Part 16 (1/2)

”If I kin regulate this kentry as it had orter to be did, there wont be a biggerty n.i.g.g.e.r twixt here and Filadelfy,” and he pa.s.sed into a little copse of woods that skirted his own humble domain.

The autumn days had come--Nature was preparing a more elaborate toilet in her great boudoir--replenis.h.i.+ng her exhausted stock of aromatics to besprinkle the fields and forests, the glades and the hills; painting the leaves with irridescent tints and even the sky with a mellow, refres.h.i.+ng beauty; and in this excess of toil. Alice saw the handiwork of Him who holds in the palm of His hand this great sphere.

She looked upward to the twinkling stars and it seemed to her as if G.o.d had relumed the heavens with a brightly diffused glow of love. G.o.d the Creator and man the creature--the Sovereign and the rebel, brought into apposition with each other through the supernal harmonies of His universal realm.

But the child was sad this beautiful October night. The birds were nodding quietly in the old rookery; there was no music in the air, for the winds under a coverlid of emerald and amber and carmine had gone fast to sleep in the trees, and the tintinnabulation of the little bells in the meadows had ceased altogether.

”If I could whisper to the stars what I would like to have them know of my unhappy life they would sympathize and perhaps they would whisper back.

”Poor forlorn child! How we pity you!”

”Tomorrow,” she said reflectively, ”I shall be twenty-four years of age, and oh, how all encompa.s.sing has been the evil. Every picture that glides athwart my heart is broken: every idol that I have fondly loved is nothing more than an effigy. Delusions follow delusions; what is life but a burden? If we look forward there are demons: if we look backward there are coffins.”

The poor wearied girl, sad and without hope, fell asleep in her mother's chair as softly as if the angels were rocking the dear old chair and singing the old nursery lullabies; they must have kissed her heavy eyelids down; so profound, so tranquil was her slumber.

When she awoke the little birds were singing as cheerily all around her in the magnolias and oaks as if their little tongues were touched with the spirit of her happy dreams.

The cloud that overcast her face was gone and she went into the kitchen where Clarissa was absorbed in her duties.

Clarissa exclaimed as she entered the kitchen, ”Miss Alice, whar in de name ob commun sense has yer been all dis time? Here I's been a c.u.mmun and ergwine, a ransackin dis house high and low fur yer. Didn't yer heer me callin yer, missis? I spishuned yar wus in ole ma.r.s.er's room fast asleep.”

Alice was obliged to confess, a little shamefacedly, that she had fallen asleep in the little alcove in the verandah and had slept so soundly that she heard no noises until awakened by the twittering of the birds in the over-arching bower.

”Sakes alive, missis,” exclaimed Clarissa ”sum ob dese nites a grate big snake is ergwine to drap rate down into yer lap und sting yer moest to def. How dos yer feel missis arter dis toxication?” the negress asked solicitously.

”Quite well, I thank you, Clarissa, my sleep was ever so refres.h.i.+ng,”

replied Alice smilingly.

”What does yer fink dem pizened yung warmints dud and dun yestiddy? Yu knowed ole Bob Sal, dat ar ole fafeful mousin cat of ourn? Whar yer fink I foun dat po ole cat, missis?”

”I am sure I do not know, Clarissa, I hope the negroes have not hurt him,” answered Alice.

”Deed they has too! Drowned to def in de hogshead, wid a brick tied erround him. Dey is de outdaciousest yunguns I ebber seed in my born days. Dere haint no telling what dey has dun und gon und dun to dis heer plantashun, dat dey aint!”

”I am sorry,” exclaimed Alice, ”Is the cat quite dead, Clarissa?” she asked.

”Ded!” exclaimed Clarissa, ”Sakes alive, ef yer wus to see him yer wud fink dat he had been ded all his life, dat yer wud. Has yer seen ole Jube?” Clarissa continued.

”Yes, he is in the verandah,” Alice replied.

”Ugh, Ugh! Glad ob dat. Fust fing Jube knows he'll be hobblin er round on two legs ef he aint kilt rite ded. De outdacious n.i.g.g.e.rs! I wushes dey wus run outen de lan.”

Clarissa heard ole Jube bark, and looking out of the kitchen window she saw the regulator shuffling along in his slip-shod way with an old haversack slung over his shoulder coming toward the front verandah and observed with some perturbation.

”Miss Alice, dos yer know de truf. I'm pintedly skeered ob dat speckled face white man. He luks pine blank lak de kommisary ob de debbill hissef. He aint arter no good on dis heer plantashun. De fust fing enybody knows dere is ergwine to be de biggest fl.u.s.trashun on dis lan yer ever heerd in yer born days und n.o.body is agwine to know de heds nur tails ov it. Look at dat ar wun eye of his'n farely blazin lak a log-heep in de new ground in de nite time,” and Clarissa shuddered as if the clutch of the ”kommisary” was already upon her.

”I have heard very strange stories about the man” said Alice very solemnly, as if humoring the ignorant old woman's apprehensions.

”Deed I has too,” she replied, ”Und if dey is kerrect dat ar creetur haint no human no how,” and Clarissa shuddered again even more violently; ”Hit natally makes my flesh creep lak santipedes,” she exclaimed with fear. ”Haint yu dun und heerd how dat Koo-kluck mommucked up brudder Joshaway, Miss Alice?” asked Clarissa. ”'Grate King!' How in de name of de hebbens dat ole n.i.g.g.e.r ever retched dry lan eny mo wid all dat skeer 'pon him, I haint never skivered. He lowed how dat hit wur provedense, but den twixt me and yu Miss Alice und not to go no fudder, Joshaway is allus ergwine wun way und provedense de tuther. Yander he c.u.ms now lak wun of dem ole cranksided rare hosses, und I'm ergwine to fetch him sum wittles rite fo yo eyes und den yu mout ax him fur yosesef.”

Joshua came up quite feebly, swathing his black face with his red handkerchief and bowed humbly to his former mistress.