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"Neb' mind where Ah got de meat from. You jes' eat 'til you git plenty. Ah'll get out and throw uh natural fuh you any time. You got uh man tuh fend fuh yuh."
"Lawd knows Ah do needs one. Me and mah po' li'l' chillun been singin' mighty low 'round here."
"Now, Lucy, don't start dat talk 'bout breakin' up and quittin' 'cause Ah ain't goin' tuh hear dat. Youse mah wife and all Ah want you tuh do is gimme uh chance tuh show mah s.p.u.n.k."
"Good Lawd, John, dat's all justice been beggin' righteous tuh do-be uh man. Cover de ground you stand on. Jump at de sun and eben if yuh miss it, yuh can't help grabbin' holt uh de moon."
"Li'l' Bit, please don't tongue lash me," there was a short pause, "'cause Ah done beat Bud nelly tuh death, and dat's plenty tuh think uhbout-by rights Ah oughta kilt 'im." He rubbed his swollen knuckles.
"Oh mah Gawd! When?"
"Dis evenin'-jus' 'fo' Ah come home, Lucy. Ah wouldn't be no man atall tuh let yo' brother uh n.o.body else s.n.a.t.c.h uh bed out from under you, mo' special in yo' condition."
"John dat's goin' tuh cause trouble and double, Bud hate you and now you done hit 'im he ain't goin' tuh let his s.h.i.+rt-tail touch 'im till he tell it tuh de white folks. Lawd, me and mah po' chilluns. If dey ever git yuh on dat chain-gang Ah never speck tuh see you live no mo'."
"Ah ain't goin' tuh no chain-gang. If dey ever git in behind me, Ah'll tip on 'cross de good Lawd's green. Ah'll give mah case tuh Miss Bush and let Mother Green stand mah bond."
"Dey liable tuh grab yuh, 'fo' yuh know it."
"Aw les' squat dat rabbit and jump uh 'nother one. You ack lak you done cut loose."
"Naw, Ah ain't cut loose but look lak wese tied tuhgether by uh long cord string and youse at one end and Ahm at de other. Way off."
"You kin take in some de slack."
"Don't look lak it."
"Aw, lemme see de caboose uh dat. Less eat dis hog meat and hoe-cake. Jes' 'cause women folks ain't got no big muscled arm and fistes lak jugs, folks claims they's weak vessels, but da.s.s uh lie. Dat piece uh red flannel she got hung 'tween her jaws is equal tuh all de fistes G.o.d ever made and man ever seen. Jes' take and ruin a man wid dey tongue, and den dey kin hold it still and bruise 'im up jes' ez bad."
"Say whut yuh will or may, you tryin' tuh loud talk me, but, John, you gives mah folks too much tuh go on. Ah wants mah husband tuh be uh great big man and look over 'em all so's Ah kin make 'em eat up dey talk. Ah wants tuh uphold yuh in eve'ything, but yuh know John, n.o.body can't fight war wid uh brick."
CHAPTER 11.
Duke came panting up to Lucy's late the next afternoon. Lucy was propped up in a rocker and Pheemy was was.h.i.+ng baby rags.
"Hates tuh tell yuh, Lucy, but dey done got 'im."
"Do, Jesus."
"Ya.s.sum, de high sheriff put his hand on his shoulder down dere by de deepo' 'bout uh hour uh go. Bud Potts swo' out de warrant, and den Weens say he goin' have 'im bound over tuh de big cote. Sho is bad, and you in yo' condition."
"Where dey got 'im, Duke?"
"In de big jail. Cy Perkins, Jestice uh de Peace, goin' tuh bind 'im over. Den Judge Pearson'll set on de case nex' cote day."
Lucy rose abruptly, "Ahm goin', Pheemy. You take keer mah chillun."
"Lucy, yo' body ain't healed up yit. You can't go."
"Ah specks tuh be back 'fo' dark, An' Pheemy."
"Gal, you ain't but three days out uh labor. De elements is pizen tuh yuh, and effen yuh git lated 'til after sundown, de pizen night air sho will be de last uh you."
