Kent Nerburn is the author of twelve books on spirituality and Native themes, including Chief Joseph and the Flight of the Nez Perce (featured on the History Channel), Simple Truths, and The Wisdom of the Native Americans. He lives in northern Minnesota.
The Wolf at Twilight: An Indian Elder's Journey through a Land of Ghosts and Shadows
by Kent Nerburn Kent Nerburn
Paperback
- ISBN-13: 9781577315780
- Publisher: New World Library
- Publication date: 11/01/2009
- Pages: 368
- Sales rank: 39,350
- Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.40(h) x 0.90(d)
Read an Excerpt
The Wolf at Twilight
An Indian Elder's Journey through a Land of Ghosts and Shadows
By Kent Nerburn
New World Library
Copyright © 2009 Kent NerburnAll rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-57731-916-0
CHAPTER 1
"FATBACK'S DEAD"
The words on the slip of paper struck me like a blow.
"Fatback's dead."
It was not just the news itself, though the words cut deep. It was the very fact of the note, stuck on my windshield on the Red Lake Indian Reservation in northern Minnesota, hundreds of miles from where Fatback had lived and, apparently, died. That, and the small deerskin pouch of tobacco that was tied to it.
Fatback was a black Lab — a good dog — who had belonged to Dan, an elderly Lakota man who lived far out on the Dakota plains. Years before, as a result of a book of elders' memories I had done with students at Red Lake, Dan had contacted me to come out to his home to speak with him. His request was vague, and I had been both skeptical and apprehensive. But, reluctantly, I had gone, and it had changed my life. We had worked together, traveled together, and created a book together in which the old man told his stories and memories and thoughts about Indian people and our American land.
However, for reasons that I cannot easily explain, after the book was published he and I had not stayed in touch. Perhaps it was because we were from such different worlds. Perhaps it was because the intimacy we had achieved was uncomfortable to both of us — he was, in some measure, allowing me to make up for my guilt about what I had left unsaid and undone with my father at the time of his passing, and I, in some measure, had served as a surrogate for Dan's son who had died an untimely death in a car accident and to whom he had initially entrusted the task of writing his story and collecting his thoughts.
But whatever it was, when we had stood together on the dusty Dakota roadside fifteen years ago, hands clasped in a bond of promise and friendship, we had both known, in some deep part of ourselves, that our time together was finished. We had shared a moment in time; we had done something worthy; and that, for each of us, was enough.
But now it was all coming back to me. He had reached out to me again — if, indeed, it was him — and had reopened a door that I thought had been closed forever.
* * *
"WHAT MAKES YOU THINK IT'S REAL?" Louise asked. "You were on the rez, and there are lots of practical jokers up there."
"Tobacco's no joke," I said, pulling out the small deerskin pouch.
To the Indian people, tobacco is the Creator's gift. It comes from the earth and rises up to heaven. When the Creator sees it, he pays attention. So when tobacco is presented to someone, it's a sacred statement. It means that the Creator is being called upon to witness the interaction. I knew of no Indian people who would use it as part of a hoax or a trick.
"I can't just let it rest," I continued. "I've got to find out."
"You could go back up to Red Lake and ask around."
"Where? It was a powwow. There were hundreds of cars parked in that field — folks from North Dakota, South Dakota, Montana, Canada."
"Maybe you should try to contact Dan or his family."
I looked down. I knew she was right. But, in truth, I was scared. I had never really talked to any of the participants since Neither Wolf nor Dog — the book Dan and I had created together — had been published. I had heard that it had been well received. But there were depictions within it that might have given offense, and I was afraid of the disapproval and recriminations that might surface if I allowed myself to get involved again.
And then there was the deeper, more tawdry issue: Dan had received nothing for the book. Though this is the way he had wanted it, I had always harbored the gnawing guilt that I should have done more for him and his family.
I looked down at the small pouch in my hand. It was not just a gift, it was a command. If it really was from Dan or someone close to him, it was a reaching out I could not ignore.
I placed it carefully back in my shirt pocket and turned toward the phone. Perhaps this was just a necessary contact too long deferred. Perhaps this was a chance to return the gift that his friendship had given to me.
