proper clothes, but it was sure better than being buck naked.
Then Ta-Kumsaw sat down on the grass, the pot between him and them, and showed them how to eat the mash-dipping in his hand, pulling out a tepid, jelly-thick glop of it and smacking it into his open mouth. Tasted so bland that Alvin like to gagged on it. Measure saw it, and said, "Eat." So Alvin ate, and once he got some swallowed he could feel how much his belly wanted more, even though it still took real persuasion to get his throat to take on the job of transportation.
When they had the pot cleaned right down to the bottom, Ta-Kumsaw set it aside. He looked at Measure for a while. "How did you make me fall down, White coward?" he said.
Al was all for speaking up right then, but Measure answered too quick and loud. "I ain't no coward, Chief Ta-Kumsaw, and if you wrassle me now it'll be fair and square."
Ta-Kumsaw smiled grimly. "So you can make me fall down with all these women and children watching?"
"It was me," said Alvin.
Ta-Kumsaw turned his head, slowly, the smile not leaving his face-but not so grim now, neither. "Very small boy," he said. "Very worthless child. You can make the ground loose under my feet?"
"I just got a knack," said Alvin. "I didn't know you weren't aiming to hurt him."
"I saw a hatchet," said Ta-Kumsaw. "Finger-marks like this." He waved his finger to show the kind of pattern Measure's fingers had left in the blade of the hatchet. "You did that?"
"It ain't right to cut a man's fingers off."
Ta-Kumsaw laughed out loud. "Very good!" Then he leaned in close. "White men's knacks, they make noise, very much noise. But you, what you do is so quiet nobody sees it."
Al didn't know what he was talking about.
In the silence, Measure spoke up bold as you please. "What you plan to do with us, Chief Ta-Kumsaw?"
"Tomorrow we run again," he said.
"Well why don't you think about letting us run toward home? There's got to be a hundred of out neighbors out now, mad as hornets. There's going to be a lot of trouble if you don't let us go home."
Ta-Kumsaw shook his head. "My brother wants you."
Measure looked at Alvin, then back at Ta-Kumsaw. "You mean the Prophet?"
"Tenskwa-Tawa," said Ta-Kumsaw.
Measure looked plain sick. "You mean after he built up his Prophetstown for four years, nobody causing him a lick of trouble, White man and Red man getting along real good, now he goes around taking Whites captive and torturing them and - "
Ta-Kumsaw clapped his hands once, loudly. Measure fell silent. "Chok-Taw took you! Chok-Taw tried to kill you! My people don't kill except to defend our land and our families from Wbite thieves and murderers. And Tenskwa-Tawa's people, they don't kill at all."
That was the first Al ever heard of there being a split between Ta-Kumsaw's people and the Prophet's people.
"Then how'd you know where we were?" demanded Measure. "How'd you know how to find us?"
"Tenskwa-Tawa saw you," said Ta-Kumsaw. "Told me to hurry and get you, save you from the Chok-Taw, bring you to Mizogan."
Measure, who knew more about Armor-of-God's maps than Alvin did, recognized the name. "That's the big lake, where Fort Chicago is."
"We don't go to Fort Chicago," said Ta-Kumsaw. "We go to the holy place."
"A church?" asked Alvin.
Ta-Kumsaw laughed. "You White people, when you make a place holy you build walls so nothing of the land can get in. Your god is nothing and nowhere, so you build a church with nothing alive inside, a church that could be anywhere, it doesn't matter - nothing and nowhere."
"Well what does make a place holy?" asked Alvin.
"Because that's where the Red man talks to the land, and the land answers." Ta-Kumsaw grinned. "Sleep now. We will go when it's still dark."
"It's going to be mighty cool tonight," said Measure.
"Women will bring you blankets. Warriors don't need them. This is summer." Ta-Kumsaw walked a few steps away, then turned back to Alvin. "Weaw-Moxiky ran behind you, White boy. He saw what you did. Don't try to keep the secret from Tenskwa-Tawa. He will know when you lie." Then the chief was gone.
"What's he talking about?" asked Measure.
"I wisht I knew," said Al. "I'm going to have trouble telling the truth when I don't know what the truth is. "
The blankets came soon enough. Al snuggled close to his big brother, for courage more than warmth. He and Measure