The House Behind the Cedars Read online

Page 17


  “I heared you say, Cousin Molly,” said Mary B. (no one ever knew what the B. in Mary’s name stood for,—it was a mere ornamental flourish), “that Rena was talkin’ ‘bout teachin’ school. I’ve got a good chance fer her, ef she keers ter take it. My cousin Jeff Wain ’rived in town this mo‘nin’, f’m ’way down in Sampson County, ter git a teacher fer the nigger school in his deestric’. I s‘pose he mought ’a’ got one f’m ‘roun’ Newbern, er Goldsboro, er some er them places eas’, but he ‘lowed he’d like to visit some er his kin an’ ole frien’s, an’ so kill two birds with one stone.”

  “I seed a strange mulatter man, with a bay hoss an’ a new buggy, drivin’ by here this mo‘nin’ early, from down to’ds the river,” rejoined Mis’ Molly. “I wonder if that wuz him?”

  “Did he have on a linen duster?” asked Mary B.

  “Yas, an’ ‘peared to be a very well sot up man,” replied Mis’ Molly, “ ’bout thirty-five years old, I should reckon.”

  “That wuz him,” assented Mary B. “He’s got a fine hoss an’ buggy, an’ a gol’ watch an’ chain, an’ a big plantation, an’ lots er hosses an’ mules an’ cows an’ hawgs. He raise’ fifty bales er cotton las’ year, an’ he’s be’n ter the legislatur’.”

  “My gracious!” exclaimed Mis’ Molly, struck with awe at this catalogue of the stranger’s possessions—he was evidently worth more than a great many “rich” white people,—all white people in North Carolina in those days were either “rich” or “poor,” the distinction being one of caste rather than of wealth. “Is he married?” she inquired with interest?

  “No,—single. You mought ‘low it was quare that he should n’ be married at his age; but he was crossed in love oncet,”—Mary B. heaved a self-conscious sigh,—“an’ has stayed single ever sence. That wuz ten years ago, but as some husban’s is long-lived, an’ there ain’ no mo’ chance fer ’im now than there wuz then, I reckon some nice gal mought stan’ a good show er ketchin’ ’im, ef she’d play her kyards right.”

  To Mis’ Molly this was news of considerable importance. She had not thought a great deal of Rena’s plan to teach; she considered it lowering for Rena, after having been white, to go among the negroes any more than was unavoidable. This opportunity, however, meant more than mere employment for her daughter. She had felt Rena’s disappointment keenly, from the practical point of view, and, blaming herself for it, held herself all the more bound to retrieve the misfortune in any possible way. If she had not been sick, Rena would not have dreamed the fateful dream that had brought her to Patesville; for the connection between the vision and the reality was even closer in Mis’ Molly’s eyes than in Rena’s. If the mother had not sent the letter announcing her illness and confirming the dream, Rena would not have ruined her promising future by coming to Patesville. But the harm had been done, and she was responsible, ignorantly of course, but none the less truly, and it only remained for her to make amends, as far as possible. Her highest ambition, since Rena had grown up, had been to see her married and comfortably settled in life. She had no hope that Tryon would come back. Rena had declared that she would make no further effort to get away from her people; and, furthermore, that she would never marry. To this latter statement Mis’ Molly secretly attached but little importance. That a woman should go single from the cradle to the grave did not accord with her experience in life of the customs of North Carolina. She respected a grief she could not entirely fathom, yet did not for a moment believe that Rena would remain unmarried.

  “You’d better fetch him roun’ to see me, Ma‘y B.,” she said, “an’ let’s see what he looks like. I’m pertic’lar ’bout my gal. She says she ain’t goin’ to marry nobody; but of co’se we know that’s all foolishness. ”

  “I’ll fetch him roun’ this evenin’ ‘bout three o’clock,” said the visitor, rising. “I mus’ hurry back now an’ keep him comp‘ny. Tell Rena ter put on her bes’ bib an’ tucker; for Mr. Wain is pertic’lar too, an’ I’ve already be’n braggin’ ’bout her looks.”

  When Mary B., at the appointed hour, knocked at Mis’ Molly’s front door,—the visit being one of ceremony, she had taken her cousin round to the Front Street entrance and through the flower garden,—Mis’ Molly was prepared to receive them. After a decent interval, long enough to suggest that she had not been watching their approach and was not over-eager about the visit, she answered the knock and admitted them into the parlor. Mr. Wain was formally introduced, and seated himself on the ancient haircloth sofa, under the framed fashion-plate, while Mary B. sat by the open door and fanned herself with a palm-leaf fan.

