Two little snub noses were flattening
themselves against the nursery window pane, while
the four eager eyes watched the soft flakes whirling
through the air and silently descending upon the whitening
earth.
“Sposen we was to steal out,”
whispered the boy, “an’ hide, so Mammy
couldn’t never find us no more.”
An excited chuckle interrupted the
further development of this deliciously lawless scheme;
but, though the little sister caught the infection,
she prudently turned from the tempting prospect, saying,
“No, Sed, I’s ‘fraid you
might git the croups an’ die.”
The other occupants of the room were
a little roly-poly cherub of a girl, seated in a tiny
chair, holding in her arms a rag baby, which she rocked
and dangled in servile imitation of her mammy, who,
with bumpings peculiar to the nursery chair, was rocking
to sleep a still younger babe. A fair little
maiden, curled up comfortably upon a cushion, the
firelight glistening upon her yellow locks, bent over
a book, from which she read, in high-pitched, childish
voice, to her mammy, the story of “Ellen Lynn.”
Mammy was very proud that her nursling could read,
and would cast admiring looks upon the child as she
bent over her book, with finger pointing to each word.
Both were absorbed in the story, and every picture
was examined with scrupulous care.
Another occupant of the nursery was
“Chany,” the under nursemaid. Gawky,
sleek, and black, she sat flat upon the floor, her
large, well-shod feet turned to the fire, a picture
of lazy, vacant content.
“Ch-Ch-Chany,”
stuttered Mammy, “look in de top drawer an’
git a hankcher and blow dat chile’s nose.
Go on wid yo book, honey; Mammy ain’t goin’
’sturb you no mo.”
“Mr. Lynn left the sleigh, and
turning from the island” piped little
Caroline. Then there came another prolonged snuffle
from Sedley.
“You Ch-Ch-Chany,
why’n’t you git dat hankcher?” caused
that languid maiden to bestir herself. Having
fumbled in the drawer for the handkerchief, she approached
the window, but no sooner did the little boy become
aware of her intention than, with a rebellious shake
of his curly head, he buried his nose in his little
chapped fists, and, regardless of Sibyl’s advice,
that he had better be good, he firmly stood his ground,
determined to resist Chany to the death.
“He ain’t gwine let me
tetch him,” said Chany, feebly dabbing at him
with the handkerchief.
“Do, pray, gal, don’t
be so no-’count,” Mammy answered.
Then Chany, stung by the imputation, made another
helpless dive; a scuffle ensued, in which she was
utterly routed, and the victorious Sedley threw himself
upon Mammy’s lap.
“Gi’ me de hankcher,”
said Mammy, with an air of withering contempt.
“There, now, you done woke up your little brother,”
she said, when, the nose being blown, she again returned
to trying to jolt baby Joe to sleep. “He
jest had drapped off into a doze.”
“Oh, chilluns, le’s pop
some corn!” Chany now exclaimed. “Here’s
a whole sight of it,” she went on, as she searched
a basket, which she had unearthed from the closet.
“Oh! pop corn!” shouted
Sedley and Sibyl, running, and each seizing an ear.
“Oh! pop torn!” echoed
the cherub, throwing down her rag baby. So the
shovel was run into the ashes, and Chany and the three
little ones set to work to shell the corn.
Quiet was again restored, and Caroline,
who, all through the hubbub, had kept her finger faithfully
upon “island,” continued her reading.
Mammy now substituted a sideways movement
of the knees for the more vigorous bumping of the
chair, and baby Joe lying luxuriously upon
her wide lap gazed dreamily into the glowing
coals upon the hearth, until gradually the white lids
drooped over the blue eyes, and he slept. The
nursery was very quiet now. The corn-poppers were
intent upon their work, and Mammy, soothed by the
unwonted stillness, listened drowsily to the little
reader until fresh interest was excited by the following
words.
