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by Helen Frost


  should go, too. No one thinks the army will stop at Kekionga. He tells us

  where the others are. We’ve been there before. It’s near the riverbank,

  where willows grow, their branches hanging down over the water.

  We’ll hide underneath them for a while. I imagine I can hear

  the sound of distant voices. Soldiers paddling toward us.

  Horses, wagons, an army like a marching forest.

  (What are they eating?) I can almost

  hear the gunfire,

  see the flames. A great danger

  close to us, and coming closer. Quickly,

  we rouse everyone from sleep. Mothers keep

  their babies quiet as we walk

  into the cornfields.

  JAMES

  Fast as they marched in two days ago, the army’s gone. Sixty soldiers

  staying here to guard the fort. The rest—almost five thousand—marched

  west and north this morning. The ground’s all trampled everywhere.

  Camps littered with scraps of animals they killed—they ate what they

  were hungry for, leaving piles of hides and bones and guts all over.

  The doe that had two fawns before comes up the hill with only one,

  looking like she’s asking me: What happened? No grass to eat. No trees

  to stand behind. Where will the animals go? Will there be enough deer

  for everyone to hunt next winter? Pa, I ask, is the war over? What will

  happen now? He answers, The British turned back. And then, as the Captain

  put it: “When the Indians saw how bad they were outnumbered, they all

  melted away into the forest.” Ma stands up and takes a long, deep breath,

  like she’s lifting something heavy, hard to carry. How can we find out, I ask,

  what happened to everyone in Kekionga? She answers, We will wait and see.

  ANIKWA

  We walk between long rows

  of corn until the sun is high above us.

  Tall stalks swish like dancers as we pass. The corn

  is sweet, ready to be picked; there’s plenty

  to eat when we get hungry. Look,

  says Grandma, how carefully

  they’ve planted it,

  how beautifully it’s grown.

  We’ll help them with the harvest, before

  we go back home. A red-winged blackbird sings to us.

  I answer it, as if this is an ordinary day—I’m just out walking

  with my family. Rain Bird stays close to Kwaahkwa’s mother. No one

  knows where Kwaahkwa went. He said, I’ll meet you tomorrow night.

  He has his horse, and we’re on foot, so he may arrive before us.

  Now we’ve passed the cornfields, and we’re on the trail

  beside the river. A pair of herons fly in, land,

  rest awhile, then take off, flying

  east. When they’re high

  in the sky, I call:

  What do you see? But I

  don’t understand their answer.

  Rain Bird asks: Are you sure you want to know

  what they see when they look back

  at where we came from?

  JAMES

  Pa picks up his gun and heads out to see what’s left of the forest. I follow

  and he warns, This won’t be easy, James. I don’t know what we’ll find out there.

  I tell him I want to check the fox den. It’s not far—past the blackberry bushes,

  near the oak tree that got split by lightning—you know the one I mean? But wait—

  the bushes and the tree aren’t here. Where are we? Is that the rock I sit on,

  to watch the trail for rabbits? It’s hard to tell. Pa stomps along beside me.

  What a waste, he says. We have to rebuild our house, the stockade, the trading post—

  now we’ll have to haul logs three times as far. They could have let us cut the trees

  before they burned the underbrush. When we get to where the fox den was,

  it’s covered in ashes. A burned tree fell across the opening. At first I think

  the foxes have all gone. Then, from under the blackened log, one peers out.

  When I go up for a closer look, it tries to run away, but its leg’s all busted up

  so it can’t walk. I lift the log—the fox snaps at my hand. Stand back, says Pa.

  I have to do this, Son. And before I get his meaning, he shoots that fox dead.

  ANIKWA

  A tree root

  poked into my back all night.

  My damp blanket didn’t keep me warm.

  Is it already morning? No one slept.

  We’re quiet—waiting, listening,

  sniffing the air, and asking,

  Do you smell smoke?

  Friends from a village north of us

  arrive here, like we did two days ago, carrying

  their blankets and a little food—enough to last a day or two.

  Late afternoon and early evening, people come in from the south.

  Grandma meets each group as they arrive. She speaks to the elders,

  then tells us what she learns: Everything is burned or burning.

  All the houses, cornfields, food they dried and couldn’t hide

  or bury. All the cattail mats they couldn’t carry.

  All the cornfields? The ones that took a whole morning to walk

  through? What about

  the milkweed,

  about to burst its seedpods?

  The black-and-orange butterflies—thousands

  of them, in a field of yellow flowers. I’m looking around at

  all these people when Kwaahkwa comes riding in,

  silent as a brewing storm.

  JAMES

  Stop that crying, Pa commands. I hiccup to a stop, clamp my mouth shut

  to stop myself from yelling: It didn’t even bite me! We could’ve tamed it!

