When a few minutes later he went into
the back room, he found Aunt Mornin sitting before
the big fireplace in which burned a few logs of wood.
The light the snapping sticks gave fell full upon
her black face, and upon the small bundle upon her
spacious knee.
As he entered she turned sharply towards him.
“Don’t nobody keer nothin’
for this yere?” she said, “ain’t
nobody comin’ nigh? Whar’s he?
Don’t he take no int’rus’ in the
pore little lonesome child? I ‘spect yo’ll
haf to take it ye’self, Mars’ De Willerby,
while I goes in dar.”
Tom stopped short, stricken with a
pang of remorse. He looked down at the small
face helplessly.
“Yes,” he said, “you’ll
have to go in there; you’re needed.”
The woman looked at him in startled questioning.
“Mars De Willerby,” she said, “does
dat ar mean she’s cl’ar gone?”
“Yes,” answered Tom. “She’s
gone, Mornin.”
With the emotional readiness of her
race, the comfortable creature burst into weeping,
clasping the child to her broad bosom.
“Pore chile!” she
said, “an’ poor chile lef behin’!
De Lord help ’em bofe.”
With manifest fear Tom stooped and
took the little red flannel bundle from her arms.
“Never mind crying,” he
said. “Go into the room and do what’s
to be done.”
When left alone with his charge, he
sat down and held it balanced carefully in his hands,
his elbows resting on his knees. He was used to
carrying his customers’ children, a great part
of his popularity being based upon his jovial fondness
for them. But he had never held so small a creature
as this in his arms before. He regarded it with
a respectful timidity.
“It wasn’t thought of,”
he said, reflectively. “Even she - poor
thing, poor thing - ” he ended, hurriedly,
“there was no time.”
He was still holding his small burden
with awkward kindliness when the door opened and the
man he had left in the room beyond came in. He
approached the hearth and stood for a few seconds staring
at the fire in a stupefied, abstracted way. He
did not seem to see the child. At last he spoke.
“Where shall I lay her?”
he asked. “Where is the nearest churchyard?”
“Fifteen miles away,”
Tom answered. “Most of the people like to
have their dead near them and lay them on the hillsides.”
The man turned to him with a touch of horror in his
face.
“In unconsecrated ground?” he said.
“It doesn’t trouble them,” said
Tom. “They sleep well enough.”
The man turned to the fire again - he
had not looked at the child yet - and made
a despairing gesture with his hands.
“That she - ”
he said, “that she should lie so far from them,
and in unconsecrated ground!”
“There is the place I told you of,” said
Tom.
“I cannot go there,” with
the gesture again. “There is no time.
I must go away.”
He made no pretence at concealing
that he had a secret to hide. He seemed to have
given up the effort.
Tom looked up at him.
“What are you going to do with this?”
he asked.
Then for the first time he seemed
to become conscious of the child’s presence.
He turned and gave it a startled sidelong glance, as
if he had suddenly been struck with a new fear.
“I - do not know,”
he stammered. “I - no! I do
not know. What have I been doing?”
He sank into a chair and buried his
face in his trembling hands.
“God’s curse is upon it,”
he cried. “There is no place for it on earth.”
Tom rose with a sudden movement and
began to pace the floor with his charge in his arms.
“It’s a little chap to
lay a curse on,” he said. “And helpless
enough, by Gad!”
He looked down at the diminutive face,
and as he did so, a wild thought flashed through his
mind. It had the suddenness and force of a revelation.
His big body trembled with some feeling it would have
gone hard with him to express, and his heart warmed
within him as he felt the light weight lying against
it.
“No place for it!” he
cried. “By God, there is! There is
a place here - and a man to stand
by and see fair-play!”
“Give her to me,” he said,
“give her to me, and if there is no place for
her, I’ll find one.”
“What do you mean?” faltered the man.
