“He tends to be forgetful,” Shakespeare said. “Infants often are.”
Winona actually giggled.
“I am right here,” Nate said.
“The snakes?” Winona said to McNair.
“You’re familiar with the Bible? I know Horatio has a copy in his little library—”
“Little?” Nate said.
“I am familiar with it,” Winona responded. “I have not read it through as he has, but he has read much of it to me and I have read a little on my own. I speak the white tongue much better than I read or write it.”
“You are a marvel,” Shakespeare said. “But back to the Bible. In it are all sorts of sayings about what we should and shouldn’t do. Thou shalt not bear false witness. Thou shalt not kill. Love thy neighbor as thyself. Be perfect as thy Father in heaven is perfect.”
“Does it mention snakes?”
“There’s the serpent in the Garden of Eden, the one who tricks Eve into taking a bite of the forbidden fruit. Some folks say that wasn’t a serpent at all but Satan.”
“Nate has told me about him. Satan is the one whites say brings much evil into the world.”
“Has he told you about the part where people who believe in the Almighty can handle snakes?”
“I do not remember him ever saying anything about that, no.”
“Tsk, tsk,” Shakespeare said to Nate.
Winona turned. “I do not understand, husband. What kind of snakes does the Bible say they can pick up?”
“It’s in one of the four Gospels,” Nate explained. “Toward the end of Mark. It says that those who believe will be able to cast out devils and speak in new tongues and pick up serpents.”
When he didn’t go on Winona said, “That is all? Serpents? Does it say poisonous serpents?”
“No.”
“Does it say rattlesnakes or some other kind of snake that can kill when it bites?”
“No and no.”
“It just says serpents? But isn’t the word ‘serpent’ another word for ‘snake.’”
“Yes and yes.”
“I still do not understand,” Winona admitted.
“Some whites think it means poisonous snakes,” Nate elaborated. “Maybe because the next part says that those who believe can drink any deadly thing and it won’t harm them.”
“Are you saying that some whites like to drink snake venom?”
Shakespeare chortled. “Not that I know of, but I wouldn’t put it past a few lunkheads to try. But there are folks who think Mark is talking about poisonous snakes. So when they worship, they pick up rattlesnakes and copperheads and the like and handle them to show they have true faith.”
“Please do not take this the wrong way,” Winona said, “but whites are very strange.”
“I know that better than anyone,” Blue Water Woman said. “I live with a crazy white.”
“Here now,” Shakespeare said. “What did I do to deserve that? I’m as ordinary as butter.”
Blue Water Woman looked at Nate. “Do you spend your whole day quoting a writer who died more winters ago than anyone can remember?”
“I do not,” Nate said. “I think that would be silly.”
Shakespeare turned red in the face.
“And you?” Blue Water Woman said to Samuel. “Do you go around quoting a dead man all day?”
“Heck no, ma’am,” Samuel said. “To be honest, I can’t read worth a lick. I couldn’t quote one if I wanted to.”
Blue Water Woman smiled at McNair. “I have made my point.”
“How the blazes did we get on this subject?” Shakespeare complained.
Emala said, “I thought we were talkin’ snakes.”
The whole while, Nate had been prying at the head. He finally got it off and threw it away and stood. “I propose we organize a snake hunt. Shakespeare has lost a horse and I nearly got bit and my daughter nearly stepped on one, all since we got back.”
“What about them?” Shakespeare asked with a nod at the Worths. “Weren’t you fixing to raise a cabin?”
“Samuel and his family can stay with us,” Nate said. “Tomorrow we hunt. The day after we’ll start on their new home.” He turned to the Worths. “That is, if you two don’t mind?”
Emala took Samuel’s big arm in hers. “Mr. King, we were talkin’ about you last night and Samuel, he said you don’t know how we feel about you, and now I see he’s right. You surely don’t.”
“Feel how?”
It was Samuel who answered. “Do you know what it’s like to be a slave?” He didn’t wait for Nate to answer. “Of course you don’t. You’re white. But I was born a slave. Emala and me, both. We were told how to behave and where to live and what work we were to do. Our masters—that’s what they called themselves and that’s what we were to call them—our masters lorded it over us. We hardly had any say. I hated it. I hated it so much I had a powerful ache deep in me that wouldn’t go away.”
Nate listened with interest. He had known the Worths for a few months now, and this was the first time Samuel had gone into detail about their old life.
“I hated bein’ made to do work I didn’t want to do. I hated bein’ made to live in a shack barely big enough for two people let alone four. I hated that I had to do what our masters said or I’d be whipped.”
“How terrible,” Winona interjected.
“You don’t know the half of it, Mrs. King,” Samuel said sadly. “But my point is this. I wanted out. I wanted a new life. I wanted to be a free man, to do as I please when I please. I wanted it with all I am. But I never became a runner. I wasn’t sure we could survive.”
“You’ve done fine if you ask me,” Nate said.
“We’ve done fine thanks to you. You befriended us. You helped us against the slave hunters. You brought us across the prairie to the mountains. You said we could come live in your valley if we wanted and have a place of our own.”
“You saved us,” Emala said.
Nate didn’t quite know what to say to that, so he said nothing.
“We owe you,” Samuel said. “We owe you more than we can ever repay. So you want to wait a day to start our cabin? We don’t mind. Hell, wait a month if you have to.”
“What have I told you about swearin’?” Emala said.
“Not now, woman.”
Nate said, “You don’t owe me anything. I did the same for you as I’d do for anyone.”
“That’s another thing,” Samuel said. “You look at us, you don’t see the color of our skin.”
“You don’t know how rare that is,” Emala said. “You don’t know how special that makes you.”
“I’m just me,” Nate said.
“A fellow of infinite jest, of most excellent fancy,” Shakespeare quoted. “He hath borne me on his back a thousand times.”
“Enough about me,” Nate said. “We have a problem and it has to be dealt with. Tomorrow we hunt snakes.”
Chapter Four
Nate sent word to his son and the Nansusequas. By eight in the morning everyone in the valley was gathered at Nate and Winona’s cabin. There were Zach and his wife, Louisa, Shakespeare and Blue Water Woman. There were the Nansusequas: Wakumassee, the father; Tihikanima, the mother; Degamawaku, their son; and their two girls, Tenikawaku and Mikikwaku.
The Worths were there as well. Samuel had offered to help, and Emala had said that of course they would but secretly she was more than a little afraid. She didn’t like snakes. She didn’t like snakes even a little bit. Now she and Samuel stood to one side as the rest talked and laughed, and the one thing she noticed, the one thing that struck her most, were all the guns. She had never seen so many guns on so few people in all her born days. All of them had rifles. Even the girls. Evelyn had what they called a custom-made Hawken. Teni and little Miki had rifles given to them by Nate and Winona. All the men wore at least two pistols. As did Winona, Evelyn and Blue Water Woman. Zach usually wore two, but for this occasion he had four wedged under his wide leather belt. Emala marveled that he didn’t clank when he walked. Zach and his father and McNair also had big knives and tomahawks. Waku and Dega had knives. There were so many firearms and blades that at one point Emala turned to Samuel and said, “Land of Goshen. Look at all the weapons. They could start their own army.”