The jug felt cool in her hands, though she was aware that her fingers left muddy streaks on che damp surface where she grasped it. She wiped her hand on her skirt, hue that hardly helped. On the outside of the jug, where the handle was attached, a single strand of hair was held captive by the dampness.
Nola collected hairs. She couldn't help herself, couldn't let them pass. There was no celling when she might need one. With a gesture too small to alert che unsuspecting, Nola caught up the hair - short and black, it belonged to the man, not his wife - and wrapped it around her fingertip.
With a glance at her mother that warned, Don't say anything, she took a long, satisfying gulp of the cool water. She handed the jug to her mother, who - thankfully - said nothing.
"Thank you," Nola repeated, making to hand the jug back to the man after her mother had had her fill. She assumed he would make his way down the path to where his brother's wife and children also picked berries.
But, "Finish it," the man said, smiling. "It's lighter empty than full."
He must mean to go back to the well lo get another jug-ful for his brother's family, she reasoned. But at the same time, the thought tickled at her mind that he had come to her and her mother first, rather than to his kinfolk.
"Cool yourself down," he suggested. "Pour it over your shoulders." But though he said shoulders, it wasn't her shoulders he was staring at.
At which point Nola decided that regardless of who had originally said it - her mother or her father - she also did not like the way this man was looking at her.
"Not necessary," she told him, and once more tried to hand the jug back.
"It's something I've seen the women in the fields do," he told her. "They pour water on their hands chen run their hands..." He indicated an area of bare skin definitely below shoulder level.
"Ah!" Nola said. "No doubt a trick you learned from your wife." She had seen the wife, who had been the one to answer the door when Nola and her mother had knocked, seeking work: a common woman, Nola had judged from their few moments' acquaintance, who put on airs.
Now the woman's husband grinned and shrugged. "And from my sister-in-law," he said, though obviously he wasn't interested in whether his sister-in-law stayed cool or overheated today. "And others. Why don't you come over to the shade of the peach tree? Lie down. Rest." His voice was calm and rational, and there was no reason to suspect he meant more than he said, except ... Except that Nola did.
The man continued, "The tree can't be seen from the house. My wife is a hard woman who would work you to death. She never needs to know." He ran his tongue over the lip of the jug at the spot from where Nola had drunk.
"Please," Nola said. If she left now, all the work that she and her mother had done the whole morning long would be for nothing.
The man looked at her quizzically, as though to say he had no idea what she was asking.
"I don't want any trouble," Nola said. She could try making a complaint to the town magistrate, but how likely was he to believe her? She imagined her voice, high-pitched and nervous, explaining, Nobody here knows me or my mother, but we worked for the majority of the morning for this man, and then we had to leave without payment because he wouldn't let me be. Maybe the sister-in-law - if he had paid unwanted attention to her - would back her story with experience of her own. But maybe the attention wasn't unwanted in the sister-in-law's case, or maybe she had too much to lose by making a complaint against her kinsman.
Nola thought of the state of her hair and clothes. She could imagine the magistrate saying, This man is a respected member of our community, and you...
Why even try to work out what the magistrate would say? She and her mother would never seek him out. They couldn't afford the attention.
The man took hold of her arm, not roughly, sure she wouldn't resist. "Come," he said.
"You know," Nola said, to give her mother warning, though her mother seemed elsewhere, elsewhen, standing there swaying slightly, humming a lullaby to herself. "You know, my lather once gave me some good advice..."
She kicked the man's knee and ran. The man dropped the water jug, which shattered when it hit the ground. She could hear him yelping and cursing behind her, but louder, closer, she could hear her mother, cackling and laughing, as she ran also, keeping up as Nola ran out from between the bushes, cut across the corner of a fallow field, and leaped over a short stone fence onto the road.
"Your father says to tell you, 'Well done!'" her mother said. Then she turned back and shouted co the man in the blackberry field, "And King Fenuku says to tell you..." She hoisted up her skirt and pointed her rear end in his direction.
"You crazy old witch!" the man yelled, which turned Nola's blood to icc water, even though he showed no inclination to follow. "You're both crazy witches!" He must have realized then that he would have to find an excuse to give his wife. "And you owe me for that jug you broke!"
"Turn him into a toad, Nola!" her mother crowed. "Turn him into a toad!"
"Mother!" Nola cried, hoping they were too far away for the man to have heard.
Her mother got her disappointed, sulky expression. "He'd only look like a toad," she muttered in complaint. "He wouldn't really be one." As though that wouldn't count. "And it would only last a day."
"Enough," Nola warned. A five-foot-tall toad. How likely was that to go unnoticed?
The day couldn't get any worse, Nola thought as she started walking.
But of course it could.
Chapter Two
WALKING FROM NOON till evening, Nola and her mother ended up in a town called Haymarket. It seemed a prosperous place, but apparently every homeowner and business had just enough help to keep things running smoothly. As night closed in around them, Nola began to think they might end the day with no supper. No shelter, either.
"We'll ask as far as the end of this street," Nola told her mother, which meant three more houses. "If we don't find something here..." She was too weary to finish and just waved vaguely toward the setting sun. They'd seen a barn earlier. The fact that the barn looked ready to fell down didn't mean its owners would be willing to let them stay there, so it was best to go after nightfall and not bother to ask permission.
"Good," her mother said. She was cradling her left arm, humming a lullaby to her finger. "The baby is getting tired."
"Just..." Nola didn't know how to finish the thought. Don't let the baby cry? Don't say anything about the baby where people can hear? Don't do anything co ruin whatever small chance we have?
She knocked on the door. Probably not loud enough, she realized. Most likely she'd need to summon the energy to knock again.
But a young woman of seventeen or eighteen opened the door. She might have been the same age as Nola - but she had the look of someone who could take things for granted from day to day: things like that she would most probably eat that day, and the next, and that she would sleep with a roof overhead, and that her mother probably wouldn't get the two of them run out of town or killed for being witches.
"I...," Nola started. But she'd lost track of what it was she had been going to say.
The young woman at the door supplied the words for her, "You're looking for work?"
Or a meal. Or a corner co sleep in - warmth and dryness welcome, but not expected.
Nola nodded her head. But then - since she knew what the answer would be - she turned to leave.