the new child that was so far away, and beyond his reach, in someone else's charge.
"Get up," whispered Arthur Stuart. "Don't kneel to her."
"He don't kneel to me," said La Tia. "He kneel to his love, to the saint of love. Not Lord Valentine, no, not him. The saint of a father's love, St. Joseph, the husband of the Holy Mother. To him he kneeling. That be so, no?"
Alvin shook his head. "I'm kneeling because I'm broke inside," he whispered. "And you want this broke man to do something for you, and there's nothing I can do. The world is sicker every day and I got no power to heal the world."
"You got the power I need," said La Tia. "Maria de los Muertos, she tell me. You make her mother whole, she."
"You're not sick," said Alvin.
"The whole of Barcy, she be sick," said La Tia. "You live in a house about to die from that sick. This blacktown, she about to die. The French people of Barcy, they be about to die. The sick of angry people, the sick of stupid people all afraid. Gotta have somebody to blame. That be you and that crazy Moose and Squirrel. That be me and all us who keep Africa alive, we. That be all them French folk like Maria de los Muertos and her mama. What they gonna do when the mob decides to blame the fever on somebody and burn it out? Where they gonna go?"
"What do you think I can do? I got no control over the mob."
"You know what I want, you."
"I don't."
"You maybe don't know you know, but you got them words burnt in your heart by your mama all them years ago, when you little, you. 'Let my people go.' "
"I'm not Pharaoh and this ain't Egypt."
"Is too Egypt and I reckon you ain't Pharaoh, you Moses."
"What do you want, a plague of cockroaches? Barcy already got that, and nobody cares."
"I want you to part the sea and let us across on dry land in the dark of night."
Alvin shook his head. "Moses did that by the power of God, which I ain't got. And he had someplace to go, a wilderness to be lost in. Where can you go? All these people. Too many."
"Where you send them slaves you set free from the riverboat?"
That flat out stunned Alvin. There was no way that story could be known here in the south. Was there?
Alvin turned and looked at Arthur Stuart.
"I didn't tell nobody," said Arthur. "You think I'm crazy?"
"You think I need somebody tell me?" said La Tia. "I saw it inside you, all on fire, you. Take us across the river."
"But you ain't talking about no two score slaves here, you talking about blacktown and the orphanage and-French-town? You know how many that is?"
"And all the slaves as want to go," said La Tia. "In the fog of night. You make the fog come into Barcy from off the river. You let us all gather in the fog, you take us across the river. You got red friends, you take us safe to the other side."
"I can't do it. You think I can hold back the whole Mizzippy? What do you think I am?"
"I think you a man, he want to know why he alive," said La Tia. "He want to know what his power be for. Now La Tia tell you, and you don't want to know after all!"
"I'm not Moses," said Alvin. "And you ain't the Lord."
"You want to sec a burning bush?" asked La Tia.
"No!" said Alvin. She might be able to conjure up some kind of fireworks, but he didn't want to see it. "And it wouldn't work to cross the river anyway. How would we feed the people on the far bank? It's swamp there, mud and snakes and gators and skeeters, just like here. Ain't no manna in the wilderness there. My friends among the reds are far to the north. It can't be done. Least of all by me."
"Most of all by you," said La Tia.
They stood there in silence for a moment.
Arthur Stuart spoke up. "Usted es tia de quien?"
"I don't speak no Spanish, boy," said La Tia. "They call me La Tia cause them Spanish people can't say my Ibo name."
"We don't say her name neither," said the smaller woman. "She be our Queen, and she say, Let my people go, so you do it, you."
"Hush, child," said La Tia. "You don't tell a man like