When I had last been in contact with Dan, he had been unwilling to speak on the telephone — an elder's quirk. I assumed nothing had changed — if, indeed, he was even still alive. But in the intervening years phone service had increased, cell phones had come into existence, and I was certain that some of the other people I had known would now be able to be contacted without difficulty.
However, it did not prove to be so simple. As I scoured the Internet and dialed up directory assistance, I realized, much to my chagrin, that I hadn't learned anyone's last name. The only person who had ever been called by a last name was me — I was always just "Nerburn." They had all been simply Dan, Grover, Wenonah, or whatever strange nickname they were known by on the rez. When you were introduced at all, it was without any air of formality. Just, "This is Nerburn. This is Wenonah." So I had no reasonable way to proceed.
Finally, it came to me that the only chance I had was to look for the number of a business establishment. There was only one business establishment on the rez whose name I could recall.
* * *
"YEAH?" CAME THE VOICE. It was as I remembered — deep, dark, and slow, as if coming from the bottom of a well.
"Jumbo?" I said.
"Yeah."
I could almost see him standing there in his huge sagging jeans and filthy laceless tennis shoes, with a dirty white T-shirt hanging like a tent over his astonishing belly, his massive ham of a hand wrapped around the grease-covered phone receiver.
"This is Nerburn. The guy ..."
"The Nissan," he interrupted. "We got a lot of 'em out here now."
The comment made me smile. Who but Jumbo would answer a business phone with "Yeah?" But, then again, his had not been an ordinary business. His primary occupation had been car repair, but he worked on toasters, pumps, and anything else that had springs or levers or any moving parts. His sign had been a dripping, hand-painted affair that said something about "broke stuff fixed" with a variety of quotation marks and underlinings that corresponded to no grammatical rules that I or anyone else had ever learned. His tool collection had run toward pipe wrenches and hammers, all covered with layers of grease and scattered randomly on a filthy black workbench. Close tolerances and delicate repairs were not his forte.
"Truck got troubles?" he asked.
"No, no. I sold it years ago," I said.
"I'd have took it," he answered. "Good truck."
"Good as a Chevy?" It was an inside joke.
"What you got now?" he asked.
"A Toyota wagon."
He emitted a low grunt. The meaning was indecipherable.
It was good to hear Jumbo's voice, but I knew I was pressing my luck by engaging him in too much conversation. The last time I had been with him he had seldom said more than two words at a time, and those had usually concerned meals or machines. So I cut to the chase. "Jumbo, I got a note on my car in Red Lake. It said Fatback was dead."
"Yeah, just keeled over last winter. Really old."
"But Dan's still alive?"
"Was yesterday."
I could hear the rustling of a wrapper being opened, followed by a chewing sound.
"So, when you coming out?" he said.
The question caught me by surprise.
"Coming out? I hadn't really thought about it."
"Probably should. The old man's counting on you."
"Counting on me? For what?"
"Don't know. Just counting on you."
"How do you know this?"
"Just do."
I probed for more information, but he had nothing more to say.
I hung up the phone completely mystified. None of it made any sense. Fatback had been dead for months, so why the note now? And how did Jumbo know that Dan had contacted me? And what was he counting on me to do?
Again, reservation protocol had put me in a box. Jumbo was not about to speak for Dan or attempt to assay his motives. He simply passed on information.
For Jumbo, it was enough that Dan wanted me out there. "Why" was none of his business, and how he had known was none of mine.
* * *
"I DON'T KNOW WHAT TO DO," I said to Louise. "Why couldn't he just have written a note saying he wanted to see me? Or why didn't he have Wenonah call me, like the last time, if he doesn't want to talk on the phone? And how'd they know my car?"
Louise just shrugged. She, too, had worked on reservations. She knew that my questions were futile.
"What do you want to do?" she asked. "That's the only real question."
I shook my head and sighed. "I think I'd better go out there. He seems to be expecting me."
"Then you'd better go," she said. "You won't feel very good about yourself if you don't."
"But only a week. No more."
She gave me a look of healthy skepticism.
