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The Sins of the Father: A Romance of the South
Through every one of his exciting speeches, when surrounded by hostile crowds, the father had watched Tom's face with a subconscious smile. At the slightest noise, the shuffle of a foot, the mutter of a drunken word, or the movement of a careless listener, the keen eyes of the boy had flashed and his right arm instinctively moved toward his hip pocket.
When the bitter struggle had ended, father and son had drawn closer than ever before in life. They had become chums and comrades.
Norton had planned his tour to keep him out of town until after the polls closed on the day of election. They had spent several nights within fifteen or twenty miles of the Capital, but had avoided home.
He had planned to arrive at the speaker's stand in the Capitol Square in time to get the first returns of the election.
Five thousand people were packed around the bulletin board when they arrived on a delayed train.
The first returns indicated that the leader's daring platform had swept the state by a large majority. The negro race had been disfranchised and the ballot restored to its original dignity. And much more had been done. The act was purely political, but its effects on the relations, mental and moral and physical, of the two races, so evenly divided in the South, would be tremendous.
The crowds of cheering men and women felt this instinctively, though it had not as yet found expression in words.
A half-dozen stalwart men with a rush and a shout seized Norton and lifted him, blushing and protesting, carried him on their shoulders through the yelling crowd and placed him on the platform.
He had scarcely begun his speech when Tom, watching his chance, slipped hurriedly through the throng and flew to the girl who was waiting with beating heart for the sound of his footstep.
CHAPTER XVIII
LOVE LAUGHS
When Helen had received a brief note from Tom the night before the election that he would surely reach home the next day, she snatched his picture from the library table with a cry of joy and rushed to her room.
She placed the little gold frame on her bureau, sat down before it and poured out her heart in silly speeches of love, pausing to laugh and kiss the glass that saved the miniature from ruin. The portrait was an exquisite work of art on ivory which the father had commisioned a painter in New York to do in celebration of Tom's coming of age. The artist had caught the boy's spirit in the tender smile that played about his lips and lingered in the corners of his blue eyes, the same eyes and lips in line and color in the dainty little mother's portrait over the mantel.
"Oh, you big, handsome, brave, glorious boy!" she cried in ecstasy. "My sweetheart-so generous, so clean, so strong, so free in soul! I love you-I love you-I love you!"
She fell asleep at last with the oval frame clasped tight in one hand thrust under her pillow. A sound sleep was impossible, the busy brain was too active. Again and again she waked with a start, thinking she had heard his swift footfall on the stoop.
At daybreak she leaped to her feet and found herself in the middle of the room laughing when she came to herself, the precious picture still clasped in her hand.
"Oh, foolish heart, wake up!" she cried with another laugh. "It's dawn, and my lover is coming! It's his day! No more sleep – it's too wonderful! I'm going to count every hour until I hear his step – every minute of every hour, foolish heart!"
She looked out the window and it was raining. The overhanging boughs of the oaks were dripping on the tin roof of the bay window in which she was standing. She had dreamed of a wonderful sunrise this morning. But it didn't matter – the rain didn't matter. The slow, familiar dropping on the roof suggested the nearness of her lover. They would sit in some shadowy corner hand in hand and love all the more tenderly. The raindrops were the drum beat of a band playing the march that was bringing him nearer with each throb. The mocking-bird that had often waked her with his song was silent, hovering somewhere in a tree beneath the thick leaves. She had expected him to call her to-day with the sweetest lyric he had ever sung. Somehow it didn't matter. Her soul was singing the song that makes all other music dumb.
"My love is coming!" she murmured joyfully. "My love is coming!"
And then she stood for an hour in brooding, happy silence and watched the ghost-like trees come slowly out of the mists. To her shining eyes there were no mists. The gray film that hung over the waking world was a bridal veil hiding the blushing face of the earth from the sun-god lover who was on his way over the hills to clasp her in his burning arms!
For the first time in her memory she was supremely happy.
Every throb of pain that belonged to the past was lost in the sea of joy on which her soul had set sail. In the glory of his love pain was only another name for joy. All she had suffered was but the preparation for this supreme good. It was all the more wonderful, this fairy world into which she had entered, because the shadows had been so deep in her lonely childhood.
