a full ride to UNC system schools after “we both worked our butts off for it,” Evans recalled. The award letters arrived on a Saturday. The next day, at the tribe’s annual powwow, tribal leaders announced the news to all. It was a moment of tremendous pride, many people remembered on Sunday, for the tribal community and for the students. UNC plans a vigil Monday night, a gathering that comes four years after the campus grieved the killing of student body president Eve Carson in March 2008. At the Mt. Bethel Baptist Church in Hollister, a wake will be held Tuesday from 6:30 p.m. to 8:30 p.m., and a funeral at 2 p.m. Wednesday. The church was a formative part of Hedgepeth’s life. Her Sunday school teachers spoke of Hedgepeth’s infectious smile. A deacon remembered that children always looked up to her – “the children stuck right to her,” McConnel Silver said. “You send a child off to college and you think they will be safe,” Silver said. “This … this … this … throws your whole balance in life off.” Hedgepeth will be buried in the church cemetery. The church pastor, Willie Silver, recalled on Sunday that Hedgepeth was one of the first to be baptized in the church, rebuilt in 2000 after a fire. Silver called worshippers to the altar on Sunday, and Evans was the first, embracing the pastor in a long hug as the congregation sang “Amazing Grace.” “Lord,” the pastor said, “we need each other at times like this.” Later, as an orange sunset melted into darkness, tribal leaders led a gathering to remember Hedgepeth. It came together in less than a day. More than 1,000 people showed up, encircling the grounds and filling bleachers typically used for the annual powwow. Drummers playedand dancers joined in an intertribal dance as Hedgepeth’s family looked on. At one point, many of those in attendance danced in a circle around burning incense. Later, there was an “honor” song. Hedgepeth’s sister, Rolanda, said Hedgepeth loved her ancestry and her church. “She was very much loved, and we are very much hurt,” Rolanda Hedgepeth said. Hedgepeth was especially close with her mother, Connie, and they were last together a week ago to celebrate her mother’s birthday. Marty Richardson, a doctoral candidate at UNC Chapel Hill and a member of the tribe who knows much of its history, said he saw Hedgepeth on campus the day before she died. She was working on a video project for an anthropology class, she told him, and would need his help. The project: She wanted to study the process tribes follow to receive state or federal recognition. The pastor’s wife, Cynthia Silver, said Hedgepeth helped with mission work and an active teen group in the church. “Native people are very clannish, in our families and our community,” she said. “You’d have to go 10 miles in any direction to find someone who didn’t know her, her mom, her sister. There’s just a lot of people affected, like we’re all in a tailspin.” She said the tribe has dealt with sudden sickness, even car accidents. “But when violence comes against a person – someone so special like Faith – you wonder what could ever drive a person to attack a child? It’s scary.” Curliss: 919-829-4840 TRIBE • from 1B