But you don’t, not when the Unmaker’s got you.
What Alvin figured out was that when you’re Making, you don’t use people like tools. You don’t wear them out to achieve your purpose. You wear yourself out helping them achieve theirs. You wear yourself out teaching and guiding, persuading and listening to advice and letting folks persuade you, when it happens they’re right. So instead of one ruler and a bunch of wore-out tools, you got a whole city of Makers, all of them free fellow-citizens, hard workers every one . . .
Except for one little problem. Alvin couldn’t teach Making. Oh, he could get people to sort of set their minds right and their work would be enhanced a little. And a few people, like Measure, mostly, and his sister Eleanor, they learned a thing or two, they caught a glimmer. But most was in the dark.
And then there comes a one like this lawyer from England, this Verily Cooper, and he was just born knowing how to do in a second what Measure could only do after a whole day’s struggle. Sealing a book shut like it was a single block of wood and cloth, and then opening it again with no harm to any of the pages and the letters still stuck on the surfaces. That was some Making.
What did he have to teach Verily? He was born knowing. And how could he hope to teach those as wasn’t born knowing? And anyway how could he teach anything when he didn’t know how to make the crystal out of which the city would be made?
You can’t build a city of glass; it’ll break, it can’t hold weight. You can’t build out of ice, either, because it ain’t clear enough and what about summer? Diamonds, they’re strong enough, but a city made of diamond, even if he could find or make so much of it—no way would they be allowed to use such rich stuff for building, there’d be folks to tear it down in no time, each one stealing a bit of wall to make hisself rich, and pretty soon the whole thing would be like a Swiss cheese, more hole than wall.
Oh, Alvin could spin himself through these thoughts and wonderings, through memories and words of books he read when Miss Larner—when Peggy—was teaching him. He could keep his mind occupied in solitude and not mind it a bit, though he also sure didn’t mind when Arthur Stuart came to talk to him about goings on.
Today, though, things were happening. Verily Cooper would be fending off motions for this and that, and even if he was a good lawyer, he was from England and he didn’t know the ways here, he could make mistakes, but there wasn’t a blame thing Alvin could do about it even if he did. He just had to put his trust in other folks and Alvin hated that.
“Everyone hates it,” said a voice, a so-familiar voice, a dreamed-of, longed-for voice with which he had had many a debate in his memory, many a quarrel in his imagination; a voice that he dreamed of whispering gently to him in the night and in the morning.
“Peggy,” he whispered. He opened his eyes.
There she was, looking just as she would if he had conjured her up, only she was real, he hadn’t done no conjuring.
He remembered his manners and stood up. “Miss Larner,” he said. “It was kind of you to come and visit me.”
“Not so much kind as necessary,” she said, her tone businesslike.
Businesslike. He sighed inwardly.
She looked around for a chair.
He picked up the stool that stood inside the cell and impulsively, thoughtlessly handed it right through the bars to her. He hardly even noticed how he made the bits of iron bar and the strands of woodstuff move apart to let each other through; only when he saw Peggy’s wide, wide eyes did he realize that of course she’d never seen anybody pass wood and iron right through each other like that.
“Sorry,” he said. “I’ve never done that before, I mean without warning or nothing.”
She took the stool. “It was very thoughtful of you,” she said. “To provide me with a stool.”
He sat down on his cot. It creaked under him. If he hadn’t toughened up the material, it would have given way under his weight days ago. He was a big man and he used furniture kind of rough; he didn’t mind if it complained out loud now and then.
“They’re doing pretrial motions in court today, I understand.”
“I watched part of it. Your lawyer is excellent. Verily Cooper?”
“I think he and I ought to be friends,” Alvin said. He watched for her reaction.
She nodded, smiled thinly. “Do you really want me to tell you what I know about the possible courses your friendship might take?”
Alvin sighed. “I do, and I don’t, and you know it.”
“I’ll tell you that I’m glad he’s here. Without him you’d have no chance of getting through this trial.”
“So now I’ll win?”
“Winning isn’t everything, Alvin.”
“But losing is nothing.”
“If you lost the case but kept your life and your life’s work, then losing would be better than winning, and dying for it, don’t you think?”
“I’m not on trial for my life!”
“Yes you are,” said Peggy. “Whenever the law gets its hands on you, those who use the law to their own advantage will also turn it against you. Don’t put your trust in the laws of men, Alvin. They were designed by strong men to improve their power over weaker ones.”
“That’s not fair, Miss Larner,” said Alvin. “Ben Franklin and them others as made the first laws—”
“They meant well. But the reality for you is that whenever you put yourself in jail, Alvin, your life is in grave danger every moment.”
“You came to tell me that? You know I can walk out of here whenever I want.”
“I came so I could tell you when to walk away, if the need comes.”
“I want my name cleared of Makepeace’s lies.”
“I also came to help with that,” she said. “I’m going to testify.”
Alvin thought of that night when Goody Guester died, Peggy’s mother, though he hadn’t known that Miss Larner was really Peggy Guester until she knelt weeping over her mother’s ruined body. Right till the moment they heard the first gunshot, he and Peggy had been on the verge of declaring their love for each other and deciding to marry. And then her mother killed the Finder, and the other Finder killed her, and Alvin got there way too late to heal her from the shotgun blast, and all he could do was kill the man that shot her, kill him with his bare hands, and what did that do? What good did that do? What kind of Making was that?