“I mean what I say,” said
Tom. “I’ll take her and stand by her
as long as there is breath in me; and if the day should
ever come in spite of me when wrong befalls her, as
it befell her mother, some man shall die, so help
me God!”
The warm Southern blood which gave
to his brothers’ love-songs the grace of passion,
and which made them renowned for their picturesque
eloquence of speech, fired him to greater fluency
than was usual with him, when he thought of the helplessness
of the tiny being he held.
“I never betrayed a woman yet,
or did one a wrong,” he went on. “I’m
not one of the lucky fellows who win their hearts,”
with a great gulp in his throat. “Perhaps
if there’s no one to come between us, she may - may
be fond of me.”
The man gave him a long look, as if
he was asking himself a question.
“Yes,” he said at last,
“she will be fond of you. You will be worthy
of it. There is no one to lay claim to her.
Her mother lies dead among strangers, and her father -
For a few moments he seemed to be
falling into a reverie, but suddenly a tremour seized
him and he struck one clenched hand against the other.
“If a man vowed to the service
of God may make an oath,” he said, “I
swear that if the day ever dawns when we stand face
to face, knowing each other, I will not spare him!”
The child stirred in Tom’s arms
and uttered its first sharp little cry, and as if
in answer to the summons, Aunt Mornin opened the door.
“It’s all done,”
she said. “Gib me de chile, Mars
De Willerby, and go in an’ look at her.”
When he entered the little square
living room, Tom paused at the foot of the bed.
All was straight and neat and cold. Among the
few articles in the one small trunk, the woman had
found a simple white dress and had put it on the dead
girl. It was such a garment as almost every girl
counts among her possessions. Tom remembered
that his sisters had often worn such things.
“She looks very pretty,”
he said. “I dare say her mother made it
and she wore it at home. O Lord! O Lord!”
And with this helpless exclamation, half sigh, half
groan, he turned away and walked out of the front door
into the open air.
It was early morning by this time,
and he passed into the dew and sunlight not knowing
where he was going; but once outside, the sight of
his horse tethered to a tree at the roadside brought
to his mind the necessity of the occasion.
“I’ll ride in and see
Steven,” he said. “It’s got
to be done, and it’s no work for him!”
When he reached the Cross-roads there
were already two or three early arrivals lounging
on the store-porch and wondering why the doors were
not opened.
The first man who saw him, opened
upon him the usual course of elephantine witticisms.
“Look a yere, Tom,” he
drawled, “this ain’t a-gwine to do.
You a-gittin’ up ‘fore daybreak like the
rest of us folks and ridin’ off Goddlemighty
knows whar. It ain’t a-gwine to do now.
Whar air ye from?”
But as he rode up and dismounted at
the porch, each saw that something unusual had happened.
He tied his horse and came up the steps in silence.
“Boys,” he said, when
he stood among them, “I want Steven. I’ve
been out to the Hollow, and there’s a job for
him there. The - the woman’s dead.”
“Dead!” they echoed, drawing
nearer to him in their excitement. “When,
Tom?”
“Last night. Mornin’s out there.
There’s a child.”
“Thunder ‘n’ molasses!”
ejaculated the only family man of the group, reflectively.
“Thunder ‘n’ molasses!” And
then he began to edge away, still with a reflective
air, towards his mule.
“Boys,” he explained,
“there’d ought to be some women folks around.
I’m gwine for Minty, and she’ll start
the rest on ’em. Women folks is what’s
needed. They kin kinder organize things whar thar’s
trouble.”
“Well,” said Tom, “perhaps
you’re right; but don’t send too many of
’em, and let your wife tell ’em to talk
as little as possible and leave the man alone.
He’s got enough to stand up under.”
Before the day was over there were
women enough in the hillside cabin. Half a dozen
faded black calico riding-skirts hung over the saddles
of half a dozen horses tethered in the wood round
the house, while inside half a dozen excellent souls
disposed themselves in sympathetic couples about the
two rooms.
