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[ Randy ] Good morning. This is Randy Peone on KREZ Radio,
the voice of the Coeur d'Alene Indian Reservation,
and it's time for the morning traffic report on this rainy bicentennial Fourth of July.
Let's go out to Lester Fallsapart in the KREZ traffic van,
broken down at the Crossroads.
Big truck just went by.
Now it's gone.
[ Randy ] Well, there you go, folks. Looks like another busy morning.
And I just got a news bulletin that says Matty and John Builds-the-Fire...
are hosting a Fourth of July party at their house.
And remember, it's B.Y.O.F.:
"Bring your own fireworks."
[ Man Narrating ] On the Fourth of July, 1976,
my mother and father celebrated white people's independence...
by holding the largest house party...
in Coeur d'Alene tribal history.
I mean, every Indian in the world was there.
And then at 3:00 in the mornin',
after everyone had passed out or fallen asleep...
on couches, on chairs,
on beds, on the floor,
a fire rose up like General George Armstrong Custer,
and swallowed up my mother and father.
I don't remember that fire.
I only have the stories.
And in every one of those stories, I could fly.
[ Indian Voices Chanting ]
I was just a baby when Arnold Joseph saved me from that fire...
and delivered me into the hands of my grandmother.
Arnold ! What happened ?
What happened ?
[ Baby Crying ]
[ Crying Continues ]
[ Screaming ]
[ Screaming, Crying Continue ]
And Victor Joseph was just a baby too,
when his father saved me from that fire.
You know, there are some children who aren't really children at all.
They're just pillars of flame that burn everything they touch.
And there are some children who are just pillars of ash...
that fall apart if you touch 'em.
Me and Victor,
we were children born of flame and ash.
[ Baby Crying ]
Arlene,
your son's name is Victor, and I--
Yes, it is.
It's a good name.
It means he's gonna win,
ain't it ?
I don't know.
You saved my grandson's life.
Well, it was nothin'. I--
I didn't even think about it. I just--
You saved Thomas.
You did a good thing.
I didn't mean to.
[ Thomas Narrating ] After that fire,
Arnold Joseph mourned by cuttin' his hair,
and he never grew it long again.
For years after that he threatened to vanish.
He practiced vanishing.
Until one day, he jumped into his yellow pickup...
and did vanish.
[ Randy ] Good morning. This is Randy Peone on KREZ Radio.
That's K-R-E-Z Radio, the voice of the Coeur d'Alene Indian Reservation.
And Coeur d'Alene people, our reservation is beautiful this morning.
It's a good day to be indigenous.
It's 45 degrees in the sun,
it's 8:00 a.m., Indian time, in 1998,
and it's time for the morning traffic report.
For that let's go to Lester Fallsapart at the KREZ traffic van,
broken down at the Crossroads since 1972.
So Lester, how's traffic out there this fine morning ?
A couple of cars went by earlier.
You know old Mrs. Joe ? She was speeding.
And, uh, Kimmy and James, uh,
they went by in a yellow car and they were arguin'.
[ Randy ] There you go, folks.
Looks like nobody's getting to work on time this morning.
As for you school kids, you'd better hurry up and eat those Wheaties,
because the first bell rang 15 minutes ago.
♪♪ [ Radio: Indistinct Music ]
Hey, Victor !
[ Man ] Come on.
Come on.
Yo !
[ Men Panting ]
[ Man ] Game point, cuz !
Bring it on, Victor. Bring it on.
[ Grunting ]
Foul !
I said, foul.
***.
I was nowhere near you.
If I say it's a foul, it's a foul.
Hey, Thomas. Give us some help, huh ?
Nice suit, Thomas. [ Laughs ]
[ Man ] Sheesh.
Victor !
Hey, Victor, what do you know about fire ?
No, really, Victor.
I mean, did you know things burn in colors ?
I mean, sodium burns yellow...
and carbon burns orange, just like that.
Hey, Victor, heard your dad's living in Phoenix, Arizona, now.
Man, he's lived everywhere since he left you, huh ?
Is that so, Thomas ?
You know, I was wondering, Thomas.
What color do you think your mom and dad were when they burned up ?
You know, your dad ain't comin' back.
No.
He's gone. When Indians go away, they don't come back.
Last of the Mohicans, last of Winnebago, last of--
Hey, shut up, Thomas, or I'll beat you up again.
[ Ball Bouncing ]
[ Victor ] ♪ Oh, I took the ball to the hoop ♪
♪ And what did I see ♪
[ Other Men Join In ]
♪ And what did I see ♪
♪ General George Armstrong Custer was a-guardin' me ♪
♪ A-guardin' me ♪♪
[ Laughing ]
Hey, Victor, who do you think is the greatest basketball player ever ?
That's easy: Geronimo.
Geronimo ? He couldn't play basketball, man.
He was Apache, man. Those suckers are about three feet tall.
It's Geronimo, man. He was lean, mean and bloody.
He would've dunked on your flat Indian *** and cut it off.
Yeah, some days it's a good day to die.
Some days, it's a good day to play basketball.
Hey, Victor.
What about your dad ?
What about him ?
[ Telephone Rings ]
Hello ? My name is Suzy Song.
