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IV
DOWN THE RIVER
NEITHER mother nor
daughter slept a great deal during the night of Warwick's first visit.
Mis' Molly anointed her sacrifice with tears and cried herself to sleep.
Rena's emotions were more conflicting; she was sorry to leave her mother,
but glad to go with her brother. The mere journey she was about to make
was a great event for the two women to contemplate, to say nothing of
the golden vision that lay beyond, for neither of them had ever been out
of the town or its vicinity.
The next day was
devoted to preparations for the journey. Rena's slender wardrobe was made
ready and packed in a large valise. Towards sunset, Mis' Molly took off
her apron, put on her slat-bonnet, -- she was ever the pink of neatness,
-- picked her way across the street, which was muddy from a rain during
the day, traversed the foot-bridge that spanned the ditch in front of
the cooper shop, and spoke first to the elder of the two men working there.
"Good-evenin', Peter."
"Good-evenin', ma'm,"
responded the man briefly, and not relaxing at all the energy with which
he was trimming a barrel-stave.
Mis'
Molly then accosted the younger workman, a dark-brown young man, small
in stature, but with a well-shaped head, an expressive forehead, and features
indicative of kindness, intelligence, humor, and imagination. "Frank,"
she asked, "can I git you to do somethin' fer me soon in the mo'nin'?"
"Yas 'm, I reckon
so," replied the young man, resting his hatchet on the chopping-block.
"W'at is it, Mis' Molly?"
"My daughter 's
goin' away on the boat, an' I 'lowed you would n' min' totin' her kyarpet-bag
down to the w'arf, onless you'd ruther haul it down on yo'r kyart. It
ain't very heavy. Of co'se I'll pay you fer yo'r trouble."
"Thank y', ma'm,"
he replied. He knew that she would not pay him, for the simple reason
that he would not accept pay for such a service. "Is she gwine fur?" he
asked, with a sorrowful look, which he could not entirely disguise.
"As fur as Wilmin'ton
an' beyon'. She'll be visitin' her brother John, who lives in -- another
State, an' wants her to come an' see him."
"Yas 'm, I'll come.
I won' need de kyart -- I'll tote de bag. 'Bout w'at time shill I come
over?"
"Well, 'long 'bout
seven o'clock or half pas'. She's goin' on the Old North State, an' it
leaves at eight."
Frank stood looking
after Mis' Molly as she picked her way across the street, until he was
recalled to his duty by a sharp word from his father.
" 'Ten' ter yo'
wuk, boy, 'ten' ter yo' wuk. You 're wastin' yo' time -- wastin' yo' time!"
Yes, he was wasting
his time. The beautiful young girl across the street could never be anything
to him. But he had saved her life once, and had dreamed that he might
render her again some signal service that might win her friendship, and
convince her of his humble devotion. For Frank was not proud. A smile,
which Peter would have regarded as condescending to a free man, who, since
the war, was as good as anybody else; a kind word, which Peter would have
considered offensively patronizing; a piece of Mis' Molly's famous potato
pone from Rena's hands, -- a bone to a dog, Peter called it once; -- were
ample rewards for the thousand and one small services Frank had rendered
the two women who lived in the house behind the cedars.
Frank went over
in the morning a little ahead of the appointed time, and waited on the
back piazza until his services were required.
"You ain't gwine
ter be gone long, is you, Miss Rena?" he inquired, when Rena came out
dressed for the journey in her best frock, with broad white collar and
cuffs.
Rena did not know.
She had been asking herself the same question. All sorts of vague dreams
had floated through her mind during the last few hours, as
to what the future might bring forth. But she detected the anxious note
in Frank's voice, and had no wish to give this faithful friend of the
family unnecessary pain.
"Oh, no, Frank,
I reckon not. I'm supposed to be just going on a short visit. My brother
has lost his wife, and wishes me to come and stay with him awhile, and
look after his little boy."
"I'm feared you'll
lack it better dere, Miss Rena," replied Frank sorrowfully, dropping his
mask of unconcern, "an' den you won't come back, an' none er yo' frien's
won't never see you no mo'."
"You don't think,
Frank," asked Rena severely, "that I would leave my mother and my home
and all my friends, and never come back again?"
"Why, no 'ndeed,"
interposed Mis' Molly wistfully, as she hovered around her daughter, giving
her hair or her gown a touch here and there; "she'll be so homesick in
a month that she'll be willin' to walk home."
"You would n' never
hafter do dat, Miss Rena," returned Frank, with a disconsolate smile.
"Ef you ever wanter come home, an' can't git back no other way, jes' let
me know, an' I'll take my mule an' my kyart an' fetch you back, ef it's
from de een' er de worl'."
"Thank you, Frank,
I believe you would," said the girl kindly. "You're a true friend, Frank,
and I'll not forget you while I'm gone."
The idea of her
beautiful daughter riding home from the end of the world with
Frank, in a cart, behind a one-eyed mule, struck Mis' Molly as the height
of the ridiculous -- she was in a state of excitement where tears or laughter
would have come with equal ease -- and she turned away to hide her merriment.
Her daughter was going to live in a fine house, and marry a rich man,
and ride in her carriage. Of course a negro would drive the carriage,
but that was different from riding with one in a cart.
When it was time
to go, Mis' Molly and Rena set out on foot for the river, which was only
a short distance away. Frank followed with the valise. There was no gathering
of friends to see Rena off, as might have been the case under different
circumstances. Her departure had some of the characteristics of a secret
flight; it was as important that her destination should not be known,
as it had been that her brother should conceal his presence in the town.