But I was serious. I had writing obligations, speaking obligations. And our short northern Minnesota summer was already on the wane. Louise was a wonderfully patient wife, but she cherished our summer visits from family and friends and didn't want me to miss them. I couldn't allow myself to get trapped like I had during my previous visit to Dan when he and his friend Grover had, in effect, kidnapped me. This time I needed to get back. No "Indian time." My obligations were white obligations, and they were bound by clocks and deadlines.
A week. No more.
CHAPTER 2RETURN
The green WWII canvas aviator bag that had been my traveling companion for years had long been demoted to tasks like carrying wood to the house or shoes to the gym. But somehow it seemed more appropriate and less conspicuous for a trip to the reservation than a black nylon suitcase made for racing through airports.
I threw in a few pairs of jeans and several T-shirts, added a few gifts, a sleeping bag, and the old beat-up tape recorder that I carried when I went out on one of my "little trips," and called it a night.
The following morning I gave Louise a peck on the cheek as she slept, checked the oil in the old Toyota wagon, and headed west on U.S. Highway 2. Despite my concerns about what I might find, the lure of the open road soon overtook me, and the day spread out like a promise before me.
By midday I had left the dark forests of northern Minnesota behind and had crossed into the broad, flat expanse of the Dakota prairies. Fields of wheat and sunflowers, redolent with the scent of summer, stretched resplendently toward the horizon. Solitary farmsteads with their prim white two-story houses sat far back from the road in copses of trees. Under the warm summer sun they conjured up images of family picnics with white tablecloths and men in rolled-up shirtsleeves playing horseshoes by the barn. The smell of the earth was so rich that I drove with the windows down just to breathe the air.
By evening I had fallen completely under the Dakota spell. All was earth and sky. Only the occasional vertical of a distant smalltown grain elevator broke the flat line of the horizon. A French station out of Canada scratched in on the radio from some far distance, and I listened with appreciation to the round tones of the unfamiliar language as I made my way into the growing prairie twilight.
Soon the pooling lights of Bismarck appeared before me. I skirted their beckoning warmth and turned south into the rolling hill country that flanked the broad waters of the Missouri. The slow, languid river moved silently in the darkness, conjuring up images of Lewis and Clark, the fur traders, and the distant outposts of Omaha and St. Louis hundreds of miles downstream. The echoes of our nation's frontier past were washing over me.
But other echoes, too, were rising. The voices of the Hidatsa and the Mandan and the Nakota and the Arikara — people whose pasts had been obliterated, or, at least, pushed far below the surface of our national consciousness — whispered through the shapeless prairie night. They gave a dark edge to my reverie, reminding me that another history, far less sanguine and hopeful, lay deeper than the memories of sodbusters and settlers and pioneers.
Deeper and deeper I drove into the Dakota darkness. The wind blew warm and intimate, like a voice trying to reveal a secret. Now and then a small town with a broken-down roadside bar would announce its presence with a few lonely neon signs and ghostly sodium yard lights, then quickly disappear into the prairie darkness. But soon they, too, thinned, then ceased altogether, and I was left alone with my thoughts and reveries in the great star-drenched night.
I was tired almost beyond redemption, but I forced myself to keep driving. I wanted to arrive at Dan's house in the early morning before he went out for the day. I needed to find out what had motivated him to reach out to me in such an enigmatic way.
By dawn I had reached the breaking point. I grabbed a few hours of sleep at a roadside pull-off, slapped some river water on my face, and gave my teeth a quick brushing in a gas station restroom. A cup of weak convenience-store coffee, and I was back on the road. By eight I was approaching the reservation line; by nine I was headed out the old familiar highway toward the turnoff to Dan's home.
Everything was just as I remembered it. The path up to his house was unchanged, except for a few more holes and ruts. The same rusted automobile carcasses hulked in the weeds on either side of the roadway. The same desiccated gray trees with broken branches stood in wounded isolation on the same distant rises. Only the brush around the house seemed different. It was now so thick and brambly that it almost totally hid his home from view.
The old Toyota creaked and groaned as I crawled up the path toward the house. Gully washes a foot wide and a foot deep cut raw diagonals across the white clay of the roadway, and even at the slowest, most careful speed, the wagon dropped into them with a sickening clunk, then pushed and surged as it struggled to make its way out the other side.
