is still damp when I knock on the screen door.
Emmy answers in a dress and an apron—like in a sitcom from the 1950s. It works for me.
“All you need now is a strand of pearls,” I tease after she invites me inside. She fingers her diamond heart necklace. “Diamonds work too. Nice apron.”
“I like my apron,” she says, blushing a little.
“I do too.” I try not to imagine her naked underneath it.
She offers me an apron, but I tell her I’m wearing an old T-shirt. I usually only get new clothes once a year, in the fall before school, unless we happen to get Indian Money during the year and Mom decides not to give any to my younger sister Lena’s white dad, who seems to know exactly when to show up repentant and broke. As a result, most years, by summer, my two pairs of jeans and three T-shirts look like shit. Last summer I bought new clothes with my job money. I’d planned as well to buy my own football gear at the end of last summer, so I didn’t have to borrow the school’s falling-apart gear and bucket helmet, but I wound up paying the rent for Mom instead. I have to figure out a way to make money again this summer, and quickly, now that I kind of got a girl. Maybe I can mow lawns, like when I was ten—fuck—or something. The summer I was twelve, Ray and I made bank tending horses for some white ranchers.
Maybe Teresa was right about Emmy’s aunt. Except for the Bible verses written on index cards and taped on the cabinet doors and the fridge, Beth’s kitchen looks like a medicine man’s with bundled herbs hanging to dry and small vials and jars. This is the first time I’ve been inside the aunt’s trailer. Emmy hung with me inside Teresa’s trailer on Friday. I was a little embarrassed at first—okay, a lot. But at least Teresa’s floor and ceiling aren’t soft and rotting like trailers on the rez. The kids and I cleaned the place, and I warned them to leave the couch free for Emmy and me. They didn’t listen, except Grace, the oldest, who kept too much distance. Kevin, Audrey, and the baby, Emilio, whose name I always pronounce with a cholo accent to piss off Teresa, crowded Emmy on the couch. She didn’t seem to mind. I got the floor. We watched a couple reruns of The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air and one stupid episode of Murder, She Wrote, which unfortunately Teresa has the girls stuck on. Emmy had never seen either show before. She and her mom don’t have cable in California, which is odd because she doesn’t seem religious or poor.
“I’m glad we chose cherry chip,” Emmy says now, referring to the box of cake mix we picked out together in the store. “Are you sure you want to help?”
I assure her I do. I assured her I did on the drive home from the store when she said it might be boring for me. As if.
“Oh, look,” she exclaims. “I found this muffin tin way in the back of the cupboard. I thought—” She pauses, maybe a little embarrassed by her enthusiasm over a tin pan. I try not to grin. “I thought I’d make a cupcake for each of the kids.” She nods toward Teresa’s house. “There should be enough batter.”
“Cool.” I try to act casual. She says we can dye the frosting with food coloring, a different color for each kid. “That’s cool.” I nod when she asks if I know their favorite colors, even though I have no idea.
I get the eggs and milk out of the fridge, and she
gets the oil from the pantry. She prefers to mix the cake batter by hand, she says, with a wooden spoon. She has to at home in California because her mom refuses to have an electric mixer in the house.
“Is the professor afraid of electronics?” There’s old people on the rez who are. There’s also people on the reservation without electricity—despite how Coulee Dam is in our backyard.
“We have an electronic pencil sharpener,” she says. “I think it’s more a feminist thing. Betty Friedan rather than Betty Crocker.”
“Who?”
She asks me to mix for a while. Her arms—pathetically, she says—always get tired. I oblige, flexing my muscles a little more than necessary.
“That was fun,” she says after we get the cupcakes and the cake into the oven and set the timer. “I’ve never baked with anyone my age before.”
“Why not?”
“I don’t know.” She smiles. “I’ve organized bake sales for clubs at school. But I don’t really have any friends.”
“Get out of here.” I think she’s joking. She’s not. “Why?”