There really hadn't been any past! She couldn't remember the time she had not known and loved Tom. Love filled the universe, past, present and future. There was no task too hard for her hands, no danger she was not ready to meet. The hungry heart had found its own.
Through the long hours of the day she waited without impatience. Each tick of the tiny clock on the mantel brought him nearer. The hands couldn't turn back! She watched them with a smile as she sat in the gathering twilight.
She had placed the miniature back in its place and sat where her eye caught the smile from his lips when she lifted her head from the embroidery on her lap.
The band was playing a stirring strain in the Square. She could hear the tumult and the shouts of the crowds about the speaker's stand as they read the bulletins of the election. The darkness couldn't hold him many more minutes.
She rose with a soft laugh and turned on the lights, walked to the window, looked out and listened to the roar of the cheering when Norton made his appearance. The band struck up another stirring piece. Yes, it was "Hail to the Chief!" He had come.
She counted the minutes it would take for him to elude his father and reach the house. She pictured the smile on his face as he threaded his way through the throng and started to her on swift feet. She could see him coming with the long, quick stride he had inherited from his father.
She turned back into the room exclaiming:
"Oh, foolish heart, be still!"
She seated herself again and waited patiently, a smile about the corners of her lips and another playing hide and seek in the depths of her expressive eyes.
Tom had entered the house unobserved by any one and softly tipped into the library from the door directly behind her. He paused, removed his hat, dropped it silently into a chair and stood looking at the graceful, beautiful form bending over her work. The picture of this waiting figure he had seen in his day-dreams a thousand times and yet it was so sweet and wonderful he had to stop and drink in the glory of it for a moment.
A joyous laugh was bubbling in his heart as he tipped softly over the thick yielding rug and slipped his hands over her eyes. His voice was the gentlest whisper:
"Guess?"
The white figure slowly rose and her words came in little ripples of gasping laughter as she turned and lifted her arms:
"It's – it's – Tom!"
With a smothered cry she was on his breast. He held her long and close without a word. His voice had a queer hitch in it as he murmured:
"Helen – my darling!"
"Oh, I thought you'd never come!" she sighed, looking up through her tears.
Tom held her off and gazed into her eyes:
"It's been a century since I've seen you! I did my level best when we got into these nearby counties again, but I couldn't shake Dad once this week. He watched me like a hawk and insisted on staying out of town till the very last hour of the election to-day. Did old Andy find out I slipped in last week?"
"No!" she laughed.
"Did Cleo find it out?"
"No."
"You're sure Cleo didn't find out?"
"Sure – but Aunt Minerva did."
"Oh, I'm not afraid of her – kiss me!"
With a glad cry their lips met.
He held her off.
"I'm not afraid of anything!"
With an answering laugh, she kissed him again.
"I'm not afraid of Dad!" he said in tones of mock tragedy. "Once more!"
She gently disengaged herself, asking:
"How did you get away from him so quickly?"
"Oh, he's making a speech to the crowd in the Square proclaiming victory and so" – his voice fell to a whisper – "I flew to celebrate mine!"
"Won't he miss you?"
"Not while he's talking. Dad enjoys an eloquent speech – especially one of his own – "
He stopped abruptly, took a step toward her and cried:
"Say! Do you know what the Governor of North Carolina said once upon a time to the Governor of South Carolina?"
Helen laughed:
"What?"
He opened his arms:
"'It strikes me,' said he, 'that it's a long time between drinks!'"
Again her arms flashed around his neck.
"Did you miss me?"
"Dreadfully!" she sighed. "But I've been happy – happy in your love – oh, so happy, dearest!"
"Well, if Dad wins this election to-night," he said with a boyish smile, "I'm going to tell him. Now's the time – no more slipping and sliding!" – he paused, rushed to the window and looked out – "come, the clouds have lifted and the moon is rising. Our old seat among the roses is waiting."
With a look of utter happiness she slipped her arm in his and they strolled across the lawn.
CHAPTER XIX
"FIGHT IT OUT!"
Cleo had heard the shouts in the square with increasing dread. The hour was rapidly approaching when she must face Norton.
She had deeply regretted the last scene with him when she had completely lost her head. For the first time in her life she had dared to say things that could not be forgiven. They had lived an armed truce for twenty years. She had endured it in the hope of a change in his attitude, but she had driven him to uncontrollable fury now by her angry outburst and spoken words that could not be unsaid.