Uh, I've got bad news. Arnold Joseph passed away.
Oh !
I'm his neighbor here in Phoenix.
His stuff is still in his trailer, and his pickup's here.
[ Sighs ] I think somebody should come get it.
I'm making arrangements for him. I'll call again.
Thank you for phoning.
What ?
Mm-hmm.
Hey, Victor !
I'm sorry about your dad.
How'd you hear about it ?
I heard it on the wind. I heard it from the birds.
I felt it in the sunlight.
And your mom was just in here cryin'.
Listen, Thomas, I gotta go. I got things to do.
Victor !
Your mom said she only had 40 bucks.
That ain't enough money to get you to Phoenix.
Help what ?
I-- I have some money.
I can help.
Listen, Thomas. I can't take your money.
So why don't you go buy a car or something ? Anything.
But just leave me alone, okay ?
Go find a woman.
I can get you to Phoenix !
Okay, so you can get me to Phoenix.
But what do you get out of the deal ?
You have to take me with you.
[ Chuckles ] You're funny.
Victor, look at this ! Ain't it cool ?
Here.
Nah, you keep it.
Hey, Thomas !
You'd better get home.
Your grandma lookin' for you.
Check this out.
[ Indistinct ]
But it's right there in your ear, see ?
Go ahead, take it.
Hello ? Hello ?
Happy Independence Day, Victor.
You feelin' independent today ?
I'm feelin' independent.
I'm feelin' extra magical today, like I could make anything disappear.
Houdini with braids, you know ?
Poof. Wave my hand, and poof.
The white people are gone,
gone back to where they belong.
Poof.
London, Paris, Moscow.
Poof ! Poof ! Poof ! [ Chuckles ]
Wave my hand and the reservation is gone.
The trading post and the post office.
The tribal school and the pine trees.
And the drunks.
The Catholics and the drunk Catholics. Poof !
And all the little Indian boys named Victor !
I'm so good, I could make myself disappear.
Poof.
And I'm gone.
[ Engine Revving ]
[ Chuckles ] Here, give me that beer.
[ Groaning ]
Just quit your cryin'. I didn't hit you that hard.
[ Crying Softly ]
Go in the house. Tell your mama I'll be right in.
Did you cash the check ?
Yeah.
That's all the money I got.
I know.
Oh, this damn arthritis.
Hurtin' bad today, ain't it ?
Nah.
[ Woman ] I don't trust him, you know ?
He's mean to you.
He wasn't always mean.
You know, Thomas said he'll give me the money,
but he wants to go with me.
You know, people always told me I make the best fry bread in the world.
Maybe it's true.
But I don't make it by myself, you know.
I got the recipe from your grandmother,
and she got it from her grandmother.
And I listen to people when they eat my bread.
You know, they might say, uh, "Arlene,
there's too much flour."
Or, "Arlene,
you should knead your dough some more."
I listen to them.
And I watch that Julia Child all the time.
She's a good cook too, but she gets lots of help.
So, do you think I should go with Thomas ?
That's your decision.
But if you go, I want you to promise me you'll come back.
- Come on, Mom. - Promise me !
[ Chuckles ] Geez. Want me to sign a paper or somethin' ?
No way. You know how Indians feel about signing papers.
[ Knock At Door ]
[ Door Opens ]
[ Victor ] Okay, Thomas, I need the money, and you can come with me,
but I have a few rules.
First of all, you can't wear that stupid suit.
And secondly, I don't want you tellin' me a million of your damn stories.
And third, we're goin' right there and comin' right back.
Good morning. This is Randy Peone on KREZ Radio,
and I just got a news bulletin here that says...
Frenchy Sidejohn won $5,000 last night playing bingo.
I want to congratulate Frenchy,
and all those used car dealers in Spokane are eagerly awaiting your arrival.
It's 7:35 a.m., Indian time, and time for the weather report.
Lester here. One of the clouds up there looks like a horse.
And the other one looks like, uh--
You know that, um, tavern we used to go, the log one ?
And that waitress there ? Hola. Looks like her.
[ Randy ] Well, there you have it...
from tribal meteorologist Lester Fallsapart.
And I just received a request from Irvin in DeSmet.
He wants to hear a sad song.
♪ We passed the stores We passed the hotels ♪
♪ Filled our car with gas and then ♪
♪ We drove that night I saw the moon ♪
Oh, man !
I love this song !
No, no. I mean it.
I really love this song.
Geez, I'm thirsty.
Give me a beer.
Hey, girl, we don't drink no more.
That's right, ain't it ?
Well, give me a Coke.
There you go, Lucy-goosey.
Have a Coke, eh ?
Hey, watch where you're goin' ! Geez !
I am watchin' where I'm goin'.
♪♪ [ Song Continues ]
Ahh !
Hey, that's Victor and Thomas.
Hey.
Hey, Victor, sorry to hear about your dad.
Oh, yeah.
Hey, Thomas. Need a ride ?
- You bet. - What are you gonna trade for it ?
We're Indians, remember ? We barter.
Better be good.
Better be good.
