Ahead of them, it was Court Day in
Lexington. From the town, as a centre, white
turnpikes radiated in every direction like the strands
of a spider’s web. Along them, on the day
before, cattle, sheep, and hogs had made their slow
way. Since dawn, that morning, the fine dust had
been rising under hoof and wheel on every one of them,
for Court Day is yet the great day of every month
throughout the Bluegrass. The crowd had gone
ahead of the Major and Chad. Only now and then
would a laggard buggy or carriage turn into the pike
from a pasture-road or locust-bordered avenue.
Only men were occupants, for the ladies rarely go
to town on court days and probably none
would go on that day. Trouble was expected.
An abolitionist, one Brutus Dean not from
the North, but a Kentuckian, a slave-holder and a
gentleman would probably start a paper
in Lexington to exploit his views in the heart of the
Bluegrass; and his quondam friends would shatter his
press and tear his office to pieces. So the Major
told Chad, and he pointed out some “hands”
at work in a field.
“An’, mark my words, some
day there’s goin’ to be the damnedest fight
the world ever saw over these very niggers. An’
the day ain’t so far away.”
It was noon before they reached the
big cemetery on the edge of Lexington. Through
a rift in the trees the Major pointed out the grave
of Henry Clay, and told him about the big monument
that was to be reared above his remains. The
grave of Henry Clay! Chad knew all about him.
He had heard Caleb Hazel read the great man’s
speeches aloud by the hour had heard him
intoning them to himself as he walked the woods to
and fro from school. Would wonders never cease.
There seemed to be no end to the houses
and streets and people in this big town, and Chad
wondered why everybody turned to look at him and smiled,
and, later in the day, he came near getting into a
fight with another boy who seemed to be making fun
of him to his companions. He wondered at that,
too, until it suddenly struck him that he saw nobody
else carrying a rifle and wearing a coonskin cap perhaps
it was his cap and his gun. The Major was amused
and pleased, and he took a certain pride in the boy’s
calm indifference to the attention he was drawing
to himself. And he enjoyed the little mystery
which he and his queer little companion seemed to
create as they drove through the streets.
On one corner was a great hemp factory.
Through the windows Chad could see
negroes, dusty as millers, bustling about, singing
as they worked. Before the door were two men one
on horseback. The Major drew up a moment.
“How are you, John? Howdye,
Dick?” Both men answered heartily, and both
looked at Chad who looked intently at them the
graceful, powerful man on foot and the slender, wiry
man with wonderful dark eyes on horseback.
“Pioneering, Major?” asked John Morgan.
“This is a namesake of mine
from the mountains. He’s come up to see
the settlements.”
Richard Hunt turned on his horse. “How
do you like ’em?”
“Never seed nothin’ like
’em in my life,” said Chad, gravely.
Morgan laughed and Richard Hunt rode on with them
down the street.
“Was that Captin Morgan?” asked Chad.
“Yes,” said the Major. “Have
you heard of him before?”
“Yes, sir. A feller on
the road tol’ me, if I was lookin’ fer
somethin’ to do hyeh in Lexington to go to Captin
Morgan.”
The Major laughed: “That’s what everybody
does.”
At once, the Major took the boy to
an old inn and gave him a hearty meal; and while the
Major attended to some business, Chad roamed the streets.
“Don’t get into trouble,
my boy,” said the Major, “an’ come
back here an hour or two by sun.”
Naturally, the lad drifted where the
crowd was thickest to Cheapside. Cheapside at
once the market-place and the forum of the Bluegrass
from pioneer days to the present hour the
platform that knew Clay, Crittenden, Marshall, Breckenridge,
as it knows the lesser men of to-day, who resemble
those giants of old as the woodlands of the Bluegrass
to-day resemble the primeval forests from which they
sprang.
Cheapside was thronged that morning
with cattle, sheep, hogs, horses, farmers, aristocrats,
negroes, poor whites. The air was a babel of
cries from auctioneers head, shoulders,
and waistband above the crowd and the cries
of animals that were changing owners that day one
of which might now and then be a human being.
