August 24, 2017, middayAlex WhiteElk had thought he'd known rage, but it wasn't until he watched his grandmother bury her son next to his own mother that he understood true fury. And to know that they'd killed Wakinyan, and blamed his uncle for it somehow, only made it worse.
"Hey, WhiteMan, opps, I mean, Elk," someone called, and the young man man ground his teeth, ignoring them. "Hey,
Apple, I'm talking to you!"
Hands seized him and spun him around, and Alex groaned inwardly when he realized that Charlie Shantz had taken an interest in him. Charlie's family was big into the "return to the old ways" and Wakinyan's death had turned the family as a whole ugly. They'd believed that Wakinyan was the Thunderbird; Alex had never been sure, but it seemed possible. "Charlie, let me go!" Alex snapped, pulling against the hands holding him.
"There's been talk, Alex," Charlie hissed, his copper skin darker than Alex's, which probably didn't help perceptions right now. "Talk that the WhiteElk are as white as their name implies."
"Fuck you, Shantz," Alex spat. "I'm as much Lakota as you."
"Then prove it," Charlie dared.
"What, do you want me to create a signal fire?" Alex growled, rolling his eyes. "Skin a buffalo? What makes me not Lakota, Charlie, since you seem to be the final word on that."
"Watokiconpi is holding a meeting tomorrow at Inyan Kara, and you need to be there, Alex," Charlie said, releasing the smaller Lakota and straightening his shirt. "You need to show that the WhiteElks are still Lakota, rather than wasicu wearing Lakota suits. You need to prove this for your family, while you can."
"While I can?" Alex asked, suddenly nervous. That sounded bad.
"You have other family, who I know aren't apples. But others... they are starting to talk about running off the other wasicu, even those among us," Charlie said. There was a mean look in his eyes, clear even with the faux sympathy in them. "And sometime, apples comes up at the same time as WhiteElf. But if you come to Watokiconpi's meeting at the cave, and you help us plan against wasicu... well, clearly, that makes you Lakota, right?"
* * *
August 25, 2017, early eveningThe meeting was not like Alex expected. This was serious, far too serious, and it scared the young man more than a little. The braves talked about sacrifice, and casulties, and generally looked frustrated and upset. But they also talked of resolve, and loyalty and somewhere along the way, Alex started to listen, to really hear what they were saying.
Watokiconpi had the furs from Ptesan-Wi's bed, and he had shown them the blood. And all had seen the footage from Wounded Knee, had seen their fallen god. They were talking about how the white man had taken everything from them when the white man flipped back the cloth covering entrance and entered the cave. Notably, he had a head of red hair that could only be natural, because the goatee matched perfectly. He was dressed in jeans and a casual shirt; even with the sunglasses, he looked like nothing more than a tourist - a tourist on sacred ground. "Oh, wow," he said, waving. "Full house. Should you guys... be here?"
"You should not be," Watokiconpi said, and shot him. The man tumbled backwards, his red hair snapped around him as he fell. The braves whooped, complaining about the echo in their ears and giving Watokiconpi slaps on the back. Alex stared at the entrance, horrified. He'd never seen anyone killed before, and he shuddered.
But that horror was doubled when the man stepped back into the cave. Alex nearly shrieked; he grabbed the brave nearest him, pointing at the man, trying to get people to notice him. He was a nova, he had to be; Alex wasn't relieved by the confirmation of the man's status when he saw his eyes. If anything, those inhuman orbs made it worse.
"Let's try this again," the nova growled. "But this time, it should be noted that I'm a little grumpy now, and I've lost my sunglasses. I
liked those glasses. So, as I said before, should you guys be here?"
"You and your people are the invaders!" Watokiconpi yelled, his dark eyes flahsing angrily.
"Oh, that. Look, I'm just here to pick some things up for Ptesan-Wi, and then I'll be-"
"Ptesan-Wi?" Alex barked. "She's alive?!" This was great news! She could come back, and quiet the People, leading them to peace instead of a war they couldn't win.
Watokiconpi sneered. "She's not alive, or she'd be here," he growled. Turning to the white man, he snapped, "Your people have killed her, and we will see her avenged!"
The man laughed. "You're going to feel really stupid when she recuperates and comes back," he told Watokiconpi, still chuckling. "But that's your issue. I'm just here to get some of her things for her. So..." He waved in a shooing motion, indicating for the braves to get out of his way.
In answer, they moved into a tighter-knit group, forming a wall with their bodies. They couldn't stop him, not a nova, but they wouldn't just let him do it either. Alex hesitated, then joined them, feeling sick to his stomach.
The man smirked. "You are all lucky people," he said. "Because there was a time, not that long ago, that I wouldn't have let that stop me." He tilted his head, considering the line. "And I'd still consider it, save for the fact that it'd piss off Ptesan-Wi, who is my friend. But rememeber this."
He moved faster than Alex had believed possible, ending nose to nose with Watokiconpi. "There will be a day of accounting, for everyone whose death comes from your hand. And when that happens, I'll be there to watch. With popcorn, and a soft drink. You got me?" His inhuman eyes fixed on Watokiconpi with unnerving intensity.
"Wakinyan will come again, and he will eat your white skin," Watokiconpi growled.
"Sure, whatev, I'm not too worried about that," the man laughed. "I've fought Waki, mark one before, and I survived." He glanced around the room at them again. "I'll see you all again when I bring Ptesan-Wi back. Chao."
After he flew away, the braves returned to their war-talk, but Alex found that he'd soured on the discussion. Instead, depression set in. No one was going to win this war, no matter what color their skin was.