Three sat in the front room, their
sunbonnets drawn well down over their faces in the
true mourner’s spirit, one at the head of the
bed slowly moving a fan to and fro over the handkerchief-covered
face upon the pillow. A dead silence pervaded
the place, except when it was broken by occasional
brief remarks made in a whisper.
“She was a mighty purty-lookin’
young critter,” they said. “A sight
younger-lookin’ than her man.”
“What’s the child?”
“Gal.”
“Gal? That’s a pity.
Gals ain’t much chance of bein’ raised
right whar they’re left.”
“Hain’t they any folks, neither on ’em?”
“Nobody don’t know.
Nobody hain’t heerd nothin’ about ’em.
They wus kinder curi’s about keepin’ to
themselves.”
“If either on ’em had
any folks - even if they wus only sort o’
kin - they might take the chile.”
“Mebbe they will. Seems
to reason they must have some kin - even if
they ain’t nigh.”
Then the silence reigned again and
the woman at the bed’s head gave her undivided
attention to the slow, regular motion of her palm-leaf
fan.
In the room beyond a small fire burned
in spite of the warmth of the day, and divers small
tin cups and pipkins simmered before and upon the
cinders of it, Aunt Mornin varying her other duties
by moving them a shade nearer to the heat or farther
from it, and stirring and tasting at intervals.
Upon a low rocking-chair before the
hearth sat the wife of the family man before referred
to. She was a tall, angular creature, the mother
of fifteen, comprising in their number three sets
of twins. She held her snuff-stick between her
teeth and the child on her lap, with an easy professional
air.
“I hain’t never had to
raise none o’ mine by hand since Martin Luther,”
she remarked. “I’ve been mighty glad
on it, for he was a sight o’ trouble. Kinder
colicky and weakly. Never done no good till we
got him off the bottle. He’d one cow’s
milk, too, all the time. I was powerful partickerler
’bout that. I’d never have raised
him if I hadn’t bin. ‘N’ to
this day Martin Luther hain’t what ’Poleon
and Orlando is.”
“Dis yere chile ain’t
gwine to be no trouble to nobody,” put in Aunt
Mornin. “She’s a powerful good chile
to begin with, ‘n’ she’s a chile
that’s gwine to thrive. She hain’t
done no cryin’ uv no consequence yit, ‘n’
whar a chile starts out dat dar way it speaks
well for her. If Mornin had de raisin’
o’ dat chile, dar wouldn’t be
no trouble ’t all. Bile der milk
well ‘n’ d’lute down right, ‘n’
a chile like dat ain’t gwine to have no
colick. My young Mistis Mars D’Willerby
bought me from, I’ve raised three o’ hern,
an’ I’m used to bilin’ it right and
d’lutin’ it down right. Dar’s
a heap in de d’lutin’. Dis yere
bottle’s ready now, Mis’ Doty, ef ye want
it.”
“It’s the very bottle
I raised Martin Luther on,” said Mrs. Doty.
“It brings back olé times to see it.
She takes it purty well, don’t she? Massy
sakes! How f’erce she looks for sich
a little thing!”
Later in the day there arose the question
of how she should be disposed of for the night, and
it was in the midst of this discussion that Tom De
Willoughby entered.
“Thar ain’t but one room;
I s’pose he’ll sleep in that,” said
Mrs. Doty, “‘n’ the Lord knows he
don’t look the kind o’ critter to know
what to do with a chile. We hain’t
none o’ us seen him since this mornin’.
I guess he’s kinder wanderin’ round.
Does any of you know whar he is? We might ax
what he ’lows to do.”
Tom bent down over the child as it
lay in the woman’s lap. No one could see
his face.
“I know what he’s going
to do,” he said. “He’s going
away to-morrow after the funeral.”
“‘N’ take the child?” in a
chorus.
“No,” said Tom, professing
to be deeply interested in the unclosing of the small
red fist. “I’m going to take the child.”
