Charity (29 page)

Read Charity Online

Authors: Paulette Callen

Gustie’s heart was racing.

“Some winters after Warrior Heart Woman passed on there was a young man among us who liked to wear the women’s clothing. A
winkda
, he was—a two-spirit person in the body of a man.”

“Was she, Warrior Heart Woman, a
winkda?”

“No. The two-spirit person in the body of a woman is
koskalaka.
My people were glad because they had someone among them touched by Wahkon Tonkah, someone to give the secret names to the children. It was a good thing to have a
koskalaka
or
winkda
. He had a brave heart. He could ride and hunt and do all things properly. He danced to the sun, sacrificing for his people three times. But then the missionaries came. They shamed him and made him wear clothes like the other men. And he sickened in his heart and died. After that we had no one blessed by Wahkon Tonkah with the two spirits, the spirit of the man and the woman in one person. The wasichu consider this a very bad thing. I do not know why.” Dorcas shrugged her shoulders sadly. “I saw what happened to that
winkda
boy, and I was afraid for Jordis. For I knew she had two spirits, and my heart fell down because her life would not be one of honor, but one of sadness and loneliness. My little wounded bird rode these hills like a ghost until you came.

“In your sickness, you talked of the woman who died. I was sorry for you. But I believe you were brought here by Wahkon Tonkah. It does not matter if you believe this. You are here. That is plenty. I knew that you, too, are
koskalaka
, a two-spirit person, and that you had been guided here for my wounded child. I was glad. I could join my mothers and grandmothers with a good heart, knowing my little wounded bird would fly. Even our own people—some have forgotten that the two-spirit people are gifted ones from Wahkon Tonkah. Should be treated with respect. Now you two must take care of each other. It will be very hard, I think. But you are strong, and she...” Dorcas treated Gustie to one of her rare and brilliant smiles, “...is stubborn.”

Gustie’s heart was singing with the knowledge that there had been others, like her, and that they had had a name—the
koskalaka
, the
winkda
, the two-spirit people. They had been respected and honored. She felt like she could do anything, be anything, soar as high as a skylark.

Maybe Dorcas was right after all. How
had
she come here? She had begun with an empty and fearful heart and a soul that sat darkly like a lamp without oil in a big house with thick carpets, chandeliers, staircases, and many fine things she could no longer even remember...she had turned her back on them all for her strange love. And then, her heart, after being utterly broken, was mended and whole once more. She had discovered a new way of being that had nothing to do with doing or having. Gustie was not a religious person, but she felt touched by a Mystery that quickened her pulse like the dancers’ drum, that gleamed in the old woman’s eyes, and throbbed in the air of the tiny cabin.

“Why didn’t you leave me on that cold pile of earth to die? You couldn’t have known then—”

Dorcas interrupted her. “I wanted lots of new stuff. New chair, I got. New bed, I got. See? Pretty good deal. Now I can throw you to the fish. I am tired, Granddaughter. I want to have a little sleep. Go away now. You—” she nodded again toward the outside where Jordis waited, “have many plans to make.”

“Yes, Grandmother.” The words came easily out of her mouth. She took her coat, kissed Dorcas on the cheek, and left the cabin.

Gustie’s heart was full. Dorcas had called her ‘Granddaughter.’ She told Jordis all the things Dorcas had said.

“She is not my real grandmother, you know. We are not blood relations. I call her Grandmother as an endearment, and out of respect because she has been a grandmother to me. I never knew her before she came to the mission to take care of me. You have been adopted by her as much as I have been.”

Moon and Biddie were standing ready, Biddie saddled, Moon in her winter blanket. “Let’s ride,” suggested Jordis. They mounted their horses and strolled them up away from the cabin. They could see the road winding from Crow Kills toward Wheat Lake. A horse galloped toward them stirring up the dry snow.

Gustie recognized the rider. “It’s Lena!”

Lena was going so fast she rode past them and had to rein her horse in and turn around. “Gustie! I’ve got to go back to Charity! Now!”

“What for?”

“I’ve got to see the ice house!”

“What’s in the ice house?”

“I don’t know. But I’ve got to see for myself.”

“Why?”

“Ella said that Tori was here to visit them. He...”

Lena started to cry. Jordis and Gustie dismounted and helped Lena down.

“It’s all my fault. I should have...”

Lena was crying hard, unable to get out full sentences. Gustie kept an arm around her until the spasm of grief passed.

“I’m sorry.” Lena said, reaching into her coat pocket for a handkerchief. She blew her nose loudly. Over the top of her hankie, she cast a watery look at Jordis.

Gustie had forgotten that the two had never met. “This is my friend Jordis. Jordis, this is Lena Kaiser.”

Jordis only nodded. Her eyes narrowed.

“How do you do?” said Lena, as polite as she could be with her streaming eyes and runny nose.

