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by Helen Frost


  so they’ll all have enough

  food to survive?

  Either way,

  I’m not sorry we helped.

  About a hundred people in the fort, and

  more than seven hundred gathered here in Kekionga,

  surrounding them. Kwaahkwa agrees with Wedaase: Let’s

  attack now, while we outnumber them, before either army arrives.

  Most of the young men agree. They take turns running

  past the fort all day and all night, checking

  to see if a sentry has fallen asleep.

  So far no one has. I’m not old

  enough to join them, but

  I’m doing my part

  by catching fish.

  The ducks and geese

  swim back and forth—they’re

  staying close to shore, quiet, as if they’re

  waiting with us, to see what

  will happen next.

  JAMES

  The burned part of the stockade is still smoking. Pa grips my shoulder,

  trying to hide us both behind a blackened post where our house used to be.

  I point into the trees. Over there, Pa. That’s where Anikwa left the deer meat.

  We look down the trail, off to the side, up into the trees. We don’t see anyone.

  It’s quiet. But that doesn’t mean no one is around. Too dangerous, Pa says,

  his hand still on my shoulder. He turns to go back into the fort. But we’re

  so close! If we just leave the salt here, Anikwa might not find it. I pull away

  from Pa and run fast, to the hollow oak. Pa won’t follow or shout after me;

  he’ll stay here watching, and if something happens, he’ll help. But nothing

  happens. I hide the salt in the tree, take out my whistle, and make the sound

  of a blackbird. I listen closely. Not too far away, another blackbird answers.

  I go back to Pa. We turn toward Ma, watching from a doorway in the fort.

  When we get to her, she pulls us inside and asks, Where was Anikwa hiding?

  As soon as you left, he came out of nowhere, took the salt, and disappeared.

  SALT INSIDE THE WORDS

  Salt on the tongue

  the pleasure

  of shared meals

  the words

  formed in our mouths

  the taste of words

  on their way

  into the world:

  salt inside the words.

  ANIKWA

  Most years, this is

  my favorite season—when the corn

  is almost ripe, I stand on a platform to scare off the birds.

  Then we pick the golden ears, braid the husks

  together, and hang the braided corn

  to dry. In the evenings, I go

  fishing, and Mink

  and Grandma salt and dry the fish.

  We store the corn and fish, and all the meat

  and berries we have dried, so we’ll have enough food

  to last all winter. But this year we haven’t had enough salt

  to dry the fish, and the corn will not have time to ripen before

  the armies get here. Everyone is working fast, staying up

  late to bring in as much food as we can, but now these

  hard questions: Can we feed all the people here,

  and still have enough food for ourselves?

  How much will the armies eat?

  Where can we hide food so

  they won’t take it?

  About ten more days—

  that’s how long we need for the corn

  to fully ripen. But we won’t have that long.

  We have to find a way to hide

  the food we have.

  JAMES

  Ma helps the cook find ways to make the deer meat last three days. They boil

  the bones for one last pot of soup. After this, there’s no more food. Can’t even

  go out to the pump for water. Rupert says, The American army could be here

  tomorrow. Mr. Briggs: Next day for sure. When I see Mr. Briggs, I think of Isaac.

  Wonder what he’s doing right now. Molly throws her pinecone on the floor.

  I pick it up. She laughs, throws it down again. Wish I could be her age again.

  Two soldiers try to guess how many men are in each army. More Americans

  than British, says one. But how many Indians have joined the British? asks the other.

  When the American army gets here, will the soldiers know who’s always lived

  in Kekionga, and who came here just to fight against them? How could they?

  High in a tree, on a branch that hangs over the fort, a squirrel chatters at us.

  It’s a real squirrel, not a tricky friend. Shoot it, Pa, I say. But he won’t.

  This whole place is like a tinderbox, he says. A gunshot could set off the fighting.

  I aim my slingshot. No, Pa says, we don’t know who might be hiding in that tree.

  ANIKWA

  The armies

  could be here tomorrow.

  We sent a runner who has just returned,

  bringing news that both armies

  are almost here—and the

  Americans are closer

  than the British.

  We had to pick the corn

  too soon. It isn’t dry. Where can we

  hide it? Toontwa helps me dig holes to bury

  what we can, but it’s hard to cover them completely, and

  if soldiers find these holes in the forest, they’ll guess that food

  is hidden in them. Rain Bird keeps on braiding corn faster

  and faster, thinking hard. Now she looks up and offers

  an idea: Could we wrap our dried food and bury it

  under fire pits? If we make new fires, the ashes

  will cover the holes—soldiers might not

  think to look there. Everyone

  stares at her. Grandma

  smiles for the first time since we picked

  the first ear of unripe corn. Now Rain Bird is wrapping

  food as I put out our fire and start digging. Mink goes around

  to all the families in Kekionga, telling everyone

  Rain Bird’s brilliant idea.