She realized when too late that he would never forgive these insults. And she began to wonder nervously what form his revenge would take. That he had matured a definite plan of hostile action which he would put into force on his arrival, she did not doubt.
Why had she been so foolish? She asked herself the question a hundred times. And yet the clash was inevitable. She could not see Helen packed off to Europe and her hopes destroyed at a blow. She might have stopped him with something milder than a threat of exposure in his rival's paper. That was the mad thing she had done.
What effect this threat had produced on his mind she could only guess. But she constantly came back to it with increasing fear. If he should accept her challenge, dare her to speak, and, weary of the constant strain of her presence in his house, put her out, it meant the end of the world. She had lived so long in dependence on his will, the thought of beginning life again under new conditions of humiliating service was unthinkable.
She could only wait now until the blow fell, and adjust herself to the situation as best she could. That she had the power to lay his life in ruins and break Tom's heart she had never doubted. Yet this was the one thing she did not wish to do. It meant too much to her.
She walked on the porch and listened again to the tumult in the Square. She had seen Tom enter the house on tip-toe and knew that the lovers were together and smiled in grim triumph. That much of her scheme had not failed! It only remained to be seen whether, with their love an accomplished fact, she could wring from Norton's lips the confession she had demanded and save her own skin in the crash.
Andy had entered the gate and she heard him bustling in the pantry as Tom and Helen strolled on the lawn. The band in the Square was playing their star piece of rag-time music, "A Georgia Campmeeting."
The stirring refrain echoed over the sleepy old town with a weird appeal to-night. It had the ring of martial music – of hosts shouting their victory as they marched. They were playing it with unusual swinging power.
She turned with a gesture of impatience into the house to find Andy. He was carrying a tray of mint juleps into the library.
Cleo looked at him in amazement, suppressed an angry exclamation and asked:
"What's that band playing for?"
"White folks celebratin' de victory!" he replied enthusiastically, placing the tray on the table.
"It's only seven o'clock. The election returns can't be in yet?"
"Yassam! Hit's all over but de shoutin'!"
Cleo moved a step closer:
"The major has won?"
"Yassam! Yassam!" Andy answered with loud good humor, as he began to polish a glass with a napkin. "Yassam, I des come frum dar. De news done come in. Dey hain't gwine ter 'low de niggers ter vote no mo', 'ceptin they kin read an' write – an' den dey won't let 'em!"
He held one of the shining glasses up to the light, examined it with judicial care and continued in tones of resignation:
"Don't make no diffrunce ter me, dough! – I hain't nebber got nuttin' fer my vote nohow, 'ceptin' once when er politicioner shoved er box er cigars at me" – he chuckled – "an' den, by golly, I had ter be a gemman, I couldn't grab er whole handful – I des tuck four!"
Cleo moved impatiently and glared at the tray:
"What on earth did you bring all that stuff for? The whole mob are not coming here, are they?"
"Nobum – nobum! Nobody but de major, but I 'low dat he gwine ter consume some! He's on er high hoss. Dey's 'bout ten thousand folks up dar in de Square. De boys carry de major on dere back to de flatform an' he make 'em a big speech. Dey sho is er-raisin' er mighty humbug. Dey gwine ter celebrate all night out dar, an' gwine ter serenade everybody in town. But de major comin' right home. Dey try ter git him ter stay wid 'em, but he 'low dat he got some 'portant business here at de house."
"Important business here?" she asked anxiously.
"Yassam, I spec him any minute."
Cleo turned quickly toward the door and Andy called:
"Miss Cleo!"
She continued to go without paying any attention and he repeated his call:
"Miss Cleo!"
She paused indifferently, while Andy touched his lips smiling:
"I got my mouf shet!"
"Does it pain you?"
"Nobum!" he laughed.
"Keep it shut!" she replied contemptuously as she again moved toward the door.
"Yassam – yassam – but ain't yer got nuttin' mo' dan dat ter say ter me?"
He asked this question with a rising inflection that might mean a threat.
The woman walked back to him:
"Prove your love by a year's silence – "
"De Lawd er mussy!" Andy gasped. "A whole year?"
"Am I not worth waiting for?" she asked with a smile.