Lucy flung the plaid shawl about her head and shoulders. "And, An' Pheemy, if de baby cries tuh nuss 'fo' Ah git back, jus' give her uh sugar-t.i.t tuh suck on and keep her pacified."
Lucy stepped out of the cabin door and was gone. In due time she stood in Cy Perkins' office where he was holding court. She saw her brother's bruised and beaten face. She saw her husband handcuffed and humble, his eyes turned away from the world.
The court had not set. She still had time if she worked fast. She held her shawl under the chin with the frail fingers of one hand as she went and stood before her brother.
"Don't come puttin' up no po' mouf tuh me, Lucy. Git out mah face," Bud shouted before she could speak. "Dis case ain't uh goin' tuh be nol prossed uh nothin' else. Ah wouldn't squash it fuh mah mammy. You made yo' bed now lay in it."
She turned away. Cy Perkins called her.
"Howdy, Lucy."
"Well, Ah thankee, Mist' Perkins. Ah come tuh see 'bout mah husband."
"Got any bail money, Lucy? That's what you need."
"Naw suh. Ah come wid jus' whut Ah stand in, 'cause Ah ain't got nothin' else, but Ah come."
Cy Perkins looked hard at the forlorn little figure. Lucy stood before him with her large bright eyes staring and not knowing she stared. Suddenly she sat down because she couldn't stand any more.
"Look like you're sick, Lucy."
"Mah troubles is inward. Mist' Perkins."
"Her new baby ain't but three days old," Duke volunteered.
Perkins fumbled with his papers, never looking at Lucy the while. John remained with head hung down and face averted except for one begging glance at Lucy. Finally the Justice of the Peace arose and beckoned Lucy into his back office.
"Don't try to stand up, Lucy. Set down before you fall down. It's too bad that you are out at a time like this. Listen, Lucy, this is serious. Your family is well thought of 'round here and lots of folks think John needs a good whipping before he goes to the gang. If he's got any friends he better call on 'em now. Tell you the truth, Lucy, if it wasn't for you, and me knowing your papa so well, I wouldn't have parted my lips, but your husband is in a mess of trouble."
"Thankee, Mist' Perkins. Ah got fo' li'l' chillun 'round mah feet; if dey send John off Ah don't know whut'll 'come uh us all."
"Have you been to Judge Alf yet?"
"Naw suh. Ah hates tuh go 'cause he done cautioned John good tuh behave hisself, but Ah reckon Ah better."
"Hurry across there to his office. I won't set court until you get back."
Lucy didn't come back. She all but collapsed on the steps of Pearson's office, and he sent her home in his buggy. Alf Pearson strode across to Perkins' office and asked that the prisoner be released in his charge and it was done. Weens was paid for his hog, but John was bound over to the big court for the a.s.sault upon his brother-in-law. There was a great deal of loud whispering about night-riders and the dark of midnight, but n.o.body touched John as he drove Judge Pearson home.
"John, I'm not going to ask you why you've done these things, partly because I already know, and partly because I don't believe you do."
"If Ah had uh knowed 'twuz gointer raise all dis rukus."
Alf laughed sardonically, "Of course you did not know. Because G.o.d has given to all men the gift of blindness. That is to say that He has cursed but few with vision. Ever hear tell of a happy prophet? This old world wouldn't roll on the way He started it if men could see. Ha! In fact I think G.o.d Himself was looking off when you went and got yourself born."
"Yes suh, Ah speck so."
They turned into the cedar-lined drive that led up to the big, columned veranda.
"John, distance is the only cure for certain diseases. Here's fifty dollars. There are lots of other towns in the world besides Notasulga, and there's several hours before midnight. I know a man who could put lots of distance between him and this place before time, even wearing his two best suits-one over the other. He wouldn't fool with baggage because it would hold him back. He would get to a railroad twenty-five or thirty miles off."
John a.s.sisted Alf Pearson to alight.
"Good bye, John. I know how to read and write and I believe Lucy does too."
He strode up the steps of his veranda very straight and stiff, as if he had an extra backbone in his back.
In the early black dark John was gone. Lucy feverishly peeped thru first one crack then another, watching up the big road after him.
