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"Keep looking for a bluebird and listena . I know by G.o.d is sing in there. I heard you. It sounded like rain on a you were p tin roof Then he was beating his chest lightly, like in the cold mission church he had served in when he was eight.
"Mea culpa, mea culpa, I am not worthy that you should come under my roof He tried to stand.
Hearing the sounds of a toothbrush he swayed backward, laughing. It sounded ridiculous. Sitting on the floor, stiff legged, he took off his boots and socks, then stood up warily to ease off his pants, unb.u.t.ton his s.h.i.+rt. He set the bottle of Four Roses on a chair where he could reach it and turned down the covers on the bed. Then he crawled in and watched the crack of light around all four sides of the bathroom door.
"it was rehung a size too small," he said in a loud critical "Or else it shrunk in the frame." He laughed again.
voice.
He is out of his mind.
She came through the door, put some clothes down neatly folded, and disappeared again. "if I close my eyes and imagine very hard what you're doing a" He addressed the bottle, then unscrewed the top.
With his eyes shut he drank the rough whiskey. It left a sweet burn going down, and when he looked again his vision had narrowed.
He said those men took trophies. Skin pressed in the pages of a book.
There was often a stage in his drunkenness where his eyesight tunneled, like looking through the wrong end of binoculars. He had to be very careful now to remember where he was. He did not dare take his eyes from the shrinking door. "Please a , " he urged the dark room, "don't a " fearing something might break the concentration.
But he kept tight control. Advise restraint. Advise restraint, his brain tapped. He began connecting each loud invisible rustle with a very specific movement that the woman must make as she undressed. From top to bottom. He undressed her mentally with slow deliberation and no desire.
Then suddenly, naked. She had even rolled her socks and stuck them in her boots.
She should have come out then, but she didn't. His heart pumped.
Concentration began to slacken. The image of her fled. He rolled from the bed and started to the door, feeling his way along the edge of the mattress until he lost it and had to cross long steps of endless s.p.a.ce, where he thought water lapped his ankles. The rustling stopped.
Silence warns. He was going to kick and jump aside like in the village back there, but from somewhere he gained a measure of control.
He gripped the handle. The door swung in. The light seemed to move around her in sheets, and the tunnel widened.
Oil the tiny square of floor, still dressed, the bundle she had carried opened and spread all around her, she crouched low.
And he saw her as the woman back there.
How the h.e.l.l could you figure them?
She looked at him. They had used a bayonet. She was out of her mind.
You, me, same. Same. She pointed to her eyes and his eyes.
The Asian, folded eyes of some Chippewas. She was hemorrhaging.
Question her Sir, she is dying, sir.
"And anyway, what could I have asked? Huh? What the h.e.l.l?"
Albertine was looking at him, staring at him. He realized he had spoken out loud.
The brown hair swung over her face as she bent, smoothing a red handkerchief into a small square. She was wrapping things back into her bundle. He tucked a gray towel around his waist and lowered himself onto the edge of the stool. Her clothing was spread between them. He bent over and picked up a thin longwaisted pair of cotton underpants, doubled them, put them back.
"I'll help you," he said.
"I don't need any help."
He put his hands in his lap. He wanted cigarettes now, badly, but he didn't want to go back and look for them in the dark where the bed was.
"Would you get me my smokes? I'm drunk."
His voice caught in his throat. She did not answer or look at him but went out of the room.
I shouldn't stay here, she thought. But all my things are here.
The was talking to himself While she was gone he noticed that his face, hands, chest were cold with sweat. His hands trembled when he lighted the Marlboro.
Weak, he thought, holding the smoke in his lungs. But now he was used to the shaking, this kind of shaking, which meant that the tightness was lowering, lowering him. He lit one cigarette from another and dropped the ends in the bowl beneath his hip.
As he watched her, his breathing gradually calmed. The blackness edging his vision dropped away. The movements of her hands were humble and certain. She had a long curved back and those ut ting shoulder blades, like wings of horn.
How long can I sit here and let him watch me like this? She felt like she was still riding on the bus. Her blood rocked.
"Please," he said finally, when she had put everything in order several times, "can we go to bed? I won't touch you. Too drunk anyhow."
"All right.
He took her hand and led her from the bathroom, half shutting the door.
"I'm going to leave the light on if that's okay with you."
