She looked as though she might cry when she heard about my Larkin. That was all right. Len was in the living room, delighting in reading real books made of paper. She would not see any tears Nia shed—in case Nia was sensi­tive about that kind of thing. You could never be altogether sure what another person might feel as a humiliation or an invasion of privacy.

'What happened to ... to the child's mother?' Nia asked.

I didn't answer until she turned to look at me. 'It's dan­gerous on the road,' I said. 'You know that People vanish out there. I walked from the Los Angeles area to Humboldt County in '27, so I know it. Know it too well.'

'She vanished on the road? She was killed?'

'She vanished on the road to avoid being killed.' I paused. 'She's me, Nia.'

Silence. Confusion. 'But. . .'

'You've trusted us. Now I'm trusting you. I'm a man on the road. I have to be. Two women out there would be everyone's target.' There. I was not correcting her, not smiling at the joke I'd played on her. I was making myself vulnerable to her, and asking her to understand and keep my secret. Just right, I hoped. It felt right.

She blinked and then stared at me. She left her pots and came over to take a good look. 'I can hardly believe you,' she whispered.

And I smiled. 'You can, though. I wanted you to know.' I drew a deep breath. 'Not that it's safe for a man out there either. The people who took my child also killed my husband and wiped out my community—all in the name of God, of course.'

She sat down at the table with me. 'Crusaders. I've heard of them, of course—that they rescue homeless orphans and... burn witches, for heaven's sake. But I've never heard that they ... just killed people and... stole their children.' But it seemed that what the Crusaders had done could not quite get her mind off what I had done. 'But you ...,' she said. 'I can't get over it. I still feel... I still feel as though you were a man. I mean ...'

'It's all right.'

She sighed, put her head back and looked at me with a sad smile. 'No, it isn't.'

No, it wasn't. But I went to her and hugged her and held her. Like Len, she needed to be hugged and held, needed to cry in someone's arms. She'd been alone far too long. To my own surprise, I realized that under other circumstances, I might have taken her to bed. I had gone through 17 months at Camp Christian without wanting to be with any­one. I missed Bankole—missed him so much sometimes that it was an almost physical pain. And I had never been tempted to want to make love with a woman. Now, I found myself almost wanting to. And she almost wanted me to. But that wasn't the relationship that I needed between us.

I mean to see her again, this kind, lonely woman in her large, empty, shabby house. I need people like her. Until I met her, I had not realized how much I needed such people. Len had been right about what I should be doing, although she had known no more than I about how it must be done. I still don't know enough. But there's no manual for this kind of thing. I suppose that I'll be learning what to do and how to do it until the day I die.

************************************

The three of us talked about Earthseed again over dinner. Most often we talked of it from the point of view of educa­tion. By the time we parted for the night, I could speak of it as Earthseed without worrying that Nia would feel harassed or proselytized. We stayed one more day and I told her more about Acorn, and about the children of Acorn. I held her once more when she cried. I kissed her lonely mouth, then put her away from me.

I did two more sketches, each accompanied by verses, and I let her offer to look after any of the children of Acorn that I could find until their parents could be contacted. I never suggested it, but I did all I could to open ways for her to suggest it. She was afraid of the children of the road, light-fingered and often violent. But she was not, in theory at least, afraid of the children of Acorn. They were con­nected with me, and after three days, she had no fear at all of me. That was very compelling, somehow, that complete acceptance and trust. It was hard for me to leave her.

By the time we did leave, she was as much with me as Len was. The verses and the sketches and memories will keep her with me for a while. I'll have to visit her again soon—say within the year—to hold on to her, and I intend to do that. I hope I'll soon be bringing her a child or two to protect and teach—one of Acorn's or not. She needs purpose as much as I need to give it to her.

'That was fascinating,' Len said to me this morning as we got under way again, 'I enjoyed watching you work.'

I glanced at her. 'Thank you for working with me.'

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