Authors: Caroline Starr Rose
This truth is inescapable:
living here brings danger.
I imagine meeting Kimi
in a place we mustn't hide.
It never was expected
we'd remain on Roanoke.
If we had never journeyed here,
how much my life would lack.
We are impoverished,
desperate.
I'm most myself
when with her.
How might I find peace
when two worlds war inside?
How many days
since George saw
the two of us together?
Perhaps a week or more.
It is hard to remember,
too painful to think upon.
Even inside the cottage
The heat has relented a mite,
the morning air does not press down
like such a heavy weight.
Summer's end draws near.
Outside,
The men drag trunks,
roll barrels through the village
to the pinnace at the shore.
It happens so suddenly,
the shouts that pound like thunder,
pulling all to the square.
From the window
I see Father,
unsteady on his feet,
lunging
at
Manteo.
I forget my vow to stay inside,
race to see what happens.
Mr. Pratt
and Old Lump-and-Bump
try to restrain Father,
but they're no match for his fury.
“Speak!” he yells to Manteo,
“of the attack you've planned
with the Roanoke!”
“I can tell you.”
George smiles.
Never have I seen him more satisfied.
“Manteo meets in the forest
with them.”
Father's neck is mottled red.
“There is no reason for this boy to lie!”
“I've planned no attack,” Manteo says.
But others badger from the crowd,
call for Manteo's arrest.
“You refuse to help us load the pinnace,
insist we stay though Howe and Dare are dead.
You want to fight with the Roanoke against us,
rid Virginia of all Englishmen.”
“Am I not an Englishman?” Manteo says.
“Your hair.
These beads about your neck.”
Father yanks the strand.
Shells spill to the ground.
“No Englishman dresses this way.”
Manteo's teeth are clenched
though his words are clear.
“Do you not realize
how much I've lost in joining you?
Some here do not trust me.
My own people
do not understand.
But they have not seen what I have,
our queen,
Elizabeth,
the great weroansqua,
whose power reaches across the seas.
I can be Croatoan,
and speak for my people.
I can be an Englishman,
and serve my queen.”
“Liar!”
Mrs. Dare shouts,
“Spy!”
It is George who yells the loudest,
his features a grotesque mask of hate.
The tumult grows,
explodes into a frenzied chorus.
I set my feet wide
to keep from being shoved about.
Mother finds me,
Samuel's cries reaching hysteria.
She pleads with me to follow,
but I pretend I can't hear her.
Mr. Pratt and Lump-and-Bump
have tied Manteo's hands behind him.
His head dips forward
like a broken reed.
I try to piece together
what George might have seen,
if what he said is true.
George would gain satisfaction
in finding reason to attack.
At Father's command,
the men lead Manteo to the jail.
How quickly Father's found his place again.
“Alis!” Mother calls,
but still I will not go to her
nor Father,
who has sparked unrest,
encouraged an angry boy
to speak against Manteo,
the one our Governor
appointed as our leader,
the one our Governor
called friend.
I return to our cottage,
close all the shutters
to escape the chaos outside.
“I called for you,” Mother says.
I do not answer.
“Father's looking for the Howe boy.
Have you seen him?”
George is not my worry.
I care for nothing that happens
in this village anymore.
Mother finds a piece of bread,
serves me a modest portion.
My hunger awakens.
I've had nothing since breakfast.
I do not ask of Father,
simply reach for Samuel,
let his steady breathing
draw me to sleep.
It is Mother who awakens me
in the mid-afternoon.
“Please take this to your father.
He's had no food since morning.”
Within me,
anger's fire has diminished,
leaving sorrow's blackened ash.
I hold the bread she offers,
kiss the top of Samuel's head.
The sun escapes the clouds
that have held it fast.
There is change in the English camp,
the way they move about
like the sparrows that flock
just to flee
the harvest season.
The sun journeys farther
across the great expanse.
The English boy
whose hair curls at his forehead,
like strips of peeled river birch bark,
from behind a tree
I see him approach,
put down his weapon.
In watching Alis
I've come to understand
the English coverings
are for more than warmth and protection.
Maybe the boy has never seen
a woman dressed as I am.
I cross my arms before me
for his comfort.
“I've come to speak of Alis.”
Hope soars
when I hear her name.
“We know of your secret meetings.”
He hesitates for a moment.
“Don't expect her again.”
What has happened
that she hasn't come?
“She is in trouble.”
His eyes meet mine.
In a flash he lowers his gaze.
“I have caused her trouble.”
I hold my fist to my chest.
“Alis.”
Before this English boy
I claim her.
“There is something else,” he whispers,
his features sharp with pain.
“I am sorry.”
He covers his face.
“I am sorry!”
He rushes away.
There is one whose needs
might have been forgotten
in the chaos of the day.
I cross the threshold,
hold the bread in my outstretched hand.
“For Manteo.”
My voice echoes off the walls.
Mr. Pratt wipes his bald head with a rag,
follows me with wary eyes.
“My mother sent me with this,” I say,
for what is one more lie?
Mr. Pratt takes the bread,
pushes it through the iron bars.
Manteo lifts his head.
“Thank you, Alis.”
This man
saw no wrong
in my befriending Kimi,
this one
who lives
in the in-betweenâ
not of one world
or the other.
“You and your friend.
I made sure you
were always safe."
“Thank you,” I whisper,
trust he feels the gratitude
these simple words convey.
Mr. Pratt crosses his arms.
“You've done what you came to do.”
It's clear he wants me gone.
But there's one thing I must know.
I lean in close,
rest my forehead on cool metal.
“Why did you let me go to her?"
His long black hair,
pearls in his ears,
all is familiar now.
Manteo smiles faintly.
“Never would I alter
what is right."
The boy looked
for me.
I linger until all have eaten.
The fire pops,
sends up sparks
that are swallowed
before they reach the sky.
The boy came
to speak of Alis.
“Uncle.”
The name binds us.
He cannot turn
his brother's child away.
“Kimi,” Mother scolds.
“Leave our weroance alone.”
I will not listen.
The boy took
great risk in coming.
“Uncle.”
I lift my chin,
launch the word like an arrow.
“Go.”
He cannot
refuse me
now.
Wanchese's jaw tightens as he studies me.
I reach for my pearls,
now gone.
“They were our friends once,” I say.
“The English?
Why do you
speak of them again?”
His words warn
not to push further,
but I do not heed them.
“I want to know
why things changed.”
“You come to me
as though you have permission.
You forget I am weroance.”
“You are Uncle.”
This has never changed.
Wanchese sighs,
he thinks I haven't learned my place.
But I know exactly where I belong.
Here. Near him.
and with my dear friend, Alis.
“They only give false friendship,”
Wanchese says.
“If Wingina had listened
he would still be with us.
It was too late
when he saw as I did.
The path to his death
had already begun.”
He leans closer.
His necklace flashes
in the firelight.
“Never forget
the English
killed your father.”
I cannot help but say it.
“Not all of them
must be our enemies.”
He gazes at the fire, silent.
It is only when I'm sure he's finished
that he speaks again.
“Have you gone to the English?”
“Uncle?”
“Have you spoken with them?”
How I want to tell of Alis,
that she's the friend I need.
That even if she's abandoned me,
I will never leave her.
But this truth is forbidden.
“Wanchese.”
Nuna's father calls him.
“Chogan is missing.”
My uncle stands to go,
but first turns back to me.
“Have you betrayed my trust?”
I cannot answer.
Behind us, I hear whispers.
It is Mother, her sisters.
Wanchese's eyes are cold, unfeeling.
“Do not be reckless.
This is not a game.”