“I don’t want you to testify,” he said.
“I wasn’t looking forward to it myself,” she said. “I won’t do it if it’s not needed. But you have to tell Verily Cooper what and who I am, and tell him that when he’s all done with his other witnesses, he’s to look to me, and if I nod, he’s to call me as a witness, no arguments. Do you understand me? I’ll know better than either of you whether my testimony is necessary or not.”
Alvin heard what she said and knew he’d go along, but there was a part of him that was seething with anger even though he didn’t know why—he’d been longing to see her for more than a year now, and suddenly she was here and all he wanted to do was yell at her.
Well, he didn’t yell. But he did speak up in a voice that sounded less than kind. “Is that what you come back for? To tell poor stupid Alvin and his poor stupid lawyer what to do?”
She looked sharp at him. “I met an old friend of yours at the ferry.”
For a moment his heart leapt within him. “Ta-Kumsaw?” he whispered.
“Goodness no,” she said. “He’s out west past the Mizzipy for all I know. I was referring to a fellow who once had a tattoo on an unmentionable part of his body, a Mr. Mike Fink.”
Alvin rolled his eyes. “I guess the Unmaker’s assembling all my enemies in one place.”
“On the contrary,” said Peggy. “I think he’s no enemy. I think he’s a friend. He swears he means only to protect you, and I believe him.”
He knew she meant him to take that as proof that the man could be trusted, but he was feeling stubborn and said nothing.
“He came to the W
heelwright ferry in order to be close enough to keep an eye on you. There’s a conspiracy to get you extradited to Kenituck under the Fugitive Slave Law.”
“Po Doggly told me he wasn’t going to pay no mind to that.”
“Well, Daniel Webster is here precisely to see to it that whether you win or lose here, you get taken to Kenituck to stand trial.”
“I won’t go,” said Alvin. “They’d never let me get to trial.”
“No, they never would. That’s what Mike Fink came to watch out for.”
“Why is he on my side? I took away his hex of protection. It was a strong one. Near perfect.”
“And he’s suffered a few scars and lost an ear since then. But he’s also learned compassion. He values the exchange. And you healed his legs. You left him with a fighting chance.”
Alvin thought about that. “Well, you never know, do you. I thought of him as a stone killer.”
“I think that a good person can sometimes do wrong out of ignorance or weakness or wrong thinking, but when hard times come, the goodness wins out after all. And a bad person can often seem good and trustworthy for a long time, but when hard times come, the evil in him gets revealed.”
“So maybe we’re just waiting for hard enough times to come in order to find out just how bad I am.”
She smiled thinly. “Modesty is a virtue, but I know you too well to think for a minute you believe you’re a bad man.”
“I don’t think much about whether I’m good or bad. I think a lot about whether I’m going to be worth a damn or not. Right now I reckon myself to be worth about six bits.”
“Alvin,” she said, “you never used to swear in front of me.”
He felt the rebuke but he rather liked the feeling of annoying her. “It’s just the bad in me coming out.”
“You’re very angry with me.”
“Yes, well, you know all, you see all.”
“I’ve been busy, Alvin. You’ve been doing your life’s work, and I’ve been doing mine.”
“Once upon a time I hoped it might be the same work,” said Alvin.
“It will never be the same work. Though our labors may complement each other. I will never be a Maker. I only see what is there to be seen. While you imagine what might be made, and then make it. Mine is by far the lesser gift, and mostly useless to you.”
“That’s the purest nonsense I ever heard.”
“I don’t speak nonsense,” she said sharply. “If you don’t think my words sound true, then think again until you understand them.”
He imagined her as he used to see her, the severe-looking teacher lady at least ten years older than Peggy really was; she still knew how to use her voice like a rap across the knuckles. “It ain’t useless to me to know what’s coming in the future.”
“But I don’t know what’s coming. I only know what might come. What seems likely to come. There are so many paths the future might take. Most people stumble blindly along, plunging into this or that path that I see in their heartfire, heading for disaster or delight. Few have your power, Alvin, to open up a new path that did not exist. There was no future in which I saw you push that stool through the bars of the cell. And yet it was an almost inevitable act on your part. A simple expression of the impulsiveness of a young man. I see in people’s heartfires the futures that are possible for them in the natural course of events. But you can set aside the laws of nature, and so you can’t be properly accounted for. Sometimes I can see clearly; but there are deep gaps, dark and wide.”
He got up from the cot and came to the bars, held them, knelt down in front of her. “Tell me how I find out how to make the Crystal City.”
“I don’t know how you do it. But I’ve seen a thousand futures in which you do.”
“Tell me where I look then, in order to learn!”
“I don’t know. Whatever it is, it doesn’t follow the laws of nature. Or at least I think that’s why I can’t see it.”
“Vilate Franker says my life ends in Carthage City,” said Alvin.
She stiffened. “How does she know such a thing?”
“She knows where things come from and where they’ll end up.”