“The men were now still more
alarmed,” read Caroline. “Farmer Lynn
said that he would go with them and see what had become
of Mr. Lynn and Annie. The whole party accordingly
went back to the river. After searching about
for some time, one of the men espied something black
on the surface of the snow, at a great distance down
the river. They all proceeded to the spot, and
were dreadfully shocked on arriving there to find
that the black spot was a part of Mr. Lynn’s
arm and that his body was beneath, frozen, and buried
up in the snow.”
When Mammy heard these words, she
threw up her arms, and exclaimed, “Lord, have
mercy ’pon my soul! What! Mr. Lynn
hisself?”
To her imagination Mr. Lynn was a
most real person. The book was now brought to
her and she, with little Caroline, looked with deep
and mournful interest at the picture of the empty
sleigh.
“It certainly is a awful country
to live in; seem like it ain’t fitten for a
dog, much less white folks. To think o’
Mr. Lynn hisself bein’ froze to death.
Well! well! well! It certainly was onexpected.”
The children’s story books furnished
Mammy with many thoughts. Among them was a set
of German nursery tales, full of quaint colored pictures,
in which she took especial pleasure. Seated by
the nursery fire, the baby asleep in his crib and
the others out at play, she would turn the leaves
feeling that each picture was a living portrait.
Slovenly Peter, Rocking Phillip, and Greedy Jacob were
her favorites. Once when shown a pretzel, she
exclaimed, “Ef it ain’t the very thing
what Jacob had in his hand when he busted,” and,
taking the pretzel in her hand, she contemplated it
with a thoughtful and sentimental air.
The nursery door was now burst open,
and in rushed Harry, bringing with him a blast of
fresh cold air; black Ned came too, and both brought
upon their feet enough snow to cover the carpet with
moist tracks.
“You Ne-Ne-Ned, ain’t
you got no mo’ manners than to be a-tracking
up de house dis way? Go ’long out
and clean your feet;” but the hubbub was too
great for Mammy’s words to be heeded; pig-tails
were being brandished aloft, and the children all
clustered round Harry and Ned, asking questions and
clamoring for pig-tails.
“Look!” said Harry.
“Here’s somefin better’n pig-tails,”
and he drew from his pocket the mangled remains of
a dozen or more snow-birds.
A scramble now ensued, and Sibyl having
secured as many as she wanted retired to
a corner, and silently fell to plucking them, while
Sedley, who was as vainglorious as a Comanche, capered
about on his short legs, and boasted of imaginary
exploits with trap and dead-fall.
Caroline looked on, half pleased and
half disgusted, keeping herself clear of contact.
“Miss Calline she too proud
to tetch pig-tails,” grinned Chany.
“’F cose she is,”
Mammy answered, bridling. She was very vain of
Miss Caroline’s daintiness.
The baby was now laid in his crib.
Chany was dispatched for salt and pepper; the shovel
was again run into the ashes, pig-tails were placed
delicately upon the coals, and the nursery, pervaded
with the various odors of wet shoes, burnt corn, fried
grease, etc., was given up to disorder and cooking,
into which Mammy threw herself with as much zest as
did the children. The pig-tails were broiled to
a turn, and the small birds were frizzling away upon
the shovel, when Sedley, taking advantage of his opportunity,
made a rush for the door, opened it, and was outside,
with mouth and hands full of snow. Before Mammy’s
vigilant eye had noted his escape, he was flying back
in triumph, with a big ball in his fist, when she
met him and, with dexterous grasp, wrenched it from
him.
“Di-di-did anybody
ever see your match!” she exclaimed as she hurled
the ball into the fire. “I clar I’s
got a good mind to take you right straight to your
ma.”
But Sedley knew the value of such
threats and soon wiggled himself out of her grasp.
“Da now, go ‘long
an’ ’have yourself,” she said, with
admiring fondness, as he laughed and capered away
from her.
“Honey, what is you a-doin’?”
she now inquired of Sibyl, who, with hot cheeks, was
bending over a pile of coals. “Cookin’
a bird? Let me do it, you’s
a-burnin’ your little face clean to a cracklin’.”
