Authors: Caroline Starr Rose
The whispers among my people began
the first time the English came.
They grew to angered shouts:
The English have great power,
mightier than we have seen
in the agile deer,
the arrows of our enemies,
the angry hurricane.
Able to blot out the sun.
I run the well-worn path
beyond the stalks of beans and corn,
through the slender poles of the palisade,
past the longhouses
to Wanchese.
“There are women and children!” I say.
I have interrupted Wanchese and his men,
their shoulders baring
four inked arrows,
the marks of my father.
Wanchese shifts,
the copper beads of his necklace
burning in the sun.
“They are no worry to you.
Find your mother.”
I ignore the men's impatient faces.
I should join the women in the fields.
But I remain where I am.â©Wanchese must understand.
“This time they've brought their families.
The English want to stay.”
He springs to his feet.
“Find your mother, Kimi.”
I race toward the fields,
my legs quivering at my boldness
before Wanchese.
Of all the Roanoke,
he knows the customs of the English best.
He lived in their land with Manteo
after the first ones came.
But even he
cannot know everything.
My people,
we have been
small in number,
and the tasks
of weaving mats
and pounding corn
have come to me.
The extra work
does not burden.
I am pleased
to prepare food
if what I do strengthens us.
I am proud
my fingers bleed
if my weaving shows our skill.
I am willing
to work
if labor means
my heart will for an instant
forget Alawa,
my sister,
who should be near me.
Instead
her bones rest
with our ancestors
because of English men.
My mother and my aunts
work side by side,
their backs bent
as they tend the crops.
Like the corn,
a woman
spreads her roots wide,
like the bean,
a woman
settles her roots deep.
The English plans have been made plain:
Women mean they'll stay.
If we hope to rid ourselves of them,
push them from us
once and for all,
we must do it
before their roots take hold.
Saws bite through wood
and hammers pound broken boardsâ
quick work for just our second day onshore.
The settlement buzzes with enterprise
like the streets of London on market day.
A perfect chance for me to steal away.
It is not difficult to climb the wall,
slip through the ditch unseen
to the outside world.
I must touch, hear, taste, breathe
this place that is not London,
so open and free.
Beyond the protection of the village,
the memory of the bones comes,
and I crouch low,
like a dog kicked from its shelter.
How did he die?
Where have the other soldiers gone?
Are we in danger staying here?
My damp hands wring and twist
the fabric of my dress.
Every bush,
tree,
shadowed covering
I study,
until I trust I am alone.
Only then do I
slowly stand,
let myself step
into the beauty
that beckons me.
If Uncle were with me,
we'd wander the forest;
he'd tell me the names of
the creatures we'd see.
For the unknown ones,
he'd invent new words,
speak of their habits,
their patterns,
their breed.
Some stories he'd tell me
would be filled with wondersâ
three-legged horses,
birds with no wings.
I'd solemnly listen,
list hundreds of questions.
Never he'd tire
of teaching me things.
Uncle Samuel,
how I miss you.
I want to see you again.
From my earliest days,
I knew my father as
our wise counselor,
great leader.
But Wingina belonged
to my people,
not to me.
It was Wanchese
who told me stories,
held me when storms raged,
my uncle
more attentive
than any father.
Now
Wingina
is gone.
Wanchese
is weroance.
And I am
no longer
welcomed
to his side.
As I work
in the fields
I think of yesterday:
the English,
the women,
how Wanchese wouldn't listen.
Once I've bathed,
I escape to the woods,
where all is familiar,
where I'll be welcomed always.
I do not expect
to find
her
there.
Hunched over the forest floor,
the girl pulls up flowers,
blind to my approach.
All is fresh here,
undisturbed by the noises of the village.
In these woods
sunlight breaks through branches,
illuminating flowers,
those star-centered beauties.
How Mother would enjoy a bit of brightness!
The stems snap easily as I pick them.
I watch her huddled
like a fawn, unaware of danger.
She's careless in her work;
petals,
leaves
litter her feet.
She's careless in her safety
all alone.
I shift to make my presence known.
So intent am I,
I miss the girl
until she is beside me.
Her eyes fly to me,
grow wide
but do not falter,
though she wears panic on her face.
Her skin too delicate,
like a thin-barked tree;
her body bundled,
thick like a caterpillar.
Motionless
she stands.
Markings spiral up her arms,
snake down below her fringed skirtâ
the only clothing she wearsâ
like fine embroidery stitched into skin.
Copper flashes at her earlobes,
a rope of pearls encircles her neck.
Short hair covers her forehead,
the rest gathered behind.
She studies me.
Her gaze never wavers.
What if there are
others hiding, waiting
like that shadow in the woods?
A cry escapes my lips.
I turn and flee.
Something happens
before she runs,
bearlike,
back to her people.
Something falls from her clothing,
this little wooden bird,
a nestling, resting
in my cupped palm.
Yesterday,
I stayed hidden, watched
the girl and her mother.
Today,
I wanted her to see me.
I caught her unaware,
exposed her fear,
showed my courage,
the power of the Roanoke.
The earth, the skies, the seas
swirl with montoac,
the power that both
shelters life and destroys.
I grasp
a piece of her strength
in my hand.
I am safe now,
yet my mind buzzes
with memories of the silent girl:
the inked marks covering her limbs,
jewelry worn on her bare chest.
I reach for Uncle's bird,
a bit of comfort.
But it's no longer in my pocket.
Not near my feet,
nor along the village path.
I twist my apron in my fist.
It is nowhere.
My bird.
It was all I had of Samuel.
The sun slants through our window
as Mother and I lay the table.
Mother's movements are slower now.
Soon our little one will come.
But even thoughts of the baby
do not excite me.
“Alis, what ails you?” Mother asks.
How can I speak,
knowing Uncle's token is missing,
remembering the savage girl?
“I'm weary,” I say,
hoping she'll not inquire further.
“Then it's early to bed for you,” she says.
Above me as I walk,
two iacháwanes flutter,
their blue wings flashing
in the evening sun.
They scold and bicker
as they dip and swirl,
light on a branch,
bob like leaves racing down a river.
How happy they are,
their round white bellies
satisfied with berries,
their heads cocked
to catch each sound.
Then
with joy,
they take wing,
travel on their way.
Such gladness they share.
I've known nothing like it
since Alawa
was beside me.
After breakfast,
Mother opens our shutters
to the morning.
Mrs. Dare sweeps dust
from her open door.
“Elyoner,” Mother calls.
Mrs. Dare stops her broom and steps outside,
shields her eyes from the brightness.
“I meant to tell you sooner.
My Alis is twelve, old enough
to mind your little one as well as mine.”
I thump the mixing bowl
firmly on the table,
scowl at her back,
but Mother doesn't turn.
Our third day in Virginia,
and I'm already a nursemaid.
“I've told Mrs. Viccars and Mrs. Archard the same.
As they organize provisions
once they're brought ashore,
Alis can watch the boys.
Practice for our babies,” she says.
I hear the smile she surely wears.
Those two creatures
I couldn't escape on our voyage here?
All they do is tug at things they shouldn't,
make messes where they don't belong.
“It will be easier for us
to cook for all the men,”
she tells Mrs. Dare.
“We'll be freer
to tend the laundry.”
“Mother,” I say,
“I need some air,”
and skip outside
before she can stop me.
If I'm to play nursemaid,
I won't begin this morning.