Mis' Molly and Rena
remained on the bank until the steamer announced, with a raucous whistle,
its readiness to depart. Warwick was seen for a moment on the upper deck,
from which he greeted them with a smile and a slight nod. He had bidden
his mother an affectionate farewell the evening before. Rena gave her
hand to Frank.
"Good-by, Frank,"
she said, with a kind smile; "I hope you and mamma will be good friends
while I'm gone."
The whistle blew
a second warning blast, and the deck hands prepared to draw
in the gang-plank. Rena flew into her mother's arms, and then, breaking
away, hurried on board and retired to her state-room, from which she did
not emerge during the journey. The window-blinds were closed, darkening
the room, and the stewardess who came to ask if she should bring her some
dinner could not see her face distinctly, but perceived enough to make
her surmise that the young lady had been weeping.
"Po' chile," murmured
the sympathetic colored woman, "I reckon some er her folks is dead, er
her sweetheart 's gone back on her, er e'se she's had some kin' er bad
luck er 'nuther. W'ite folks has deir troubles jes' ez well ez black folks,
an' sometimes feels 'em mo', 'cause dey ain't ez use' ter 'em."
Mis' Molly went
back in sadness to the lonely house behind the cedars, henceforth to be
peopled for her with only the memory of those she had loved. She had paid
with her heart's blood another installment on the Shylock's bond exacted
by society for her own happiness of the past and her children's prospects
for the future.
The journey down
the sluggish river to the seaboard in the flat-bottomed, stern-wheel steamer
lasted all day and most of the night. During the first half-day, the boat
grounded now and then upon a sand-bank, and the half-naked negro deck-hands
toiled with ropes and poles to release it. Several times before Rena fell
asleep that night, the steamer would tie up at a landing,
and by the light of huge pine torches she watched the boat hands send
the yellow turpentine barrels down the steep bank in a long string, or
pass cord-wood on board from hand to hand. The excited negroes, their
white teeth and eyeballs glistening in the surrounding darkness to which
their faces formed no relief; the white officers in brown linen, shouting,
swearing, and gesticulating; the yellow, flickering torchlight over all,
-- made up a scene of which the weird interest would have appealed to
a more blasé traveler than this girl upon her first journey.
During the day,
Warwick had taken his meals in the dining-room, with the captain and the
other cabin passengers. It was learned that he was a South Carolina lawyer,
and not a carpet-bagger. Such credentials were unimpeachable, and the
passengers found him a very agreeable traveling companion. Apparently
sound on the subject of negroes, Yankees, and the righteousness of the
lost cause, he yet discussed these themes in a lofty and impersonal manner
that gave his words greater weight than if he had seemed warped by a personal
grievance. His attitude, in fact, piqued the curiosity of one or two of
the passengers.
"Did your people
lose any niggers?" asked one of them.
"My father owned
a hundred," he replied grandly.
Their respect for
his views was doubled. It is easy to moralize about the misfortunes
of others, and to find good in the evil that they suffer; -- only a true
philosopher could speak thus lightly of his own losses.
When the steamer
tied up at the wharf at Wilmington, in the early morning, the young lawyer
and a veiled lady passenger drove in the same carriage to a hotel. After
they had breakfasted in a private room, Warwick explained to his sister
the plan he had formed for her future. Henceforth she must be known as
Miss Warwick, dropping the old name with the old life. He would place
her for a year in a boarding-school at Charleston, after which she would
take her place as the mistress of his house. Having imparted this information,
he took his sister for a drive through the town. There for the first time
Rena saw great ships, which, her brother told her, sailed across the mighty
ocean to distant lands, whose flags he pointed out drooping lazily at
the mast-heads. The business portion of the town had "an ancient and fishlike
smell," and most of the trade seemed to be in cotton and naval stores
and products of the sea. The wharves were piled high with cotton bales,
and there were acres of barrels of resin and pitch and tar and spirits
of turpentine. The market, a long, low, wooden structure, in the middle
of the principal street, was filled with a mass of people of all shades,
from blue-black to Saxon blonde, gabbling and gesticulating over piles
of oysters and clams and freshly caught fish of varied hue.
By ten o'clock the sun was beating down so fiercely that the glitter of
the white, sandy streets dazzled and pained the eyes unaccustomed to it,
and Rena was glad to be driven back to the hotel. The travelers left together
on an early afternoon train.
Thus for the time
being was severed the last tie that bound Rena to her narrow past, and
for some time to come the places and the people who had known her once
were to know her no more.
Some few weeks later,
Mis' Molly called upon old Judge Straight with reference to the taxes
on her property.
"Your son came in
to see me the other day," he remarked. "He seems to have got along."
"Oh, yes, judge,
he's done fine, John has; an' he's took his sister away with him."
"Ah!" exclaimed
the judge. Then after a pause he added, "I hope she may do as well."
"Thank you, sir,"
she said, with a curtsy, as she rose to go. "We've always knowed that
you were our friend and wished us well."
The judge looked
after her as she walked away. Her bearing had a touch of timidity, a shade
of affectation, and yet a certain pathetic dignity.
"It is a pity,"
he murmured, with a sigh, "that men cannot select their mothers. My young
friend John has builded, whether wisely or not, very well; but he has
come back into the old life and carried away a part of it, and I fear
that this addition will weaken the structure."
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