“No, Mammy, I’m cookin’
my bird for grandma,” the child answered, rejecting
all help, “an’ I’m goin’ to
do it all by myself.”
“Wh’, baby honey, your
gran’ma ain’t comin’ before Christmas
eve, an’ dat’s a week off. Your bird
ain’t goin’ keep all dat time, but ne’
mine, I’ll make Ned ketch you another one.”
Upon Christmas Eve, the children might
have been seen at the big gate, straining their eyes
down the road, each hoping to be the first to see
their grandmother’s carriage. Visions of
waxen dolls, sugar-plums, and other vague delights
imparted a double zest to her arrival, to
say nothing of Uncle Robin (the driver) who, in the
estimation of the little boys, was of far greater
importance than was their grandmother. To them
he was an oracle of wisdom, and their delight was to
follow him about the stable lot or to sit in the sunshine
and hang upon his words; for his imagination was fertile,
and the boys would listen with wonder to the tales
of his prowess and skill with horses. Something
was now observed to be moving far down the road, which
soon proved to be the carriage. Yes, there were
“Phoenix” and “Peacock,” which
no one but Uncle Robin could handle, and there sat
Uncle Robin upon the box, and there was grandma inside,
smiling and waving her handkerchief, and there, too,
sat Aunt Polly, grandma’s maid.
The carriage stopped, and Uncle Robin,
bowing and smiling, descended and opened the door,
and they all scrambled in and were hugged and kissed,
and Polly admired their beauty and exclaimed at their
growth. Then the door was clapped to again, but
not before Harry had managed to slip out and clamber
to the box beside Uncle Robin, who, having driven
through the gate, handed him the reins, with a caution
to keep his eye upon Peacock. In the estimation
of the boy, this sleek and overfed Peacock seemed
little less than a raging lion whom only Uncle Robin
could quell.
“He’ll run in a minute,
if he gits a chance,” said the guileful Uncle
Robin. So Harry clutched the reins and drove proudly
past the lot, in full view of some of the men, turned
in at the yard gate, and drew up before the door.
Grandma could not wait for the hanging
of the Christmas stockings, but insisted upon opening
her trunk at once, and displaying her gifts to the
children’s delighted eyes. The wax babies
exceeded their wildest hopes. The house was made
horrible with horns and drums. Mammy laughed
and showed her dimples and courtesied over her own
gorgeous present, and all felt that Christmas had
really come.
For several days, indeed, throughout
the holidays, Harry felt that he had left childhood
far behind him, and, as he strutted about the stable
yard, he now and then expectorated, in imitation of
Uncle Robin, as though he had a quid in his mouth.
Aunt Polly, though far inferior to
Uncle Robin in the children’s estimation, was
yet a person of distinction, and no naughtiness was
ever displayed when she was by to witness it.
Mammy usually enjoyed a gossip with
Aunt Polly over the nursery fire. But, sometimes
feelings of coolness would arise. Polly belonged
to the family of the mother of the children, while
Mammy came from that of the father, and between the
two a slight rivalry had always existed as to the
superiority of her own white children.
“’T is a pity Miss Calline’s
back’s so round,” said Polly one night
as the children were being undressed.
Now, if there was a feature in which
Mammy took a pride, it was in the straightness of
the children’s limbs and the flatness of their
backs, above all the limbs and backs in the other
branches of the family; so, firing up at once, she
replied that she would like to see a flatter back
than “this here one,” laying her hand upon
Caroline’s.
“Miss Emmaline’s is a
sight flatter,” Polly stoutly maintained.
“She’s got as pretty shape as ever I see, all
our people’s got good shapes from old Missis
down. I reckon this chile’s got her back
from her pa’s fambly.” When Polly
said this, Mammy felt that the gauntlet had been flung
down, and, at once, with an eloquence all her own,
so defended the “shapes” of her “fambly”
that Polly was fairly beaten in the war of words,
and was forced to admit, with many apologies, that
Miss Caroline’s back was as flat as Miss Emmaline’s.