[ Clears Throat, Sighs ]
Durin' the '60s, Arnold Joseph was the perfect hippie...
because all the hippies were tryin' to be Indians anyway.
But because of that, he was always wonderin' how anybody would know...
when an Indian was tryin' to make a social statement.
But there's proof, you know.
Back durin' the Vietnam War, he was demonstratin' against it,
and there was this photographer there.
He took a picture of Arnold that day, and it made it onto the wire services...
and was reprinted in newspapers throughout the country.
It even made it to the cover of Time magazine.
In that photograph, Arnold is wearin' bell-bottoms and a flowered shirt,
his hair in braids, with red peace symbols...
splashed across his face like war paint.
He holds a rifle above his head, captured in that moment...
just before he proceeded to beat the *** out of...
the National Guard private lyin' on the ground beneath him.
Another demonstrator holds a sign, just barely visible over his left shoulder.
It reads: "Make love, not war."
Geez. Did your dad really do that ?
Thomas, you're so full of ***.
[ Lucy ] Oh, then what happened ?
Arnold got arrested, you know. But he got lucky.
At first they charged him with attempted ***,
but then they plea-bargained that down to assault with a deadly weapon.
And then they plea-bargained that down to bein' an Indian in the twentieth century.
[ Girls Sigh ]
So, what do you think ?
Well,
I think it's a fine example of the oral tradition.
[ Girls Laugh ]
♪ But they're floating just above the land ♪
♪ And we are floating ♪
♪ You're my road buddy ♪
♪ But I'm lonely all the time ♪
♪ I thought we'd show that friendship ♪
♪ Could be stronger than the crossroads devil ♪
Sorry.
♪ I'll take that thing you got from praying ♪
♪ This is not a romance ♪♪
- You two guys got your passports ? - Passports ?
Yeah. You're leavin' the res...
and goin' into a whole different country, cousin.
But it's the United States.
Damn right, it is. That's as foreign as it gets.
Hope you two got your vaccinations.
Bye, Victor !
[ Thomas ] Hey, Victor.
Remember that dog that used to live over there ?
That dog that fell in love with that cat ?
Old Lady Harrison, she used to tie that dog up, but--
Imagine if they had a baby.
It wouldn't know whether it was a cog or a dat. [ Chuckles ]
Get it, Victor ?
Hey, are you sure about this ? It's a lot of money.
Yeah, I'm sure. Are you sure ?
Damn right, I'm sure.
Ah, get on the bus.
No, Thomas.
Hey, you're pretty flexible.
Are you a gymnast or somethin' ?
I was an alternate on the 1980 Olympic team.
Geez, I wish I could do that.
Well, it's pretty easy. Try it.
[ Giggles ] No way !
[ Laughs ]
Yeah.
I'm Thomas, and this is Victor.
We're Coeur d'Alene Indians.
I'm Cathy. I'm from Mississippi.
Nice suit.
Thanks.
[ Cathy ] I don't mean to brag,
but I was every bit as good as Mary Lou.
In 1984 I tried out again...
and Mary Lou beat me that time,
but I had grown, you know ?
Oh ! Those little people ! They get all the attention.
Me ? I put my whole life into makin' the Olympics,
then Jimmy Carter took it away.
Geez. You gymnasts got a lot in common with us Indians then, ain't it ?
Hey. Hi.
You said you were an alternate for the team, right ?
Well,
if you were an alternate, then you'd only compete...
if somebody was hurt or something, right ?
- Yeah. - Was anybody hurt ?
Then you really weren't on the team, were you ?
I mean, it didn't really matter if there was a boycott or not.
You were stayin' home anyways.
You ain't got nothin' to complain about,
so why don't you just be quiet ?
What'd you do that for ? She was nice.
Nice, my ***. She was a liar.
Yes, she was. Think about it, Thomas.
What would a big shot Olympic gymnast be doing on a bus ?
I don't know.
You know, Thomas, you really need to grow up.
Don't you know anything ? People are awful.
They'll rob you blind if you ain't watching.
Where's your piggy bank ? You still got your piggy bank ?
Yeah.
Just remember, Thomas: You can't trust anybody.
♪ Let's rent a car and drive it ♪
♪ A million miles away ♪
[ Laughter ]
♪ Let's start a fire and survive it ♪
♪ A million miles away ♪
♪ Let's steal the sun and hide it ♪
♪ A million miles away ♪
Show me.
Hey, Victor.
Dance with us.
Come dance with your old man.
Hey, Victor, who's your favorite Indian ?
It's your mama, huh ?
Tell him it's your mama.
♪ I see you dancin' in the bar light ♪♪
Nobody.
What'd you say, Victor ?
Speak up, boy.
Who's your favorite Indian ?
Nobody.
Nobody ? Huh ?
Nobody ?
Did you say "nobody" ?
He didn't mean it. Come on, tell him, Victor.
Tell your daddy you didn't mean it.
Nobody. Nobody.
Nobody.
You gotta love somebody, Victor.
[ Arnold ] Nobody !
[ Drunken Laughter ] Nobody.
Nobody !
[ Thomas ] You know, your dad took me to Denny's once.
Thomas, I've heard this story a thousand times, okay ?
Yeah, it was the summer he left.
