can help you find some land."
"Free of charge, I hope," said Verily. "My practice hasn't been such as to make me a wealthy man. I keep working pro bono for my friends."
"I don't know how it will be paid for," said Margaret. "I only know that if you don't go to see Mr. Lincoln, there are few paths that lead anywhere but to disaster for Alvin and the people in his care. But if you do go..."
"Let me guess-there might be some path that leads to safety."
"First things first," said Margaret. "He needs a place that will take in these homeless folk and board them and bed them for a time. There's no place in the slave lands that will have them, that's certain."
Verily sat down at the table and leaned his chin on his hands and stared into her eyes. "I'd rather stay here and get Alvin shut of this will once and for all time. Why don't you go and talk to this Mr. Lincoln?"
She sighed and stared into her bowl. "Mr. Cooper, I have spent five years of my life trying to persuade people to do the things that would avoid a terrible, bloody war. With all my years of talking, do you know what I accomplished?"
"We ain't had a war yet," said Verily.
"I postponed the war by a year or two, maybe three," she said. "And do you know how I did that?"
"How?"
"By sending my husband to Nueva Barcelona."
"He put off a war?"
"Without knowing what he did, yes, the war was delayed. Because of an outbreak of yellow fever. But then he went on and did this-this impossible escape. This rescue, this liberation of slaves."
Horace chuckled. "Sounds like he finally got him the spirit of abolition."
"He's always had the wish for it," said Margaret. "Why did he have to pick now to find the will? This escape of slaves-it will lead to war as surely as ever."
"So he eliminated one cause of war, and then brought about another," said Verily.
Margaret nodded and took a bite of soup. "This is very good, Papa."
"Forgive me for thinking like a lawyer," said Verily Cooper, "but why didn't you foresee this before you sent him down?"
She was chewing, so Old Horace answered. "She can't see that clear when it comes to Alvin. Can't see what all he's going to choose to do. She can see some things, but not most things, when it comes to him. Which I think is a plain mercy. A man who has a wife can see everything he does and thinks and wants and wishes, well, I think he might as well kill himself."
Horace was joking, and so he laughed, but Margaret didn't take it as a joke. Verily saw her tears drop into the stew.
"Ho, now," he said, "that's already salted well enough, I can swear to that, I had some for supper."
"Father is right," she said. "Oh, poor Alvin. I should never have married him."
Verily had actually had that thought occur to him several times in the past, and since he knew she could see into his heartfire, he didn't bother trying to lie and reassure her. "Maybe so," he said, "but as you already know, Alvin's a free chooser. He chose you the way most folks choose a mate, not seeing the end, but wanting to find his way to it with his hand in yours."
She placed her hand on his and gave him a weak smile. "You have a lawyer's way with words," she said.
"What I said is true," said Verily. "Alvin chose you because of who you are and how he feels about you, not because he thought you'd always make right choices."
"How he feels about me," she said, and shuddered. "What if he finds out that I sent him to Nueva Barcelona knowing that by going there, he'd cause the deaths of hundreds of souls?"
"Why does he have to find out?" said Verily. But he knew the answer already.
"He'll ask me," said Margaret. "And I'll tell him."
"He caused the plague of yellow fever, is that it?"
"Not on purpose, but yes."
"And you knew he would."
"It was the only thing that would stop the war that the King already planned. His invasion of Nueva Barcelona would have forced the United States to invade the Crown Colonies in order to keep the King from sealing off their access to the sea. But the yellow fever prevented the King's army from approaching the city. By the time the fever is gone, so will