Least of all you, smith boy, I could see you ten miles away."
Alvin just looked at him. Eventually the Finder sneered and turned away. They put Arthur Stuart onto the horse in front of the white-haired Finder. But Alvin figured that as soon as they got across the Hio, they'd have Arthur walking. Not out of meanness, maybe - but it wouldn't do no good for Finders to show themselves being kindly to a runaway. Besides, they had to set an example for the other slaves, didn't they? Let them see a boy seven years old walking along, feet bleeding, head bowed, and they'd think twice about trying to run off with their children. They'd know that Finders have no mercy.
Pauley and Dr. Physicker rode away with them. They were seeing the Finders to the Hio River and watching them cross the river, to make sure they did no hurt to Arthur Stuart while he was in free territory. It was the best they could do.
Makepeace didn't have much to.say, but what he said, he said plain. "A real man would never put manacles on his own friend," said Makepeace. "I'll go up to the house and sign your journeyman papers. I don't want you in my smithy or my house another night."
He left Alvin alone by the forge.
He'd been gone no more than five minutes when Horace Guester got to the smithy.
"Let's go," he said.
"No," said Alvin. "Not yet. They can see us coming. They'll tell the sheriff if they're being followed."
"We got no choice. Can't lose their trail."
You know something about what I am and what I can do," said Alvin. "I've got them even now. They won't get more than a mile from the Hio shore before they fall asleep."
"You can do that?"
"I know what goes on inside people when they're sleepy. I can make that staff start happening inside them the minute they're in Appalachee."
"While you're at it, why don't you kill them?"
"I can't."
"They aren't men! It wouldn't be murder, killing them!"
"They are men," said Alvin. "Besides, if I kill them, then it's a violation of the Fugitive Slave Treaty."
"Are you a lawyer now?"
"Miss Larner explained it to me. I mean she explained it to Arthur Stuart while I was there. He wanted to know. Back last fall. He said, 'Why don't my pa just kill them if some Finders come for me?', And Miss Larner, she told him how there'd just be more Finders coming, only this time they'd hang you and take Arthur Stuart anyway."
Horace's face had turned red. Alvin didn't understand why for a minute, not till Horace Guester explained. "He shouldn't call me his pa. I never wanted him in my house." He swallowed. "But he's right. I'd kill them Finders if I thought it'd do good.
"No killing," said Alvin. "I think I can fix it so they'll never find Arthur again."
"I know. I'm going to ride him to Canada. Get to the lake and sail across."
"No sir," said Alvin. "I think I can fix it so they'll never find him anywhere. We just got to hide him till they go away."
"Where?"
"Springhouse, if Miss Larner'll let us."
"Why there?"
"I got it hexed up every which way from Tuesday. I thought I was doing it for the teacher lady. But now I reckon I was really doing it for Arthur Stuart."
Horace grinned. "You're really something, Alvin. You know that?"
"Maybe. Sure wish I knew what."
"I'll go ask Miss Larner if we can make use of her house."
"If I know Miss Larner, she'll say yes before you finish asking."
"When do we start, then?"
It took Alvin by surprise, having a grown man ask him when they should start. "Soon as it's dark, I reckon. Soon as those two Finders are asleep."
"You can really do that?"
"I can if I keep watching them. I mean sort of watching. Keeping track of where they are. So I don't go putting the wrong people to sleep."
"Well, are you watching them now?"
"I know where they are."
"Keep watching, then." Horace looked a little scared, almost as bad as he did near seven years ago, when Alvin told him he knew about the girl buried there. Scared because he knew Alvin could do something strange, something beyond any hexings or knacks in Horace's ken.
Don't you, know me, Horace? Don't you know that I'm still Alvin, the boy you liked and trusted and helped so many times? Finding out that I'm stronger than you thought, in ways you didn't think of, that don't mean