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The shade of the lonely spreading oak before the front porch was attractive. He sat down upon some cus.h.i.+oning chigger-weed. The July afternoon wore on; he slept.
He woke at the sound of feet sending the gravel flying. A white man approached.
"Hey, n.i.g.g.e.r, what you doing there?"
He got to his feet, his hat off. "Ah'm lookin' for Joneses' Hill, suh.
Done los' mah way."
"I reckon you have! Jones' Hill is in West Adamsville, six miles from here. Live there?"
"Aimin' to."
"Where do you live now?"
"Ah jus' come to town, suh. Ain't picked out mah house yit."
Nathaniel Guild considered him. Looked like a respectable negro. "You married?"
"Yes, suh. Me 'n' mah ole 'ooman got five chillun, fo' boys an' one girl."
The white man looked abstractedly into his face. "I'm looking for a tenant for this house--someone who can keep an eye on the place, and do a little day work now and then."
There now! Tom had never doubted for a moment that the Lord would provide. His tone was persuasively eager. "Lawdy, boss, Ah's jes' de man you's lookin' for! Ah does all kin's of wu'k, an' mah ole 'ooman is sho'
a powerful cook."
"I'll tell you what I'll do. You can come in, for three dollars a month rent. The house can be fixed up, and I'll see that you get more than enough work to pay it off. We may have work for you every day soon. If your wife's a good cook, Tom, you send her over to that new house you see yonder, to Mr. Judson; say Mr. Guild sent you." He walked back through the gate. "There's an excellent spring just at the bottom here; and if you can find any garden truck behind the house, you're welcome to it. There are some tomatoes, I know, and some turnips. If you want some seeds, Mr. Judson will let you have them.... Oh, by the way, here's your key."
When these suggestions had become realities, Stella was vehement in her praise of the Judson place. "Dat Miss' Mary, now, she's a sho' 'nuff lady! She order me 'roun' jes' lak Miss' Land useter. Dis is one gran'
place, Tom."
The children scattered over the mountain, like the hedge rabbits they soon became acquainted with, and grew st.u.r.dy and strong from the pioneering. Old Tom learned the countryside, and particularly the negro settlement two miles back through the trees. Lilydale had a thriving Baptist Church, the First Zion, which competed vigorously for converts with the Nebo Methodist congregation, two hilly blocks away. Tom soon became an elder, and on the loss of the pastor, who was indicted as a murder suspect, the Georgia preacher naturally succeeded to his place.
On weekdays Tom found himself in daily demand, as Hillcrest Subdivision expanded and developed. Even Ed, the oldest of his boys, found work for his strong sixteen-year muscles in the road-making. Jim and Will went to the city school, while Diana tended Babe, to let Stella cook for the Judsons.
Tom's keen instinct soon located the isolated hen roosts in the valley, and the more unprotected ones at the foot of the mountain. Surely the Lord's anointed deserved chicken.
With the knowledge that a chicken dinner awaited him on his return, his Sunday sermons gained unction and elegance. He was regarded as the most powerful disputer in this section of the valley, and his exhortations always secured a big turnout for the baptizing in Shadow Creek.
He felt welded to the mountain. He was caretaker of the whole estate, and lord of his half of it. He felt superior to the mere Lilydale negroes, even those who owned their own homes; it was more to be good enough to live near Mister Judson. As for the Adamsville negroes, his scorn for them boiled over weekly in his sermon. "Them c.r.a.p-shootin', rum-soppin' Scratch-Ankle nigguhs----" The self-righteous congregation s.h.i.+vered delightedly as he pictured the sure h.e.l.l-fire for the modern "Sodom-'n'-Gomorry."
Life had evidently provided a firm and pleasant routine for this wandering apostle of the Lord.
XVI
Tom Cole s.h.i.+fted his left leg from its cramped under position, replacing it over the right. He was careful not to let his heel sc.r.a.pe the s.h.i.+ny painted floor of the outer office of the Snell-Judson Real Estate and Development Company; white folks were particular about scratches. He had been waiting since eight-thirty for Mr. Judson to come in from the mountain; it was now after ten. It wasn't his fault if Mr. Judson was late. He hadn't done anything to deserve what Mr. Judson had said a week ago come next Friday, that waiting was the best thing he did.