  Mis’ Molly’s impression of Wain was favorable. His complexion was of a light brown—not quite so fair as Mis’ Molly would have preferred; but any deficiency in this regard, or in the matter of the stranger’s features, which, while not unpleasing, leaned toward the broad mulatto type, was more than compensated in her eyes by very straight black hair, and, as soon appeared, a great facility of complimentary speech. On his introduction Mr. Wain bowed low, assumed an air of great admiration, and expressed his extreme delight in making the acquaintance of so distinguished-looking a lady.

  “You’re flatt‘rin’ me, Mr. Wain,” returned Mis’ Molly, with a gratified smile. “But you want to meet my daughter befo’ you commence th’owin’ bokays. Excuse my leavin’ you—I’ll go an’ fetch her.”

  She returned in a moment, followed by Rena. “Mr. Wain, ‘low me to int’oduce you to my daughter Rena. Rena, this is Ma’y B.’s cousin on her pappy’s side, who’s come up from Sampson to git a school-teacher.”

  Rena bowed gracefully. Wain stared a moment in genuine astonishment, and then bent himself nearly double, keeping his eyes fixed meanwhile upon Rena’s face. He had expected to see a pretty yellow girl, but had been prepared for no such radiant vision of beauty as this which now confronted him.

  “Does—does you mean ter say, Mis’ Walden, dat—dat dis young lady is yo’ own daughter?” he stammered, rallying his forces for action.

  “Why not, Mr. Wain?” asked Mis’ Molly, bridling with mock resentment. “Do you mean ter ’low that she wuz changed in her cradle, er is she too good-lookin’ to be my daughter?”

  “My deah Mis’ Walden! it ‘ud be wastin’ wo’ds fer me ter say dat dey ain’ no young lady too good-lookin’ ter be yo’ daughter; but you’re lookin’ so young yo’sef dat I’d ruther take her fer yo’ sister. ”

  “Yas,” rejoined Mis’ Molly, with animation, “they ain’t many years between us. I wuz rather young myself when she wuz bo’n.”

  “An‘, mo’over,” Wain went on, “it takes me a minute er so ter git my min’ use’ ter thinkin’ er Mis’ Rena as a cullud young lady. I mought ‘a’ seed her a hund’ed times, an’ I’d ‘a’ never dreamt but w’at she wuz a w’ite young lady, f’m one er de bes’ families. ”

  “Yas, Mr. Wain,” replied Mis’ Molly complacently, “all three er my child‘en wuz white, an’ one of ’em has be’n on the other side fer many long years. Rena has be’n to school, an’ has traveled, an’ has had chances—better chances than anybody roun’ here knows.”

  “She’s jes’ de lady I’m lookin’ fer, ter teach ou’ school,” rejoined Wain, with emphasis. “Wid her schoolin’ an’ my riccommen‘, she kin git a fus’-class ce‘tifikit an’ draw fo’ty dollars a month; an’ a lady er her color kin keep a lot er little niggers straighter’n a darker lady could. We jus’ got ter have her ter teach ou’ school—ef we kin git her.”

  Rena’s interest in the prospect of employment at her chosen work was so great that she paid little attention to Wain’s compliments. Mis’ Molly led Mary B. away to the kitchen on some pretext, and left Rena to entertain the gentleman. She questioned him eagerly about the school, and he gave the most glowing accounts of the elegant school-house, the bright pupils, and the congenial society of the neighborhood. He spoke almost entirely in superlatives, and, after making due allowance for what Rena perceived to be a temperamental tendency to exaggerati
on, she concluded that she would find in the school a worthy field of usefulness, and in this polite and good-natured though somewhat wordy man a coadjutor upon whom she could rely in her first efforts; for she was not over-confident of her powers, which seemed to grow less as the way opened for their exercise.

  “Do you think I’m competent to teach the school?” she asked of the visitor, after stating some of her qualifications.

  “Oh, dere’s no doubt about it, Miss Rena,” replied Wain, who had listened with an air of great wisdom, though secretly aware that he was too ignorant of letters to form a judgment; “you kin teach de school all right, an’ could ef you didn’t know half ez much. You won’t have no trouble managin’ de child‘en, nuther. Ef any of ’em gits onruly, jes’ call on me fer he‘p, an’ I’ll make ’em walk Spanish. I’m chuhman er de school committee, an’ I’ll lam de hide off’n any scholar dat don’ behave. You kin trus’ me fer dat, sho’ ez I’m a-settin’ here.”