Mammy accepted the apology with some
hauteur, and it was several days before entire cordiality
was reestablished; in fact, in all her after life,
Mammy would, when in certain moods, hark back to “dat
time when dat long-mouthed Polly had de imperdence
to say dat our folks’ backs weren’t as
straight as hern.”
Full of peaceful content were the
lives of both whites and blacks. Merrily the
Christmas went by, to be followed by others as merry,
and the winters and summers came and went, turning
childhood into maturity and maturity into old age.
Mammy’s glory reached its zenith when, at “Miss
Calline’s” grand wedding, she herself rustled
about in all the grandeur of a new black silk and
Polly was forever squelched. The whole world
seemed full of prosperity, abundance, and careless
happiness, when suddenly, like a thunderbolt, the war
came.
The plantation home was abandoned
very carelessly, and with light hearts the family
drove away, expecting nothing but to return with the
frosts of winter. They refugeed to a farmhouse
upon the outskirts of a little up-country village.
Sedley, though still a beardless youth,
shouldered his musket, and took his place in the ranks.
Sibyl and her mother, in the little rude farmhouse,
thought not of their lost splendor, but cheerfully
looked for the good days sure to come when, the war
over, the dear ones would come back, and the old times.
Every Southern woman knows how it was when the great
battles were fought and a trembling, white-lipped group
of women and aged men would stand huddled together
to hear what the midnight dispatches might have in
store for them.
In the little upland village the refugees
were closely knit together by hopes and fears in common.
When sorrow fell upon one household the little community
all mourned. But if the wires brought glad words
that all at the front were unharmed, there would come
a period of happy reaction; the little society would
be wildly gay, especially if one or more young heroes
from the front had come home with a slight wound, just
enough to make a demigod of him.
Such was Sedley’s happy fate
one never-to-be-forgotten summer, when every girl
in the village fell madly in love with his blue eyes
and his gray coat and his mustache and his lovely
voice, as he strummed the guitar in the moonlight, and
most of all with his merry laugh. Did time permit,
I might tell of such odd costumes, such make-ups of
homespun and lace, fine old silks and calicoes, in
which the Dixie girls danced so merrily.
It was just upon the heels of one
of these happy seasons that a rumor was whispered
that the army was about to fall back and that the
offices and stores would be removed in consequence.
At first the rumor was rejected, no good
Confederate would listen to such treason; but finally
the croakers were proved to be right. The government
stores were hastily removed. The office-holders
took a sad farewell of those whom they left behind
them, and the little town was abandoned to its fate,
outside the Confederate lines.
Sibyl and her mother were among the
tearful group who watched the little band of departing
friends, as it passed out of the town, waved a last
adieu, and strained their dimmed eyes for a last sight
of the Confederate gray, ere they went sadly back
to their homes.
When Sibyl and her mother reached
home, they found Mammy already at work. She had
ripped open a feather bed, and amid its downy depths
she was burying whatever she could lay her hands upon.
Clothing, jewelry, even a china ornament or two, all
went in. It was a day or two after that Rita
complained of a great knot in her bed, which had bruised
her back and prevented her sleeping. Mammy heard
her, but, waiting until they were alone, said in a
half whisper, “Honey, I knows what dat knot
is, ‘t ain’t nothin’ but your brother’s
cavalry boots that I hid in the bed. I reckon
the feathers has got shuck down. Don’t
say nothin’, an’ I’ll turn your bed
over, and then you won’t feel ’em.
An’, honey, do pray be kereful how you talks
before Jim. I ain’t got no ‘pinion
o’ Jim, an’ it’ll never do in de
world to let him speck where the things is hid.”
