All the fury of Alvin’s life, all these years of slavery, all these years of rage at the unfairness of his master, all these years of secrecy and disguise, all his desperate longing to know what to do with his life and having no one in the world to ask, all this was burning inside Alvin hotter than the forge fire. Now the itching and tingling inside him wasn’t a longing to run. No, it was a longing to do violence, to stop that smile on Makepeace Smith’s face, to stop it forever against the anvil’s beak.
But somehow Alvin held himself motionless, speechless, as still as an animal trying to be invisible, trying not to be where he is. And in that stillness Alvin heard the greensong all around him, and he let the life of the woodland come into him, fill his heart, bring him peace. The greensong wasn’t loud as it used to be, farther west
in wilder times, when the Red man still sang along with the greenwood music. It was weak. and sometimes got near drowned out by the unharmonious noise of town life or the monotones of well-tended fields. But Alvin could still find the song at need, and sing silently along with it, and let it take over and calm his heart.
Did Makepeace Smith know how close he came to death? For it was sure he’d be no match for Alvin rassling. not with A1 so young and tall and so much terrible righteous fire in his heart. Whether he guessed or not. the smile faded from Makepeace Smith’s face, and he nodded solemnly. “I’ll keep all I said, up there, when Horace pushed me so hard. I know you probably put him up to it. but I’m a fair man. so I’ll forgive you. long as you still pull some weight here for me, till your contract’s up.”
Makepeace’s accusation that Alvin conspired with Horace should have made Alvin angrier, but by now the greensong owned him, and Alvin wasn’t hardly even in the smithy. He was in the kind of trance he learned when he ran with Ta-Kumsaw’s Reds, where you forget who and where you are. and your body’s just a far-off creature running through the woods.
Makepeace waited for an answer, but it didn’t come. So he just nodded wisely and turned to leave. “I got business in town.” he said. “Keep at it.” He stopped at the wide doorway and turned back into the smithy. “While you’re at it, you might as well fix those other brokedown stoves in the shed.”
Then he was gone.
Alvin stood there a long time, not moving, not hardly even knowing he had a body to move. It was full noon before he came to himself and took a step. His heart was utterly at peace then, with not a spot of rage left in it. If he’d thought about it, he probably would’ve knowed that the anger was sure to come back. that he wasn’t so much healed as soothed. But soothing was enough for now, it’d do. His contract would be up this spring, and then he’d be out of this place, a free man at last.
One thing, though. It never did occur to him to do what Makepeace Smith asked, and fix those other brokedown stoves. And as for Makepeace, he never brought it up again, neither. Alvin’s knack
wasn’t a part of his prenticeship, and Makepeace Smith must’ve knowed that, deep down, must’ve knowed he didn’t have the right to tell young Al what to do when he was a-Making.
A few days later Alvin was one of the men who helped lay the new floor in the springhouse. Horace took him aside and asked him why he never came by for his four dollars.
Alvin couldn’t very well tell him the truth, that he’d never take money for work he did as a Maker. “Call it my share of the teacher’s salary,” said Alvin.
“You got no property to pay tax on,” said Horace, “nor any children to go to the school, neither.”
“Then say I’m paying you for my share of the land my brother’s body sleeps in up behind the roadhouse,” said Alvin.
Horace nodded solemnly. “That debt, if there was a debt, was paid in full by your father’s and brothers’ labor seventeen year gone, young Alvin, but I respect your wish to pay your share. So this time I’ll consider you paid in full. But any other work you do for me, you take full wages, you hear me?”
“I will, sir,” said Alvin. “Thank you sir.”
“Call me Horace, boy. When a growed man calls me sir it just makes me feel old.”
They went back to work then, and said nary another word about Alvin’s work on the springhouse. But something stuck in Alvin’s mind all the same: what Horace said when Alvin offered to let his wages be a share of the teacher’s salary. “You got no property, nor any children to go to the school.” There it was, right there, in just a few words. That was why even though Alvin had his full growth on him, even though Horace called him a growed man, he wasn’t really a man yet, not even in his own eyes. Because he had no family. Because he had no property. Till he had those, he was just a big old boy. Just a child like Arthur Stuart, only taller, with some beard showing when he didn’t shave.
