the charm to learn how it was put together-"in case she come apart on the road," La Tia said-and learning the words and the motions.
"What if I don't do it exactly right?" said Arthur Stuart. "What if I forget some bit? Will it just work a little slower, or will it not work at all?"
La Tia glared at him again. "Don't forget any. Then we never find out how much she go wrong when stupid boy forget."
So even after she was satisfied that he knew what to do, Arthur Stuart went off by himself, to a stand of trees near the river, to go through it all again.
That's where he was when Dead Mary found him. But he was asleep by then, exhausted from all that he'd been doing for days. The greensong helped him and everyone else stay vigorous all through the night and into the morning, but the need for sleep had caught up with him and there was no denying it.
Arthur Stuart felt a hand on his shoulder and sat bolt upright. He was confused to see that it was Dead Mary who was kneeling beside him, because she had also been in his dream.
"Alvin sent me to look for you," said Dead Mary. "Sorry to wake you up."
Arthur shook his head. "That's all right," he said. "I didn't mean to fall asleep."
"What's that you were lying on?"
Arthur Stuart looked down and was horrified to see that he had rolled over on the smaller charm and bent it. He said a swear word, apologized for it, and when Dead Mary said it was all right, he thanked her and said it again. "She's gonna kill me if I don't get this back together right."
"La Tia?" said Dead Mary. "Sometimes I think she might kill someone for practice. The power she has!"
"I'm just glad she's on our side," said Arthur Stuart.
"She is for now."
"Same could be said for you," said Arthur. "When we get to safety, what then? Where will everybody go?"
"Where can we go?" said Dead Mary. "All these runaway slaves, where will they be safe? And my people, the French- we don't speak the way they do in Paris, you think they'll want us in Canada? We will be strangers wherever we go. Maybe we stay in the United States. Maybe we stay with Alvin."
"Alvin wanders all the time," said Arthur Stuart. "He hardly sleeps in the same bed twice."
"Then maybe we wander."
Oh right, Alvin was bound to want her along on his journeys. "He's married, you know."
She looked at him like he was crazy. "I know that, ignorant boy."
"Is that what I am?"
"When you talk like that, yes," said Mary. "You think I want a husband? You think all women, they want a man for a husband or not at all?"
"Well, you ain't got a husband," said Arthur Stuart.
"And when I want one," she answered, "I will tell him and it will be none of your business."
So much for Arthur Stuart's dream. "It's none of my business now." He looked at the small charm from every angle. There was nothing wrong with it that he could see, and yet it still didn't feel quite right.
"Was this supposed to be part of it?" said Mary. She held up a grain of dried maize-a red one.
"Yes, yes, thank you." He inserted it into its place between two pieces of birchbark. "It's hard to remember what you're not seeing. I'm going to mess this up, I just know it. This is important, and they're crazy to send an ignorant boy to do it."
She laid a reassuring hand on his shoulder. "You are not really an ignorant boy," she said.
"No, you had it right."
"You are an ignorant boy when you try to guess what a woman is thinking," said Mary. "But you are not an ignorant boy when it comes to doing a man's work."
"I guess then I'm an ignorant man" he grumbled, but he liked having her touch his shoulder, even if she was sweet on a married man.
"I saw you in the crystal ball," she said. "I saw you running and running. Through desert, up a mountain. To a great valley surrounded by tall mountains, with a lake in the middle, and a city on the lake. I saw you run to the middle and light a fire and it turned all the mountains into great chimneys giving off smoke, and then the earth began to shake and the mountains began to bleed."
"Well, the plan is for