Chapter Five
LILLIE STOOD WHERE she was for a long moment,
staring at the usually friendly sight of Bett and yet feeling
reluctant to move. She had known the old woman for as long as she
could remember and had always found her a gentle presence. Now,
however, Lillie was strangely afraid. Bett seemed to notice that.
She opened the door wider and ticked her head invitingly.
“Come in,” she repeated. “There’s bread if you want
some.”
Lillie unrooted her feet, stepped across the grass
and climbed the single step into the cabin. It was warm and close
inside with the heat coming out of the oven, but Bett closed the
door anyway, as if she already knew the reason for Lillie’s visit
and reckoned privacy was called for. The little house looked the
way it always looked, furnished with an eating table and two
chairs, a dresser with a small looking glass above it, and a bed
covered with a soft, woolen throw Bett had owned for years and
years and years. Lillie had always liked the colors of the worn old
blanket—greens and yellows and oranges and scarlets on a background
of deep black.
“Africa colors,” Bett would say. “Been sleepin’
under ’em my whole life.”
The only part of the cabin that didn’t look as tidy
as the rest was the area near the hearth where Bett did her baking.
There was a small wall of shelves filled with a jumble of baking
trays, mixing bowls, spoons, whisks and knives. Next to it was a
separate shelf stacked with an odd collection of bowls and pieces
of china that were far too fine for a slave’s cabin and in fact had
come from the Big House. All of them were chipped or cracked or
otherwise not suitable for the Master’s home and had been given to
Bett as a gift from the Missus.
“I expect these would look just fine in your
kitchen,” the Missus had said with a broad smile when she passed
the battered old things to Bett.
“Yes, ma’am,” was all Bett had said.
Beneath Bett’s shelves was a long, well-used
worktable where she mixed her batters and kneaded her doughs.
Resting on the table was a fresh tray of dark bread. Lillie could
see a few curls of steam rising from it and, though Mama had given
her a good breakfast of hoecakes and milk, she could feel her belly
rumbling. Bett saw her staring at the bread.
“You look hungry, girl,” she said.
Lillie nodded mutely.
“Sit then,” Bett said, gesturing to one of the two
chairs.
Lillie did as she was told, and Bett sliced off a
thick piece of the fresh bread. She blew the crumbs off a plate
sitting on the mixing table, placed the bread on it and carried it
to the eating table. Lillie inhaled the heavy, yeasty smell and
took a bite. The bread, as always, was just what bread ought to be.
The crust was thick and flavorful, and fought with her a little
when she bit it. The inside was cloud light. It was as if two foods
had come together in a single one, and Lillie ate hungrily. Bett
sat down and watched her and, after a long moment, spoke.
“I reckoned today was the day you’d come,” she
said.
“I woulda come earlier if I coulda got away,”
Lillie said through a mouthful of bread.
“I know,” Bett said. “You want to talk about the
boy—Plato.”
Lillie stopped chewing and looked up, the appetite
suddenly gone from her. She nodded. “How do you know?” she
asked.
“People talk, I listen,” Bett said. “You want to
know if I can help you.”
Lillie nodded again. “Can you?” she asked.
“What is it you reckon I can do?”
“I need to get to Bluffton,” Lillie said, putting
down her bread. She leaned in and spoke low and fast as if someone
might be listening. “I need to go soon. We was supposed to be
freed, but since they say my papa done some stealin’, they ain’t
never gonna let us go. I got to show he didn’t do it or they’ll
take Plato away and we won’t never see him again.” Lillie never
found it easy to talk about Papa without the talk turning to
tears—especially when she had to repeat the lie about the stealing.
But she swallowed hard and her eyes stayed dry.
“What’s in Bluffton?” Bett asked. She pushed
Lillie’s bread plate a little closer to her, but Lillie had lost
interest in eating and Bett did not press her further.
“A man,” Lillie said. “A slave soldier what might
know somethin’.”
“You think I can help you get there?”
“You can,” Lillie said.
“You think you can just walk about a place like
that, askin’ questions like you was growed and free?”
“I got to try. I can’t let ’em take Plato!”