  We head for home. Can’t get the picture of that fox out of my mind.

  I don’t tell Ma—I can’t. But her face says she knows something’s wrong.

  Molly wakes up from her nap, crying worse than I did—no one yells at her

  to stop it. Ma lifts her up and sings to her till she calms down, and then

  she turns to me and asks, What did you see this morning? I tell her, Lots of

  burned-down trees. That’s all I have to say about it. But later on, when Pa’s

  not here, I say, You know that deer we saw, with one fawn? She had two before.

  Ma nods. I know the ones you mean. The missing fawn had a white patch

  on her leg. That’s them. I take a deep breath. We saw—a dead fox. Dang.

  Can’t help it—I bust out crying. Ma says, I heard a shot. It sounded like

  your father’s gun. She knows. She puts Molly down, comes to me. Brushes

  hair off my forehead, puts her hand on my shoulder. Leaves it there.

  ANIKWA

  Kwaahkwa

  spreads his arms as wide

  as they will reach, moves his fingers

  up and down like flames,

  his face like fire, too,

  eyes wide open,

  smoldering.

  Father and the other

  men have embers in their eyes

  as they listen—what are they remembering?

  Kwaahkwa leans in, drawing in the dirt: Here, he says,

  and here. Here. And here. Stabbing a pointed stick into the ground

  along a curvy line he’s drawn to represent the river, he shows

  us where the army burned each village, all the cornfields.

  He points his stick at a spot between two villages.

  Is he talking about my best fishing place?

  I hid my horse and walked over

  to the water’s edge, close

  to the herons’ nest.

  A heron flew out of a tree. I heard …

  a shot. It f
ell in the water … and they … they left it there.

  We stand with him in silence. I try to find words for my question:

  Do the herons know the difference between them and us?

  Grandma says, Iihia. Yes. They do.

  JAMES

  Pa and Ma are arguing. The American army went west for a few days; now

  they’re here again, getting ready to head back east where they came from.

  They’ll be going through Piqua, and the women and children are ready

  to come home. Pa doesn’t know where Old Raccoon and Piyeeto are,

  so he volunteered to go to Piqua and bring everyone back home. Ma says,

  No! How would we get along without you if … She doesn’t finish, but I know.

  It’s dangerous. Pa could get captured—or killed. After all that’s happened,

  won’t everyone be mad? I can speak the languages along the way, Pa says,

  at least enough to ask for help. Ma says what I’m thinking: What makes you so

  sure anyone will help you? Pa answers, If you were at Piqua … Ma interrupts:

  I’m not at Piqua! I’m here with James and Molly! And I don’t want to stay

  in this fort any longer. When will you start cutting logs for our new house?

  They go on like that, longer than I’ve ever heard them argue. I think Ma will

  win, but I fall asleep before she does, and when I wake up, Pa’s not here.

  ANIKWA

  The sun

  shines on a circle of white

  hair, all the grandparents, talking to each other.

  We have survived hard times before.

  They talk all morning, then

  all afternoon, on

  into evening.

  This comforts me.

  They’ll know what to do,

  where we should go, how we can

  stay together. But their faces, when they rise

  from the circle, hold no answers, only sorrow. They’ve found

  no way for us to stay together. Some will go to live with

  relatives in other places, west or north or south.

  Kwaahkwa’s family is going so far west, we

  don’t know if we’ll see them again.

  Rain Bird turns her face away.

  What will our family do?

  Grandma’s sister

  lives six days’ journey to the west.

  But Father says, If none of us return to Kekionga,

  they’ll treat our home as if we have abandoned it. They’ll say

  we don’t need it anymore. He looks at Grandma.

  We will go back, they agree.

  SALT STREAKS

  Tears come from earth and sky,

  from words moving through us.

  We taste them as they fall,

  leaving salt streaks on our faces.

  We bear witness as they splash

  back to earth, and are absorbed.

  JAMES

  I hate staying in the fort without Pa. Last night some of the soldiers

  got in a big fight. Ma covered Molly’s ears, but I heard the whole thing.

  Those men miss their wives and children, Ma explained. It won’t be so bad

  when things get back to normal. But will that ever happen? How can it?

  So far, none of the Miami have come back to Kekionga. I heard a soldier

  say, If they leave for good, I have a real nice place picked out for my house,

  where the river curves around that big rock. Good fishing. The trees will

  grow again, and we’ll have shade. I know the place he means, not far

  from where Anikwa’s house used to be—before it got burned down.

  Ma won’t let me go look. When your pa gets home, we’ll all go, she says.

  A few streaks of orange splash the evening sky, and pretty soon

  it’s red and purple. What’s that sound? Quiet at first, then louder.

  Sandhill cranes are flying in, hundreds of them, thousands.

  Calling back and forth as they land in the burned cornfields.