It was hard to imagine that anyone could navigate this path in a normal automobile during the winter or the rainy season. Yet this was the kind of road that people on the reservation took for granted. It was small wonder that the fields and yards were littered with junk cars.
As I approached Dan's house, a wave of nostalgia overtook me. The old half-dismantled car that had been Fatback's doghouse still sat on blocks to the right of the steps. The three planks that formed the steps to his door were more warped and weathered but otherwise unchanged. The door still hung loosely on its hinges, and the screens were still torn. Even the patchy, peeling paint on the clapboard siding seemed the same. Nothing had been moved, nothing had been repaired. The place had simply deteriorated from an old man's house into an old man's shack.
Though it was barely 9:00 a.m., I could hear a television blaring through the open front door. I had expected someone to come out at the sound of the engine, but no one appeared. It seemed strange, since an unexpected car coming up the driveway of an isolated rural home usually draws attention, if not outright concern. Perhaps the sound from the television had masked my arrival.
I stepped out cautiously, apprehensive about the reception I was about to receive.
I walked quietly up the steps, not wanting to wake Dan if he was still asleep, and was about to knock, when the old man's voice came rattling from inside.
"About time, Nerburn."
The greeting shocked me; I had no idea how he knew it was me. His voice had the same twinkle in it, the same wry playfulness that I remembered so well from my last visit. The dark edge of disapproval that I had so feared was nowhere to be heard.
"Come on in. Come on in."
I opened the old screen door and stepped across the threshold. Memories flooded over me. The same yellow Formica kitchen table sat in the middle of the one large living area. The floor was still a dingy patchwork of cheap linoleum with chunks torn up in various places, revealing the black mastic underneath. The fluorescent light still buzzed from the ceiling, but the plastic cover had been broken off, making the light from the two long cylindrical tubes even more harsh and unsettling.
Dan was sitting in the middle of the room in a four-wheeled rolling "medical equipment" kind of chair with chrome framework and brown vinyl arm pads. He was facing away from me, staring at a large, flat-panel television set. His long white hair hung down to the middle of his back and, despite the growing warmth of the morning, he had a shawl draped over his shoulders. To a casual observer, he might have been mistaken for an infirm old woman.
"Hello, Dan," I said, not knowing quite how to proceed. "How'd you know it was me?"
He didn't turn, but kept facing the television. The bright colors from the screen looked out of place in the grimy surroundings.
"Remembered your footsteps. Hearing gets good when your eyes go bad."
Dan lifted his hand over his shoulder, as if waiting for me to take it. He kept his eyes glued to the screen.
"How you been, Nerburn?" he asked. I grasped his gnarled root of a hand and squeezed it in an awkward approximation of a handshake.
He seemed somehow smaller and more fragile than I had remembered. The wheels of the chair squeaked as they shifted on the hard linoleum.
"I'm fine," I said. "You got a new chair."
(Continues...)
Excerpted from The Wolf at Twilight by Kent Nerburn. Copyright © 2009 Kent Nerburn. Excerpted by permission of New World Library.
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.