She nodded silently.
She took her jeans, boots, socks off, then slid into bed. She was wearing a long-sleeved s.h.i.+rt and underwear. Once beside him, although she had been half asleep as she folded her clothes, she became completely alert, conscious of his lightest movement.
Good night. I'm going to shut my eyes and pretend to steep.
But the pretense just increased her sensitivity to his breathing, to the way the sheets scratched against his body.
The CREDIT sign across the street ticked on by slow stages until the letters completed, flared three times in silence. She turned to him.
She propped herself on her elbow and unb.u.t.toned her s.h.i.+rt. He took her hand away and worked the cloth off her shoulders. She wore a thick cotton bra.s.siere. He put both arms around her and undid the hook.
Once she was naked beneath him, he could hold off no longer. In panic, he tried to surge inside of her.
Her fear excited him so much, though, that he came helplessly, pressed against her, before he was even hard. She was quiet, waiting for him to say something. She touched his face, but he did not speak, so she rolled away from him.
Henry was not drunk anymore, not in the least. He knew that In a moment he would want her again, the right way, and in this expectation he listened as she pretended to sleep. Her back curved, a warm slope.
The length and breadth of her seemed edge less He felt wonder and moved closer. She tensed. Her breathing changed.
She gave off a fetid traveler's warmth, cigarette smoke, bus-seat smell, a winy undertone from what they'd drunk, the crackery smell of snow melted into unwashed hair, a flowery heat from her armpits.
He thought of diving off a riverbank, a bridge.
He closed his eyes and saw the water, the whirling patterns, below.
He pushed her over, face down, and pinned her from behind. He spread her legs with his knees and pulled her toward him.
m.u.f.fled, slogged in pillows, she gripped the head bars. He pushed into her. She made a harsh sound. Her back was board hard, resistant.
Then she gave with a cry. He touched her with the cus.h.i.+oned part of his fingers until she softened to him. She opened. The bones of her pelvis creaked wide, like the petals of a wooden flower, and he thought she came. Then he did, too.
Wobbling then surging smoothly forward, he came whispering that he loved her.
Afterward, he let her go, put his face in dark hair behind her ear, and was about to whisper love talk, but she rolled out from under his chest.
She got as far away from him as possible. It was, to Henry, as if she had crossed a deep river and disappeared. He lay next to her, divided from her, just outside and with no way to follow.
At last she slept. Her even breath was a desolate comfort. He wound his hand in a long Thank of her hair and, eventually, slept, too.
Near dawn Albertine could not remember where she was. She could not remember about the dull ache between her legs. She turned to the man and made the mistake of touching him in his sleep. His name came back to her. She was about to say his name.
He shrieked. Exploded.
She was stunned on the floor, gasping for breath against the "ago L wall before the syllables of his name escaped. Outside their room a door opened and shut. Somewhere in the room she heard his breath, a slow animal wheeze that froze her to the wall. He moved.
The scent of his harsh fear hit her first as he came toward her.
In reflex, she crossed her arms b6ore her face. A dark numbing terror had stopped her mind completely. But when he touched her he was weeping.
THE RED CONVERTIBLE r ra jr (1974) LYMAN LAMAR TINE.
I was the first one to drive a convertible on my reservation. And of course it was red, a red Olds. I owned that car along with my brother Henry junior. We owned it together until his boots filled with water on a windy night and he bought out my share. Now Henry owns the whole car, and his younger brother Lyman (that's myselo, Lyman walks everywhere he goes.
How did I earn enough money to buy my share in the first place? My one talent was I could always make money. I had a touch for it, unusual in a Chippewa. From the first I was different that way, and everyone recognized it. I was the only kid they let in the American Legion Hall to s.h.i.+ne shoes, for example, and one Christmas I sold spiritual bouquets for the mission door to door. The nuns let me keep a percentage. Once I started, it seemed the more money I made the easier the money came.
Everyone encouraged it. When I was fifteen I got a job was.h.i.+ng dishes at the Joliet cafe, and that was where my first big break happened.
it wasn't long before I was promoted to bussing tables, and then the short-order cook quit and I was hired to take her place.
No sooner than you know it I was managing the Joliet. The rest is history. I went on managing. I soon become part owner, and of course there was no stopping me then. It wasn't long before the whole thing was mine.