We were 12, ain't it ? I had this dream, you know ?
And this dream told me to go to Spokane to stand by the falls.
You know, those ones by the Y.M.C.A.
So I walked there.
I mean, I didn't have no car, I didn't have no license.
I was 12 years old.
It took me all day, but I walked there...
and I stood on that bridge over the falls,
waitin' for a sign.
I must've been waitin' there for a couple hours.
But I just watched the water.
It was beautiful.
I kept hopin' I'd see some salmon, but there ain't any salmon in that river no more.
And then I heard this voice.
"Hey, what the hell you doin' here ?"
It was your dad, yellin' at me.
And he keeps on yellin'.
"I asked you what the hell you're doin' here."
So I told him I was waitin' for a vision,
and he just laughed.
He said, "All you're gonna get around here is mugged."
[ Laughing ]
So then he took me to Denny's.
It was afternoon, you know,
but I still had the Grand Slam breakfast.
Two eggs, two sausages,
two slices of bacon...
and two pancakes.
And some juice, and milk.
You know, sometimes it's a good day to die,
sometimes it's a good day to have breakfast.
[ Banging Sound ]
[ Banging ]
[ Banging ]
[ Banging ]
[ Banging ]
[ Banging ]
[ Banging ]
[ Banging ]
[ Banging ]
[ Banging ]
[ Sighs ]
We ain't doin' this no more !
[ Banging ]
We're done with it.
[ Television: Gunshots ]
I told ya, all I want is the money that I got comin' to me !
It's over ! No more drinkin' !
Let go !
Let go !
Hit me again ! Come on !
[ TV Continues ]
If you leave now, don't you ever come back !
You hear me ?
Don't you ever come back !
[ Victor ] Don't leave, Dad !
[ Engine Starts, Revs ]
Don't leave, Dad !
Victor !
Oh, Papa !
[ Switch Clicking ]
[ Arlene ] He's gone, Victor.
[ Arlene ] Yeah, your daddy's magic, ain't it ?
He sawed us into pieces, didn't he ?
[ Switch Clicking ]
Feel like my head's in the kitchen and my belly's in the bathroom...
and my feet are in the bedroom.
[ Switch Clicking ]
You feel that way, too, huh ?
[ Switch Clicking ]
[ Thomas ] Hey, Victor.
Victor.
Hey, Victor, heard your dad left.
What happened ?
Why'd he leave ?
Does he hate you ?
Victor ! Stop it !
Victor, don't do that to him !
[ Groaning ]
Why'd Arnold leave ?
Okay.
[ Thomas ] Hey, Victor, what do you remember about your dad ?
I remember one time we had this fry bread eatin' contest,
and he ate 15 pieces of fry bread.
It was cool.
You know, Thomas, I don't know what you're talkin' about half the time.
I don't know.
I mean, you just go on and on, talkin' about nothing.
Why can't you have a normal conversation ?
You're always tryin' to sound like some damn medicine man or something.
I mean, how many times have you seen Dances With Wolves ?
A hundred, two hundred ? Aw, geez.
You have seen it that many times, haven't you ?
I guess not.
Well, ***. No wonder. Geez.
I guess I'll have to teach you then, ain't it ?
First of all, quit grinnin' like an idiot.
Indians ain't supposed to smile like that. Get stoic.
No. Like this.
You gotta look mean, or people won't respect you.
White people will run all over you if you don't look mean.
You gotta look like a warrior.
You gotta look like you just came back from killing a buffalo.
What ?
You wanna look like you just came back from catching a fish ?
This ain't Dances With Salmon, you know.
Thomas, you gotta look like a warrior.
There. That's better.
And second, you gotta know how to use your hair.
Yeah.
I mean, look at your hair. It's all braided up and stuff. You gotta free it.
An Indian man ain't nothing without his hair.
And last,
you gotta get rid of that suit, Thomas.
You just have to.
♪ Yeah, yeah, yeah ♪
♪ Yeah, yeah, yeah yeah, yeah ♪
♪ Yeah ♪
♪ Yeah, yeah, yeah ♪♪
Um, 'scuse me.
Those are our seats.
You mean, these were your seats.
No, that's not what he means.
Now listen up.
These are our seats now, and there ain't a damn thing you can do about it.
So why don't you and Super *** there...
find yourself someplace else to have a powwow.
Okay ?
[ Man ] Come on, now, boys. Just sit down.
Geez, Victor, I--
I guess your warrior look doesn't work every time.
Shut up, Thomas.
[ Thomas ] Man, the cowboys always win.
The cowboys don't always win.
Yeah, they do. The cowboys always win.
Look at Tom Mix.
[ Thomas ] What about John Wayne ?
Man, he was about the toughest cowboy of them all, ain't it ?
You know, in all those movies...
you never saw John Wayne's teeth.
Not once.
I think there's something wrong when you don't see a guy's teeth.