There were four sharp exclamations,
and for a second or so all four women gazed at him
with open mouths. It was Mrs. Doty who first recovered
herself sufficiently to speak. She gave him a
lively dig with her elbow.
“Now, Tom D’Willerby,”
she said, “none of your foolin’. This
yere ain’t no time for it.”
“Mars D’Willerby,”
said Aunt Mornin, “dis chile’s mother’s
a-lyin’ dead in the nex’ room.”
Tom stooped a trifle lower. He
put out both his hands and took the baby in them.
“I’m not foolin’,”
he said, rather uncertainly. “I’m
in earnest, ladies. The mother is dead and the
man’s going away. There’s nobody else
to claim her, he tells me, and so I’ll claim
her. There’s enough of me to take care
of her, and I mean to do it.”
It was so extraordinary a sensation,
that for a few moments there was another silence,
broken as before by Mrs. Doty.
“Waal,” she remarked,
removing her snuff-stick and expectorating into the
fire. “Ye’ve allus been kinder
fond o’ chillun, Tom, and mebbe she ain’t
as colicky by natur’ as Martin Luther was, but
I mus’ say it’s the curi’sest
thing I ever heern - him a-gwine away an’
givin’ her cl’ar up as ef he hadn’t
no sort o’ nat’ral feelin’s - I
do say it’s curi’s.”
“He’s a queer fellow,”
said Tom, “a queer fellow! There’s
no denying that.”
That this was true was proven by his
conduct during the time in which it was liable to
public comment. Until night he was not seen, and
then he came in at a late hour and, walking in silence
through the roomful of watchers, shut himself up in
an inner chamber and remained there alone.
“He’s takin’ it
mighty hard,” they said. “Seems like
it’s kinder onsettled his mind. He hain’t
never looked at the child once.”
He did not appear at all the next
day until all was ready and Tom De Willoughby went
to him.
He found him lying on the bed, his
haggard face turned towards the window. He did
not move until Tom touched him on the shoulder.
“If you want to see her - ”
he said.
He started and shuddered.
“What, so soon?” he said. “So
soon?”
“Now,” Tom answered. “Get up
and come with me.”
He obeyed, following him mechanically,
but when they reached the door, Tom stopped him.
“I’ve told them a story
that suits well enough,” he said. “I’ve
told them that you’re poor and have no friends,
and can’t care for the child, and I’ve
a fancy for keeping it. The mother is to lie out
here on the hillside until you can afford to find
a better place for her - perhaps at your
own home. I’ve told the tale my own way.
I’m not much of a hand at that kind of thing,
but it’ll do. I’ve asked you no questions.”
“No,” said the man, drearily. “You’ve
asked me no questions.”
Then they went together into the other
room. There were twenty or thirty people in it,
or standing about the door. It was like all mountain
funerals, but for an air of desolateness even deeper
than usual. The slender pine coffin was supported
upon two chairs in the middle of the room, and the
women stood or sat about, the more easily moved weeping
a little under the shadow of their calico sunbonnets.
The men leaned against the door-posts, or sat on the
wooden steps, bare-headed, silent, and rather restless.
When Tom led his charge into the apartment,
there was a slight stir and moving back of chairs
to make way for him. He made his way straight
to the coffin. When he reached it and looked
down, he started. Perhaps the sight of the white
dress with its simple girlish frills and homelike
prettiness brought back to him some memory of happier
days when he had seen it worn before.
The pure, childlike face had settled
into utter calm, and across the breast and in the
hands were long, slender branches of the thickly flowering
wild white clematis. Half an hour before
Tom had gone into the woods and returned with these
branches, which he gave to one of the younger women.
“Put them on her,” he
said, awkwardly; “there ought to be some flowers
about her.”
For a few moments there reigned in
the room a dead silence. All eyes were fixed
upon the man who stood at the coffin side. He
simply looked down at the fair dead face. He
bestowed no caresses upon it, and shed no tears, though
now and then there was to be seen a muscular contraction
of his throat.