The Major was busy, and Chad wandered where he pleased keeping
a sharp lookout everywhere for the school-master,
but though he asked right and left he could find nobody,
to his great wonder, who knew even the master’s
name. In the middle of the afternoon the country
people began to leave town and Cheapside was cleared,
but, as Chad walked past the old inn, he saw a crowd
gathered within and about the wide doors of a livery-stable,
and in a circle outside that lapped half the street.
The auctioneer was in plain sight above the heads
of the crowd, and the horses were led out one by one
from the stable. It was evidently a sale of considerable
moment, and there were horse-raisers, horse-trainers,
jockeys, stable-boys, gentlemen all eager
spectators or bidders. Chad edged his way through
the outer rim of the crowd and to the edge of the sidewalk,
and, when a spectator stepped down from a dry-goods
box from which he had been looking on, Chad stepped
up and took his place. Straightway, he began
to wish he could buy a horse and ride back to the mountains.
What fun that would be, and how he would astonish the
folks on Kingdom Come. He had his five dollars
still in his pocket, and when the first horse was
brought out, the auctioneer raised his hammer and shouted
in loud tones:
“How much am I offered for this horse?”
There was no answer, and the silence
lasted so long that before he knew it Chad called
out in a voice that frightened him:
“Five dollars!” Nobody
heard the bid, and nobody paid any attention to him.
“One hundred dollars,” said a voice.
“One hundred and twenty-five,”
said another, and the horse was knocked down for two
hundred dollars.
A black stallion with curving neck
and red nostrils and two white feet walked proudly
in.
“How much am I offered?”
“Five dollars,” said Chad,
promptly. A man who sat near heard the boy and
turned to look at the little fellow, and was hardly
able to believe his ears. And so it went on.
Each time a horse was put up Chad shouted out:
“Five dollars,” and the
crowd around him began to smile and laugh and encourage
him and wait for his bid. The auctioneer, too,
saw him, and entered into the fun himself, addressing
himself to Chad at every opening bid.
“Keep it up, little man,”
said a voice behind him. “You’ll get
one by and by.” Chad looked around.
Richard Hunt was smiling to him from his horse on
the edge of the crowd.
The last horse was a brown mare led
in by a halter. She was old and a trifle lame,
and Chad, still undispirited, called out this time
louder than ever:
“Five dollars!”
He shouted out this time loudly enough
to be heard by everybody, and a universal laugh rose;
then came silence, and, in that silence, an imperious
voice shouted back:
“Let him have her!” It
was the owner of the horse who spoke a tall
man with a noble face and long iron-gray hair.
The crowd caught his mood, and as nobody wanted the
old mare very much, and the owner would be the sole
loser, nobody bid against him, and Chad’s heart
thumped when the auctioneer raised his hammer and
said:
“Five dollars, five dollars what
am I offered? Five dollars, five dollars, going
at five dollars, five dollars going at five
dollars going going, last bid,
gentlemen!” The hammer came down with a blow
that made Chad’s heart jump and brought a roar
of laughter from the crowd.
“What is the name, please?”
said the auctioneer, bending forward with great respect
and dignity toward the diminutive purchaser.
“Chad.”
The auctioneer put his hand to one ear.
“I beg your pardon Dan’l Boone
did you say?”
“No!” shouted Chad indignantly he
began to feel that fun was going on at his expense.
“You heerd me Chad.”
“Ah, Mr. Chad.”
Not a soul knew the boy, but they
liked his spirit, and several followed him when he
went up and handed his five dollars and took the halter
of his new treasure trembling so that he could scarcely
stand. The owner of the horse placed his hand
on the little fellow’s head.
“Wait a minute,” he said,
and, turning to a negro boy: “Jim, go bring
a bridle.” The boy brought out a bridle,
and the tall man slipped it on the old mare’s
head, and Chad led her away the crowd watching
him. Just outside he saw the Major, whose eyes
opened wide:
“Where’d you get that old horse, Chad?”
“Bought her,” said Chad.
“What? What’d you give for her?”
“Five dollars.”
The Major looked pained, for he thought
the boy was lying, but Richard Hunt called him aside
and told the story of the purchase; and then how the
Major did laugh laughed until the tears
rolled down his face.
And then and there he got out of his
carriage and went into a saddler’s shop and
bought a brand new saddle with a red blanket, and put
it on the old mare and hoisted the boy to his seat.