She shrugs her shoulders.
“I think you’re great.” I didn’t mean to say that out loud. I quickly recover. “You have a boyfriend.”
“It’s not the same.” We start making the frosting.
“It can be.”
“I don’t think so.” She’s told me some about her boyfriend when I’ve asked. She seems pretty loyal, despite having to try a little too hard to hide the fact he’s a fucking chump. “Here, taste this,” she says. “See if it needs more vanilla.”
Jesus. Is she really offering me her finger with frosting on it?
“It’s perfect.” I hold her wrist loosely. I wonder what she’d do if I kissed her. Or put her finger back in my mouth. She’s looking at me as if she might not mind.
Stepping back, she says, “You’re the best friend I’ve ever had.”
The phone rings—I’m almost relieved—before I can respond.
It’s her mom. I gesture toward the front door and mouth, “Should I go?”
She shakes her head.
I try to act busy with the frosting. Ray’s always been my best friend. We spent hours and hours of our childhoods together: on the trampoline in his mom’s front yard in Nespelem, or under the trampoline after trying to summon Big Foot; at our great-aunt’s place along the Sanpoil River; in the back of a rusted-over truck and on our bikes around Omak, mostly on the rez side; with his dad’s ponies. As for others, I don’t have a problem making friends, but something does feel different with Emmy. I’ve got a giant crush on her, sure, but I’ve had crushes before. I had it pretty bad once for one of Teresa’s friends. I finish mixing yellow, which I claimed was Emilio’s favorite. I try not to listen to the conversation, but I can’t help it. My eyes lock on Emmy’s after she tells her mom that she likes it here. Who is this girl? I’m not sure she herself knows—she just asked her mom why she was never told who she was named after. I can’t imagine that. Indians might have too many names, but we damn sure know who or what we’re named after or for. If not, how can a name hold any power?
Emmy’s voice suddenly changes, and she looks away. She turns and lowers her voice. I concentrate, like when I’m hunting with the elders. Emmy says something into the phone about a ceremony and admits to being scared. I should leave. Many ceremonies, by definition, should be kept private. I head for the door. She puts her hand over the receiver and asks me to please stay. I have the feeling I could never say no to this girl. And not because she’s white, as Benji would claim. I broke it off with the rodeo queen, not the other way around. I grab the flowered apron off the table and put it on. Emmy laughs, and I curtsy.
“She’s your only sister,” I hear her say. It sounds like she’s trying to convince her mom to call back later and tell her only sister happy birthday.
White people.
I read the Bible verse directly in front of me. I’ve been trying to ignore them, and not just here and now, but everywhere and always. This index card looks way newer than the others, which have yellowed: “For I have heard a voice as of a woman in travail . . . the voice of the daughter of Zion.”
What the fuck?
Emmy’s eyes are watery when she hangs up the phone, but she pretends they’re not. We get the cupcakes out of the oven and then the cake fifteen minutes later. We leave on the aprons, my suggestion, while the cakes cool and we run next door to check on the kids, who giggle, even Grace, who tries not to. By the time we finally get the cakes frosted, there’s only ten minutes to spare before Emmy’s aunt and uncle are due to return. We take off the aprons. She looks so sweet in her dress that I want to hug her. I’ve been wanting to hug her all week. “What ceremony were you talking about on the phone?” I ask.
“Oh, that. Nothing.”
“But you’re scared.” I hold a plate with four cupcakes.
“No.”
“I heard you say you were.”
“It’s embarrassing, Reuben.” She blushes.
“I’m Indian. We have ceremonies for ceremonies—for ceremonies.”
“Cool ones, probably.”
“Not always.”
She opens the screen door for me.
“Tell me tonight then,” I say. “I mean, if you want to get together.” She nods. “And make out,” I joke. Not really.
She punches my arm, lightly. Most of the girls on the rez, and the cowgirls in Omak, have brothers and know how to wallop, even in jest. I feel Emmy’s punch, though, in my gut.