No one knew how soon the Yankees might
come, and all were busily engaged in concealing whatever
they had of value. People may smile now at some
of the recollections of that day, but they were earnest
enough then, and as much importance was attached to
the concealment of a ham or a pound of black sugar
as to that of a casket of diamonds. Clothing
and provisions were hidden in various strange and
out-of-the-way places, and, when night came, Mammy
and her mistress were glad to rest their tired bodies,
although too much excited to sleep. At last,
however, a deep sleep fell upon them, from which they
were awakened by the distant roar of cannon. The
village, though no longer a depot for Confederate
stores, was not to be given up without a struggle.
It now became a sort of debatable ground, and cannonading,
more or less distant, told the anxious listeners of
almost daily skirmishes.
Awakened by the cannon’s roar,
Sibyl opened the window and listened. A pale
glory to the eastward, a low rustle of leaves, a drowsy
chirp from tiny nests, all merging into one inarticulate
murmur of awakening nature, told that night was over.
Sibyl and her mother hastily dressed themselves, called
Rita from her fearless young sleep, roused up the
baby, as they still called little Joe; then asked themselves
why they did it. There was nothing to do but
to sit on the porch or to wander aimlessly, listening
with beating hearts to the faint and more faint boom
of the artillery. And the roses glowed in the
May sunshine, and the honeysuckle wafted its perfume
in at the open windows, and the bees droned among
the flowers, and all was so peaceful, but for the
incessant dull roar of the battle.
The Confederates were finally driven
back, the Federals entered the town, and then the
bummers came streaming through the country, leaving
desolation behind them. Cattle, poultry, everything
eatable was driven off or carried away in the great
army wagons that came crashing along, regardless of
all obstacles in their cruel course. Cut off from
all news from the army, Sibyl and her mother dragged
wearily through the long, sad summer, and the two
children grew gaunt for want of nourishing food.
It was a morning in the early autumn
that Sibyl, sitting at work by an open window, became
suddenly conscious of an unusual presence near her,
and, looking up, beheld a man gazing fixedly upon her.
A party of Federals had that very morning visited
the house upon a pretended search for concealed weapons,
and the girl, with nerves still vibrating with terror,
uttered a little shriek, and, starting up, was about
to close the window, when the figure leaped over the
low sill, a pair of strong arms encircled her, kisses
fell upon her lips, and, ere the shriek of terror
could find voice, she recognized, under the rough
countryman’s hat, the laughing eyes of her brother
Sedley.
Such meetings can be better imagined
than described; seconds had become minutes ere Sibyl
or her mother could begin to realize their joy, which,
in its first intensity, was almost pain. Then
came the breathless questionings as to the well-being
of the other dear ones, then the deep sigh of thankfulness
from the long-burdened hearts.
At the sound of a strange voice.
Mammy, peeping in at the open door, had fallen prostrate
with joy, and, while hugging her boy to her faithful
bosom, had called upon her Maker to testify that upon
this very morning the scissors had stuck up twice.
“An’ I knowed when dey
done dat, dat somebody was a-comin’.”
Then Dinah, the cook, came in, courtesying
and laughing and loyal as though no emancipating army
had set foot in Dixie.
When the joyful tidings had reached
the children, Rita’s thin legs might have been
seen flying through the high grass. The more practical
Joe toiled behind, bending under the burden of (their
treasure trove) a big pumpkin, a basket of persimmons,
and a few stalks of sorghum, for, like the Scriptural
colts of the wild ass, they passed their time in searching
after every green thing.
In the magnetism of the bright presence
of the young soldier, all the sad forebodings seemed
to vanish into thin air. While listening to his
brave words of hope, they forgot that the sunny hours
of this most happy day were hastening by. Already
the shadows lay long upon the grass, and there remained
yet so much to be said and so little time wherein
to say it! By set of sun Sedley must be on his
way to rejoin his command. His brief and daring
visit had been achieved by his assuming a disguise
before venturing inside the enemy’s lines.