Bett sat back. “You’re askin’ a lot, girl,” she
said. “And you’re askin’ for trouble too. No harm would come to
me—even that Bull wouldn’t lay a whip to my back, and the Master
couldn’t get more’n a coin if he tried to sell me off for
misbehavin’. But you’d fetch a price and a flogging both if you got
caught. And besides ...” Bett trailed off as if considering whether
or not she ought to continue. Then she went on, but more gently.
“And besides, how do you know they wasn’t tellin’ the truth ’bout
your papa? It ain’t every slave man what comes by a bag o’ Yankee
gold, ’less he took it.”
Lillie’s eyes went fiery, and her tone went cold.
“My papa weren’t no thief,” she said, rising to her feet, “and I
won’t listen to no one call him one. He lived an honest man, and he
died one too! And if you don’t believe me, we ain’t got nothin’ to
talk about!” She pushed her chair back noisily, nearly knocking it
over, and began to stalk toward the door.
“Girl!” Bett called after her sharply. Lillie
slowed, then turned back. “Sit back down!”
Lillie hesitated and Bett’s stern tone and face
softened to weary amusement. “Sit,” she said, with a tired wave of
her hand. Lillie returned to the table and Bett looked at her
thoughtfully.
“No, child,” the old woman said at length. “I don’t
reckon your papa was a thief. A thievin’ man’s always lookin’
about, as if he’s waitin’ to be caught at somethin’. An honest man
got a steady way about him—and your papa was steady like a tree.
You got his way about you, and you got his looks too—which I reckon
pleases you less than if you had your mama’s looks. But you’re Ibo
and your papa was Ibo, and your mama ain’t.”
This was not the first time Bett had mentioned that
Lillie was Ibo, and Lillie could never tell if she meant it as a
good thing or not. “A lot of Ibo in you, child,” Bett liked to say
if she caught Lillie wrestling with another child or otherwise
making trouble. “Maybe too much.”
Papa had had a lot more to say than Bett on the
matter of the Ibo, and he had talked of it often. The Ibo were the
African tribe that Bett’s people and his people—and so Lillie’s own
people—had come from. It was something she ought to be proud of, he
said. The Ibo were known as fine music-makers and storytellers and
were said to be especially good with numbers, coming up with their
own form of ciphering that was even better than the one the white
men used. Best of all, at least to Lillie, the Ibo people didn’t
see much difference between an Ibo boy and an Ibo girl, an Ibo man
and an Ibo woman, reckoning any Ibo could hunt or plant or fight or
tend as well as any other one. Full-grown Ibo women even went into
battle alongside the men, facing the same enemies and carrying the
same weapons. Bett used to say that she could spot an Ibo in any
group of Southern slaves, and it was that readiness to tangle when
they had to that set them apart. Sitting across the table from
Lillie, she now looked in the girl’s face, seeming to study it
closely.
“I expect you aim to do this thing,” she
said.
Lillie nodded.
“And I expect you won’t let me be if I don’t give
you some help,” Bett added.
Lillie shook her head no.
Bett sighed and then stood, pressing her palms down
on the table to help herself rise, grunting with the effort. “I’m
too old to be of much use to you myself,” she said, “but maybe I
got somethin’ that can serve.”
She made her way over to her baking shelves and
took down a small, reddish jar, holding it carefully in both hands.
The jar looked like ordinary Carolina clay, but it was shaped like
it had been made with another land in mind. Bett carried it back to
the table, set it down and took the lid off. She withdrew a small
cloth bag and opened the drawstring that kept it shut. Then she
tipped the bag into her hand, and a shiny chip of black stone fell
into her palm.
“That,” she said, “is a piece of Africa.”
Bett slowly tilted the chip this way and that. It
had a surface that looked as if it had been polished, and it
reflected light like a bright coin. “Your papa never knew what part
of the Ibos’ land his people come from,” Bett said, “but I knew
where mine was from. A place not far from the ocean, where the
ground was cut through by rivers and streams. The water always ran
fast and bright there, and my papa said his papa told him it tasted
fine too—what a cloud would taste like if you could squeeze it down
tight and put it in a bowl. Still, there was one place the water
didn’t run so quick, and that was on my granddaddy’s land. When it
flowed through there, it flowed like syrup. But if you scooped the
water out and poured it on the ground, it spilled as quick as any
water ought to. Ever see any other water behavin’ like that?”