  “Then,” said Rena, “I’ll undertake it, and do my best. I’m sure you’ll not be too exacting.”

  “Yo’ bes’, Miss Rena, ’ll be de bes’ dey is. Don’ you worry ner fret. Dem niggers won’t have no other teacher after dey’ve once laid eyes on you: I’ll guarantee dat. Dere won’t be no trouble, not a bit.”

  “Well, Cousin Molly,” said Mary B. to Mis’ Molly in the kitchen, “how does the plan strike you?”

  “Ef Rena’s satisfied, I am,” replied Mis’ Molly. “But you’d better say nothin’ about ketchin’ a beau, or any such foolishness, er else she’d be just as likely not to go nigh Sampson County.”

  “Befo’ Cousin Jeff goes back,” confided Mary B., “I’d like ter give ‘im a party, but my house is too small. I wuz wonderin’, ” she added tentatively, “ef I could n’ borry yo’ house.”

  “Shorely, Ma‘y B. I’m int’rested in Mr. Wain on Rena’s account, an’ it’s as little as I kin do to let you use my house an’ help you git things ready.”

  The date of the party was set for Thursday night, as Wain was to leave Patesville on Friday morning, taking with him the new teacher. The party would serve the double purpose of a compliment to the guest and a farewell to Rena, and it might prove the precursor, the mother secretly hoped, of other festivities to follow at some later date.

  XXII

  Imperative Business

  One Wednesday morning, about six weeks after his return home, Tryon received a letter from Judge Straight with reference to the note left with him at Patesville for collection. This communication properly required an answer, which might have been made in writing within the compass of ten lines. No sooner, however, had Tryon read the letter than he began to perceive reasons why it should be answered in person. He had left Patesville under extremely painful circumstances, vowing that he would never return; and yet now the barest pretext, by which no one could have been deceived except willingly, was sufficient to turn his footsteps thither again. He explained to his mother —with a vagueness which she found somewhat puzzling, but ascribed to her own feminine obtuseness in matters of business—the reasons that imperatively demanded his presence in Patesville. With an early start he could drive there in one day, —he had an excellent roadster, a light buggy, and a recent rain had left the road in good condition,—a day would suffice for the transaction of his business, and the third day would bring him home again. He set out on his journey on Thursday morning, with this programme very clearly outlined.

  Tryon would not at first have admitted even to himself that Rena’s presence in Patesville had any bearing whatever upon his projected visit. The matter about which Judge Straight had written might, it was clear, be viewed in several aspects. The judge had written him concerning the one of immediate importance. It would be much easier to discuss the subject in all its bearings, and clean up the whole matter, in one comprehensive personal interview.

  The importance of this business, then, seemed very urgent for the first few hours of Tryon’s journey. Ordinarily a careful driver and merciful to his beast, his eagerness to reach Patesville increased gradually until it became necessary to exercise some self-restraint in order not to urge his faithful mare beyond her powers; and soon he could no longer pretend obliviousness of the fact that some attraction stronger than the whole amount of Duncan McSwayne’s note was urging him irresistibly toward his destination. The old town beyond the distant river, his heart told him clamorously, held the object in all the world to him most dear. Memory brought up in vivid detail every moment of his brief and joyous courtship,—each tender word, each enchanting smile, every fond caress. He lived his past happiness over again down to the moment of that fatal discovery. What horrible fate was it that had involved him—nay, that had caught this sweet delicate girl in such a blind alley? A wild hope flashed across his mind: perhaps the ghastly story might not be true; perhaps, after all, the girl was no more a negro than she seemed. He had heard sad stories of white children, born out of wedlock, abandoned by sinful parents to the care or adoption of colored women, who had reared them as their own, the children’s future basely sacrificed to hide the parents’ shame. He would confront this reputed mother of his darling and wring the truth from her. He was in a state of mind where any sort of a fairy tale would have seemed reasonable. He would almost have bribed some one to tell him that the woman he had loved, the woman he still loved (he felt a thrill of lawless pleasure in the confession), was not the descendant of slaves,—that he might marry her, and not have before his eyes the gruesome fear that some one of their children might show even the faintest mark of the despised race.

  At noon he halted at a convenient hamlet, fed and watered his mare, and resumed his journey after an hour’s rest. By this time he had well-nigh forgotten about the legal business that formed the ostensible occasion for his journey, and was conscious only of a wild desire to see the woman whose image was beckoning him on to Patesville as fast as his horse could take him.

