to close her eyes for even a wink, but no, she’d had no sleep. There was no choice but to accept that she had witnessed the impossible made real. “See you later, Lester,” she said, still hoping familiar habits could erase the sense of oddity the night had sown in the pit of her stomach.
Last night, she’d picked her way home from the clearing more by instinct than by landmark, Jilo asleep in her arms as they made their way through the night forest. Once home, she had slipped the baby in bed next to Opal, who—despite her worry—had drifted off to sleep with Poppy cuddled in her arms. May herself never even considered trying to sleep. Instead, she stoked the kitchen stove and boiled up some chicory that went cold without her even lifting cup to lip. Then she spent the night bent over her Bible, though the words seemed to dance on the page, imparting none of their usual wisdom or comfort.
Even now, as she passed beneath the steeple of Tremont Nondenominational House of Prayer, the prayer she yearned to offer up—one that combined a supplication for forgiveness for having used magic and a request for guidance—remained inchoate in her breast. She hated it, but anger against God Almighty simmered in her soul. Magic had saved Jilo, not prayer. It terrified her that one of those evil men had managed to slip silently into her home, as if by witchcraft, and steal her grandbaby right out of her bed. A man who could keep his cool as those around him gave in to panic. A man who would arrange the abduction of a tiny child just to lure May out into the night.
May stopped dead in her tracks as another thought struck her. What if those men hadn’t taken Jilo? What if it had instead been the creature who’d presented itself as a friend? The creature could have set up the whole adventure to fool May into believing it was acting as her protector.
The questions made her heart heavy, but pondering them made the remainder of her trek to work short. Before she knew it, she had arrived at the rear of Pinnacle. A concrete sidewalk ran behind the hotel, and May stepped onto it carefully so as not to trip where the roots of an ancient oak had pushed up from beneath the pavement and forced it up. Without giving it a thought, she passed by the entrance used by the white staff, heading to the far side of the building to the door labeled “Colored.” Humidity and warping caused the door to stick; each day it took a bit more out of May to tug it open and step through it. The door’s handle vibrated in her hand as the resistant wood finally yielded to her. She stepped into the side of the kitchen where the sinks would soon be full of dishes from the guests’ breakfasts.
But the dishes weren’t May’s concern, and she had enough work of her own to handle without taking on more. The hotel had sixty-eight rooms and only three maids. May and the two much younger women did the laundry and cleaned the guest rooms, halls, and great rooms. The younger women worked quicker, but May always did the best job—she didn’t miss spots or take shortcuts like her companions often did. The longtime guests, the folk who’d been coming here for years, knew to ask for her to service their rooms, and May felt justified in taking a touch of pride in that. Of course, it did nothing to prevent Mr. Porter, her buckra manager, from telling her she’d be out of a job if she didn’t step it up.
“Good morning, Mrs. Wills,” said Henry Cook, looking up from the wingtips he had been polishing. The small boy shined guests’ shoes and ran odd errands for management.
“Good morning, Henry,” May said, letting her hand brush the boy’s cheek. “How’s yo’ mama doing? Getting over her ailment, I hope.”
“Yes, ma’am,” Henry replied, turning back to his work. May could tell from his expression that he wasn’t telling the truth. His mama was still poorly. Sighing to herself, May opened the closet where the cleaning implements were stored. She