After I'd owned the Joliet for one year, it blew over in the worst tornado ever seen around here. The whole operation was smashed to bits.
A total loss. The fryalator was up in a tree, the grill torn in half like it was paper. I was only sixteen. I had it all in my mother's name, and I lost it quick, but before I lost it I had every one of my relatives, and their relatives, to dinner, and I also bought that red Olds I mentioned, along with Henry.
The first time we saw it! I'll tell you when we first saw it. We had gotten a ride up to Winnipeg, and both of us had money. Don't ask me why, because we never mentioned a car or anything, we just had all our money. Mine was cash, a big bankroll from the Joliet's insurance.
Henry had two checks-a week's extra pay for being laid off, and his regular check from the jewel Bearing Plant.
We were walking down Portage anyway, seeing the sights, when we saw it.
There it was, parked, large as life. Really as if it was alive.
I thought of the word repose, because the car wasn't simply stopped, parked, or whatever. that car reposed, calm and gleaming, a FOR SALE sign in its left front window. Then, before we had thought it over at all, the car belonged to us and our pockets were empty. We had just enough money for gas back home.
We went places in that car, me and Henry. We took off driving all one whole summer. We started off toward the Little Knife Irow" River and Mandaree in Fort Berthold and then we found our selves down in Wakpala somehow, and then suddenly we were over in Montana on the Rocky Boys, and yet the summer was not even half over.
Some people hang on to details when they travel, but we didn't let them bother us and just lived our everyday lives here to there.
I do remember this one place with willows. I remember I laid under those trees and it was comfortable. So comfortable. The branches bent down all around me like a tent or a stable. And quiet, it was quiet, even though there was a powwow close enough so I could see it going on.
The air was not too still, not too windy either. When the dust rises up and hangs in the air around the dancers like that, I feel good.
Henry was asleep with his arms thrown wide. Later on, he woke up and we started driving again. We were somewhere in Montana, or maybe on the Blood Reserve-it could have been anywhere. Anyway it was where we met the girl.
All her hair was in buns around her ears, that's the first thing I noticed about her. She was posed alongside the road with her arm out, so we stopped. That girl was short, so short her lumber s.h.i.+rt looked comical on her, like a nightgown. She had jeans on and fancy moccasins and she carried a little suitcase.
"Hop on in," says Henry. So she climbs in between us.
"We'll take you home," I says. "Where do you live?"
"Chicken," she says.
"Where the h.e.l.l's that?" I ask her.
"Alaska.
"Okay," says Henry, and we drive.
We got up there and never wanted to leave. The sun doesn't truly set there in summer, and the night is more a soft dusk. You J might doze off, sometimes, but before you know it you're up again, like an animal in nature. You never feel like you have to sleep hard or put away the world. And things would grow up there. One day just dirt or moss, the next day flowers and longa"mow gra.s.s. The girl's name was Susy. Her family really took to us.
They fed us and put us up. We had our own tent to live in by their house, and the kids would be in and out of there all day and night.
They couldn't get over me and Henry being brothers, we looked so different. We told them we knew we had the same mother, anyway.
One night Susy came in to visit us. We sat around in the tent talking of this thing and that. The season was changing. It was getting darker by that time, and the cold was even getting just a little mean. I told her it was time for us to go. She stood up on a chair.
"You never seen my hair," Susy said.
That was true. She was standing on a chair, but still, when she unclipped her buns the hair reached all the way to the ground.
Our eyes opened. You couldn't tell how much hair she had when it was rolled up so neatly. Then my brother Henry did something funny. He went up to the chair and said, "Jump on my shoulders." So she did that, and her hair reached down past his waist, and he started twirling, this way and that, so her hair was flung out from side to side.
"I always wondered what it was like to have long pretty hair," Henry says. Well we laughed. It was a funny sight, the way he did it. The next morning we got up and took leave of those people.
-On to greener pastures, as they say. It was down through Spokane and across Idaho then Montana and very soon we were racing the weather right along under the Canadian border through Columbus, Des Lacs, and then we were in Bottineau County and soon home. We'd made most of the trip, that summer, without putting up the car hood at all. We got home just in time, it turned out, for the army to remember Henry had signed up to join it.
I don't wonder that the army was so glad to get my brother that they turned him into a Marine. He was built like a brick outhouse anyway.