“Well, I was talking to Ella this morning...” Lena blew her nose again. “...and she said when Tori was here he was saying...” Lena wailed, “I didn’t even know Tori had been here. After Pa’s funeral I just got so wrapped up in things, with Will and all, I didn’t even think about Tori. I didn’t think about him not being to see us or anything. But he came all the way here, and he told Ella and Ragna that as soon as Will’s trial was over he was going to be able to get it all fixed up. And they asked him what it was he needed to fix up, and he said he couldn’t say now while I had so much on my mind, because he’d made a promise, but when it was all over, then he could come and talk to me and put it straight. They tried to get him to tell what it was, but he said he’d made a promise. He was such a child that way. He wouldn’t say anything more. But when they asked him to go to the ice house he started to cry, and he said he couldn’t go to the ice house again. Not till he talked to me. They didn’t understand it at all. He was just a dummy to them, you see. They let it drop because they just thought it was some dumb thing. And when he died, they didn’t think of it then either. They never paid any attention to him. But I always knew that he had a kind of...oh...I don’t know. Things made their own kind of sense to Tori. You just had to try to see it his way. If you could see a thing the way he saw it—simple—things he said would make sense. I could do that, you see, and that’s why he came to me with everything. I never laughed at him. He told me everything that was bothering him. So that’s why I knew that when he said he couldn’t go into the ice house, he didn’t mean their ice house...well he did...but he got it mixed up in his head. He was thinking of them as the same ice house.”

Gustie shook her head. “Lena, I don’t understand you. What was in your sister’s ice house?”

“Nothing! Nothing was in
her
ice house. It was in Pa’s ice house. When he came out of Pa’s ice house the day of the funeral, he was sick. Something must have happened to him in there. I don’t know. But I never paid attention. I never asked him.” Lena started to cry again. “But I’ve got to go back and look in there. Right now. Can you go with me, Gustie? I don’t have anyone else. Will is a mess. Please?”

Gustie and Jordis exchanged a long look. Then Gustie nodded, “We will go with you.”

The cold snapped. No cloud broke the way of ascension from earth to sky-high infinity. No breeze disturbed the powdery ground cover of snow on this bright day as three women rode out from Crow Kills. They rode the straight road, abreast, sun on their faces. Only hooves disturbed the snow beneath them as their horses took the distance between Crow Kills and Charity in a ground-eating lope. An unlikely trio these three, with little in common but the rhythm of their horses moving in sync, and the sudden, unexpected tendrils of love and friendship.

Gustie had never seen Lena on a horse before, but she was obviously at home there. “Oh, Pa put me on a horse before I could walk,” Lena said. Gustie surprised herself, as well, by her ease on Biddie’s back. Her months of practice had been well spent. Jordis rode, as always, like she and her horse were one.

 

We ride

my love and I

and my love’s friend who is now my friend

who, were it not for Gustie, would not allow herself at my side, but now her red-brown horse moves abreast of the Moon and the Black

the magnificent black of my love’s riding. We are like the moon, the night, and the red earth flying.

It is a fine thing to ride a straight road with friends.

“Now, why in Sam Hill would anybody lock an ice house?” Lena rattled the ice house door in frustration. “Where there’s a lock, there’s a key,” she asserted and stalked through the back door of Ma’s house. On the walls of the shanty were several tiny nails all bare. Then Gustie followed Lena next door into the back of Julia’s house while Jordis stood, rather uncomfortably, where she had dismounted from Moon. To her right were the two Kaiser houses, Gertrude’s and Julia’s; to her left, a barren spot where the big barn had recently been torn down, the ice house, and beyond that, and directly behind the house that was Julia’s, a small barn. A light dusting of snow covered everything. Since last night, at least, no one had been back here to disturb it, except for clear tracks to Julia’s barn where a team of horses had been taken out that morning. Gustie and Lena came out of Julia’s back door. Lena had a key in her hand.

When Lena slid the key into the padlock on the ice house door, it snapped open. “Hmmp,” she grunted in satisfaction.

Jordis wondered what the point was of locking a door if the key was so easily found.

“Where is everybody?” Gustie asked.

“It’s Sunday,” was all Lena said, and Gustie remembered that, except for Will, the Kaisers were a church-going family.

The door to the ice house was proportioned large, like a barn door, so that when it was open two people could pass through with a block of ice carried between them and the inside would be illuminated; there were no windows.

Lena, Gustie and Jordis stood together in the doorway, then they moved to the side to let in more light. “Good grief, what’s all this?” Lena asked. She went inside.

In the middle of the ice house was a rocking chair. Piles of straw had been pitched all over, covering the ice blocks and packed into the empty places, and everywhere, candle drippings spattered the ice and straw.

“This is sure peculiar.” Lena fingered a small hard mound of wax on the nearest straw pile. “But I don’t see anything in here that would make Tori sick. I was looking for blood or something, you know.”

Gustie and Jordis stepped inside. Both women were taller than Lena and had to stoop slightly to keep from bumping their heads on the roof. Jordis asked, “Is there always so much straw in here?”

“Well, I suppose as they take the ice out, they bring in more straw to insulate what’s left. I don’t know. It’s a good place to store it, now they tore Ma’s barn down. Julia’s barn is small.”

Gustie felt, rather than heard a low humming, like distant earth-bound thunder. She was overcome with dread, cold, and felt herself suffocating.
Oh no! Please, no!
The avalanche of earth was pouring down upon her again, crushing her. It had never come upon her wide awake. She was not dreaming now.
What is this?
Her sight dimmed. She thought she was going down, though she did not feel the impact of the ground.
I’m dying. Now.
She almost gave in to it. Then...
Clare...Jordis! Help me!
She did not know if she said it or thought it.

Jordis had moved farther into the ice house and begun to examine the piles of straw. She stirred the straw up with her hands but in places it was packed too hard. She was looking around for a pitchfork when she heard her name and an eerie little cry for help. She whirled and saw that Gustie had collapsed and was choking for air.

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