"Yassam – yassam," he replied slowly, "Jacob he wait seben years an' den, by golly, de ole man cheat him outen his gal! But ef yer say so, I'se er-waitin', honey – "
Andy placated, her mind returned in a flash to the fear that haunted her:
"He said important business here at once?"
The gate closed with a vigorous slam and the echo of Norton's step was heard on the gravel walk.
"Yassam, dar he is now."
Cleo trembled and hurried to the opposite door:
"If the major asks for me, tell him I've gone to the meeting in the Square."
She passed quickly from the room in a panic of fear. She couldn't meet him in this condition. She must wait a better moment.
Andy, arranging his tray, began to mix three mint juleps, humming a favorite song:
"Dis time er-nudder year,Oh, Lawd, how long!In some lonesome graveyard —Woh, Lawd, how long!"Norton paused on the threshold with a smile and listened to the foolish melody. His whole being was quivering with the power that thrilled from a great act of will. He had just made a momentous decision. His work in hand was done. He had lived for years in an atmosphere poisoned by a yellow venomous presence. He had resolved to be free! – no matter what the cost.
His mind flew to the boy he had grown to love with deeper tenderness the past weeks. The only thing he really dreaded was his humiliation before those blue eyes. But, if the worst came to worst, he must speak. There were things darker than death – the consciousness to a proud and sensitive man that he was the slave to an inferior was one of them. He had to be free – free at any cost. The thought was an inspiration.
With brisk step he entered the library and glanced with surprise at the empty room.
"Tom not come?" he asked briskly.
"Nasah, I ain't seed 'im," Andy replied.
Norton threw his linen coat on a chair, and a dreamy look came into his deep-set eyes:
"Well, Andy, we've made a clean sweep to-day – the old state's white again!"
The negro, bustling over his tray, replied with unction:
"Yassah, dat's what I done tole 'em, sah!"
"All government rests on force, Andy! The ballot is force – physical force. Back of every ballot is a gun – "
He paused, drew the revolver slowly from his pocket and held it in his hand.
Andy glanced up from his tray and jumped in alarm:
"Yassah, dat's so, sah – in dese parts sho, sah!" he ended his speech by a good-natured laugh at the expense of the country that allowed itself to be thus intimidated.
Norton lifted the gleaming piece of steel and looked at it thoughtfully:
"Back of every ballot a gun and the red blood of the man who holds it! No freeman ever yet voted away his right to a revolution – "
"Yassah – dat's what I tells dem niggers – you gwine ter giv 'em er dose er de revolution – "
"Well, it's done now and I've no more use for this thing – thank God!"
He crossed to the writing desk, laid the revolver on its top and walked to the lounge his face set with a look of brooding intensity:
"Bah! The big battles are all fought inside, Andy! There's where the brave die and cowards run – inside – "
"Yassah! – I got de stuff right here fer de inside, sah!" he held up the decanter with a grin.
"From to-night my work outside is done," Norton went on moodily. "And I'm going to be free – free! I'm no longer afraid of one of my servants – "
He dropped into a seat and closed his fists with a gesture of intense emotion.
Andy looked at him in astonishment and asked incredulously:
"Who de debbil say you'se er scared of any nigger? Show dat man ter me – who say dat?"
"I say it!" was the bitter answer. He had been thinking aloud, but now that the negro had heard he didn't care. His soul was sick of subterfuge and lies.
Andy laughed apologetically:
"Yassah! Cose, sah, ef you say dat hit's so, why I say hit's so – but all de same, 'twixt you an' me, I knows tain't so!"
"But from to-night!" Norton cried, ignoring Andy as he sprang to his feet and looked sharply about the room:
"Tell Cleo I wish to see her at once!"
"She gone out in de Squar ter hear de news, sah."
"The moment she comes let me know!" he said with sharp emphasis and turned quickly to the door.
"Yassah," Andy answered watching him go with amazement. "De Lawdy, major, you ain't gwine off an' leave dese mint juleps lak dat, is ye?"
Norton retraced a step:
"Yes, from to-night I'm the master of my house and myself!"
Andy looked at the tray and then at Norton:
"Well, sah, yer ain't got no objections to me pizinin' mysef, is ye?"
The master surveyed the grinning servant, glanced at the tray, smiled and said:
"No – you'll do it anyhow, so go as far as you like!"
