Ardell Polus-Bombay e e e S My cousins called me apple, said my green eyes were like go lights flashing at the good looking drummers. They told me mooniaquay were loose. Indian women are modest, so I lowered my eyes and spent the next ten years wandering, wishing for shiny black braids. I came home and found my mother praying to Jesus in Ojibway, lying in the dingy bedroom the chemo’s venom in her veins, the light strained through the drapes giving her face a pale green tinge. I knew the cancer leech was bloated with Mama’s red blood. Daddy started burning her things before she was dead; the fire was small. At thirty, I sat on the shoulders of Bear Butte watching the storm roll closer across the open plains. With every lightning strike I cried for my grandfather, offering tobacco as each foot touched down beside me, the drum in my chest beating. In this black light I knew the colour of my skin. *Sister Dodo=Mom always talked about Sister Dondot..I thought it was “Dodo”. As well as being an extinct bird species, dodo also means “teat” in Ojibway. * Apache Pass=Famous section of lower third avenue in Prince Rupert. *Mooniaquay=White woman, *Bear Butte=Ceremonial fasting grounds, S. Dakota. 17