  ANIKWA

  It’s raining

  as we begin our long walk home.

  Soft rain, like the sky is crying, and it isn’t going to stop.

  The geese form into arrows pointing south, calling

  down to us as they fly over. Cold, dark

  days are coming. We won’t

  be ready for them.

  I’m trying not to be so hungry,

  not to think about the snow that will soon

  cover the ground, how ice will slow the river to a stop.

  The army’s gone, but tracks are everywhere—grass and flowers

  trampled down. Where are the animals? Did they kill them, or scare

  them into hiding? Toontwa walks beside me. He’s hungry too,

  and since I don’t have food to share, I tell him stories.

  In one, I imitate the sound of sandhill cranes

  and right then, hundreds of them fly

  up from a burned cornfield—

  there must be

  a little corn

  still left on the ground.

  At the edge of the field, I see a deer, running.

  Look, Toontwa—moohswa, I say. See her white tail flashing?

  She stops and stands still for a minute

  watching us.

  JAMES

  Ma keeps talking about her sister: I wonder if Amanda could convince

  Ethan to leave Philadelphia. I hear it’s getting crowded out east—

  I’m sure there would be room for them here. Think of it, James!

  She breaks into a big smile—the first one I’ve seen since Pa left.

  You’d have cousins to play with! It’s true, I’d like that. Uncle Ethan

  could help us build our new house and then we’d help them build theirs.

  I’ve never met my cousins, but I’d like to. Twin boys a little older than me,

  a girl a year and a half younger. A boy about two years older than Molly.

  With both families working together, Ma says, we’d make the trading post

  bigger and better. We’ll need new merchandise when we open it again,

  and they have money—they could help replace what we lost in the fire.

  She spends all day writing a letter. I’ll mail it when I can, she says.

  Rupert hears her talking and reminds us: This part of the territory isn’t open

  for settlement yet. They still have to work out some details in the treaties.

  ANIKWA

  It’s almost dark

  when we walk into Kekionga.

  Or where it used to be. Now it’s … ashes.

  Kwaahkwa told us, but no one could

  imagine how terrible it is:

  every house

  torn apart

  and burned. The fish

  we had to leave on drying racks

  scattered everywhere, and trampled.

  Corncobs and fish heads covered with flies—

  the army must have eaten what they wanted, and then

  destroyed whatever was left over. Didn’t they know—

  they must have known—it’s too late to grow more

  corn, and we won’t be able to catch many

  fish before the river freezes.

  Will the animals find

  their way

  back?

  Will deer give us

  hides for warmth and shelter, meat

  for winter food? Father says, It’s worse than I thought.

  Grandma says, You helped them go to Piqua.

  They should help us now.

  JAMES

  I’m sitting on a rock near the burned-down trading post, trying out

  a new tune on my whistle, when Old Raccoon walks up, holding

  a white cloth on a stick to show he comes in peace. Aya, James, he says.

  Hello, I answer. You looking for Pa? He went to Piqua. Ma sees us talk
ing

  and walks over. Aya, she says. I expect Mr. Gray to be home tomorrow

  or the next day. Old Raccoon says, I’ll come back. Please tell him I need

  credit for tools and blankets. Ma says she’ll tell him. I ask, Will you bring

  Anikwa next time you come? Old Raccoon doesn’t answer yes or no.

  He looks at the charred ruins of our house. We didn’t start the fire, he says.

  Ma replies, We know that. She sweeps her arm toward Kekionga and says,

  I’m sorry. There must be bigger words somewhere, but none of us

  can find them. Old Raccoon turns away. As we watch him walking

  down the trail, I remember how some people cheered when they saw

  Kekionga burning. What will they do now? I ask. Ma has no answer.

  ANIKWA

  Soldiers found

  the food we buried in the forest

  but, as we hoped, they didn’t think of looking

  under fire pits. We dig through ashes, lift

  out the food we hid, and carry it

  to where we’re building

  our new wiikiaami.

  Eleven other families

  are making houses close to ours.

  Later, we’ll all work together, building

  a new longhouse. We won’t have time, before snow

  falls, to build new homes with logs, but cattail walls and elk hides

  will keep out the coldest winds. Grandma says, This

  may be the hardest winter we have ever known.

  But we will survive—we always have.

  Here, where the river curves

  around a rock that used

  to stand in the shade

  of seven maple

  trees, my parents

  and my grandparents are

  buried. When summer comes again,

  a cool breeze will blow across

  their graves.

  JAMES

  When’s Pa going to get back? Maybe then Ma will quit scrubbing

  tables, floors, and walls. Not just the room we stay in—she’s cleaning

  the whole fort. Take Molly outside? she asks. Molly reaches out her hand

  and smiles. I take her to the yard inside the fort, then out to where

 

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