“How did you ever manage it?”
asked the mother. “I tremble when I think
of it.”
“Oh,” he answered, “it
was easy enough. I came in with a fellow who
was driving cattle into town.”
“Oh, Sed!” his
sister whispered; “you ran an awful risk; how
will you manage to get back without being discovered?”
“There’ll be no trouble
about that,” he answered. “Don’t
you and mother go and worry yourselves about me.
I’ll be all right, so cheer up and don’t
look so doleful.”
Urged on by fear, they now almost
hurried him away, and Mammy, while filling his haversack
with provisions, entreated him to be careful.
“De ain’t no tellin’
what dem Yankees would do ef dey once clapt hands
on you.”
Sedley might guess shrewdly enough
what his fate would be in such case, but he replied,
with his old boyish laugh, that it was his trade to
outrun the Yankees.
“Never fear, Mammy,” he
said at parting. “Trust me to beat ’em
at that game.”
Then the sad good-byes were said,
and manfully he strode down the little path, turning
only once to wave a last good-by to the sorrowful
group on the broad front porch, who watched till he
passed out of sight.
The night was spent in anxious watching,
but confidence returned with the morning, and all
again settled back to their employments and amusements.
Sybil wandered into the parlor, and, sitting down to
the piano, sang in a low, sweet voice some of the
pathetic war melodies. The “colts of the
wild ass seeking after every green thing” had
sought the sorghum patch, and Mammy had taken a basket
into the garden for a final gathering of sage leaves.
The day was dreamy, as only an October day of the
South can be. The tempered sunlight, streaming
softly through the filmy autumnal mist, threw a veil
of loveliness over the homeliest objects; the old
gray fences, the russet fields, the lonely pastures,
where from beneath the grass roots the tiny crickets
chanted their low, sweet dirge the long day through,
the cawing of the crows from a distant tree-top, all
told in notes of most harmonious pathos that “the
fashion of this world passeth away.”
As Mammy, with back stiffened from
stooping, raised herself for a moment’s rest,
she saw Jim lounge into the backyard and speak to
Dinah. Mammy had but little use for Jim in general,
but now she felt anxious to know what had been going
on in the village, and for that reason she left her
basket among the sage and went near to hear what he
was saying. As she drew near, Dinah suddenly threw
up her hands, and, starting from the hencoop on which
she had been leaning, came towards her, stuttering
and stammering in a manner so excited as to be unintelligible.
“What’s dat you say?
For Gods sake, ooman, say what yere got to say, an’
be done wid it!” said Mammy, too frightened to
be patient. Jim then drew near to her and, glancing
cautiously towards the not very distant piazza, upon
which his mistress happened at the moment to be standing,
he whispered, “Dey’s done ketched him.”
“K-k-ketched who?” stammered Mammy fiercely.
“Mas’ Sedley, dat’s who,”
Jim answered doggedly.
“How you know? I don’t b’lieve
a word on it.”
“Anyhow, dey’s done done it.”
“Ho’ come you know so much ’bout
it?”
“’Cause I seen ’em when dey done
it.”
“Y-y-you have de face to stan’
da an’ tell me dat you seen ’em a-troublin’
dat chile an’ you not lif’ a han’
to help him?”
“How I gwine help him? G’long, you
don’t know what you talkin’ ’bout.”
“Whar’bouts did dey come across him?”
Mammy inquired.
“Right down yonder at de mill,”
Jim answered, nodding his head in the direction.
“Good Lord,” exclaimed
Mammy, “dey must ‘a’ ketched him
directly after he went away!”
This conversation was carried on in
such low murmurings that even a listener at a short
distance could not have distinguished what was said;
the three were very intent, but did not omit occasional
cautious glances in the direction of the house.
“Dat’s so,” Jim
replied; “an’ den dey shet him up in de
mill house, and den I never seed no mo’, ‘cause
I was skeered an’ runned away.”