[ Tapping Sound ]
♪ John Wayne's teeth Hey-ya ♪
♪ John Wayne's teeth Hey-ya ♪
♪ Hey-ya Hey-ya-hey ♪
[ Thomas Joins In ] ♪ John Wayne's teeth, hey-ya John Wayne's teeth, hey-ya ♪
♪ Hey-ya Hey-ya-hey ♪
♪ Are they false Are they real ♪
♪ Are they plastic Are they steel ♪
♪ Hey-ya, hey-ya-hey ♪ [ Laughing, Shouting ]
[ Tune Changes To Serious ] ♪ John Wayne's teeth Are they plastic ♪
♪ Are they steel ♪
♪ Ha-ha, hey-hey Ha-ha, hey-hey ♪
♪ John Wayne's teeth John Wayne's teeth ♪
♪ Are they plastic Are they steel ♪
♪ Ha-ha, hey-hey Ha-ha, hey-hey ♪♪
[ Woman On P.A. ] Now arriving in Phoenix, Arizona.
Please meet your passengers at the gate.
Reboarding in five minutes for Yuma, Arizona,
and our final destination: Los Angeles, California.
So what do we do now ?
What do you think ? We walk.
Hey, Victor,
did you know I was an alternate on the 1980 Olympic team ?
[ Laughs ]
How long you think it'll take us to get there ?
We get there when we get there, okay ?
I mean, I just wanna know if you have any idea how long it's going to take.
We've been travelin' a long time, ain't it ?
I mean, Columbus shows up,
and we start walkin' away from that beach, tryin' to get away.
And then Custer moves into the neighborhood,
drivin' down all the property values and--
And we gotta keep on walkin'.
Then old Harry Truman drops the bomb,
and we gotta keep on walkin' somewhere.
'Cept it's all bright now, and we can see exactly where we're goin'.
Hey ! And then we get a beach house on the moon.
But old Neil Armstrong shows up and boots us off into space.
Then your mom gets that phone call about your dad bein' dead,
and geez, your dad's gotta be livin' in Mars, Arizona.
And we ain't got no money, no car, no horse.
We have to catch the bus all the way down here.
I mean, we ain't got-- Nobody can help us.
No Superman, no Batman, no Wonder Woman.
[ Chuckles ] Not even Charles Bronson, man.
Hey, did you ever notice how your dad looks like Charles Bronson ?
Thomas, my dad doesn't look anything like Charles Bronson, okay ?
Yeah, your dad looks like Charles Bronson.
Not the Charlie Bronson of the first Death Wish movie.
No, your dad's more like Death Wish V,
the one where Charlie Bronson fights that Asian death gang.
Thomas, will you shut up !
Thirsty ?
Get that thing away from me, okay ?
Leave it there, Thomas.
[ Indian Voices Chanting ]
[ Knocking ]
Hey !
Well, one of you must be Victor, ain't it ?
He's Victor. I-I'm Thomas.
I'm Suzy Song.
Is my dad here ?
Yeah.
Come in.
Come on.
That's him ?
Yeah. This is Arnold.
I mean, he's not lookin' so good, huh ?
Okay, we gotta go. We got a long ride home.
Hold on. Y-You just got here.
I mean, you guys want something to eat or drink or somethin' ?
I'm thirsty, and I'm hungry.
I'm both.
Come on.
You know, the only thing more pathetic than Indians on TV...
is Indians watchin' Indians on TV.
[ Chuckles ]
[ Victor ] So, Suzy, what are you doin' out here ?
Yeah.
I work for Indian Health Service,
but I don't know if I have a job anymore.
I haven't been back to work since...
I found your dad.
I haven't talked to anybody since it happened.
Are you a nurse or somethin' ?
I used to be a nurse, but now I'm a hospital administrator.
What does that mean ?
It means I travel too much.
Yeah.
I've been a lot of places since I left home.
So where's home then ?
Hey, Suzy.
- This is pretty good bread. - Yeah, it's okay.
Hey, Victor, you should try some. It's almost as good as your mom's.
Ain't no bread good as Mom's.
This is pretty close.
It's okay.
Ain't even close to Mom's, though.
Victor's mom makes the best fry bread in the whole world.
Really ?
It's so good, they use it for communion back home.
Arlene Joseph makes some Jesus fry bread.
Fry bread that can walk across water.
Fry bread risin' from the dead.
Is that true ?
Huh ?
Come on, is that true ?
Way back when, we were havin' a feast on our reservation.
A good old feast.
We didn't have a whole lot of food,
just a little bit of deer meat, a huge vat of mashed potatoes,
some Coke and fry bread.
But the fry bread made all the difference in the world.
You see, a good piece of fry bread...
turned any meal into a feast.
Everybody sat at the tables,
waitin' for the cooks to come with the fry bread.
They waited...
and waited,
but you see, there was a hundred Indians at that feast...
and only 50 pieces of fry bread.
Arlene kept tryin' to figure out what to do.
I mean, it was her magical fry bread that everybody wanted.
But Arlene knew what to do.
You see, Arlene's fry bread was magic.
Arlene was magic.
She knew how to feed a hundred Indians...
with only 50 pieces of fry bread.
She went out to talk to the people.
"Listen !" she said.
"There are one hundred Indians here...
and only 50 pieces of fry bread !"
Everybody was mad.
There was gonna be a fry bread riot for sure.
But then Arlene said,
"But I have a way to feed you all !"
