Authors: Caroline Starr Rose
I stay
long enough to study
the patterns on her arms,
close enough
to meet her eyes
with no urge to lower my gaze.
We are not together,
but neither are we apart.
Three times
I have come here.
Three times
we have met.
Something
fascinating, fragile
grows between us.
KIMI | Alis |
Her bird rests | |
in the folds of my skirt. | |
It has called her. | |
It has led me here. | |
I inch my hand forward, | |
let it hover over | |
the inky band about her arm. | |
She reaches near, | |
reminds me how Alawa, | |
entranced with a lizard, | |
longed to grasp | |
his glistening blue tail. | |
I touch the lacy pattern. | |
She presses a finger to my arm, | |
pulls her hand back quickly. | |
Her eyes rush to mine. | |
Did I expect her skin | |
to feel like wood or stone? | |
It is as any person's would be. | |
Suddenly, I smile. | |
I begin to laugh. |
I pass into the settlement unnoticed.
Where there was activity,
now no one is about.
My insides grow cold and heavy.
I am desperate to find my family.
I stumble over abandoned tools,
skirt a basket of laundry and an overturned bench.
Everyone's assembled in the square.
To one side,
bald Mr. Pratt holds George,
who hangs like a marionette
with severed strings.
I push into the crowd.
Several women step back,
their faces covered.
I shove into the center,
where Father,
Mr. Dare,
Governor White,
Mr. Archard
hold the limbs of a man
whose back
is riddled with arrows,
whose head
is smashed in.
“Away, Alis!” Father says.
Tears etch his weathered cheeks.
I stagger out of the circle
past George
now crumpled on the ground,
and retch,
body heaving,
my hands pressed to my knees.
Above the clamor the Governor speaks.
“We found Mr. Howe near the shore,”
his voice breaks,
“as you see him.”
The bones
the arrows
fifteen missing menâ
I retch againâ
Dear Uncle Samuel!
What awful things
happened here
before we came?
What
is
this
place?
Not long after I return,
Wanchese and his men come.
They've slain an Englishman
wandering alone,
hunting crabs with a clumsy weapon.
The English have again been shown
the might of the Roanoke,
they have again been reminded
of the wrong in beheading our weroance,
in unleashing disease and crippling our people.
In the season of the highest sun,
after those that survived Wanchese's fire
broke free and fled,
my people celebrated.
Never again would we face
the betrayal of the English.
Yet here they are
with families,
and Manteo,
who never returned to the Croatoan,
but claimed the English as his own.
None is welcome here.
But there is a girl among them
I would have never known
if they had not come again.
One whose curiosity
reminds me of my sister,
one I long to understand.
The next morning I awake.
My head pounds with remembrance:
the crowd gathered in horror
around Mr. Howe.
Just one week here,
and one of us is dead,
attacked,
while I was with the girl.
He at the shoreline,
we in the woods,
was it luck he was the one
discovered?
Did she know
what was planned?
Out there,
was I in as much danger
as a murdered man?
None of us has done wrong,
yet we fear for our lives.
Mother hands me a crust of bread,
though it's not enough to satisfy.
What little food we have must last
as long as we can make it.
I shuffle to Mr. Viccars's house
to collect young Ambrose.
He clings to my sleeve
as I greet Mrs. Archard at her door.
“Remember,
they're not to dump dirt on their heads,” she says,
her sharp eyes narrowed.
“It won't happen again.”
I doubt Mrs. Archard
has ever had a bit of fun.
All the day
I roll a rag ball,
wipe dripping noses,
keep hands from the fire,
fetch back Tommy
when he wanders too close to the water pail,
teach them what Joan and I used to sing:
Summer is a-coming in
Loudly sing cuckoo
Groweth seed and bloweth mead
and springs the wood anew
Sing cuckoo!
It almost helps me to forget
that just this morning
the Governor and several of his men
sailed to the island Croatoan
in search of answers.
Manteo's mother,
leader of the Croatoan,
will help us, the Governor says.
He'll find the missing soldiers,
bring them back to Roanoke.
I roll the rag ball
for the hundredth time.
How can the Governor be sure of anything?
I leave the children with their mothers.
George carries a bucket of water
across the square.
The skin under his eyes is smudged,
as though last night
withheld from him its rest.
We walk together,
silent.
I don't know how
to speak of yesterday,
but I must say something.
“Which is yours?” I ask,
when we reach the cottages
on the other side.
“We lived there.”
George points to a home
three doors down.
“But I'll be in the barracks now.”
His words
hint at the awful way
his life has changed.
I cannot help myself.
“It's not the same
as losing your father,
but my uncle's missing.”
His eyes shine with tears.
Abruptly he turns from me.
Water sloshes from the pail's edge,
drenching my feet.
Like the water,
this truth washes over me:
Mr. Howe is gone forever.
Perhaps my uncle won't be found.
The men arrive back in the village
when the sun burns low.
Manteo's tribe has promised
to tell the Roanoke we mean no harm.
The Croatoan will invite them
to talk peace with our men
ten days from now.
“To restore the friendship we once had,”
the Governor says.
What sort of friend
slays an innocent man,
I wonder,
but I am comforted to know
something has been done.
“Did you hear of the soldiers?” Father asks.
“Were they with the Croatoan?”
I reach for my bird, remember it is gone.
The Governor shakes his head.
At his sides
Father's hands
curl into fists.
“My mother says they traveled north,” Manteo says.
“Toward Chesapeake?”
“Yes.”
His head's still bare,
and now he wears
a chain of shells about his neckâ
every day more Indian.
“If we could, we'd go to them at once,”
Governor White says.
“But it would take weeks
to move the cargo to the pinnace,
take it north,
trip by trip.
By then,
summer would be too far gone
to plant and harvest.
There'd be no time to build
before cold weather settles in.”
“But is it safe here?” someone asks.
“A man was murdered yesterday.”
“I understand your worry,” the Governor says.
“But we are trying to set things right.
I believe it's best to stay.
We'll be reunited with the missing men next spring,
once we pass the winter here.”
His words cover all of us
assembled in the twilight.
It is the first mention of leaving
since we arrived a week ago,
and though Uncle's whereabouts are unclear,
I will not lose faith.
“To Virginia!” someone shouts,
“to the City of Ralegh!”
and all around
we join
in jubilee.
“How are you sure they're still alive?”
Father's words cut through the celebration.
“There is no certainty,”
the Governor admits,
“but we hold hope close.
We have no other choice.”
“Ferdinando should take us north.”
someone says.
“Ferdinando should take us home!”
another answers.
The Governor's face grows red.
“Do not speak of that man to me!”
He spits the words.
“Do you know why
he agreed to bring us to Virginia?
So that he might plunder
Spanish ships along the way.
Throughout our voyage
he spoke of nothing else.
It took weeks to persuade him
to wait until he'd brought us here.
Such raiding as he hoped for
risked losing our cargo,
perhaps even our lives.
Once our goods are unloaded,
Ferdinando will be gone.”
“Come.”
Father grabs my hand and Mother's.
His tone holds an edge.
When talk turns to the missing men,
how quickly his emotions
bend and shift like heated iron.