Part 25 (2/2)

It was not like that. What I felt was quiet and strange. It was happiness defiled by fear. For an imperishable minute I couldn't speak.

My silence distressed him. ”Sarah?” he said.

”. . . I want to say yes . . . and yet, as you know, I've set my course for a vocation. The ministry . . . What I mean to say is . . . could I be your wife and a minister?”

His eyes widened. ”I hadn't imagined you would want to continue with your ambition after we married. Would you really want that?”

”I would. With all my heart.”

His face furrowed. ”Forgive me, I only thought you chose it because you'd given up on me.”

He thought my ambition was a consolation? Reflexively, I stood and took a few steps.

I thought of the knowing that had come to me about my mission on the night I wrote to Handful. It was pure as the voice that had brought me north. When I'd sewed the b.u.t.ton on my dress, I knew it couldn't be undone.

I turned back to him and saw he was on his feet, waiting. ”I can't be Rebecca, Israel. Her whole life was for you and the children, and I would love you no less than she did, but I'm not like her. There are things I must do. Please, Israel, don't make me choose.”

He took my hands and kissed them, first one, then the other, and it came to me that I'd spoken of love, but he had not. He'd spoken of caring, of need-his, the children's, Green Hill's.

”Wouldn't I, wouldn't we be enough for you?” he said. ”You would be a wonderful wife and the best of mothers. We would see to it that you never missed your ambition.”

It was his way of telling me. I could not have him and myself both.

Handful.

I spread a pallet under the tree and set my sewing basket on it. Missus had decided she needed new curtains and covers for the drawing room, which was the last thing she needed, but it gave me a reason to come out here and sew with mauma.

She sat under the tree every day, working her story onto the quilt. Even if it drizzled, I couldn't budge her-she was like G.o.d mending the world. When she came to bed at night, she brought the tree with her. The smell of bark and white mushrooms. Crumbs from the earth all over the mattress.

Winter had packed and gone. The leaves had wriggled out on the tree branches and the gold ta.s.sels were falling from the limbs like shedding fur. Settling on the pallet next to mauma, I wondered about Sarah up north, if her pale face ever saw the sun. She'd written me a while back, first letter I ever got. I carried it in my pocket most of the time.

Thomas' wife had given missus a bra.s.s bird that fastened cloth in its beak, what they called a sew bird. I stuck one end of the curtain panel in its mouth while I measured and cut. Mauma was cutting out the applique of a man holding a branding iron in the fire.

”Who's the man?” I said.

”That's ma.s.sa Wilc.o.x,” she said. ”He brand me the first time we run off. Sky was 'bout seven then-I had to wait on her to get old enough to travel.”

”Sky said yawl ran four times.”

”We run the next year when she's eight, and then when she's nine, and that time they whip her, too, so I stop trying.”

”How come you tried this last time then?”

”When I first get there, before Sky was born, ma.s.sa Wilc.o.x come down to see me. Everybody know what he want, too. When he put his hand on me, I take a scoop of red coals off the fire and toss 'em. Burn the man's arm clean through his s.h.i.+rt. I got my first whipping, but it's the last time he try that with me. When Sky turn thirteen last year, here he come back, sniffing round her. I tell her, we leaving, and this time we gon die trying.”

I couldn't measure words against any of that. I said, ”Well, you made it. You're here now.”

Our needles started back. Over in the garden, Sky was singing. Ef oona ent kno weh oona da gwuine, oona should kno weh oona dum from.

Sky had never set foot past the Grimke walls since she got here. Missus didn't have owner papers on her and Nina said it was dangerous business out there. Since Denmark, the codes had got stricter and the buckrahs had got meaner, but the next market day, I told Nina, ”Write Sky a pa.s.s, just do it for me. I'll watch after her.”

I tied a fresh scarf on Sky's head and wrapped a pressed ap.r.o.n round her waist. I said, ”Now, don't be talking too much out there, all right?”

On the street, I showed her the alleys to duck in. I pointed out the guards, how to walk past and lower her eyes, how to step aside for the whites, how to survive in Charleston.

The market was busy-the men carrying wood slats piled with fish and the women walking round with vegetable baskets on their heads the size of laundry tubs. The little slave girls were out, too, selling peanut patties from their straw hats. By the time we pa.s.sed by the butcher tables with the b.l.o.o.d.y calf heads lined up, Sky's eyes were big as horse hooves. ”Where all this stuff come from?” she said.

”You're in the city now,” I told her.

I showed her how to pick and choose what Aunt-Sister needed-coffee, tea, flour, corn meal, beef rump, lard. I taught her how to haggle, how to do the money change. The girl could do numbers in her head quicker than me.

When the shopping was done, I said, ”Now we going somewhere, and I don't want you telling mauma, or Goodis, or anybody about it.”

When we came to Denmark's house, we stood on the street and looked at the battered whitewash. I'd come by here a few months after they lynched Denmark, and a free black woman I'd never seen answered the door. She said her husband had bought the house from the city, said she didn't know what came of Susan Vesey.

I said to Sky, ”You're always singing how we should know where we come from.” I pointed to the house. ”That's where your daddy lived. His name was Denmark Vesey.”

She kept her eyes on the porch while I told her about him. I said he was a carpenter, a big, brave-hearted man who had wits sharper than any white man. I said the slave people in Charleston called him Moses and he'd lived for getting us free. I told her about the blood he'd meant to spill. Blood I'd long since made peace with.

She said, ”I know 'bout him. They hung him.”

I said, ”He would've called you daughter if he'd had the chance.”

We hadn't blown out the candle five minutes when mauma's voice whispered cross the bed. ”What happen to the money?”

My eyes popped open. ”What?”

”The money I saved to buy our freedom. What happen to it?”

Sky was already sleeping deep with a wheeze in her breath. She rolled over at our voices, mumbling nonsense. I raised on my elbow and looked at mauma laying in the middle between us. ”I thought you took it with you.”

”I was delivering bonnets that day. What would I be carrying all that money in my pocket for?”

”I don't know,” I whispered. ”But it ain't here. I looked high and low for it.”

”Well, it's right under your nose the whole time-if it was a snake, it'd bite you. Where's that first quilt you made-has red squares and black triangles?”

I should've known.

”I keep it on the quilt frame with the other quilts. Is that where you put it?”

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