Part 26 (2/2)
”Why, surely she won't detain me by force?”
”Won't she?--you don't know her. Why she'd stop an army,” replied the man. ”I don't think that she will let you go--I don't know; but that's my opinion. She wants another hand.”
”What, do you mean to say that she'll make me work?”
”I mean to say that, according to the laws of the settlement, she has a right to detain you. Any person found roving here, who cannot give a satisfactory account of himself, may be detained till something is heard about him; for he may be a runaway convict, or a runaway apprentice, which is much the same, after all. Now, she may say that your account of yourself is not satisfactory, and therefore she detained you; and if you won't work, she won't give you to eat; so there you are.”
”Well, we will see if she is able.”
”Able! If you mean strong enough, why she'd take you up with one hand; and she is as resolute and severe as she is strong. I had rather have to deal with three men, and that's the truth.”
”What's the truth, James?” cried the mistress, coming in at the door.
”Let's hear the truth from your lips, it will be something new.”
”I said that I was sent here for finding a pocket-book, mistress; that's all.”
”Yes; but you did not tell him where you found it--at the bottom of a gentleman's coat-pocket, you know. You can only tell the truth by halves yet, I see.”
Wis.h.i.+ng to ascertain how far the man's suspicions were correct, I said to her:
”I have good friends in James Town: if I were once there I could procure money and anything else to any amount that I required.”
”Well,” says she, ”you may have; but I'm afraid that the post don't go out to-day. One would think, after all your wanderings and difficulties, that you'd be glad to be quiet a little, and remain here; so we'll talk about James Town some time about next spring.”
”Indeed, mistress, I hope you will not detain me here. I can pay you handsomely, on my arrival at James Town, for your kind treatment and any trouble you may take for me.”
”Pay me! What do I want with money?--there's no shops here with ribbons, and calicoes, and muslims; and if there were, I'm not a fine madam. Money! Why I've no child to leave what I have to--no husband to spend it for me. I have bags and bags of dollars, young man, which my husband heaped up, and they are of as much use to me as they are now to him.”
”I am glad that you are so rich, mistress, and more glad that your money is so little cared for and so little wanted; but if you do not want money, I do very much want to get back to my friends, who think I am dead, and mourn for me.”
”Well, if they have mourned, their sorrow is over by this time, and therefore your staying here will not distress them more. I may as well tell you at once that you shall not go; so make up your mind to be contented, and you'll fare none the worse for it.”
This was said in so decided a tone, that, bearing in mind what I had heard from the convict servant, I thought it advisable to push the question no further for the present, making up my mind that I would wait a short time, and then make my escape, if she still persisted in detaining me by force; but this I could not venture upon until I was in possession of fire-arms, and I could not obtain them while she had any suspicion. I therefore replied--”Well, since you are determined I shall not go, I have nothing more to say, except that I will wait your pleasure, and, in the mean time, let me make myself as useful as I can, for I don't want to eat the bread of idleness.”
”You're a very sensible young man,” replied she; ”and now you shall have a s.h.i.+rt to put on, which will improve your appearance a great deal.”
She then went into the inner room, which I presumed was her bed-room, as there were but two rooms in the cabin. As she went out, I could not help wondering at her. On examination, I felt a.s.sured that she was more than six feet high, and her shoulders as broad and her arms as nervous as a man's of that stature. Her chest was very expanded, but bosom she had none. In fact, she was a man in woman's clothing, and I began to doubt her s.e.x. Her features were not bad, had they been of smaller dimensions, but her nose was too large, although it was straight; her eyes were grand, but they were surmounted with such coa.r.s.e eyebrows; her mouth was well shaped, and her teeth were good and regular, but it was the mouth of an ogress; her walk was commanding and firm; every action denoted energy and muscle; and certainly, from the conversation I have already made known, her mind was quite as masculine as her body--she was a splendid monster. In a minute she returned, bringing me a good check s.h.i.+rt and a pair of duck trousers, which I thankfully accepted.
”I've plenty more for those who please me,” said she, carelessly; ”when you've put them on, come out to me, and I'll show you the plantation.”
In a minute or two I joined her, and she led me round the tobacco-fields, then to the maize or Indian corn grounds, pointing out and explaining everything. She also showed me the cows, store pigs, and poultry. Wis.h.i.+ng to please her, I asked many questions, and pretended to take an interest in all I saw. This pleased her much, and once or twice she smiled--but such a smile! After an hour's ramble we returned, and found the two servants very busy, one husking maize, and the other in the shed where the tobacco was dried. I asked some questions of her about the tobacco--how many casks or bales she made a year? She replied that she made it in bales, and sold it by weight.
”It must be heavy carriage from here to James Town?” said I.
”Yes, indeed, if it went that way it never would arrive, I imagine,”
replied she; ”but I have a sloop in the river below, which carries it round.”
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