The Sioux and
the Chippewa Indians didn't get along. In the mid-1700s, many Sioux migrated
westward across the Missouri River to get away from their enemies. The Teton
Sioux, the largest branch of the Sioux nation and Billy's people, went the
farthest west to the Black Hills region of western South Dakota where they
followed the great buffalo herds, living in tepees scattered across the Great
Plains and smoking long-stemmed peace pipes.
The history
fascinated Billy and he couldn't fill his head enough. He read everything he
could find on the culture and traditions of his people and the land they
occupied. With help from his uncles and cousins on the reservation, he learned
more than he ever could from reading, though, and was able to experience it first
hand, or at least some of it . . . like the ceremony his uncle invited him to.
In the room it
was dark. The bitter cold from outside seeped through the cracks around the
walls where the dirt once invaded, unnoticed. Kathy couldn't remember when she
had ever been in such absolute darkness, not even able to see her hands in
front of her face.
The medicine man
chanted in his Lakota tongue while the drummer drummed a deep, mysterious beat
that pushed hard, but tender, against her chest. Spirits entered the dark room,
becoming a part of the ceremony that Billy had been lucky enough to be invited
to. He told Kathy that she should feel honored to attend with him, since few
whites are ever invited.
Kathy didn't
know what she felt. She wasn't even sure what to think of the lights when they
danced across the ceiling, snapping and glistening like fireflies. She thought
of the fireflies she saw late at night as a kid. They scared her then.
While the
spirits visited and the drummer drummed, a lizard smaller than her hand rested
on her wide ankle. She could feel it settle between her socks and her pant leg,
and when the lights on the ceiling flashed . . . the lights of the spirits who
had come to visit . . . she could briefly see the lizard's shiny eyes, like
tiny stars on a black night. She wondered what it was doing out in such cold
weather. Everything in the ceremony seemed surreal though.
When the ritual
was over and the drummer was quiet, the medicine man still sat in the center of
the room surrounded by his sage, pipe and gifts . . . presents from those who
sat around the inside wall of the empty basement. A jug of water was passed
around; it tasted cool and fresh like river water. Kathy drank some and passed
it on to Billy, wishing that once they were outside, he would explain this
complex ceremony to her, but knowing that he probably didn't understand much
more than she did.
When they first
arrived in South Dakota, a blanket of new snow covered the Great Plains area.
Air was still and thick with the smell of sage and earth, and land stretched
out tight like a rubber band, making its way to surrounding hills. The beauty
of the land astounded Kathy. Although it was bare and insignificant in every
way, there was no mistaking the beauty of the landscape. She knew right away
why Billy wanted to be here.
Billy drove
cautiously in his pickup, knowing that the bald tires wouldn't grip a road half
covered with slush. When they got closer to the town where his relatives lived,
he took back roads to show Kathy all the small houses that were otherwise
hidden.
"People
here don't have anything fancy," Billy said when he saw the look of
sadness on her face. The puny houses sat back off the road, some missed windows
and others missed doors. Graveyards of
cars and trucks decorated yards like garden sculptures.
"Indian
landscaping," Billy said, followed by laughter.
Driving slowly,
Billy tried his best to recognize his cousin's house, a tiny shack that sat
alone like a forgotten stick of wood. He could see now that there were many
forgotten sticks of wood tucked away here and there.
The last time
Billy visited the reservation, it was summer and the heat was relentless on the
tired little houses, parching the land and houses, sucking moisture from
everything, including him. He spent a lot of time that summer in the hills,
hunting fossils and drinking beer.
Sometimes the mixture of beer and sun fried his brain so much he could
barely remember getting back to the little house. Now all the houses looked the
same to him, partially covered with snow and partially falling down.
Billy pulled
over and stopped when he saw an old woman outside her house sweeping a thin
layer of snow from the dirt porch. Her body was short and round like a bowling
pin, and the red sweater that was buttoned across her middle threatened to
rupture any moment. Billy pushed open
his door and jumped out.
"Excuse me,
ma'am. I'm lost, looking for my cousin, thought you might know him. His name's
David Yellow Feather, but they call him Doc." Kathy moved her face closer
to the steering wheel so she could hear what was going on.
The woman quit
sweeping when she heard the name Doc. She looked up, squinting at this young
man who was standing in her yard. A smile crept across her face uncovering a
mouthful of missing teeth. She waddled across