“Be careful, you shouldn’t go to that village alone.” Clara’s words were muffled. She helped Maria with a sewing project and held extra hooks and pins in her mouth.
“I’ll be back before twilight.” Alicia noticed her sister picking up a lot of motherly mannerisms, the longer she worked with Maria Rodriguez. “Good luck with the curtains.” Alicia was no longer a baby. She could visit Masagawa all by herself.
Near the village, Alicia expected to hear the Native children playing by the stream or among the trees. She noticed very little noise besides the birds and breeze in the oaks. The creak of a wooden wagon startled her.
“Alicia Ortega, is that you?” Private Valdez, used to seeing Alicia in her grubby dock clothes, did not recognize her. Her beauty surprised him.
“Private, you gave me a fright.” Alicia noticed a rifle and a shovel in the back of his wagon. “I’m visiting my friend’s grandma. Everything seems so silent here. What are you doing here?” Valdez looked at the Native land he had been ordered to clear, then back at Alicia.
“I think you are in the wrong spot. There’s no one out here.”
“You’re new to our territory, Private. I’ve lived here all my life and I’m telling you there’s a friend, a healer by the name of Masagawa, who lives here.” Alicia sped up her steps. He may be handsome, but he was not very smart.
“Señorita Ortega, stop. There is no village here, not anymore.” Manuel got down from his wagon and caught up with Alicia. “I’ve been here all week on cleanup duty.” He gently broke his news. “I know you are talking about the old woman.”
“Her name is Masagawa. She’s a healer, I tell you!” Alicia’s patience grew thin.
“But she’s the one whose grandsons burned the Mission. They were tried and sent off to do hard labor in Monterey. Right?”
“It was all a mistake.” Alicia stared at him in disbelief. “Where is she? Is she okay?” Then she realized what he’d said, and why he carried a rifle and shovel. “Cleanup duty? What is that?”
“Just calm down. I’m sure she’s fine. She left with the rest of them. The Mission is going to cultivate this space. They need the land.” Valdez noticed Alicia did not appear so attractive when she became angry.
“This is their land. Where have they gone?” Alicia tried to look beyond the bushes toward the spot where Masagawa’s hut stood on her last visit.
“They set up in the next valley over near the creek. Let me show you where. I’m happy to take you.” What could he answer to make amends? He was only doing his duty.
“Don’t show me anything.” She had looked forward to seeing Valdez each time he collected invoices. “How could you be a part of clearing them out of their homes?” Alicia cursed herself for delaying her visit. She could have prevented this or talked Padre Romo out of it. “Don’t you ever bother coming back to our rancho. From now on, I’ll send in our dock invoices with Roberto.”
Alicia set out to find Masagawa by herself. She fumed with disappointment about Manuel Valdez, the first man she ever found attractive. He was a coldhearted coward. She stomped toward the valley and the creek.
Clara was right—she shouldn’t have gone alone. It was dark and cold by the time Alicia got to the relocated village. She had no shawl and no torch light, just a stubborn determination to fulfill her promise to Nina. The sweet scents coming from a makeshift shelter were Masagawa’s healing herbs.
“Hello, it’s me, Alicia. May I come in?” She peered around a blanket hanging from a shrub. Masagawa sat fanning a small flame. She looked the same as the last time they met. She gestured with one hand for Alicia to sit with her.
“Valdez?” Masagawa said with the slightest smile on her lips.
“Don’t mention that man’s name! I can’t believe what he did to you.” Alicia could not hold back her anger. The old woman now had to live in this tiny space. “Valdez is cruel and stupid. I am so sorry I did not come sooner.”
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