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This time Tim had taken Misty, and she was the one who had to stop and nibble at every bush. By the time he got home, two wagons and a<br />

pony-trap had passed him, each carrying a pair of women eager to help his mother in her time of hurt and trouble.<br />

He had no more than stabled Misty next to Bitsy be<strong>for</strong>e Ada Cosington was on the porch, telling him he was needed to drive the Widow Smack<br />

home. “You can use my pony-trap. Go gentle where there’s ruts, <strong>for</strong> the poor woman’s fair done up.”<br />

“Has she got her shakes, sai?”<br />

“Nay, I think the poor thing’s too tired to shake. She was here when she was most needed, and may have saved <strong>you</strong>r mama’s life. Never <strong>for</strong>get<br />

that.”<br />

“Can my mother see again? Even a little?”<br />

Tim knew the answer from sai Cosington’s face be<strong>for</strong>e she opened her mouth. “Not yet, son. You must pray.”<br />

Tim thought of telling her what his father had sometimes said: Pray <strong>for</strong> rain all <strong>you</strong> like, but dig a well as <strong>you</strong> do it. In the end, he kept silent.<br />

It was a slow trip to the Widow’s house with her little burro tied to the back of Ada Cosington’s pony-trap. The unseasonable heat continued,<br />

and the sweet-sour breezes that usually blew from the Endless Forest had fallen still. The Widow tried to say cheerful things about Nell, but soon<br />

gave up; Tim supposed they sounded as false to her ears as they did to his own. Halfway up the high street, he heard a thick gurgling sound from<br />

his right. He looked around, startled, then relaxed. The Widow had fallen asleep with her chin resting on her birdlike chest. The hem of her veil lay in<br />

her lap.<br />

When they reached her house on the outskirts of the village, he offered to see her inside. “Nay, only help me up the steps and after that I’ll be fineo.<br />

I want tea with honey and then my bed, <strong>for</strong> I’m that tired. You need to be with <strong>you</strong>r mother now, Tim. I know half the ladies in town will be there by<br />

the time <strong>you</strong> get back, but it’s <strong>you</strong> she needs.”<br />

For the first time in the five years he’d had her as a schoolteacher, she gave Tim a hug. It was dry and fierce. He could feel her body thrumming<br />

beneath her dress. She wasn’t too tired to shake after all, it seemed. Nor too tired to give com<strong>for</strong>t to a boy—a tired, angry, deeply confused boy—<br />

who badly needed it.<br />

“Go to her. And stay away from that dark man, should he appear to thee. He’s made of lies from boots to crown, and his gospels bring nothing<br />

but tears.”<br />

On his way back down the high street, he encountered Straw Willem and his brother, Hunter (known as Spot Hunter <strong>for</strong> his freckles), riding to<br />

meet the posse, which had gone out Tree Road. “They mean to search every stake and stub on the Ironwood,” Spot Hunter said excitedly. “We’ll<br />

find him.”<br />

The posse hadn’t found Kells in town after all, it seemed. Tim had a feeling they’d not find him along the Iron, either. There was no basis <strong>for</strong> the<br />

feeling, but it was strong. So was his feeling that the Covenant Man hadn’t finished with him yet. The man in the black cloak had had some of his<br />

fun . . . but not all of it.<br />

His mother was sleeping, but woke when Ada Cosington ushered him in. The other ladies sat about in the main room, but they had not been<br />

idle while Tim was away. The pantry had been mysteriously stocked—every shelf groaned with bottles and sacks—and although Nell was a fine<br />

country housekeeper, Tim had never seen the place looking so snick. Even the overhead beams had been scrubbed clean of woodsmoke.<br />

Every trace of Bern Kells had been removed. The awful trunk had been banished to beneath the back porch stoop, to keep company with the<br />

spiders, fieldmice, and moortoads.<br />

“Tim?” And when he put his hands in Nell’s, which were reaching out, she sighed with relief. “All right?”<br />

“Aye, Mama, passing fine.” This was a lie, and they both knew it.<br />

“We knew he was dead, didn’t we? But it’s no com<strong>for</strong>t. It’s as if he’s been killed all over again.” Tears began to spill from her sightless eyes. Tim<br />

cried, himself, but managed to do it silently. Hearing him sob would do her no good. “They’ll bring him to the little burying parlor Stokes keeps out<br />

behind his smithy. Most of these kind ladies will go to him there, to do the fitting things, but will <strong>you</strong> go to him first, Timmy? Will <strong>you</strong> take him <strong>you</strong>r<br />

love and all of mine? For I can’t. The man I was fool enough to marry has lamed me so badly I can hardly walk . . . and of course I can’t see anything.<br />

What a ka-mai I turned out to be, and what a price we’ve paid!”<br />

“Hush. I love <strong>you</strong>, Mama. Of course I’ll go.”<br />

But because there was time, he went first to the barn (there were far too many women in the cottage <strong>for</strong> his taste) and made a jackleg bed<br />

with hay and an old mule blanket. He fell asleep almost at once. He was awakened around three of the clock by Square Peter, who held his hat<br />

clasped to his breast and wore an expression of sad solemnity.<br />

Tim sat up, rubbing his eyes. “Have <strong>you</strong> found Kells?”<br />

“Nay, lad, but we’ve found <strong>you</strong>r father, and brought him back to town. Your mother says <strong>you</strong>’ll pay respects <strong>for</strong> the both of <strong>you</strong>. Does she say<br />

true?”<br />

“Aye, yes.” Tim stood up, brushing hay from his pants and shirt. He felt ashamed to have been caught sleeping, but his rest the previous night had<br />

been thin, and haunted by bad dreams.<br />

“Come, then. We’ll take my wagon.”<br />

The burying parlor behind the smithy was the closest thing the town had to a mortuary in a time when most country folk preferred to see<br />

to their own dead, interring them on their own land with a wooden cross or a slab of roughly carved stone to mark the grave. Dustin Stokes—<br />

inevitably known as Hot Stokes—stood outside the door, wearing white cotton pants instead of his usual leathers. Over them billowed a vast white<br />

shirt, falling all the way to the knees so it looked almost like a dress.<br />

Looking at him, Tim remembered it was customary to wear white <strong>for</strong> the dead. He understood everything in that moment, realizing the truth in a<br />

way that not even looking at his father’s open-eyed corse in running water had been able to make him realize it, and his knees loosened.<br />

Square Peter bore him up with a strong hand. “Can’ee do it, lad? If’ee can’t, there’s no shame. He was <strong>you</strong>r da’, and I know <strong>you</strong> loved him well.<br />

We all did.”<br />

“I’ll be all right,” Tim said. He couldn’t seem to get enough air into his lungs, and the words came out in a whisper.<br />

Hot Stokes put a fist to his <strong>for</strong>ehead and bowed. It was the first time in his life that Tim had been saluted as a man. “Hile, Tim, son of Jack. His<br />

ka’s gone into the clearing, but what’s left is here. Will’ee come and see?”<br />

“Yes, please.”<br />

Square Peter stayed behind, and now it was Stokes who took Tim’s arm, Stokes not dressed in his leather breeches and cursing as he fanned

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