Chad was to have no little honor in his day, but he
never knew a prouder moment than when he clutched
the reins in his left hand and squeezed his short legs
against the fat sides of that old brown mare.
He rode down the street and back again,
and then the Major told him he had better put the
black boy on the mare, to ride her home ahead of him,
and Chad reluctantly got off and saw the little darky
on his new saddle and his new horse.
“Take good keer o’ that
hoss, boy,” he said, with a warning shake of
his head, and again the Major roared.
First, the Major said, he would go
by the old University and leave word with the faculty
for the school-master when he should come there to
matriculate; and so, at a turnstile that led into a
mighty green yard in the middle of which stood a huge
gray mass of stone, the carriage stopped, and the
Major got out and walked through the campus and up
the great flight of stone steps and disappeared.
The mighty columns, the stone steps where
had Chad heard of them? And then the truth flashed.
This was the college of which the school-master had
told him down in the mountains, and, looking, Chad
wanted to get closer.
“I wonder if it’ll make
any difference if I go up thar?” he said to the
old driver.
“No,” the old man hesitated “no,
suh, co’se not.” And Chad climbed
out and the old negro followed him with his eyes.
He did not wholly approve of his master’s picking
up an unknown boy on the road. It was all right
to let him ride, but to be taking him home old
Tom shook his head.
“Jess wait till Miss Lucy sees
that piece o’ white trash,” he said, shaking
his head. Chad was walking slowly with his eyes
raised. It must be the college where the school-master
had gone to school for the building was
as big as the cliff that he had pointed out down in
the mountains, and the porch was as big as the black
rock that he pointed out at the same time the
college where Caleb Hazel said Chad, too, must go
some day. The Major was coming out when the boy
reached the foot of the steps, and with him was a
tall, gray man with spectacles and a white tie and
very white nails, and the Major said:
“There he is now, Professor.”
And the Professor looked at Chad curiously, and smiled
and smiled again kindly when he saw the boy’s
grave, unsmiling eyes fastened on him.
Then, out of the town and through
the late radiant afternoon they went until the sun
sank and the carriage stopped before a gate. While
the pickaninny was opening it, another carriage went
swiftly behind them, and the Major called out cleanly
to the occupants a quiet, sombre, dignified-looking
man and two handsome boys and a little girl. “They’re
my neighbors, Chad,” said the Major.
Not a sound did the wheels make on
the thick turf as they drove toward the old-fashioned
brick house (it had no pillars), with its windows
shining through the firs and cedars that filled the
yard. The Major put his hand on the boy’s
shoulder:
“Well, here we are, little man.”
At the yard gate there was a great
barking of dogs, and a great shout of welcome from
the negroes who came forward to take the horses.
To each of them the Major gave a little package, which
each darky took with shining teeth and a laugh of
delight all looking with wonder at the
curious little stranger with his rifle and coonskin
cap, until a scowl from the Major checked the smile
that started on each black face. Then the Major
led Chad up a flight of steps and into a big hall and
on into a big drawing-room, where there was a huge
fireplace and a great fire that gave Chad a pang of
homesickness at once. Chad was not accustomed
to taking off his hat when he entered a house in the
mountains, but he saw the Major take off his, and he
dropped his own cap quickly. The Major sank into
a chair.
“Here we are, little man,” he said, kindly.
Chad sat down and looked at the books,
and the portraits and prints, and the big mirrors
and the carpets on the floor, none of which he had
ever seen before, and he wondered at it all and what
it all might mean. A few minutes later, a tall
lady in black, with a curl down each side of her pale
face, came in. Like old Tom, the driver, the Major,
too, had been wondering what his sister, Miss Lucy,
would think of his bringing so strange a waif home,
and now, with sudden humor, he saw himself fortified.
“Sister,” he said, solemnly,
“here’s a little kinsman of yours.
He’s a great-great-grandson of your great-great-uncle Chadwick
Buford. That’s his name. What kin
does that make us?”
