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XXV
BALANCE ALL
THE
road to Sampson County lay for the most over the pine-clad sandhills,
-- an alternation of gentle rises and gradual descents, with now and then
a swamp of greater or less extent. Long stretches of the highway led through
the virgin forest, for miles unbroken by a clearing or sign of human habitation.
They
traveled slowly, with frequent pauses in shady places, for the weather
was hot. The journey, made leisurely, required more than a day, and might
with slight effort be prolonged into two. They stopped for the night at
a small village, where Wain found lodging for Rena with an acquaintance
of his, and for himself with another, while a third took charge of the
horse, the accommodation for travelers being limited. Rena's appearance
and manners were the subject of much comment. It was necessary to explain
to several curious white people that Rena was a woman of color. A white
woman might have driven with Wain without attracting remark, -- most white
ladies had negro coachmen. That a woman of Rena's complexion should eat
at a negro's table, or sleep beneath a negro's roof, was
a seeming breach of caste which only black blood could excuse. The explanation
was never questioned. No white person of sound mind would ever claim to
be a negro.
They
resumed their journey somewhat late in the morning. Rena would willingly
have hastened, for she was anxious to plunge into her new work; but Wain
seemed disposed to prolong the pleasant drive, and beguiled the way for
a time with stories of wonderful things he had done and strange experiences
of a somewhat checkered career. He was shrewd enough to avoid any subject
which would offend a modest young woman, but too obtuse to perceive that
much of what he said would not commend him to a person of refinement.
He made little reference to his possessions, concerning which so much
had been said at Patesville; and this reticence was a point in his favor.
If he had not been so much upon his guard and Rena so much absorbed by
thoughts of her future work, such a drive would have furnished a person
of her discernment a very fair measure of the man's character. To these
distractions must be added the entire absence of any idea that Wain might
have amorous designs upon her; and any shortcomings of manners or speech
were excused by the broad mantle of charity which Rena in her new-found
zeal for the welfare of her people was willing to throw over all their
faults. They were the victims of oppression; they were not responsible
for its results.
Toward the end of the second day, while nearing their destination, the
travelers passed a large white house standing back from the road at the
foot of a lane. Around it grew widespreading trees and well-kept shrubbery.
The fences were in good repair. Behind the house and across the road stretched
extensive fields of cotton and waving corn. They had passed no other place
that showed such signs of thrift and prosperity.
"Oh,
what a lovely place!" exclaimed Rena. "That is yours, is 't it?"
"No;
we ain't got to my house yet," he answered. "Dat house b'longs ter de
riches' people roun' here. Dat house is over in de nex' county. We're
right close to de line now."
Shortly
afterwards they turned off from the main highway they had been pursuing,
and struck into a narrower road to the left.
"De
main road," explained Wain, "goes on to Clinton, 'bout five miles er mo'
away. Dis one we're turnin' inter now will take us to my place, which
is 'bout three miles fu'ther on. We'll git dere now in an hour er so."
Wain
lived in an old plantation house, somewhat dilapidated, and surrounded
by an air of neglect and shiftlessness, but still preserving a remnant
of dignity in its outlines and comfort in its interior arrangements. Rena
was assigned a large room on the second floor. She was somewhat surprised
at the make-up of the household. Wain's mother -- an old woman, much darker
than her son -- kept house for him. A sister with two children
lived in the house. The element of surprise lay in the presence of two
small children left by Wain's wife, of whom Rena now heard for the first
time. He had lost his wife, he informed Rena sadly, a couple of years
before.
"Yas,
Miss Rena," she sighed, "de Lawd give her, an' de Lawd tuck her away.
Blessed be de name er de Lawd." He accompanied this sententious quotation
with a wicked look from under his half-closed eyelids that Rena did not
see.
The
following morning Wain drove her in his buggy over to the county town,
where she took the teacher's examination. She was given a seat in a room
with a number of other candidates for certificates, but the fact leaking
out from some remark of Wain's that she was a colored girl, objection
was quietly made by several of the would-be teachers to her presence in
the room, and she was requested to retire until the white teachers should
have been examined. An hour or two later she was given a separate examination,
which she passed without difficulty. The examiner, a gentleman of local
standing, was dimly conscious that she might not have found her exclusion
pleasant, and was especially polite. It would have been strange, indeed,
if he had not been impressed by her sweet face and air of modest dignity,
which were all the more striking because of her social disability. He
fell into conversation with her, became interested in her hopes and aims,
and very cordially offered to be of service, if at any time
he might, in connection with her school.
"You
have the satisfaction," he said, "of receiving the only first-grade certificate
issued to-day. You might teach a higher grade of pupils than you will
find at Sandy Run, but let us hope that you may in time raise them to
your own level."
"Which
I doubt very much," he muttered to himself, as she went away with Wain.
"What a pity that such a woman should be a nigger! If she were anything
to me, though, I should hate to trust her anywhere near that saddle-colored
scoundrel. He's a thoroughly bad lot, and will bear watching."
Rena,
however, was serenely ignorant of any danger from the accommodating Wain.
Absorbed in her own thoughts and plans, she had not sought to look beneath
the surface of his somewhat overdone politeness. In a few days she began
her work as teacher, and sought to forget in the service of others the
dull sorrow that still gnawed at her heart.
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