  At sundown he stopped again, about ten miles from the town, and cared for his now tired beast. He knew her capacity, however, and calculated that she could stand the additional ten miles without injury. The mare set out with reluctance, but soon settled resignedly down into a steady jog.

  Memory had hitherto assailed Tryon with the vision of past joys. As he neared the town, imagination attacked him with still more moving images. He had left her, this sweet flower of womankind—white or not, God had never made a fairer!—he had seen her fall to the hard pavement, with he knew not what resulting injury. He had left her tender frame—the touch of her finger-tips had made him thrill with happiness—to be lifted by strange hands, while he with heartless pride had driven deliberately away, without a word of sorrow or regret. He had ignored her as completely as though she had never existed. That he had been deceived was true. But had he not aided in his own deception? Had not Warwick told him distinctly that they were of no family, and was it not his own fault that he had not followed up the clue thus given him? Had not Rena compared herself to the child’s nurse, and had he not assured her that if she were the nurse, he would marry her next day? The deception had been due more to his own blindness than to any lack of honesty on the part of Rena and her brother. In the light of his present feelings they seemed to have been absurdly outspoken. He was glad that he had kept his discovery to himself. He had considered himself very magnanimous not to have exposed the fraud that was being perpetrated upon society: it was with a very comfortable feeling that he now realized that the matter was as profound a secret as before.

  “She ought to have been born white,” he muttered, adding weakly, “I would to God that I had never found her out!”

  Drawing near the bridge that crossed the river to the town, he pictured to himself a pale girl, with sorrowful, tear-stained eyes, pining away in the old gray house behind the cedars for love of him, dying, perhaps, of a broken heart. He would hasten to her; he would dry her tears with kisses; he would express sorrow for his cruelty.

  The tired mare had crossed the
bridge and was slowly toiling up Front Street; she was near the limit of her endurance, and Tryon did not urge her.

  They might talk the matter over, and if they must part, part at least they would in peace and friendship. If he could not marry her, he would never marry any one else; it would be cruel for him to seek happiness while she was denied it, for, having once given her heart to him, she could never, he was sure,—so instinctively fine was her nature,—she could never love any one less worthy than himself, and would therefore probably never marry. He knew from a Clarence acquaintance, who had written him a letter, that Rena had not reappeared in that town.

  If he should discover—the chance was one in a thousand—that she was white; or if he should find it too hard to leave her—ah, well! he was a white man, one of a race born to command. He would make her white; no one beyond the old town would ever know the difference. If, perchance, their secret should be disclosed, the world was wide; a man of courage and ambition, inspired by love, might make a career anywhere. Circumstances made weak men; strong men mould circumstances to do their bidding. He would not let his darling die of grief, whatever the price must be paid for her salvation. She was only a few rods away from him now. In a moment he would see her; he would take her tenderly in his arms, and heart to heart they would mutually forgive and forget, and, strengthened by their love, would face the future boldly and bid the world do its worst.

  XXIII

  The Guest of Honor

  The evening of the party arrived. The house had been thoroughly cleaned in preparation for the event, and decorated with the choicest treasures of the garden. By eight o’clock the guests had gathered. They were all mulattoes,—all people of mixed blood were called “mulattoes” in North Carolina. There were dark mulattoes and bright mulattoes. Mis’ Molly’s guests were mostly of the bright class, most of them more than half white, and few of them less. In Mis’ Molly’s small circle, straight hair was the only palliative of a dark complexion. Many of the guests would not have been casually distinguishable from white people of the poorer class. Others bore unmistakable traces of Indian ancestry,—for Cherokee and Tuscarora blood was quite widely diffused among the free negroes of North Carolina, though well-nigh lost sight of by the curious custom of the white people to ignore anything but the negro blood in those who were touched by its potent current. Very few of those present had been slaves. The free colored people of Patesville were numerous enough before the war to have their own “society,” and human enough to despise those who did not possess advantages equal to their own; and at this time they still looked down upon those who had once been held in bondage. The only black man present occupied a chair which stood on a broad chest in one corner, and extracted melody from a fiddle to which a whole generation of the best people of Patesville had danced and made merry. Uncle Needham seldom played for colored gatherings, but made an exception in Mis’ Molly’s case; she was not white, but he knew her past; if she was not the rose, she had at least been near the rose. When the company had gathered, Mary B., as mistress of ceremonies, whispered to Uncle Needham, who tapped his violin sharply with the bow.