  JAMES

  Through the gap where the stockade burned down, we see people running

  back and forth, around the fort. A lot of people. Kwaahkwa is the only one

  I recognize. I’m looking for Anikwa or Old Raccoon, when I notice something:

  it’s almost all young men—no women or children. Not many older men.

  Someone shoots a burning arrow toward the fort, and Mr. Briggs runs out

  to stamp on it. Another arrow, not burning, flies toward him and barely

  misses. He runs back to the fort. We’re almost out of water—if another fire

  starts, we won’t have any way to quench it. Will we even have enough to drink?

  Everything gets quiet. Five warriors go past, walking, not running, back

  toward Kekionga. I see Kwaahkwa again—I want to run and ask him: What

  is happening? Where’s Anikwa? Old Raccoon? Are Rain Bird and Wiinicia safe?

  But then he’s gone. A hawk swoops in, kills a squirrel, and takes it to a tree.

  After that, nothing happens for a while. No one comes near the fort. No more

  flaming arrows. One flash of lightning in a blue-gray sky. Distant thunder.

  ANIKWA

  The elders talk all night,

  and when the sun comes up, they’ve made

  a hard decision: The American army is too big. The British

  are too far away. There aren’t enough of us. It’s time

  to leave, before this war begins.

  Don’t carry too much,

  Mink says.

  A fishing spear, a knife, a blanket.

  Kwaahkwa is staying: If we all leave, they’ll think

  we’re afr
aid. His mother’s hardest questions and Rain Bird’s

  sweetest smiles haven’t changed his mind. I’m almost as tall as he is.

  Father, I say, maybe I should stay here, too. He rests his hand on my shoulder,

  swallows hard, then asks, Who would catch fish for everyone along the way?

  So now I can leave without shame. We pack a few canoes and horses,

  but most of us are walking, going west to our relatives. They

  will make room for us—it’s what we always do—but we

  don’t want to eat the food they’ve gathered

  for their own winter days. Father

  picks up his fiddle,

  sets it down. Ready? I ask Toontwa.

  It’s time to go. We circle around the fort in silence.

  Inside, a baby cries—must be Molly. In the pond, a muskrat

  watches us, dives deep—I wonder where

  he will come up.

  JAMES

  No more lightning, but the thunder’s louder. Ma tilts her head. It’s from

  the east, she says, squeezing Molly so tight she busts out crying. We go out

  to look. Is that a huge cloud on the horizon? Or dust rising from the road?

  That’s not thunder, says Pa, it’s the army marching in. The Americans are here.

  The fort rings with cheers, and soldiers pour outside. Someone shoots a rifle

  into the sky. From the east another gunshot answers. Where’s Pa going?

  I start to follow him, but Ma holds me back. No, she says. We don’t know

  what will happen. You stay here. She thinks I’m still a baby—makes me mad

  and a little bit glad at the same time. The thunder sound comes closer

  as soldiers here line up to meet the army coming in. Isaac would be

  cheering along with them—he’d know for sure which side he’s on.

  I wish I did. Where is everyone from Kekionga? Are they getting ready

  to start fighting? Old Raccoon didn’t want a war, but he might fight in one

  if he has to. I listen for unusual birds or animals. No—I don’t hear Anikwa.

  ANIKWA

  The morning sky

  was still dark when we walked away

  from Kekionga. The top branches of the oak tree

  cradled the half-moon, and stars whispered

  their sky-stories like old friends:

  We will still be here

  when you return.

  Now the sun is high, the sky

  is blue. Behind the steady song of Cricket!

  Cricket! we hear thunder rumbling, but there’s

  no rain or lightning. Stay quiet and listen, Father says.

  That’s not thunder—the American army must be here. Toontwa

  opens his eyes wide and stays close to my side. I tell him,

  Not much farther. When we get to where siipiiwi goes in

  two directions, we’ll play tossball with our relatives.

  I’ll help you look for flints beside the water.

  We walk all day, and arrive before

  the sun sets, but we find

  no friends, no cousins.

  Cornfields stretch to the horizon,

  some corn already picked, drying in the sun. Beans,

  pumpkins, apples left in baskets say to us: Welcome, friends.

  Rest here, please eat well. But why is no one here?

  Where have they gone?

  JAMES

  Rupert made Molly a puppet on a stick that dances when I tap it on a board.

  All morning I’ve been trying to keep her happy: tap, tap, tap—it dances, she

  laughs, like everything’s the same as usual. Ma wishes there were women

  she could talk to, or someone to tell us what’s happening, but we’re stuck here

  with the cook and a few soldiers who stayed to guard the fort. It’s not as loud

  as I thought a war would be. A few gunshots, a lot of hollering, another shot.

  Soldiers we’ve never seen before come marching into the fort looking for food.

  Cook shows them our supplies—that is, where the food would be if we had any.