And just like Arthur Stuart, he had no share in the school. He was too old. It wasn’t built for the likes of him. So why did he wait so anxious for the schoolmistress to come? Why did he think
of her with so all-fired much hope? She wasn’t coming here for him, and yet he knew that he had done his work on the springhouse for her, as if to put her in his debt, or perhaps to thank her in advance for what he wanted her, so desperately, to do for him.
Teach me, he said silently. I got a Work to do in this world, but nobody knows what it is or how it’s done. Teach me. That’s what I want from you. Lady, to help me find my way to the root of the world or the root of myself or the throne of God or the Unmaker’s heart, wherever the secret of Making lies, so that I can build against the snow of winter, or make a light to shine against the fall of night.
River Rat
ALVIN WAS IN Hatrack Mouth the afternoon the teacher came. Makepeace had sent him with the wagon, to fetch a load of new iron that come down the Hio. Hatrack Mouth used to be just a single wharf, a stop for riverboats unloading stuff for the town of Hatrack River. Now, though, as river traffic got thicker and more folks were settling out in the western lands on both sides of the Hio, there was a need for a couple of inns and shops, where farmers could sell provender to passing boats, and river travelers could stay the night. Hatrack Mouth and the town of Hatrack River were getting more important all the time, since this was the last place where the Hio was close to the great Wobbish Road—the very road that Al’s own father and brothers cut through the wilderness west to Vigor Church. Folks would come downriver and unship their wagons and horses here, and then move west overland.
There was also things that folks wouldn’t tolerate in Hatrack River itself: gaming houses, where poker and other games got played and money changed hands, the law not being inclined to venture much into the dens of river rats and other such scum. And upstairs
of such houses. it was said there was women who wasn’t ladies, plying a trade that decent folks scarcely whispered about and boys of Alvin’s age talked of in low voices with lots of nervous laughter.
It wasn’t the thought of raised skirts and naked thighs that made Alvin look forward to his trips to Hatrack Mouth. Alvin scarce noticed those buildings, knowing he had no business there. It was the wharf that drew him. and the porthouse, and the river itself, with boats and rafts going by all the time. ten going downstream for every one coming up. His favorite boats were the steamboats, whistling and spitting their way along at unnatural speeds. With heavy engines built in Irrakwa, these riverboats were wide and long, and yet they moved upstream against the current faster than rafts could float downstream. There was eight of them on the Hio now. going from Dekane down to Sphinx and back again. No farther than Sphinx, though, since the Mizzipy was thick with fog, and nary a boat dared navigate there.
Someday. thought Alvin, someday a body could get on such a boat as
Pride
of the
Hio
and just float away. Out to the West, to the wild lands, and maybe catch a glimpse of the place where Ta-Kumsaw and Tenskwa-Tawa live now. Or upriver to Dekane, and thence by the new steam train that rode on rails up to Irrakwa and the canal. From there a body could travel the whole world, oceans across. Or maybe he could stand on this bank and the whole world would someday pass him by.
But Alvin wasn’t lazy. He didn’t linger long at riverside, though he might want to. Soon enough he went into the porthouse and turned in Makepeace Smith’s chit to redeem the iron packed in nine crates on the dock.
“Don’t want you using my hand trucks to tote those, now,” said the portmaster. Alvin nodded—it was always the same. Folks wanted iron bad enough, the portmaster included, and he’d be up to the smithy soon enough asking for this or that. But in the meantime, he’d let Alvin heft the iron all himself, and not let him wear out the portmaster’s trucks moving such a heavy load. Nor did Makepeace ever give Alvin money enough to hire one of the river rats to help with the toting. Truth to tell, Alvin was glad enough of
that. He didn’t much like the sort of man who lived the river life. Even though the day of brigands and pirates was pretty much over, there being too much traffic on the water now for much to happen in secret, still there was thievery enough, and crooked dealing, and Alvin looked down hard on the men who did such things. To his way of thinking, such men counted on the trust of honest folks, and then betrayed them; and what could that do, except make it so folks would stop trusting each other at all? I’d rather face a man with raw fighting in him, and match him arm for arm, than face a man who’s full of lies.
