Authors: Caroline Starr Rose
My pace has slowed,
but my heart still races.
Manteo knows I was with Kimi.
Will he tell what he has seen?
Near the shed,
Father stands with George,
whom he now trains.
“We must stay safe,” Father's saying,
“leave before the spring.”
I cannot pass unnoticed.
“What are you doing?” Father asks.
“Fetching water,” I say,
hoping the words sound true.
“Where is your bucket?
And why are you so filthy?”
Digging at the wall
has left my hands
smeared with mud.
George studies me knowingly.
“Truly, Alis,
where is your sense?”
I have no answer,
just hasten my steps,
for I must wash,
refresh our pail
before Father arrives home.
All morning,
all afternoon,
the women bustle about
to make Mrs. Dare comfortable.
I wait near the doorway so as not to be a nuisance.
They bump me,
step around
Tommy and Ambrose playing at my feet,
until Mrs. Archard tells me sharply
to take the children from the cottage.
I skip from the doorway,
the boys' hands in mine.
Mrs. Dare's child
means my duties with these little ones
will end after today.
A baby sleeps,
cries for milk,
retires to the cradle.
My work won't be so taxing.
Perhaps, there will be time
to go to Kimi.
But I think
of George's certainty
the Indians wait to strike,
how Father talks
of leaving before spring.
Since our return
the men
have danced each
evening,
have crafted arrows
at the fireside,
told stories
of victories past.
In this way
they prepare
for attack.
Wanchese says
the English are cruel,
hasty, undisciplined,
slaughtering all before them,
while we
wait for the perfect moment.
We fight
with precision.
I fear for what
this means
for Alis.
We
were able to go
to our mainland village.
But there is nowhere
she
can run.
Mother's scream rips me from my sleep.
“Fetch Mrs. Archard,” Father says,
before he even lights a candle.
I fly to the Archard home,
bang at the door.
A slit of light grows as it opens.
“The baby!” I shout.
So long I've waited,
it is impossible to believe
today I'll truly be a sister.
Behind me,
Mrs. Archard marches,
pushes past me at our threshold,
snatches the candle from Father's hand.
Mother leans against her pillows,
tells me to leave with Father.
Through the darkness,
birds trill their morning songs,
and Father ushers me to his work shed,
where we sit by the fire,
enjoy the luxury of a bit of tea.
“I was almost a man
when my brother was born.
But when you came,
your uncle Samuel was a boy,
and he stayed forever by your side.”
It warms me to think
I might be to our baby
as Uncle was to me.
Hours later,
Mrs. Archard finds us
beside the glowing coals,
her face as stern as always.
“You have a son,” she says.
He is pure sweetness,
soft as dough left to rise
by the fire,
swaddled in a blanket
and in his cradle laid.
He is all sighing,
squeaking,
blinking,
a marvelous creation,
my precious brother, Samuel,
tiny babe.
Mother,
I feel
the emptiness you carry
every time you pull me close,
the ache that speaks of your missing one,
Alawa,
the longing to touch her again.
I should attend to you
as two daughters would,
yet so swiftly I deceive you
to meet my friend.
As Mrs. Dare and baby Virginia have done,
Mother and Samuel must both rest,
and since I've had a bit of bread
and Father works at the forge,
I kiss the baby's head,
encourage Mother to sleep.
I watch until their eyes flutter closed,
escape outside into the sun
to breathe deep the salty breeze.
From post to post I wander,
hoping to find a guard who's missing,
distracted from his work.
At the station near the garden,
I see Manteo within.
Our eyes meet.
He inclines his head toward the wall,
turns his back to me.
He gives me permission
to cross over?
He said it was dangerous
for me to be alone.
Out there
where a man could wait,
his arrow aimed to strike,
out there
where Kimi waits for me.
Does he signal
because he knows the way is clear?
In haste I go,
before I can change my mind,
before anyone might see.
How she talks,
her blue eyes dancing,
holds her arms as though
cradling something dear.
A baby?
My memory revives.
Her mother was with child
when they first came.
What a gift this little one will be.
It's always here we meet.
So much Alis hasn't seen.
“Come.”
I grab her hand,
pull her with me.
We run
past thick-limbed oaks,
the beech and ash and maple trees.
I show her maquowoc
hanging from his tail,
the earth below, his sky above,
the sweet goodness of the strawberry,
at the shore,
digging down,
how cool the sand can be.
Eyes closed,
Alis smiles,
her toes burrowed deep.
Alis | KIMI |
What a world, | |
this place | |
Kimi's opened to me. | |
We sit together, | |
content with silence, | |
satisfied | |
in knowing the other's near. |
The breeze turns menacing,
treetops bend,
creak like our ship tossed on the waves
those months at sea.
That evening,
Mother serves a watery pottage
while I hold sweet Samuel to my shoulder,
kiss him when the cottage shudders
with the lashing wind and rain.
Father does not eat.
“What is it, Dyonis?” Mother says.
She takes his hand in hers.
“The Governor's assistants have talked.
We've asked him to leave with Ferdinando
once all our goods are onshore.”
I cannot believe what Father is saying.
Governor White must go
With our mutinous pilot?
The man who's anchored here
for these five weeks,
who's been no help
removing our possessions?
Who's offered us no shelter
in the midst of our enemies?
The words spill from me.
“You want the Governor to desert us.”
Samuel's face reddens.
He opens his mouth to howl.
Mother takes him from me,
gathers him in her arms.
“If he doesn't go to England,
how will Sir Ralegh learn
what's happened?” Father says.
No good has happened here,
but to have our leader go,
to believe he mustâ
My insides knot;
I can't imagine eating
this scant meal.
Outside the wind screams,
echoing the eerie songs
of the Roanoke.
“The Governor said no.
He's worried it will seem
he's abandoned us.”
Father pounds his fist on the table.
The bread plate clatters.
“What does it matter how things appear?
Would he have us die
to keep his reputation?
Ferdinando wouldn't bother telling
we're at Roanoke
and not Chesapeake.
The Governor must be the one
to ensure the supply ships find us.
We'll have to bribe the pilot
to take Governor White at all.”
“Dyonis,” Mother says,
her voice high,
light like a melody,
“Remember Alis.”
“Mother, I've seen everything you have!”
I think of Kimi.
I've seen more
than Mother knows.
“And what of that savage man?” Mother asks.
“Does he stay or go?”
“He stays as Lord of Roanoke Island,
as our connection to the Indians
and the Queen's representative.”
Mother stands
abruptly,
snatches away
the bread plate.
“I do not trust him,” she says.
All night,
our home is cuffed by violent winds
and waves of rain,
a hurricane.
This settlement will fly apart,
will be ripped like weeds,
until each board is stripped away.
This village is as fragile as an egg
unprotected in its nest.
I pray
for peace
and silence,
for just an hour of rest.
The lashing winds
strip the bark from our longhouses.
The second-planting corn bends its head,
weeping for the harvest
that will never come.
But we are safe
here in our village.
This is enough.
Wanchese says the English
know nothing of the hurricane's might,
and his men pound their heels on the earth,
raise their gourd rattles,
sing for their destruction.