* * *
She brings me a giant slice of cake when we meet that evening by the bench in her aunt’s garden. We have only an hour and a half. Would her aunt and uncle really care that she’s hanging out with the neighbor kid, even if I am Indian? I don’t think she’s asked them, and I don’t want to seem pushy. But shit, we’re both going to be seniors come fall. She told me her mom doesn’t know she has a boyfriend, even though they’ve been going out for six months. When I asked her if her boyfriend in California is white, she nodded, but said her mom would probably like him better if he weren’t.
Only in California.
“Let’s go for a walk,” I suggest now after finishing my cake. Even as hungry as I am—Teresa’s cooking sucks compared with Mom’s, and we’re low on groceries—the frosting tasted better on her finger. She wears the same dress she had on this morning, as I was hoping. “You have different shoes?” I ask. She’s worn flip-flops every time we’ve been together. She goes inside and changes into low-top black Converse. Only the punk or oddball girls at school wear Converse, rather than Sketchers or Adidas. But somehow, Emmy pulls them off with her dress.
We start walking down the road, not toward town, but the other direction. Irrigation sprinklers are clunking full blast in the potato field. Emmy stops to look. The leafy plants are still small on the raised mounds. She says, “The water arching that way is kind of pretty.”
“I guess, maybe, in a farmish sort of way.”
She laughs. “How cold do you think that water is?”
“Why, do you want to run through the sprinklers?”
“No way.” She shakes her head adamantly.
Her uncle’s work truck says BASIN IRRIGATION. He’s often wet or even covered in mud after work. I think he works on farm pumps.
We start walking again. “It’s Columbia water,” I tell her.
“What do you mean?”
“The arching water is from the Columbia River.”
“How do you get there?”
“You have to drive. It’s north, west, and south of here. The river curves to avoid this area. Do you blame it?” She looks around, but I don’t think she hates what she sees. “It’s a cold river. It used to be colder.”
“What happened?”
“I’ll take you there sometime.” She must want to stall talking a
bout the ceremony.
“Do you promise?”
“I promise.” I brush a mosquito from her arm. “They’re going to eat you alive with your perfume.” She put on a spray of perfume when she ran back into the trailer to change her shoes. It’s not heavy or musky. Usually she smells a little like peppermint, shampoo, soap, herbs. But right now she smells like fruit—apples? berries?—and it makes me fucking dizzy. “Hasn’t your aunt or uncle taken you for any drives yet?”
“Around town, yes.”
“I’m surprised your uncle hasn’t taken you fishing.” The dude fishes a lot.
“They—that is, Aunt Beth wants to wait until after—”
When she doesn’t finish her sentence, I ask, “After what? The ceremony?”
“Yeah.” She points. “Look, a stack of hay.”
“Now, that’s truly amazing,” I mock. “Shall we?” She looks confused. “Climb to the top? Come on.” I run ahead of her. I have so much energy.
“I can’t climb,” she admits when she makes it to the stack of staggered hay bales.
“Of course you can climb. You got arms and legs.”
“I can’t ride a bike.”
Is she serious? Isn’t her mom a professor? “Listen, if you passed precalculus with an A, then—”
“An A minus.”
“You can climb a stack of hay bales.” I worked my ass off in algebra II last year and only got a C+, which my counselor said was great. She meant great for a tribal kid. This school year I have to take trigonometry. “Come on, city girl. I’ll help you.” I go first, since she’s wearing a dress. She does just fine. We make it to the top, and she immediately sits down. “I wish there were more of a view,” I say. There’s views on the rez I’d like to show Emmy—views I haven’t wanted to share with anyone before, which must make her my best friend. What do you know?
“How are we going to get back down?” she frets.
“Don’t worry, Emmy.” I sit beside her on the same hay bale and take her hand. She lets me hold it for a minute until her pulse steadies. “You okay?”