So wouldn’t you know it, Alvin met the new teacher and matched himself with a river rat all in the same hour.
The river rat he fought was one of a gang of them lolling under the eaves of the porthouse, probably waiting for a gaming house to open. Each time Alvin came out of the porthouse with a crate of iron bars, they’d call out to him. taunting him. At first it was sort of good-natured, saying things like, “Why are you taking so many trips, boy? Just tuck one of those crates under each arm!” Alvin just grinned at remarks like that, since he knew that they knew just how heavy a load of iron was. Why, when they unloaded the iron from the boat yesterday, the boatmen no doubt hefted two men to a crate. So in a way, teasing him about being lazy or weak was a kind of compliment, since it was only a joke because the iron was heavy and Alvin was really very strong.
Then Alvin went on to the grocer’s, to buy the spices Gertie had asked him to bring home for her kitchen, along with a couple of Irrakwa and New England kitchen tools whose purpose Al could only half guess at.
When he came back, both arms full, he found the river rats still loitering in the shade, only they had somebody new to taunt, and their mockery was a little ugly now. It was a middle-aged woman, some forty years old by Alvin’s guess, her hair tied up severe in a bun and a plain hat atop it, her dark dress right up to the neck and down the wrist as if she was afraid sunlight on her skin might kill her. She was staring stonily ahead while the river rats had words at her.
“You reckon that dress is sewed on, boys?”
They reckoned so.
“Probably never comes up for no man.”
“Why no, boys, there’s nothing
under
that skirt, she’s just a doll’s head and hands sewed onto a stuffed dress, don’t you think?”
“No way could she be a
real
woman.”
“I can tell a real woman when I see one, anyway. The minute they lay eyes on me,
real
women just naturally start spreading their legs and raising their skirts.”
“Maybe if you helped her out a little, you could turn her into a real woman.”
“This one? This one’s carved out of wood. I’d get splinters in my oar, trying to row in such waters.”
Well, that was about all Alvin could stand to hear. It was bad enough for a man to think such thoughts about a woman who invited it—the girls from the gaming houses, who opened their necklines down to where you could count their breasts as plain as a cow’s teats and flounced along the streets kicking up their skirts till you could see their knees. But this woman was plainly a lady, and by rights oughtn’t to have to hear the dirty thoughts of these low men. Alvin figured she must be waiting for somebody to fetch her—the stagecoach to Hatrack River was due, but not for a couple of hours yet. She didn’t look fearful—she probably knew these men was more brag than action, so her virtue was safe enough. And from her face Alvin couldn’t guess whether she was even listening, her expression was so cold and faraway. But the river rats’ words embarrassed
him
so much he couldn’t stand it, and couldn’t feel right about just driving his wagon off and leaving her there. So he put the parcels he got from the port grocer into the wagon and then walked up to the river rats and spoke to the loudest and crudest talker among them.
“Maybe you’d best speak to her like a lady,” said Alvin. “Or perhaps not speak to her at all.”
Alvin wasn’t surprised to see the glint these boys all got in their eyes the minute he spoke. Provoking a lady was one kind of fun, but he knew they were sizing him up now to see how easy he’d be
to whup. They always loved a chance to teach a lesson to a town boy, even one built up as strong as Alvin was, him being a blacksmith.
“Maybe you’d best not speak to us at all,” said the loud one. “Maybe you already said more than you ought.”
One of the river rats didn’t understand, and thought the game was still talking dirty about the lady. “He’s just jealous. He wants to pole her muddy river himself.”
“I haven’t said enough,” said Alvin, “not while you still don’t have the manners to know how to speak to a lady.”
Only now did the lady speak for the first time. “I don’t need protection, young man,” she said. “Just go along, please.” Her voice was strange-sounding. Cultured, like Reverend Thrower, with all the words clear. Like people who went to school in the East.
It would have been better for her not to speak, since the sound of her voice only encouraged the river rats.
“Oh, she’s sweet on this boy!”
“She’s making a move on him!”
“He wants to row our boat!”
“Let’s show her who the real man is!”
“If she wants his little mast, let’s cut it off and give it to him.”