She took a piece of fry bread, she held it over her head...
and she ripped it in half !
[ Suzy Laughing ]
Oh, that's a good story.
Is that true ?
Hmm ? Is that true ?
No, it's not true. Thomas, you're so full of ***.
So I told you a story. Now it's your turn.
What ? Do you want lies, or do you want the truth ?
I want both.
Tell us how you met Victor's dad, anyway.
[ Chuckles Nervously ] Well,
you know, I just moved here a couple years back...
and I saw him puttering around a lot.
He was always workin' on that truck, you know ?
[ Engine Cranking ]
I didn't have a car back then, so sometimes he'd give me a ride.
Geez. This hardly ever happens.
It starts almost every time.
[ Engine Cranking ]
Come on.
[ Cranking Stops ]
Well, may as well walk home.
Oh, no, no.
It's a long walk.
[ Giggling ]
Hey, where are you from, man ?
Plummer, Idaho.
You know, I got me a ex-wife and a son up there.
What are you doin' down here then ?
I don't know.
Guess I'm still tryin' to figure that out.
Suzy,
what's the worst thing you ever did ?
[ Chuckles ] What do you mean ?
I mean, what's the--
the most evil thing you ever done to another person ?
Oh, I don't know if I wanna answer that.
Come on, tell me.
[ Chuckles ] Uh, let's see.
This one time at a powwow,
I stole this old Indian woman's purse.
There-- There was like a couple of hundred bucks in there,
and I spent it all.
And that was probably all of her powwow money too.
I bet she just cried.
Yeah, that's bad.
There's gotta be somethin' worse than that, ain't it ?
Aw, come on. What about you ? It's your turn.
What's the worst thing you ever done ?
No way. It's still your turn.
I mean, you gotta have done somethin' worse than steal money.
Okay, okay.
How about this ?
Back in college,
I slept with my best friend's boyfriend.
[ Sniffs ] Oh, now that's bad.
You must've broke some hearts that day, ain't it ?
At least three.
Yeah, just like me. I broke three hearts too.
[ Suzy ] Your dad was a good-looking guy, you know ?
He was givin' me the eye. Just a little bit, you know ?
My dad, did he ever talk about me ?
He was always talking about...
you two playin' basketball. [ Chuckles ]
[ Arnold ] I remember this time,
me and my boy Victor,
we were playin' two-on-two basketball against these Jesuits.
[ Chuckles ]
These Jesuits had on their white collars and their black robes,
and they were pretty damn good.
By the way they were playing,
I could've swore they had seven out of twelve apostles on their side.
Because every time I tried to shoot the ball,
there was a storm of locusts come flyin' in and blind me.
Now, I was shootin' in the dark. In the dark, I tell ya.
But my boy Victor--
He was magic. He couldn't miss.
Those Jesuits didn't have a prayer of stoppin' him fair and square.
All right ! Ha-ha-ha !
Victor was only 12 years old and kind of small,
so those Jesuits were beatin' up on him real good.
They were beatin' up on him and chantin' at him...
like he was possessed or somethin'.
Maybe Victor was possessed by the spirit of Jim Thorpe,
because he had this look in his eye, and he was mean.
"Come on, Victor !" I shouted.
"Come on, Victor !
"We're up against the Son and the Father here !
And these two are gonna need the Holy Ghost to beat us !"
I mean, the score was all tied up.
Next basket wins, you know ?
So the Jesuits had the ball.
And this great, big redhead Jesuit...
come drivin' in, and knocked my boy over.
My boy, he was tough.
You gotta have faith, son.
Faith. Next basket wins.
And he took it to the hoop, and he flew, man !
He flew, right over that Jesuit !
Twelve years old, and he was like some kind of indigenous angel or somethin'.
'Cept maybe his wings were made out of TV dinner trays !
[ Chuckles ]
My boy Victor ! He was the man that day.
He took that shot, and he won that game.
It was the Indians versus the Christians that day,
and for at least one day, the Indians won !
Whee !
[ Ball Bounces ]
Yeah.
Yeah, well, I missed the shot. I lost the game.
You mean, your dad lied to me ?
Yeah, in a lie that made me look good.
[ Laughs ]
He was a magician, you know.
I know.
What ?
Did you love him ?
Yes.
He was like--
like a father, I guess.
A father.
He had you fooled too, then, ain't it ?
He quit drinkin', you know.
Yeah.
He was pretty tricky, wasn't he ?
Hey, Victor, you ever hear of...
the Gathering of Nations Powwow in New Mexico ?
No ? Well, your dad and I,
we went to check it out last year.
All sorts of Indians there, thousands of 'em,
more Indians than I've ever seen in one place.
I kept thinkin', "I wish we'd been this organized when Columbus landed."
Your dad and I were sittin' way up high in the stands.
He never liked to get too close to anything, you know ?
And then, the powwow emcee, he called for a ladies' choice dance.
I got to pick my partner, and I picked your dad.
There were mothers and fathers dancing,
and brothers and sisters,
there were some sweethearts, then there was your dad and me.
And what were you two ?
We kept each other's secrets.
[ Dog Barking ]
What ?
It's Kafka, Arnold's dog.
