“No, no,” said Verily. “You were right, you came through in your own defense.”
“But what if I hadn't figured out how to let the salamander's voice be heard? I've been thinking about that ever since yesterday. What if I hadn't done it? They was all talking like I could do anything, like I could fly or do miracles on the moon just by thinking about it. I wish I could. Sometimes I wish I could. It's still nip and tuck with the jury, ain't it, Verily?”
Verily agreed that it was. But they all knew that he wasn't likely to get convicted of anything now– assuming, of course, that the shelf of rock was still there in the spot Hank Dowser marked for a well. The real damage was to his good name. The real damage was to the Crystal City, which now would be harder to build because of all them stories going around about how Alvin Smith seduced young girls and old women and walked through walls to get to them. Never mind that the story had turned out to be lies and foolishness– there was always folks stupid enough to say, “Where there's smoke there's fire,” when the saying should have been, “Where there's scandalous lies there's always malicious believers and spreaders-around, regardless of evidence.”
The whooping and hollering in the street, with youngsters or drunken oldsters riding their horses at a breakneck speed up and down until Sheriff Doggly or some deputy could either stop the horse or shoot it, that guaranteed no sleep for anyone, not early, anyway. So they were all still awake, even Arthur Stuart, when two more men came into the common room of the roadhouse, looking wore out and dirty from hard travel. They waited at the counter, nursing a mug of cider each, till Horace came downstairs to check on things and recognized them at once. “Come on up, he's here, he's upstairs,” whispered Horace, and the three of them was up the stairs in a trice.
“Armor,” said Alvin, greeting him with a brotherly hug. “Mike.” And Mike Fink got him a hug as well. “You picked a good night to return.”
“We picked a damn good night,” said Fink. “We was afraid we might be too late. The plan was to take you out of the jail and hang you as part of the election night festivities. Glad the sheriff thought ahead.”
“He just needed the space for drunk and disorderly,” said Alvin. “I don't think he had any inkling about no plot.”
“There's twenty boys here,” said Fink. “Twenty at least, all of them well paid and likkered up. I hope well enough paid that they're really likkered up so they'll just fall down, puke, and,go to sleep, and then slink off home to Carthage in the morning.”
“I doubt it,” said Measure. “I been caught up in plots against Alvin before. Somebody once pretty much took me apart.”
Fink looked at him again. “You wasn't so tall then,” he said. “I was plain ashamed of what I done to you,” he said. “It was the worst thing I ever done.”
“I didn't die,” said Measure.
“Not for lack of trying on my part,” said Fink.
Verily was baffled. “You mean this man tried to kill you, Measure?”
“Governor Harrison ordered it,” said Measure. “And it was years ago. Before I was married. Before Alvin came here to Hatrack River as a prentice boy. And if I recall aright, Mike Fink was a little prettier in those days.”
“Notin my heart,” said Frank. “But I bore you no malice, Measure. And after Harrison had me do that to you, I left him, I wanted no truck with him. It don't make up for nothing, but it's the truth, that I'm not a man who'd let such as him boss me around, not anymore. If I thought you was the type of man to get even, I wouldn't run, I'd let you do it. But you ain't that kind of man.”
“Like I said,” Measure answered, “no harm done. I learned some things that day, and so did you. Let's have done with that now. You're Alvin's friend now, and that makes you my friend as long as you're loyal and true.”
There were tears in Mike Fink's eyes. “Jesus himself couldn't be more kind to me, and me less deserving.”
Measure held out his hand. Mike took and held it. Just for a second. Then it was done, and they set it behind them and went on.
“Found out a few things,” said Armor-of-God. “But I'm glad Mike was with me. Not that he had to do any violence, but there was a couple of times that some fellows didn't take kindly to the questions I was asking.”
“I did throw a fellow into a horsetrough,” said Fink, “but I didn't hold him under or nothing so I don't think that counts.”
Alvin laughed. “No, I reckon that was just playing around.”
“It's some old friends of yours behind all this, Alvin,” said Armor-of-God. “The Property Rights Crusade is mostly Reverend Philadelphia Thrower and a couple of clerks opening letters and mailing out letters. But there's some money people behind him, and he's behind other people who need money.”
“Like?” asked Horace.
“Like one of his first and longest and loyalest contributors is a fellow name of Cavil Planter, who once owned him a farm in Appalachee and still clings to a certain cachet like it was gold bullion,” said Armor-of-God, with a glance at Arthur Stuart.
Arthur nodded. “You're saying that's the white man as raped my mama to make me.”
“Most likely,” said Armor-of-God.
Alvin stared at Arthur Stuart. “How do you know about such things?”
“I hear everything,” said Arthur Stuart. “I don't forget none of it. People said things about that stuff when I was too young to understand it, but I remembered the words and said them to myself when I was older and could understand them.”
“Damn,” said Horace. “How was Old Peg and me supposed to know he'd be able to figure it out later?”
“You did nothing wrong,” said Verily. “You can't help the knacks your children have. My parents couldn't predict what I'd do, either, though heaven knows they tried. If Arthur Stuart's knack let him learn things that were painful to know, then I'd also have to say his inward character was strong enough to deal with it and let him grow up untroubled by it.”
“I ain't troubled by it, that's true,” said Arthur Stuart. “But I'll never call him my pa. He hurt my mama and he wanted to make a slave of me, and that's no pa.” He looked at Horace Guester. “My own Black mama died trying to get me here, to a real pa and to a ma who'd take her place when she died.”
Horace reached out and patted the boy's hand. Alvin knew how Horace had never liked having the boy call him his father, but it was plain Horace had reconciled himself to it. Maybe it was because of what Arthur just said, or maybe it was because Alvin had taken the boy away for a year and Horace was realizing now that his life was emptier without this half-Black mixup boy as his son.
“So this Cavil Planter is one of the money men behind Thrower's little group,” said Verily. “Who else?”
“A lot of names, we didn't get but a few of them but it's prominent people in Carthage, and all of them from the proslavery faction, either openly or clandestine,” said Armor. “And I'm pretty sure about where most of the money's going to.”
“We know some of it went to pay Daniel Webster,” said Alvin.
“But a lot more of it went to help with White Murderer Harrison's campaign for president,” said Armor.
They fell silent, and in the silence more gunshots went off, more cheering, more galloping of horses and whooping.and hollering. “Tippy-Canoe just carried him another county,” said Horace.
“Maybe he won't do so well back east,” said Alvin.
“Who knows?” said Measure. “I can guarantee you he didn't get a single vote in Vigor Church. But that ain't enough to turn the tide.”
“It's out of our hands for now,” said Alvin. “Presidents ain't forever.”
“I think what's important here,” said Verily, “is that the same people whose candidate for president just won the election are also out to get you killed, Alvin.”