airholes through the thick walls. Then he fell onto cornstalk mat on the floor and slept.
When he woke it was still night. Except it wasn't. The sun was up-but it was only a dim red disk in the ashes that filled the air. Morning. How long till the eruption? What time of day had it been when the smoke first started?
Doesn't matter. Can't control that. Keep walking. There was no running in him today, especially since his path led inexorably uphill, and the ground kept shaking so much that if he'd been running he would have fallen down.
He was still far from the crest when the volcano blew up. He only had time enough to burrow his way into an outcropping of rock, which took the brunt of the shockwave. It struck with such force that the rock he was hiding in would have given way and crumbled and collapsed into the valley, but Calvin held it firm, kept all but a few shards and slivers of rock in place. And when the hot fiery air blew past, incinerating all life in its path, Calvin kept a bubble of air around him cool enough to bear, and so he did not die.
And when the shock wave passed, he stepped out into the burning world, keeping that cool bubble around him, and turned back to see lava pouring down the slopes of the mountain like a flood from a burst dam. Only it wasn't heading toward the city, because there was no city. Every building had been blown flat by the blast. Only a few stone structures stood, and then only in ruins, most of the walls having been broken down. There was not a sign of life. And the lake was boiling.
Calvin wondered, for a moment, whether any of the men of Austin's expedition had lived long enough to be killed by the eruption. Probably not. Who was to say which was the better way to die? There was no good way to die. And Calvin had come this close.
But close to death was still not death.
Cooling the ground under his feet so his shoes didn't burn, he slowly made his way up the slope until, before nightfall, he reached the crest and started down the unburnt side. Ash had fallen here, too, but this land had been sheltered from the blast, and he could eat the fruit from the trees, as long as he got the ash off it first. The fruit was partly cooked-the ash had been that warm when it fell-but to Calvin it tasted like the nectar of the gods.
I have been spared alive yet again. My work is not yet done in the world.
Might as well head north and see what Alvin's doing. Maybe it's time I started learning some of the stuff he taught to Arthur Stuart. Anything that half-black boy can learn, I can learn, and ten times better.
Chapter 16
Labor
Tenskwa-Tawa watched from the trees as Dead Mary, Rien, and La Tia uncovered the crystal ball.
"We got to do something good for Alvin, all he do for us," said La Tia.
"Maybe we should ask him what he wants," said Dead Mary.
"He not here," said La Tia.
"Men never know what they want," said Rien. "They think they want one thing, then they get it, then they don't want it."
"Your life story, Mother?" asked Dead Mary.
"I name her Marie d'Espoir," said Rien to La Tia. "Marie of hope. But maybe Marie de la Morte is the right name. She the death of me, La Tia."
"I don't think so," said La Tia. "I think men be the death of you, and that don't come from the crystal ball, no."
"I'm too old for men," said Rien.
"But they never too old for you, Caterina," said La Tia. "Now we look to see what Alvin want the most in his heart."
"Can you command it to show what you want?" asked Dead Mary.
"It always show me the right thing," said La Tia.
"But I would still find a way to do the wrong thing," said Dead Mary.
"You see?" said Rien. "My fille n'a pas d'espoir."
"I have hope, Mother," said Dead Mary. "But I have experience too."
"Look," said La Tia. "Do you see what I see?"
"We never do," said Dead Mary.
"I see Alvin with a son. That what he want most."
"I see him with a woman," said Rien. "That is what he miss the most."
"I see him kneeling by a child's grave," said Dead Mary. "That is what he fears the most."
"I