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Eric Flint: Grantville Gazette. Volume 21

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"I hope this helps," said Maria.

***

The Coromantee reverently set down the slates. He had been pleasantly surprised to discover that one of the whites was a tindana , a priestess of the Earth Goddess. Who else would place a magical incantation on a rock?

Now she had blessed him with a talisman by which he could speak to his children. Perhaps even call them back to him.

He had almost lost hope, had contemplated walking into the Great Sea.

He wondered how he could possibly repay her.

***

"Blue or red?" said Johann Mueller, spreading his hands, each pointing at a different pile of beads.

The young Eboe woman reached slowly toward a blue bead, then jerked her hand back. Two Eboe matrons, baskets on top of their heads, watched the interplay. Johann had no idea what they were saying, but he fancied they were placing bets on which color his customer would settle on.

Business had been good. The Eboe were very fond of beads. Both men and women were accustomed to wearing beaded necklaces. Since they had come to the New World as slaves, they had only whatever they had been wearing when they were sold to European slavers. And once they were freed, they wanted to adorn themselves, to distinguish themselves from their companions.

To buy beads, or anything else, they needed something to trade. And that meant that they needed to fish, hunt, grow crops, mine, or craft artifacts. Either on their own account, or as contract labor. Samuel Johnson's epigram-about liberty being the choice of working or starving-was known only in countries exposed to up-time literature, but the Africans were quick to appreciate the limits of the liberty the Gustavans had conferred upon them.

Of course, thought Johann, they were no worse off than the Gustavans in that regard. It was fortunate that the slave ship still had several months supply of food. Better yet, they had seeds to plant. Mauricio had told Johann that there was an Eboe insult, " I bet you even eat your yam seeds." The colonists had supplied water, and they had made and sold farm implements to the Africans, but they were expecting a return.

"Hello, Johann, how's business?" asked Mauricio.

Johann jumped. If Johann were a superstitious man, he might worry that his thoughts had summoned Mauricio.

"Fine, fine. Would you ask this young lady whether she has made up her mind?" Mauricio did so. She ended up trading for an equal number of both colors.

Mauricio walked over to the watching women. He held up the drawings Maria had made. "Did you see these Coromantee children before you boarded the giant canoe with the white wings?" That was, more or less, the proper way to describe a European sailing ship.

They shook their heads.

He heard a cough behind him. He turned, and saw Heinrich Bender. "Teach me some Portuguese, Mauricio. I need to be able to bargain with the blacks."

"What do you want to know?"

Heinrich smiled. "You can start with 'How much?' and 'Too much.'"

Mauricio laughed. "I should start a school."

"You should, Mauricio. You've been teaching Portuguese to Maria, I know, so why not teach a bunch of people at once?"

"I could, I suppose. Although Maria knows Latin, which makes it much easier for her than it would be for you German peasants." Mauricio smiled to show he was joking.

"I mean it, Mauricio. Teach Portuguese to us, and English or German to Africans. Earn some money."

"Perhaps I will. I can teach the Mandinka trade talk, too. The problem isn't just us talking to the Africans, it's getting them talking to each other."

***

The Eboe stood up, shading his eyes with one hand and hefting his fishing spear in the other. He kept his balance in the canoe with the ease of long practice. He had often gone fishing on the Niger and its tributaries. The dugout canoe, made by one of the local Surinamese Indians, was made from a strange tree, but he had learned to handle it quickly enough.

It was a good time to fish; early on a Sunday morning, when the colonists of Gustavus, across the river, were at prayer, or enjoying their day of rest.

There. A dark shape in the water. He threw.

Missed. The float bobbed in the water, as if it were laughing at him. He shrugged philosophically, and pulled on the retrieval line. He took in a few feet and then it resisted. Clearly, the spear was caught in something.

Back home, he might have chosen to abandon the spear. Here, he couldn't afford to do so. The Gustavans had freed the blacks, but that didn't mean that they felt obliged to give them much in the way of goods. For anything more than water, and a bit of food, they expected the blacks to work. The hospitality of the Indian tribes also had its limits.

He didn't care about the spear shaft-there was plenty of wood around-but a metal spear point, made by the Gustavan smith… that was another matter.

He tied the near end of the rope about the canoe, as best he could, and then dived into the water.

When, he emerged, his teeth were chattering. Not with cold, but with fright. There was a boat, with dead men, resting on the shallow river bottom. And not just any men, but the terrible white men who had taken them across the Great Sea. Had they turned into river demons?

He clambered into the canoe and just lay there, trying to calm down. The pleasant warmth of the sun had a lulling effect. He drew a knife, and was about to cut the rope away and head back to shore, when he had a change of heart.

If the bad men turned into river demons, surely they would have drowned someone weeks ago. And there would have been talk.

So these were just dead men. Dead men still holding their weapons, and with other valuable goods on their persons.

Who needs a spear shaft, if one has a sword? he thought. And with that, he paddled the boat closer to the sunken longboat, and then jumped back into the water.

Some time later, he beached the canoe, and gazed with satisfaction at the pile of goods heaped beside him. A half dozen cutlasses, a gold bracelet, and other odds and ends. He was rich now, by the standards of the ex-slaves. Rich beyond his wildest dreams.

With this, he would be an ozo, a big man. A giver of great gifts. And when he ran out, he could slip back here, and collect more goods. He would have a round stool, with three legs, and a stool carrier. He would have the town smith make him an iron staff, with bells attached. He would wear a red hat.

As he mused over these attractive possibilities, he was grabbed from behind. He tried to reach for one of the weapons so close to his feet, but the attackers pulled him back, away from the canoe, and tapped the side of his head with a war club.

When he came to, he was hanging, head down. One of his fellow ex-slaves, from an unfamiliar tribe, was studying him. Three others, who seemed from their markings to be of the same tribe, lounged nearby.

"Ah," the warrior said to his fellows, "our fish is squirming. Should we toss him back into the water, or throw him into the pot?" His filed teeth suggested that this was not a metaphor.

The Eboe had no idea what they were saying, but was pretty sure it didn't bode well for him. He began pleading for his life, first in his native tongue, then in Mandinka trade talk.

The warrior held up one of the weapons. "Where did you get these?"

"Spare me, and I will show where to find more."

Near modern Paranam, Suriname

Heinrich Bender held up the chunk of rock. "This is what we are looking for." Kojo had asked Mauricio whether the Gustavans had any mines, and one thing had led to another.

Kojo, and the two Coromantee he had brought with him, studied the specimen. Kojo took it in his hand, then returned it with a moue of distaste.

"Worthless clay. We gold miners, not dirt farmers."

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