“Hush, brother,” said
Miss Lucy, for she saw the boy reddening with embarrassment
and she went across and shook hands with him, taking
in with a glance his coarse strange clothes and his
soiled hands and face and his tangled hair, but pleased
at once with his shyness and his dark eyes. She
was really never surprised at any caprice of her brother,
and she did not show much interest when the Major
went on to tell where he had found the lad for
she would have thought it quite possible that he might
have taken the boy out of a circus. As for Chad,
he was in awe of her at once which the
Major noticed with an inward chuckle, for the boy
had shown no awe of him. Chad could hardly eat
for shyness at supper and because everything was so
strange and beautiful, and he scarcely opened his
lips when they sat around the great fire, until Miss
Lucy was gone to bed. Then he told the Major all
about himself and old Nathan and the Turners and the
school-master, and how he hoped to come back to the
Bluegrass, and go to that big college himself, and
he amazed the Major when, glancing at the books, he
spelled out the titles of two of Scott’s novels,
“The Talisman” and “Ivanhoe,”
and told how the school-master had read them to him.
And the Major, who had a passion for Sir Walter, tested
Chad’s knowledge, and he could mention hardly
a character or a scene in the two books that did not
draw an excited response from the boy.
“Wouldn’t you like to
stay here in the Bluegrass now and go to school?”
Chad’s eyes lighted up.
“I reckon I would; but how am
I goin’ to school, now, I’d like to know?
I ain’t got no money to buy books, and the school-teacher
said you have to pay to go to school, up here.”
“Well, we’ll see about
that,” said the Major, and Chad wondered what
he meant. Presently the Major got up and went
to the sideboard and poured out a drink of whiskey
and, raising it to his lips, stopped:
“Will you join me?” he
asked, humorously, though it was hard for the Major
to omit that formula even with a boy.
“I don’t keer if I do,”
said Chad, gravely. The Major was astounded and
amused, and thought that the boy was not in earnest,
but he handed him the bottle and Chad poured out a
drink that staggered his host, and drank it down without
winking. At the fire, the Major pulled out his
chewing tobacco. This, too, he offered and Chad
accepted, equalling the Major in the accuracy with
which he reached the fireplace thereafter with the
juice, carrying off his accomplishment, too, with perfect
and unconscious gravity. The Major was nigh to
splitting with silent laughter for a few minutes,
and then he grew grave.
“Does everybody drink and chew down in the mountains?”
“Yes, sir,” said Chad.
“Everybody makes his own licker where I come
from.”
“Don’t you know it’s
very bad for little boys to drink and chew?”
“No, sir.”
“Did nobody ever tell you it
was very bad for little boys to drink and chew?”
“No, sir” not once had Chad
forgotten that.
“Well, it is.”
Chad thought for a minute. “Will
it keep me from gittin’ to be a big man?”
“Yes.”
Chad quietly threw his quid into the fire.
“Well, I be damned,” said
the Major under his breath. “Are you goin’
to quit?”
“Yes, sir.”
Meanwhile, the old driver, whose wife
lived on the next farm, was telling the servants over
there about the queer little stranger whom his master
had picked up on the road that day, and after Chad
was gone to bed, the Major got out some old letters
from a chest and read them over again. Chadwick
Buford was his great-grandfather’s twin brother,
and not a word had been heard of him since the two
had parted that morning on the old Wilderness Road,
away back in the earliest pioneer days. So, the
Major thought and thought suppose suppose?
And at last he got up and with an uplifted candle,
looked a long while at the portrait of his grandfather
that hung on the southern wall. Then, with a
sudden humor, he carried the light to the room where
the boy was in sound sleep, with his head on one sturdy
arm, his hair loose on the pillow, and his lips slightly
parted and showing his white, even teeth; he looked
at the boy a long time and fancied he could see some
resemblance to the portrait in the set of the mouth
and the nose and the brow, and he went back smiling
at his fancies and thinking for the Major
was sensitive to the claim of any drop of the blood
in his own veins no matter how diluted.
He was a handsome little chap.
“How strange! How strange!”
And he smiled when he thought of the boy’s last
question.
“Where’s yo’ mammy?”
It had stirred the Major.
“I am like you, Chad,”
he had said. “I’ve got no mammy no
nothin’, except Miss Lucy, and she don’t
live here. I’m afraid she won’t be
on this earth long. Nobody lives here but me,
Chad.”