Table of Contents
Contents
DISTANT VOICES,CHAPTER 1 "Fatback's Dead",
CHAPTER 2 Return,
CHAPTER 3 Burial,
CHAPTER 4 Scars on the Moon,
CHAPTER 5 Reservation Fortune Cookie,
CHAPTER 6 The Jarburetor,
CHAPTER 7 Looking for Mr. Peanut,
CHAPTER 8 Bibles and Broomsticks,
CHAPTER 9 Tiospaye,
PRAIRIE SECRETS,
CHAPTER 10 Charles Bronson,
CHAPTER 11 Prayer for a Hot Dog,
CHAPTER 12 Indians and Cavemen,
CHAPTER 13 Snakes and Bears,
CHAPTER 14 Message from a Dog,
CHAPTER 15 Yellow Bird's Ghost,
CHAPTER 16 Talking Stones,
CHAPTER 17 A Clock in the Head,
CHAPTER 18 Twenty-Eight French Fries,
CHAPTER 19 Ratberry Sandwiches,
CHAPTER 20 A Girl Named Sarah,
CHAPTER 21 "Go Home to Your Family",
FOREST SILENCE,
CHAPTER 22 A Haunted Heart,
CHAPTER 23 Fading Tracks,
CHAPTER 24 A Glow in the Distance,
CHAPTER 25 One White Eye,
CHAPTER 26 Secret in the Snows,
CHAPTER 27 A Hard Winter,
THE GATHERING DAWN,
CHAPTER 28 Vigil,
CHAPTER 29 Collecting Rent on the Homeland,
CHAPTER 30 The Longest Night,
CHAPTER 31 Reaching Across,
CHAPTER 32 Zintkala Zi,
CHAPTER 33 A Blue Dakota Day,
ABOUT THE AUTHOR,
THE GIRL WHO SANG TO THE BUFFALO,
PREFACE A World Beyond Our Understanding,
CHAPTER 1 A Shout in the Night,
What People are Saying About This
“Kent Nerburn offers a sensitive, insightful glimpse into a Lakota soul, a feat unattainable by most non-Native writers.”
Joseph M. Marshall III, Sicangu Lakota, author of The Lakota Way and The Journey of Crazy Horse
“Kent Nerburn’s creative and compassionate book [is] humorous, hilarious, and at times very sad. Thank you, Kent, for a good book to read.”
Leonard Peltier, author, artist, and activist
“Elegant, yet powerful...Nerburn crosses borders with a single-minded dedication to preserving an oral tradition. The emotional truth that resides in the rich storytelling is a testament to the strength and endurance of Lakota culture and...removes barriers to understanding our common humanity.”
Winona LaDuke, founder and executive director of the White Earth Land Recovery Project
“The best storytellers make you feel that they are speaking directly to you, and the best-told stories resonate in the heart and soul forever. A story about the triumph of love and the spirit of a people..., The Wolf at Twilight will be permanently etched in your consciousness.”
Dan Agent, former editor of the Cherokee Phoenix and screenwriter for Our Spirits Don’t Speak English: Indian Boarding School
“The story of this unique and captivating journey...is a remarkable gift that we are honored to receive and obligated to pass on.”
Steven R. Heape, Cherokee Nation citizen and producer of the award-winning documentary The Trail of Tears: Cherokee Legacy
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Choose Expedited Delivery at checkout for delivery by. Monday, December 2
A note is left on a car windshield, an old dog dies, and Kent Nerburn finds himself back on the Lakota reservation where he traveled more than a decade before with a tribal elder named Dan. The touching, funny, and haunting journey that ensues goes deep into reservation boarding-school mysteries, the dark confines of sweat lodges, and isolated Native homesteads far back in the Dakota hills in search of ghosts that have haunted Dan since childhood.
In this fictionalized account of actual events, Nerburn brings the land of the northern High Plains alive and reveals the Native American way of teaching and learning with a depth that few outsiders have ever captured.
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Joseph M. Marshall III, Sicangu Lakota, author of The Lakota Way and The Journey of Crazy Horse
“Kent Nerburn’s creative and compassionate book [is] humorous, hilarious, and at times very sad. Thank you, Kent, for a good book to read.”
Leonard Peltier, author, artist, and activist
“Elegant, yet powerful...Nerburn crosses borders with a single-minded dedication to preserving an oral tradition. The emotional truth that resides in the rich storytelling is a testament to the strength and endurance of Lakota culture and...removes barriers to understanding our common humanity.”
Winona LaDuke, founder and executive director of the White Earth Land Recovery Project
“The best storytellers make you feel that they are speaking directly to you, and the best-told stories resonate in the heart and soul forever. A story about the triumph of love and the spirit of a people..., The Wolf at Twilight will be permanently etched in your consciousness.”
Dan Agent, former editor of the Cherokee Phoenix and screenwriter for Our Spirits Don’t Speak English: Indian Boarding School
“The story of this unique and captivating journey...is a remarkable gift that we are honored to receive and obligated to pass on.”
Steven R. Heape, Cherokee Nation citizen and producer of the award-winning documentary The Trail of Tears: Cherokee Legacy
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