Lillie nodded.
“I reckoned you had. My granddaddy never could
understand why his stream behaved that way. Then he dug beneath the
mud where the fish and turtles fed and found black rock everywhere
just like this chip—long, hard bones of it runnin’ through the
ground. The Africans called the rock firestone, ’cause it come from
the hot rocks the mountains spit out. Granddaddy reckoned it was
the firestone what held the magic that slowed his river, figuring
stone that flowed fast and then turned hard could share its
changin’ nature with the water. He broke some bits offa the rock
and carried them with him for luck. When the slavers caught him, he
hid two of the chips under his tongue and promised himself he’d
never spit them out—not when he got chained, not when he got
whipped, not when they closed him in the belly of a ship and
carried him across the ocean. He held on to ’em till he was sold to
a plantation where he could hide ’em well and pass ’em on to his
children and to their children who came after.”
“And this here piece is all that’s left?” Lillie
asked softly.
Bett smiled again. “No, child,” she said. “I got
the other one too.”
Bett stood again and gestured to Lillie to follow
her. She walked the three steps to her still-hot oven and crouched
down in front of it. Lillie did the same, flinching at the heat
coming out of the bricks. Bett pointed into the oven and Lillie
followed where her finger indicated. At first she noticed nothing,
but then she saw what Bett wanted her to see: a single brick in the
oven wall, just the same as all the other bricks except that in the
middle of it was a shiny piece of black stone, about as big as a
small coin. The stone was plain to see once you knew where to look,
but no one other than Bett would ever have cause to use her oven,
much less crouch down low and peer inside.
“I reckoned I needed a place to keep at least one
of ’em safe,” Bett said. “So I baked me a brick and mortared it in
where no one would ever look. What I didn’t figure on was that when
I lit the fire, the magic o’that stone would get carried on the
smoke. It flows out of the chimney and just like it slowed my
granddaddy’s river—”
“It slows the bees!” Lillie finished. “And the
stream and the smoke!”
Bett nodded.
“What about the whip—the one what missed Cal?”
Lillie asked.
“That too,” Bett said.
“But how did you make it work just right—so the
whip didn’t hit nothin’ but the air?”
“That sort o’ thing comes with practice. Part of it
comes from just when you light the fire and just when you put it
out. Part of it’s how you bake. If I bake my bread the regular way,
I can slow things down a little; if I bake it too long, I can slow
’em down a lot. I can even bake it too short and speed things up.
There’s other things them stones can do too, but they don’t bear
foolin’ with.”
“What other things?” Lillie asked.
“Never mind. Didn’t I just say they don’t bear
foolin’ with?”
“But why not?”
“There’s magic you touch and there’s magic you
don’t,” Bett said firmly, “and I’ll tell you which is which.”
“But s’posin’—” Lillie began.
“I said never mind!” Bett answered, and this time
she spoke with a bite in her voice Lillie had never heard
before.
Lillie fell silent and looked awkwardly down at her
hands.
Bett softened her tone and smiled. “It was wrong o’
me to make mention of such a thing. We got enough magic in this
oven and this stone already without pushin’ it places it ain’t
meant to go. Besides, I don’t plan to use it at all ’less we got no
other choice.”
Lillie nodded. “How will we know that?” she
asked.
Bett’s demeanor now changed entirely and she
allowed herself a laugh. “Full of questions,” she said. “Too many
for today. You go back to that nursery now ’fore anyone notices you
missing. Ain’t no one gonna bother your brother for a little while
yet.”
“When can I come again?” Lillie asked.
“Two days,” Bett said. “ ’Round about then, I
reckon I’ll be needin’ to make a trip to Bluffton, and I could
always use the help of a young pair of hands.”
Lillie brightened, Bett’s angry moment now entirely
forgotten. “Two days!” she said excitedly. Then she jumped up from
her seat as Bett struggled up from hers, and the old woman and
young girl hugged good-bye at the door. Bett watched as Lillie ran
off and vanished back the way she came. Then she closed the door,
gathered up her stone and swaddled it carefully in its drawstring
bag.