"Lucy, whyn't you stay in dat bed?" Pheemy grumbled. "You look lak youse jes' determined tuh be down sick and Ah already got mah hands full wid dese chilluns."
"An' Pheemy, Ahm standin' on de watch wall. Reckon de patter rollers'll ketch 'im?"
"Lawd naw. He pitched out towards Chehaw and dem folks is in Notasulga waitin' fuh midnight."
The hours went past on their rusty ankles and midnight stood looking both ways for day.
"Hus.h.!.+" said Lucy, "dey's comin'!"
Pheemy listened hard but couldn't hear a thing.
"Dat's all right, An' Pheemy, Ah don't zakly hear nothin' neither, but uh far uhway whisper look lak it's puttin' on flesh."
They stood peering for a quarter of an hour or more at the narrow slit of the big road visible from the cabin. Then sure enough as silently as hors.e.m.e.n can, rode twenty or thirty men in the cloud-muddied moonlight. Slowly, watchfully, as they pa.s.sed the big gate that led to the quarters and on past the stately cedar drive.
"How come dey ain't turned in?" Lucy asked, a tremble.
"Dey ain't gwine set foot on Judge Alf Pearson's place, if dey run on 'im outside dey'd grab 'im. Dey might go in some folks' quarters, but 'tain't never no patter roller set foot on dis place. Dey know big wood from brush."
Pheemy told the truth, but she was only embolden to speak after the last rider had pa.s.sed the big gate, and faded into the distance.
"Maybe dey already got 'im."
"Aw naw, gal, g'wan tuh rest. Dey jes' bluffin' tuh skeer us black folks."
The next day Chuck Portlock met Alf Pearson and tried to say casually, "Say, Judge dey tell me dat n.i.g.g.e.r run off. You got any notion which way he went?"
"Afraid not, Chuck. I've treed many a c.o.o.n in my time, but I don't believe I've got a drop of bloodhound in me."
CHAPTER 12.
John's destination was purely accidental. When he came out upon the big road to Chehaw, he overtook another Negro. They hailed each other gladly in the early dawn.
"Where you bound fuh?" John asked.
"Tuh ketch me uh high henry."
"Whuss dat?"
"Uh railroad train, man, where you been all yo' days you don't know de name of uh train?"
"Oh, 'bout in spots and places. Where you bound fuh when you git on de train?"
"Tuh Florida, man. Dat's de new country openin' up. Now git me straight, Ah don't mean West Florida, Ah means de real place. Good times, good money, and no mules and cotton."
"B'lieve Ah'll go 'long wid yuh."
"Man, dat calls fuh more'n talk. Dat calls fuh money."
"How much?"
"Twenty odd dollars. 'Cordin' tuh where at you goin'."
"Where you goin'?"
"Tuh uh town called Sanford. Got uh sister dere. She keep-in' uh boardin' house," he looked John over, "she's uh fine lookin', portly 'oman; you better come 'long."
"Um already married, thankee jes' de same. Man, Ah got uh putty 'oman. Li'l' bitsa thing. Ahm sho tuh send fuh her soon ez Ah git settled some place."
"Aw shucks man, you ain't lak me. Ah don't take no women no place. Ah lets every town furnish its own."
They bought their tickets and John sat in a railway coach for the first time in his life, though he hid this fact from his traveling mate. To him nothing in the world ever quite equalled that first ride on a train. The rhythmic stroke of the engine, the s.h.i.+ny-b.u.t.toned porter bawling out the stations, the even more begilded conductor, who looked more imposing even than Judge Pearson, and then the red plush splendor, the gaudy ceiling hung with glinting lamps, the long mournful howl of the whistle. John forgot the misery of his parting from Lucy in the aura of it all. That is, he only remembered his misery in short s.n.a.t.c.hes, while the glory lay all over him for hours at the time. He marvelled that just anybody could come along and be allowed to get on such a glorified thing. It ought to be extra special. He got off the train at every stop so that he could stand off a piece and feast his eyes on the engine. The greatest acc.u.mulation of power that he had ever seen.
CHAPTER 13.