said. I told yâall, didnât I? Sheâs two-headed. She can tell tomorrow.
Liz heard murmurs of assent.
It was nearly daylight now. Through the slivers of light that peeked through the slats of the leaky roof, Liz noticed in a darkened far corner of the room, two gigantic human feet, the largest feet she had ever seen. The immense toes spread apart like oversized grapes, each toe pointed towards the ceiling. The man connected to those feet, Liz thought with alarm, was a giant.
The woman stared at Liz.
âTell me about yourself, the woman said.
Liz began to tell the woman about the web of relationships sheâd left behind, the torrent of tears and abuse, the plotting and planning, the hardship of running through an unknown land to an unknown world, but the woman cut her off.
âDonât tell me âbout the cross every colored got to bear, she said. I want to know how you come to dreaming.
âI donât know. I got struck as a child and I fall asleep sometimes on no account.
âTell us another dream, then.
âI canât think of none.
âSleep on it, then.
âWhat about the code? Liz asked.
âIn due time. Sleep, child.
âHow can I sleep, knowing Little George might have at me now that Iâm better? Liz said.
âDonât you fret about him, the old woman said. Go back to sleep and wake up and tell me what you got.
She turned to the others in the room and said, This two-headed girlâs gonna bust us out. Big Linus, is you ready?
From the darkened corner of the room, the enormous nostrils of a large nose barely discernible in the darkness could be seen as the huge head pivoted to one side, the face still unseen in the dark shadows of the atticâs rafters. Liz heard a deep, baritone voice rumble:
âI been ready, the voice said. I been ready.
Two days passed. No dreams came. But, true to her word, the old woman, in fading health, told Liz different parts of the code.
âChance is an instrument of God, she said.
âWhatâs that mean?
âIt means God rules the world. And the coach wrench turns the wagon wheel.
âWhatâs a coach wrench?
âDonât think, child. Just remember. Scratch a line in the dirt to make a friend. Always a crooked line, âcause evil travels in straight lines. Use double wedding rings when you marry. Tie the wedding knot five times. And remember, itâs not the song but the singer of it. You got to sing the second part twiceâif you know it. Donât nobody know it yet, by the way. And find the blacksmith if youâre gonna marry. Heâs doing marriages these days.
âWhoâs he?
âDonât matter who he is. Itâs what he is.
âAnd whatâs that?
âHeâs part of the five points.
âWhatâs the five points?
âNorth, south, east, west, and free. Thatâs the fifth point.
âHow you get to that?
âGotta go through the first fourâto get to the five. Five knots. Five directions. If a knotâs missing, check the collar. Itâll tell you the direction the soul is missing from.
âIâm more confused than ever, Liz said.
âHush up, dammit! someone said frantically. Now yâall woke him up.
Liz heard the creaking of heavy feet climbing the stairs and turned on her side, waiting, trembling. A cone of silence enveloped the room. The trapdoor opened and Little George climbed up.
Liz turned to face the wall. A familiar inertia draped over her mind, covering her like a blanket, clamping over her more securely than the ankle chains that pressed against her flesh. She stared at a crack in the wooden floor beneath her nose, just where the wall met the roof. Between the wooden slats and the rafter, she could make out the head of a large, exposed straight pike, several inches long, that some long-forgotten carpenter had attached improperly, probably secure in the knowledge that no one would ever have their
Reshonda Tate Billingsley