“Don’t go to Carthage City. Never go there.”
“So she’s right.”
“Never go there,” she whispered. “Please.”
“I got no plans for it,” he said. But inside his heart he thought: She cares for me after all. She still cares for me.
He might have said something about it, or she might have talked a bit more tenderly and less businesslike. Might have, but then the door opened and in trooped the sheriff and the judge and Marty Laws and Verily Cooper.
“Scuse us,” said Sheriff Doggly. “But we got us a courtroom thing to do here.”
“I’m at your service, gentlemen,” said Alvin, rising at once to his feet. Peggy also rose, then stooped to move the stool out of the way of the door.
The sheriff looked at the stool.
“It was so kind of you to allow Alvin’s stool to be placed outside the bars for me,” said Peggy.
Po Doggly looked at her. He hadn’t given any such order, but he decided not to argue the point. Alvin was Alvin.
“Explain things to your client,” said the judge to Verily Cooper.
“As we discussed last night,” said Verily, “we’ll need to have various witnesses view the plow. The three of us will be enough to ascertain that the plow exists, that it appears to be made of gold, and . . .”
“That’s all right,” said Alvin.
“And we’ve agreed that after the jury is empaneled, we’ll select eight more witnesses who can testify to the existence and nature of the plow in open court.”
“As long as the plow stays in here with me,” said Alvin. He glanced toward Sheriff Doggly.
“The sheriff already knows,” said the judge, “that he is not one of the designated witnesses.”
“Blame it all, Your Honor!” said Doggly. “It sets in here for weeks in my jail and I can’t even see it?”
“I don’t mind if he stays,” said Alvin.
“I do,” said the judge. “It’s better if he doesn’t regale his deputies with tales of how big and how gold the thing is. I know we can trust Mr. Doggly. But why exacerbate the temptation that must already afflict at least some of his deputies?”
Alvin laughed.
“What’s so funny, Mr. Smith?” asked the judge.
“How everybody’s all pretending they know what in hell the word exacerbate means.” They all joined him in laughter.
When it died down, Sheriff Doggly was still in the room. “I’m waiting to escort the lady out,” he said.
Alvin rolled his eyes. “She saw the plow on the night that it was made.”
“Nevertheless,” said the judge, “three witnesses on this official occasion. You can show it to every visitor in the jail if you want to, but on this occasion, we have agreed to three, and three it is.”
Peggy smiled at the judge. “You are a man of extraordinary integrity, sir,” she said. “I’m glad to know you’re presiding at this trial.”
When she was gone and the sheriff had closed the door to the jail, the judge looked at Alvin. “That was Peggy Guester? The torch girl?”
Alvin nodded.
“She grew up prettier than I ever expected,” said the judge. “I just wish I knew whether she was being sarcastic.”
“I don’t think so,” said Alvin. “But you’re right, she has a way of saying even nice things as if she’s only barely holding back from telling a bunch of stuff that ain’t so nice.”
“Whoever marries that one,” said the judge, “he better have a thick skin.”
“Or a stout stick,” said Marty Laws, and then he laughed. But he laughed alone, and soon fell silent, vaguely embarrassed, uncertain why his joke had fallen so flat.
Alvin reached under the cot and slid out the burlap bag that held the plow. He pulled back the mouth of the sack, so the plow sat exposed, surrounded by burl
ap, shining golden in the light from the high windows.
“I’ll be damned,” said Marty Laws. “It really is a plow, and it really is gold.”
“Looks gold,” said the judge. “I think if we’re to be honest witnesses, we have to touch it.”
Alvin smiled. “I ain’t stopping you.”
The judge sighed and turned to the county attorney. “We forgot to get the sheriff to open the cell door.”
“I’ll fetch him,” said Marty.
“Please cover the plow, Mr. Smith,” said the judge.
“Don’t bother,” said Alvin. He reached over and opened the cell door. The latch didn’t even so much as make a sound; nor did the hinges squeak. The door just opened, silent and smooth.
The judge looked down at the latch and lock. “Is this broken?” he asked.
“Don’t worry,” said Alvin. “It’s working fine. Come on in and touch the plow, if you want.”
Now that the door was open, they hung back. Finally Verily Cooper stepped in, the judge after him. But Marty held back. “There’s something about that plow,” he said.
“Nothing to be worried about,” said Alvin.
“You’re just bothered because the door opened so easy,” said the judge. “Come on in, Mr. Laws.”
“Look,” said Marty. “It’s trembling.”
“Like I told you,” said Alvin, “it’s alive.”
Verily knelt down and reached out a hand toward the plow. With no one touching it yet, the plow slid toward him, dragging the burlap with it.
Marty yelped and turned his back, pressing his face into the wall opposite the cell door.
“You can’t be much of a witness with your back turned,” said the judge.
The plow slid to Verily. He laid his hand on the top of it. It slowly turned under his hand, turned and turned, around and around, smooth as an ice skater.
“It is alive,” he said.
“After a fashion,” said Alvin. “But it’s got a mind of its own, so to speak. I mean, it’s not like I’ve tamed it or nothing.”
Alvin Journeyman: The Tales of Alvin Maker, Volume IV Page 25