might have clung to him. Then he rose up and lifted Arthur Stuart out of the water, all in one motion. The boy came up shedding waterdrops like a spray of cold pearls in the moonlight. He stood there gasping for breath and shaking from the cold.
"Tell me it don't hurt no more," said Alvin.
"Any more," said Arthur, correcting him just like Miss Larner always did. "I feel fine. Except cold."
Alvin scooped him up out of the water and carried him back to the bank. "Wrap him in my shirt and let's get out of here."
So they did. Not a one of them noticed that when Arthur imitated Miss Larner, he didn't use Miss Larner's voice.
* * *
Peggy didn't notice either, not right away. She was too busy looking inside Arthur Stuart's heartfire. How it changed when Alvin transformed him! So subtle a change it was that Peggy couldn't even tell what it was Alvin was changing - yet in the moment that Arthur Stuart emerged from the water, not a single path from his past remained - not a single path leading southward into slavery. And all the new paths, the new futures that the transformation had brought to him - they led to such amazing possibilities.
During all the time it took for Horace, Po, and Alvin to bring Arthur Stuart back across the Hio and through the woods to the smithy, Peggy did nothing more than explore in Arthur Stuart's heartfire, studying possibilities that had never before existed in the world. There was a new Maker abroad in the land; Arthur was the first soul touched by him, and everything was different. Moreover, most of Arthur's futures were inextricably tied with Alvin. Peggy saw possibilities of incredible journeys - on one path a trip to Europe where Arthur Stuart would be at Alvin's side as the new Holy Roman Emperor Napoleon bowed to him; on another path a voyage into a strange island nation far to the south where Red men lived their whole lives on mats of floating seaweed; on another path a triumphant crossing into westward lands where the Reds hailed Alvin as the great unifier of all the races, and opened up their last refuge to him, so perfect was their trust. And always by his side was Arthur Stuart, the mixup boy - but now trusted, now himself gifted with some of the Maker's own power.
Most of the paths began with them bringing Arthur Stuart to her springhouse, so she was not surprised when they knocked at her door.
"Miss Larner," called Alvin softly.
She was distracted; reality was not half so interesting as the futures revealed now in Arthur Stuart's heartfire. She opened the door. There they stood, Arthur still wrapped in Alvin's shirt.
"We brought him back," said Horace.
"I can see that," said Peggy. She was glad of it, but that gladness didn't show up in her voice. Instead she sounded busy, interrupted, annoyed. As she was. Get on with it, she wanted to say. I've seen this conversation as Arthur overheard it, so get on with it, get it over with, and let me get back to exploring what this boy will be. But of course she could say none of this - not if she hoped to remain disguised as Miss Larner.
"They won't find him," said Alvin, "not as long as they don't actually see him with their eyes. Something - their cachet don't work no more."
"Doesn't work anymore," said Peggy.
"Right," said Alvin. "What we come for - came for - can we leave him with you? Your house, here, Ma'am, I've got it hexed up so tight they won't even think to come inside, long as you keep the door locked."
"Don't you have more clothes for him than this? He's been wet - do you want him to take a chill?"
"It's a warm night," said Horace, "and we don't want to be fetching clothes from the house. Not till the Finders come back and give up and go away again."
"Very well," said Peggy.
"We'd best be about our business," said Po Doggly. "I got to get back to Dr. Physicker's."
"And since I told Old Peg that I'd be in town, I'd better be there," said Horace.
Alvin spoke straight to Peggy. "I'll be in the smithy, Miss Larner. If something goes wrong, you give a shout, and I'll be up the hill in ten seconds."
"Thank you. Now please go on about your business."
She closed