  The soldiers shake their heads and leave. Ma says it shouldn’t be too long

  before Pa can go out hunting—he’ll get us a turkey, a goose, maybe a deer.

  Pa made it clear that I can’t leave the fort “until this is settled.” When will that be?

  I asked. I don’t know, he answered. It depends on where the British army is.

  Where are they? I look toward Kekionga. What’s that, above the trees? Smoke—

  fire! Houses burning. Whose houses? Flames rise high, then higher, wider.

  ANIKWA

  We eat our food,

  not theirs. Grandma says, Our friends

  and relatives will probably return tomorrow. No matter

  where they’ve been, they’ll come home hungry.

  No one knows why everyone

  has gone away from here.

  As the sun goes down,

  two people ride in at almost

  the same time. First, from the north, a man

  from this village returns to tell us they sent out a spy

  who learned that the British turned back. If we decide to fight

  the Americans, we will fight alone. They have five thousand men—

  and even with all the warriors who are here now, we have

  no more than fifteen hundred. A dark cloud crosses

  Father’s face. And then the second person

  rides in from the east. At first,

  I don’t recognize this angry

  red-faced man:

  Kwaahkwa

  has come to tell us, I stayed

  out of sight and watched the army burn our longhouse,

  all our homes—those made of cattail mats and those we’ve built with logs.

  All our cornfields. Everything. Nothing left but ashes

  where Kekionga was.

  JAMES

  All this smoke is choking me. What’s going on? Pa comes in with food,

  but not ’cause he went hunting. He puts it on the table—deer meat, corn,

  maple sugar. And then a copper pot. The fiddle that belongs to Old Raccoon.

  Pa, I ask, who gave this to you? He answers: No one. They’ve all gone away.

  I took this from Old Raccoon’s house before the soldiers set it on fire. Pa stole

  from our friends? He slumps into a chair. Ma brings him water,

  and we wait for him to tell us what’s happening. Ma keeps coughing.

  Her eyes are all red. Might be from the smoke, but it’s also from crying.

  Pa starts talking: As far as I can tell, almost everyone in Kekionga left before

  the army got here. Probably went to a village west of here. When the General

  couldn’t find anyone to fight, he said, “We’ll make sure no one comes back later

  to cause trouble.” Ma objects, But most of the people in Kekionga don’t even want

  to fight this war! Pa nods. I know that. You know that. I couldn’t stop them, Lydia.

  I ask, How will they make new houses before winter? Pa mutters, That is the idea.

  ANIKWA

  The cornfields here

  go on and on, the wind blows

  softly through them. Will we stay here with

  our relatives this winter? We didn’t bring

  enough food. What kind of fish

  can you catch here?

  Father is quiet

  for a long time. Then, as if he

  hears the questions I’m not asking, he says,

  I suppose they’ll do for us what we do for others. When people

  from the east are pushed west, we’ve always made room on our land.

  What else can we do? So far, our fish and animals and cornfields have been enough

  to feed us all. He stops talking for a minute. Then: Tomorrow I’ll show you

  a
good fishing place not far from here. That should make me happy,

  but the sadness in Father’s voice is so deep and heavy

  I can barely hear the words he speaks.

  Gently, Grandma calls me

  over to her.

  Noohse,

  will you go find some firewood?

  Toontwa can help you. Good, I think, a chance

  to explore, but then she adds, Don’t go farther than that oak tree—

  see it, at the edge of the clearing? If we call for you,

  come quickly.

  JAMES

  I’ve never seen so many people in one place. They say there’s five thousand

  soldiers around here! Who can even count that high? Some of them seem

  disappointed that the people they were going to fight went away before

  they had a chance to fight them. The smoke from Kekionga settled down

  by late last night, but when we woke up this morning, there was more of it!

  Look at it all—dang! It’s getting worse. Seems like the whole forest is on fire.

  Pa comes storming in. They’re burning everything, from here down to the river!

  Ma gasps. I ask, Why, Pa? There’s not even any houses there! Pa says, Remember

  that day we took salt to Anikwa, and he hid somewhere, until he saw where we left it?

  Not only that time—he always likes to hide. Well, says Pa, they’re trying to clear

  out any hiding places, so no one can sneak up and attack us. By burning everything?

  Is that why those woodpeckers flew into the fort this morning, pecking holes

  in the back wall? If someone burned down their trees, and all the nesting holes

  they live in—they’d have to make new ones. Hey! What about the fox den?

  ANIKWA

  I’m awake

  before the sun comes up. The river

  here sounds different than it does in Kekionga.

  A woodpecker hammers on a tree.

  Kwaahkwa has been gone

  all night, trying to

  find out why

  the people who live here

  went away, and where they are. Now he

  comes in and wakes his parents, and Grandma, Mink,

  and Father. Everyone has gone upriver, he reports. They say we

 

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