A knife appeared, then another. Didn’t she know enough to keep her mouth shut? If they dealt with Alvin alone, they’d set up to have a single fight, one to one. But if they got to showing off for her, they’d be happy enough to gang up on him and cut him bad, maybe kill him, certainly take an ear or his nose or, like they said, geld him.
Alvin glared at her for a moment, silently telling her to shut her mouth. Whether she understood his look or just figured things out for herself or got plain scared to say more, she didn’t offer any more conversation, and Alvin set to turning things in a direction he could handle.
“Knives,” said Alvin, with all the contempt he could muster. “So you’re afraid to face a blacksmith with bare hands?”
They laughed at him, but the knives got pulled back and put away.
“Blacksmith’s
nothing
compared to the muscles we get poling the river.”
“You don’t pole the river no more, boys, and everybody knows that,” said Alvin. “You just set back and get fat, watching the paddlewheel push the boat along.”
The loudest talker got up and stepped out, pulling his filthy shirt off over his head. He was strongly muscled, all right, with more than a few scars making white and red marks here and there on his chest and arms. He was also missing an ear.
“From the look of you,” said Alvin, “you’ve fought a lot of men.”
“Damn straight,” said the river rat.
“And from the look of you, I’d say most of them was better than you.”
The man turned red, blushing under his tan clear down to his chest.
“Can’t you give me somebody who’s worth rassling? Somebody who mostly wins his fights?”
“I win my fights!” shouted the man—getting mad, so he’d be easy to lick, which was Al’s plan. But the others, they started pulling him back.
“The blacksmith boy’s right, you’re no great shakes at rassling.”
“Give him what he wants.”
“Mike, you take this boy.”
“He’s yours, Mike.”
From the back—the shadiest spot, where he’d been sitting on the only chair with a back to it—a man stood up and stepped forward.
“I’ll take this boy,” he said.
At once the loud one backed off and got out of the way. This wasn’t what Alvin wanted at all. The man they called Mike was bigger and stronger than any of the others, and as he stripped his shirt off, A1 saw that while he had a scar or two, he was mostly clean, and he had both his ears, a sure sign that if he ever lost a rassling match, he sure never lost
bad.
He had muscles like a buffalo.
“My name is Mike Fink!” he bellowed. “And I’m the meanest, toughest son-of-a-bitch ever to walk on the water! I can orphan baby alligators with my bare hands! I can throw a live buffalo up onto a wagon and slap him upside the head until he’s dead! If I don’t like the bend of a river, I grab ahold of the end of it and give it a shake to straighten it out! Every woman I ever put down come up with triplets, if she come up at all! When I’m done with you, boy, your hair will hang down straight on both sides cause you won’t have no more ears. You’ll have to sit down to piss, and you’ll never have to shave again!”
All the time Mike Fink was making his brag, Alvin was taking off his shirt and his knife belt and laying them on the wagon seat. Then he marked a big circle in the dirt, making sure he looked as calm and relaxed as if Mike Fink was a spunky seven-year-old boy, and not a man with murder in his eyes.
So when Fink was shut of boasting, the circle was marked. Fink walked to the circle, then rubbed it out with his foot, raising a dust. He walked all around the circle, rubbing it out. “I don’t know who taught you how to rassle, boy,” he said, “but when you rassle
me
, there ain’t no lines and there ain’t no rules.”
Once again the lady spoke up. “Obviously there are no rules when you speak, either, or you’d know that the word
ain’t
is a sure sign of ignorance and stupidity.”
Fink turned to the woman and made as if to speak. But it was like he knew he had nothing to say, or maybe he figured that whatever he said would make him sound more ignorant. The contempt in her voice enraged him, but it also made him doubt himself. At first Alvin thought the lady was making it more dangerous for him, meddling again. But then he realized that she was doing to Fink what Alvin had tried to do to the loudmouth—make him mad enough to fight stupid. Trouble was, as Alvin sized up the river man, he suspected that Fink didn’t fight stupid when he was mad —it just made him fight meaner. Fight to kill. Act out his brag about taking off parts of Alvin’s body. This wasn’t going to be a
friendly match like the ones Alvin had in town, where the game was just to throw the other man, or if they was fighting on grass, to pin him down.