"Yassah!" the negro laughed as Norton turned again. "An' please, sah, won't yer gimme jes a little advice befo' you go?"
Norton turned a puzzled face on the grinning black one:
"Advice?"
"Yassah. What I wants ter know, major, is dis. Sposen, sah, dat a gemman got ter take his choice twixt marryin' er lady dat's forcin' herself on 'im, er kill hissef?"
"Kill her!"
Andy broke into a loud laugh:
"Yassah! but she's er dangous 'oman, sah! She's a fighter from Fightersville – an' fuddermo', sah, I'se engaged to annudder lady at the same time – an' I'se in lub wid dat one an' skeered er de fust one."
"Face it, then. Confess your love and fight it out! Fight it out and let them fight it out. You like to see a fight, don't you?"
"Yassah! Oh, yassah," Andy declared bravely. "I likes ter see a fight – I likes ter see de fur fly – but I don't care 'bout furnishin' none er de fur!"
Norton had reached the door when he suddenly turned, the momentary humor of his play with the negro gone from his sombre face, the tragedy of a life speaking in every tone as he slowly said:
"Fight it out! It's the only thing to do – fight it out!"
Andy stared at the retreating figure dazed by the violence of passion with which his master had answered, wondering vaguely what could be the meaning of the threat behind his last words.
CHAPTER XX
ANDY FIGHTS
When Andy had recovered from his surprise at the violence of Norton's parting advice his eye suddenly rested on the tray of untouched mint juleps.
A broad smile broke over his black countenance:
"Fight it out! Fight it out!" he exclaimed with a quick movement toward the table. "Yassah, I'm gwine do it, too, I is!"
He paused before the array of filled glasses of the iced beverage, saluted silently, and raised one high over his head to all imaginary friends who might be present. His eye rested on the portrait of General Lee. He bowed and saluted again. Further on hung Stonewall Jackson. He lifted his glass to him, and last to Norton's grandfather in his blue and yellow colonial regimentals. He pressed the glass to his thirsty lips and waved the julep a jovial farewell with the palm of his left hand as he poured it gently but firmly down to the last drop.
He smacked his lips, drew a long breath and sighed:
"Put ernuff er dat stuff inside er me, I kin fight er wil'cat! Yassah, an' I gwine do it. I gwine ter be rough wid her, too! Rough wid her, I is!"
He seized another glass and drained half of it, drew himself up with determination, walked to the door leading to the hall toward the kitchen and called:
"Miss Minerva!"
Receiving no answer, he returned quickly to the tray and took another drink:
"Rough wid her – dat's de way – rough wid her!"
He pulled his vest down with a vicious jerk, bravely took one step, paused, reached back, picked up his glass again, drained it, and walked to the door.
"Miss Minerva!" he called loudly and fiercely.
From the kitchen came the answer in tender tones:
"Yas – honey!"
Andy retreated hastily to the table and took another drink before the huge but smiling figure appeared in the doorway.
"Did my true love call?" she asked softly.
Andy groaned, grasped a glass and quickly poured another drink of Dutch courage down. "Yassam, Miss Minerva, I thought I hear yer out dar – "
Minerva giggled as lightly as she could considering her two hundred and fifty pounds:
"Yas, honey, hit's little me!"
Andy had begun to feel the bracing effects of the two full glasses of mint juleps. He put his hands in his pockets, walked with springing strides to the other end of the room, returned and squared himself impressively before Minerva. Before he could speak his courage began to fail and he stuttered:
"M-M-M-Miss Minerva!"
The good-humored, shining black face was raised in sharp surprise:
"What de matter wid you, man, er hoppin' roun' over de flo' lak er flea in er hot skillet?"
Andy saw that the time had come when he must speak unless he meant to again ignominiously surrender. He began boldly:
"Miss Minerva! I got somethin' scandalous ter say ter you!"
She glared at him, the whites of her eyes shining ominously, crossed the room quickly and confronted Andy:
"Don't yer dar' say nuttin' scandalizin' ter me, sah!"
His eyes fell and he moved as if to retreat. She nudged him gently:
"G'long, man, what is it?"
He took courage:
"I got ter 'fess ter you, m'am, dat I'se tangled up wid annuder 'oman!"