He's been-- Well, he's been gone since I found your dad.
[ Barking Continues ]
Kafka !
Where's your master, huh ?
You wouldn't believe the smell.
You know, Victor, his stuff's still in there.
Might be something you wanna keep.
There's nothing in there for me.
Victor, please ?
No way.
Hey.
How about this ?
If I make a shot, then you have to go inside.
And if you miss ?
Then I'll leave you alone.
Fine. It's a deal.
Nice shot.
But I still ain't goin' in.
Look, Victor, I'm not playin' some kind of game here. I'm tryin' to help.
Tryin' to help what ? I mean, who the hell are you anyways ?
You're tellin' me all these stories about my father,
and I don't even know if they're true.
Hey, maybe you don't even know him.
I know more about him than you do.
You don't know anything !
I know about the Fourth of July party.
What about it ?
Nobody knows how it started.
[ Arnold Laughing ]
Yee-hee ! Whoo-hoo !
Come on ! Get up, you guys.
Whoo-hoo-hoo. [ Grunts ]
[ Laughing ]
Come on, you guys ! You gonna get up or what ?
Come on !
Wally, come on !
My dad started that fire ?
He killed Thomas's mom and dad ?
But he saved Thomas.
- He almost killed all of us ? - He saved you.
No, my mom saved me.
Listen to me, Victor. Your dad talked about that fire every day.
He cried about it. He wished he could've changed it.
He wished he hadn't run away. But you have to remember one thing, Victor.
He ran back into that burning house looking for you.
He went back for you.
He didn't mean to die here, Victor.
He wanted to go home.
He always wanted to go home.
He's waiting for you, Victor.
He's waiting for you.
[ Thomas Narrating ] After Victor butchered his hair,
he thought the ceremony was over,
so he tore me from sleep at sunrise,
and we left Phoenix without tellin' Suzy good-bye.
I thought we were leavin' in a bad way,
but Victor didn't seem to care a bit.
He just drove all day and didn't say a word to me,
even though I told him a thousand stories...
about Suzy and drought,
about his mother and hunger,
about his father and magic.
And then I told Victor,
I thought we were all travelin' heavy with illusions.
[ Thomas ] I remember so much about your dad.
I remember when he took me for breakfast at Denny's.
Your dad was goin' on and on about you.
He said you were so good at basketball.
But he also said basketball was the only thing you were ever gonna be good at.
You know, Thomas, I'm really sick and tired of you tellin' me...
all these stories about my dad like you knew him.
But I did know him.
What do you know about him, Thomas ?
Did you know he's a drunk ? Did you know that he left my family ?
Did you know he beat up my mom ? Did you know he beat me up ?
Just let it go, Thomas ! He was nothing but a liar.
What was he then, Thomas ?
You tell me. You're the expert. What do you think he was ?
You know, you got it all wrong, Victor.
Maybe you don't know who you are !
I think you do.
You've been mopin' around the reservation for ten years.
Ten years, Victor ! Doin' what ?
You ain't got no job ! You ain't got no money ! You ain't got nothin' !
Yeah, and what do you got, huh, Thomas ? What do you do all day long ?
Yeah, and I look after my mom.
Shut up, Thomas !
You make your mom cry her eyes out !
I mean, your dad left her, sure, but you left her too.
And you're worse 'cause you still live in the same house with her !
Shut up, Thomas ! Just shut up !
He saved your dumb *** in that fire ! He didn't save me !
Quit feelin' sorry for yourself.
I wish he would have let you burn in that fire, you know ?
Then he wouldn't have left me.
He was always leavin', Victor !
Everything burned up, Thomas, everything ! Everything burned up !
Everything ! Everything ! *** !
[ Crashing Noises ]
[ Woman Crying ]
What have you done ? What have you done ? What did you do ?
[ Man ] Get in the car, Penny !
I'm so-- I'm so sorry. He was drunk, and he was driving so fast.
All right, get back in the car.
Hey, take it easy !
I didn't do anything.
It's your fault, man. You hit my car, man.
Take it easy ! Get out of my face !
- Step away ! - It's your fault !
Help me ! Hurry ! Somebody help !
I didn't do anything.
Don't let her up !
Get out of my face !
Look at what you did to your wife ! Look what you did !
Holly.
This is your fault.
This is your fault.
What, are you crazy ?
The nearest town is 20 miles away. You'll never make it.
I'm goin' for help. Thomas !
[ Burt ] And she ain't gonna make it either !
I'm goin' for help !
That's a dead girl you're talkin' to.
It's a dead girl !
[ Suzy ] Your dad talked about that fire every day.
He cried about it.
He wished he could've changed it. He wished he hadn't run away.
But you have to remember one thing, Victor.
He ran back into that burning house looking for you !
He did one good thing.
He went back for you.
[ Arnold ] Everything in the world can fit inside this ball.
It's not about magic, man.
It's about faith.
Geez, Thomas, can't you drive this thing ?
Geez, who are you to talk ? You're the one who got us in a wreck.
Hey, a wreck's a wreck. I got cousins who've been in a dozen car wrecks.
Old Lester Fallsapart has been in a car wreck every year of his life.