He considered a patch once neatly covering the left knee with owlish deliberation. "My ole 'ooman's a powerful patcher," he told Peter, the gap watchman, when the mend was new. "Say she gonter patch mah britches wid shoe leather, she do."
That was a long time ago; the patch had bulged out on one side, and torn loose. He picked carefully at the frayed gap, widening it. Maybe Mr.
Judson would notice it--it was about time he got that brown suit the boss wore around the garden in the morning.
He brought his mind back with an effort to what he had come for. He went over the figures again, painfully printed on the back of an envelope picked from the kitchen trash-basket. He rehea.r.s.ed carefully what he would have to say. It wouldn't be hard to get that thirty-five dollars.
Maybe he ought to ask for forty, or forty-five; that would leave something for himself and Stella.
He'd have to try, some day, to get more out of Miss' Mary for the First Zion Church. The organ money was overdue; and there was a second-hand red carpet at Geohegan's that would just fit the Sunday School room.
He snorted aloud, to the amazement of the stenographer busily at work in the corner. Shaking her head, she returned to her machine.... That Scales Green and the 'c.o.o.n dog he wanted to sell, at church last Sunday!
Wanted two dollars for an old yellow pup that looked like he'd only chase cows. Probably picked him up; the dog ought to be in the pound.
Maybe he stole him. That was a nice 'c.o.o.n dog that storekeeper Carr had; there was one just like him running around the Ellis Dairy below the Thirty-Eighth Street road. If he caught that dog roaming around Mr.
Judson's place, he'd show them! Anyhow, Pup and Whitey were good 'c.o.o.ners, he didn't need any more. You had to feed dogs somehow.
He mustn't forget about the cow-feed, or the saddle.
Paul Judson walked briskly in, an aster blue-purple against the soft gray lapel. "h.e.l.lo, Tom, you here? I thought you were to prune those forsythias this morning."
"Miss' Mary done tole me to go by Dexter's an' have de side-saddle fixed, suh. One of de sturrup strops is broke. Ah had to come in for cow-feed an' oats."
"Get an order from Miss Simpson for the feed. And drive by the Union Depot on your way out; there's a box of fruit trees to set out on the hill across the gap."
He pa.s.sed into the inside offices.
When he crossed over to the t.i.tle room, half an hour later, Tom still sat in the same place, the top rim of the folded order showing neatly above the sweat-band in the cap on the negro's lap. "Still here?"
Tom rose awkwardly, puffing out his lips in uncertainty. "There wuz sump'n else Ah wanted to see you 'bout, suh."
"Well?"
"Ah wanted to ax a favor, Mr. Judson."
"What is it?"
"Ah wondered ef you could spare me a loan, suh? Make an edvance?"
"What do you want it for?"
The crumpled cap fell to the floor; Tom stooped and picked it up. "We done decided to sen' Diana to de Tuskegee school, suh. You got some of mah money; an' Ah's been savin' till Ah's got thuhteen dollars. She kin wu'k out in Tuskegee, an' make mos' of her 'spenses. She's goin' to take millinery."
"How much do you need?"
"Thuhty-five dollars, suh. Dat's for de fu'st year. She'll hatter go two years."
Paul considered the matter; a sigh of irritation escaped him. Higher education for negroes might be a good thing, in some cases; it was usually a waste of time. There was something wrong with the idea of it; a serving cla.s.s ought, naturally, to remain uneducated. Education had a tendency to stir up unrest. Negroes who knew too much might seem respectful, but there was a suspicious glibness about them that warned that they had acquired something which, if it became formidable or wide-spread, might question the social framework on which Adamsville and the South were built. Still, Diana seemed a hard-working girl; it might do no harm.
"All right. Whenever she's ready to go, you can have the money."
"Thank you so kin'ly, suh. Ah'll pay back every cent----"