Part 21 (1/2)
”Those are our Sandstone County mountaineers; our yeomanry, sir. Suez holds these three counties in a sort o' triple alliance. You make a great mistake, sir, to go off to-morrow without seeing the Widewood district. You've seen the Alps, and I'd just like to hear you say which of the two is the finer. There's enough mineral wealth in Widewood alone to make Suez a Pittsburg, and water-power enough to make her a Minneapolis, and we're going to make her both, sir!” The monologue became an avalanche of coal, red hemat.i.te, marble, mica, manganese, tar, timber, turpentine, lumber, lead, ochre, and barytes, with signs of silver, gold, and diamonds.
”Don't you think, however----”
”No, sir! no-o-o! far from it----”
A stifled laugh came from where Johanna's face darkened the corner it occupied. Barbara looked, but the maid seemed lost in sad reverie.
”Barb, yonder's where Jeff-Jack and I stopped to dine on blackberries the day we got home from the war. Now, there's the railroad cut on the far side of it. There, you see, Mr. Fair, the road skirts the creek westward and then northwestward again, leaving Rosemont a mile to the northeast. See that house, Barb, about half a mile beyond the railroad?
There's where the man found his plumbago.” The speaker laughed and told the story. The discoverer had stolen off by night, got an expert to come and examine it, and would tell the result only to one friend, and in a whisper. ”'You haven't got much plumbago,' the expert had said, 'but you've got dead oodles of silica.' You know, Barb, silica's nothing but flint, ha-ha!”
Fair smiled. In his fortnight's travel through the New Dixie plumbago was the only mineral on which he had not heard the story based.
A military horseman overtook the carriage and slackened to a fox-trot at Garnet's side. ”Captain Champion, let me make you acquainted with Mr.
Fair. Mr. Fair and his father have put money into our New Dixie, and he's just going around to see where he can put in more. I tell him he can't go amiss. All we want in Dixie is capital.”
”Mr. Fair doesn't think so,” said Barbara, with great sweetness.
”Ah! I merely asked whether capital doesn't seek its own level. Mustn't its absence be always because of some deeper necessity?”
Champion stood on his guard. ”Why, I don't know why capital shouldn't be the fundamental need, seh, of a country that's been impoverished by a great waugh!”
Barbara exulted, but Garnet was for peace. ”I suppose you'll find Suez swarming with men, women, and horses.”
”Yes,” said Champion--Fair was speaking to Barbara--”to say nothing of yahoos, centaurs, and niggehs.” The Major's abundant laugh flattered him; he promised to join the party at luncheon, lifted his plumed shako, and galloped away. Garnet drove into the edge of the town at a trot.
”Here's where the reservoir's to be,” he said, and spun down the slope into the shaded avenue, and so to the town's centre.
”Laws-a-me! Miss Barb,” whispered Johanna, ”but dis-yeh town is change'!
New hotel! brick! th'ee sto'ies high!” Barbara touched her for silence.
”But look at de new sto'es!” murmured the girl. Negroes--the men in dirty dusters, the women in smart calicoes, girls in dowdy muslins and boy's hats--and mountain whites, coatless men, shoeless women--hung about the counters dawdling away their small change.
”Colored and white treated precisely alike, you notice,” said Garnet, and Barbara suppressed a faint grunt from Johanna.
Trade had spread into side-streets. Drinking-houses were gayly bedight and busy.
”That's the new _Courier_ building.”
The main crowd had gone down to the railway tracks, and it was midsummer, yet you could see and feel the town's youth.
”Why, the nig--colored people have built themselves a six-hundred dollar church; we white folks helped them,” said Garnet, who had given fifty cents. ”See that new sidewalk? Our chain-gang did that, sir; made the bricks and laid the pavement.”
The court-house was newly painted. Only Hotel Swanee and the two white churches remained untouched, sleeping on in green shade and sweet age.
The Garnet's wheels bickered down the town's southern edge and out upon a low slope of yellow, deep-gullied sand and clay that scarce kept on a few weeds to hide its nakedness while gathering old duds and tins.
”Yonder are the people, and here, sir,” Garnet pointed to where the green Swanee lay sweltering like the Nile, ”is the stream that makes the tears trickle in every true Southerner's heart when he hears its song.”