You and me, we just had one car wreck.
Victor, I think we were in two wrecks last night.
Well, if it isn't our marathon runner. How ya doin' ?
Oh, my feet hurt. How's she ?
Julie's gonna be okay.
You guys are heroes, you know ?
It's like you're the Lone Ranger and Tonto.
No, it's more like we're Tonto and Tonto.
I mean, the police were just here. That Burt guy said the wreck was your fault.
- No way. - He said you were tryin' to kill him.
I know.
That's what I told the police. I don't think they believed me.
Well, geez, we probably should get out of town then, ain't it, Victor ?
- Yeah. - Yeah.
Uh-oh.
Well, it looks like you boys got yourself into some serious trouble here.
You've been accused of assault with a deadly weapon.
That's ***.
Yes.
Victor Joseph.
Well, that kind of language isn't necessary, Victor.
We didn't do anything wrong.
You didn't do anything wrong.
Well, I have this complaint...
signed by a Mr. Burt Cicero.
And Mr. Cicero alleges...
that Mr. Joseph assaulted him soon after the accident...
and that you were drunk.
I don't drink.
I never had a drop of alcohol in my life, Officer.
Not one drop.
Well, just what kind of *** are you, exactly ?
I'm Coeur d'Alene, and Thomas here is Coeur d'Alene too.
Y-Yeah, exactly.
Well, Mr. Builds-the-Fire,
what do you think about all these charges ?
We was framed.
Framed ? Well--
Hmm.
We do have another statement here by a Mrs. Penny Cicero.
It says here that her husband is--
and I quote-- "a complete ***."
I'd say Mr. Cicero doesn't have much of a case here against you.
However, I do have one problem here. Uh--
Now, I know that this...
is a basketball.
But I am very,
very curious about this.
That's my father.
Your father ?
Yes. That's my father.
I can't believe we got out of that guy's office alive.
Yeah, I guess your warrior look does work sometimes.
Ahh !
Let me hold on to Dad.
Thomas,
I'm sorry I got us into that wreck.
I mean, I'm sorry about every wreck.
Let's go.
[ Engine Choking ]
♪ Sometimes, Father you and I ♪
♪ Are like a three-legged horse ♪
♪ Who can't get across the finish line ♪
♪ No matter how hard he tries and tries and tries ♪
♪ And sometimes, Father you and I ♪
♪ Are like a warrior ♪
♪ Who can only paint half of his face ♪
♪ While the other half cries and cries and cries and cries ♪
Yeah !
Whoo, baby !
♪ Now can I ask you, Father ♪
♪ If you know how much farther we need to go ♪
♪ Now can I ask you, Father ♪
♪ If you know how much farther we have to go ♪
♪ Father and farther ♪
♪ Father and farther ♪
♪ Till we know ♪
♪ Sometimes, Father, you and I are like two old drunks ♪
♪ Who spend their whole lives in the bars ♪
♪ Swallowing down all those lies and lies and lies ♪
♪ And sometimes, Father you and I ♪
♪ Are like dirty ghosts ♪
♪ Who wear the same sheets every day ♪
♪ As one more piece of us just dies and dies and dies ♪
[ Laughing ]
♪ Sometimes, Father you and I ♪
♪ Are like a three-legged horse ♪
♪ Who can't get across the finish line ♪
♪ No matter how hard ♪
♪ He tries and tries and tries ♪♪
I bet your grandma really missed you, huh ?
Yeah, we've been gone six days, 12 hours and 32 minutes.
You know, Thomas, I, uh--
I wanna thank you for everything.
For the money and stuff.
I-It's nothin', really.
I-It's nothin'.
I mean, who needs money on the res anyways ?
Yeah, you're probably right.
Are you sure ?
Yeah, I'm sure.
Victor, I'm gonna travel to Spokane for one last time...
and toss these ashes into the river,
and your father will rise like a salmon.
He'll rise.
What ? What ?
Well, I was thinkin' about doin' the same thing myself,
but I never thought of my father as a salmon.
I mean, I thought it would be just like cleaning out the attic, you know ?
Like throwin' things away when they have no more use.
Thanks, eh ?
[ Engine Starting ]
Hey, Victor !
Hey, Victor.
Do you know why your dad really left ?
Yeah.
He didn't mean to, Thomas.
[ Door Opens ]
Tell me what happened, Thomas.
Tell me what's going to happen.
[ Thomas Narrating ] How do we forgive our fathers ?
Maybe in a dream.
Do we forgive our fathers for leavin' us too often...
or forever when we were little ?
Maybe for scarin' us with unexpected rage ?
Or makin' us nervous because there never seemed to be any rage there at all ?
Do we forgive our fathers for marryin'...
or not marryin' our mothers ?
For divorcin' or not divorcin' our mothers ?
And shall we forgive them for their excesses of warmth...
or coldness ?
Shall we forgive them for pushin' or leanin' ?
For shuttin' doors ?
For speakin' through walls...
or never speakin' ?
Or never being silent ?
Do we forgive our fathers in our age...
or in theirs ?
Or in their deaths, saying it to them ?
Or not saying it ?
If we forgive our fathers,
what is left ?