The Game of Silence
By Louise Erdrich
Trophy
ISBN: 0-06-441029-3
Chapter One
The Raggedy Ones
When they were close enough to touch bottom with their paddles, the people
poured out of the nearly swamped canoes. The grown-ups held little ones
and the little ones held even smaller ones. There were so many people
jammed into each boat that it was a wonder they had made it across. The
grown-ups, the ones who wore clothes, bunched around the young. A murmur
of pity started among the people who had gathered on shore when they heard
Omakayas's shout, for the children had no clothing at all, they were
naked. In a bony, hungry, anxious group, the people from the boats waded
ashore. They looked at the ground, fearfully and in shame. They were like
skinny herons with long poles for legs and clothes like drooping feathers.
Only their leader, a tall old man wearing a turban of worn cloth, walked
with a proud step and held his head up as a leader should. He stood
calmly, waiting for his people to assemble. When everyone was ashore and a
crowd was gathered expectantly, he raised his thin hand and commanded
silence with his eyes.
Everyone's attention was directed to him as he spoke.
"Brothers and sisters, we are glad to see you! Daga, please open your
hearts to us! We have come from far away."
He hardly needed to urge kindness. Immediately, families greeted cousins,
old friends, lost relatives, those they hadn't seen in years. Fishtail, a
close friend of Omakayas's father, clasped the old chief in his arms. The
dignified chief's name was Miskobines, Red Thunder, and he was Fishtail's
uncle. Blankets were soon draping bare shoulders, and the pitiful naked
children were covered, too, with all of the extra clothing that the people
could find. Food was thrust into the hungry people's hands-strips of dried
fish and bannock bread, maple sugar and fresh boiled meat. The raggedy
visitors tried to contain their hunger, but most fell upon the food and
ate wolfishly. One by one, family by family, the poor ones were taken to
people's homes. In no time, the jeemaanan were pulled far up on the beach
and the men were examining the frayed seams and fragile, torn stitching of
spruce that held the birchbark to the cedar frames. Omakayas saw her
grandmother, her sister, and her mother, each leading a child. Her
mother's eyes were wide-set and staring with anger, and she muttered
explosive words underneath her breath. That was only her way of showing
how deeply she was affected; still, Omakayas steered clear. Her brother,
Pinch, was followed by a tall skinny boy hastily wrapped in a blanket. He
was the son of the leader, Miskobines, and he was clearly struggling to
look dignified. The boy looked back in exhaustion, as if wishing for a
place to sit and rest. But seeing Omakayas, he flushed angrily and
mustered strength to stagger on ahead. Omakayas turned her attention to a
woman who trailed them all. One child clutched her ragged skirt. She
carried another terribly thin child on a hip. In the other arm she
clutched a baby. The tiny bundle in her arms made no movement and seemed
limp, too weak to cry.
The memory of her poor baby brother, Neewo, shortened Omakayas's breath.
She jumped after the two, leaving the intrigue of the story of their
arrival for later, as well as the angry boy's troubling gaze. Eagerly, she
approached the woman and asked if she could carry the baby.
The woman handed over the little bundle with a tired sigh. She was so poor
that she did not have a cradle board for the baby, or a warm skin bag
lined with rabbit fur and moss, or even a trade blanket or piece of cloth
from the trader's store. For a covering, she had only a tiny piece of
deerskin wrapped into a rough bag. Even Omakayas's dolls had better
clothing and better care. Omakayas cuddled the small thing close. The baby
inside the bag was bare and smelled like he needed a change of the cattail
fluff that served as his diaper. Omakayas didn't mind. She carried the
baby boy with a need and happiness that the woman, so relieved to hand the
baby over, could not have guessed at. Having lost her own brother,
Omakayas took comfort in this baby's tiny weight and light breath. She
would protect him, she promised as they walked. She would keep him company
and give him all the love she had stored up but could no longer give to
her little brother Neewo.
The baby peered watchfully into her eyes. Though tiny and helpless, he
seemed determined to live. With a sigh he rooted for milk, for something,
anything. Anxiously, Omakayas hurried toward the camp.
The angry boy with the long stick legs and frowning face sat next to Pinch
by the fire. He glared up when Omakayas entered the clearing, but then his
whole attention returned to the bowl of stew in his hands. He stared into
it, tense as an animal. He tried without success to keep from gulping the
stew too fast. His hands shook so hard that he nearly dropped the bowl at
one point, but with a furious groan he righted himself and attained a
forced calm. Straining to control his hunger, he lifted the bowl to his
lips and took a normal portion of meat between his teeth. Chewed. Closed
his eyes. When Omakayas saw from beneath one half-shut eyelid the gleam of
desperation, she looked away. Not fast enough.
"What are you staring at?" the boy growled.
"Nothing."
"Don't even bother with her," said Pinch, delighted to sense an ally with
whom he might be able to torment his sister. "She's always staring at
people. She's a homely owl!"
"Weweni gagigidoon," said Angeline, throwing an acorn that hit Pinch
square on the forehead. She told her brother to speak with care, then
commanded him, "Booni'aa, leave her alone!"
(Continues...)
Excerpted from The Game of Silence
by Louise Erdrich Excerpted by permission.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.