31 pages • 1 hour read
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The chapter opens as Ti Noël, a slave, and his master, Monsieur Lenormand de Mézy, make purchases in Cap Français. Lenormand de Mézy is confident in Ti Noël’s ability to select a horse. Ti Noël rides the unbroken stallion into the market, where his master gets a haircut and Ti Noël thinks about the similarity between the wax heads sporting wigs in the window and the calf heads on display in the butcher shop next door. In a nearby shop are etchings: one features a king being received by a black man seated in a throne. Ti Noël, illiterate and unable to read the inscription, asks the shopkeeper who it depicts. He is told that it is the king of his country. Ti Noël recalls the stories about African kings told by Macandal, another slave: “Kings they were, true kings, and not those sovereigns covered with someone else’s hair” (7). They return home along a sea road.