At length he turned towards those
surrounding him and raised his hand, speaking in a
low voice.
“Let us pray.”
It was the manner of a man trained
to rigid religious observances, and when the words
were uttered, something like an electric shock passed
through his hearers. The circuit-riders who stopped
once or twice a month at the log churches on the roadside
were seldom within reach on such an occasion as this,
and at such times it was their custom to depend on
any good soul who was considered to have the gift
of prayer. Perhaps some of them had been wondering
who would speak the last words now, as there was no
such person on the spot; but the trained manner and
gesture, even while it startled them by its unexpectedness,
set their minds at rest.
They settled themselves in the conventional
posture, the women retiring into their bonnets, the
men hanging their heads, and the prayer began.
It was a strange appeal - one
which only one man among them could grasp the meaning
of, though all regarded its outpouring words with wonder
and admiration. It was an outcry full of passion,
dread, and anguish which was like despair. It
was a prayer for mercy - mercy for those who
suffered, for the innocent who might suffer - for
loving hearts too tender to bear the bitter blows
of life.
“The loving hearts, O God!”
he cried, “the loving hearts who wait - who -
More than one woman looked up from
under her bonnet; his body began to tremble - he
staggered and fell into a chair, hiding his face, shaking
from head to foot in an agony of weeping. Tom
made his way to him and bent over him.
“Come with me,” he said,
his great voice broken. “Come with me into
the air, it will quiet you, and we can wait until - until
they come.”
He put his arm under his and supported
him out of the house.
Two or three women began to rock themselves
to and fro and weep aloud hysterically. It was
only the stronger ones who could control themselves.
He was standing at Tom’s side then; when they
came out a short time afterwards, walking slowly and
carrying the light burden, which they lowered into
its resting-place beneath the pines.
He was quite calm again, and made
no sound or movement until all was over. Then
he spoke to Tom.
“Tell them,” he said,
“that I thank them. I can do no more.”
He walked back to the desolate house,
and in a little while the people went their ways,
each of them looking back a little wistfully at the
cabin as he or she rode out of sight.
When the last one was lost to view,
Tom, who had loitered about, went into the cabin.
The man was sitting in the empty room,
his gaze fixed upon the two chairs left standing in
the middle of it a few paces from each other.
Tom moved them away and then approached him.
“The child has been taken to
my house,” he said. “You don’t
want to see it?”
“No.”
“Is there anything else I can do?”
“No, nothing else,” monotonously.
“Are you going away?”
“Yes - to-night.”
Tom glanced around him at the desolation
of the poor, bare little place, at the empty bed,
and the small trunk at the foot of it.
“You are not going to stay here alone, man?”
he said.
“Yes,” he was answered. “I
have something to do; I must be alone.”
Tom hesitated a moment.
“Well,” he said, at length, “I suppose
I’ve done, then. Good-bye.”
“Good-bye,” he was answered. “The
Lord - the Lord will reward you.”
And then Tom crossed the room slowly
and reluctantly, passed out, and closed the door after
him.
When he opened his own door, he struck
his foot against something and stumbled over it.
It was a primitive wooden cradle - somewhat
like a box on rockers - a quilt of patchwork
covered it, and upon the small pillow rested the round
black head of his new possession. He stopped short
to regard it. Aunt Mornin had left it there while
she occupied herself with preparing supper in the
kitchen. It really looked quite comfortable.
Gradually a smile established itself upon Tom’s
countenance.
“By thunder!” he said,
“here you are, youngster, ain’t you?
You’ve come to stay - that’s
what you’ve come for.”
And, being answered by a slight stirring
of the patchwork quilt, he put his foot out with much
cautiousness, touched the rocker, and, finding to
his great astonishment that he had accomplished this
much safely, he drew up a chair, and, sitting down,
devoted himself with laudable enthusiasm to engineering
the small ark with a serious and domestic air.