Then, after an uneasy pause, he added,
“I come ’long dat-a-way soon dis
mornin’,” and here he murmured so low into
Mammy’s ear that Dinah, though she stretched
her neck, could not catch the word, which turned Mammy’s
brown face to ashen gray. She stood for a minute
like one turned to stone, then staggered to her own
doorstep. Sitting down, she buried her head in
her apron, and so sat motionless for half an hour,
while Jim and Dinah continued their guarded murmurings
by the hencoop. At the end of half an hour she
rose, took a bunch of keys from her pocket, went into
her house and, closing the door behind her, unlocked
her chest. Drawing from it a little workbox, which
had, in years gone by, been one of Caroline’s
cherished Christmas gifts, she opened it. From
beneath her Sunday pocket handkerchief, and a few other
articles of special value, she produced another and
smaller box which she opened, and, taking from it
a gold coin, looked at it tenderly.
“Po’ little fellow!
God bless him! he give me this that fus’
time he come home from school. I never ’spected
to part with it, but ef it’s de Lord’s
will, it may help him now.”
With these thoughts, Mammy quickly
replaced the things in her chest, put the coin into
her pocket, and, taking up the man’s hat, which
upon week days she always wore, she strode off towards
the mill.
As she passed by the piazza, she paused
one moment irresolute, but murmuring to herself, “‘T
ain’t no use upsettin’ Mistis, po’
cretur, and I can do it better by myself anyhow,”
she walked briskly forward, revolving in her mind
her plan.
The mill house consisted of two rooms,
and in the one in which Jim had reported Sedley to
be confined there was a small trap-door. It had
been used for regulating the working of the machinery,
and led from beneath the house directly to the creek,
which ran close to the walls of the house. This
trap Mammy had once happened to see opened, and in
that way knew of its existence, otherwise she would
never have suspected it, as, from its infrequent use,
it was usually covered with dust and dirt and could
not be distinguished from the rest of the floor.
Her plan was to endeavor to get speech with Sedley,
tell him of the trap-door, and leave the rest to him.
Her great fear had been that she might be refused
admittance to him, and hence it was that she had thought
of her gold piece, as she hoped by its potent influence
to be given a few minutes alone with the prisoner.
There would be no great difficulty
for Sedley to lift the trap without noise and, when
it was lifted, to swing himself through to the ground,
to creep until he came to the thick tangle upon the
creek banks, then to swim across and escape into the
shelter of the woods beyond. That would be simple
enough, and Mammy, full of hopeful thoughts, was walking
briskly forward, when suddenly a turn in the path brought
into view a small body of Federals, all mounted, and
evidently coming from the direction of the mill.
They seemed in haste, and she could hear the rattle
of their sabres as they cantered by.
Standing amid the broom-sedge, Mammy
watched them, casting eager, anxious looks upon them,
fearing, dreading to see her boy in their midst, a
poor, defenseless captive. Finally, as the last
horseman disappeared, she heaved a sigh of infinite
relief. “Bless de good Lord, dey ain’t
took de po’ chile wid ’em,”
and so went on her way.
At length the gray gables of the little
mill house came into view, and Mammy, feeling in her
pocket to assure herself that the gold piece was safe
at hand, went boldly forward, telling herself that,
if she spoke politely, the Yankee guard would not
shoot her. So she went on until the little mill
came into full view, but with no guard or any other
object to inspire fear. All seemed quiet, and
the place quite deserted. There were footprints
about the door, and broken bushes showed the trampling
of both men and horses, but now all was very quiet.
The old mill house looked very peaceful, with the yellow
autumnal sun shining upon its moss-grown roof, with
no sound to break the deep silence, save the low,
continuous warbling of a solitary mockingbird which,
perched upon an overhanging bough, seemed to review
its past joys in low, sweet notes of retrospection.
Upon seeing that the place was quite
deserted, Mammy paused, and, after looking around
to satisfy herself that this was really the case,
ascended the steps and, lifting the latch of the door,
looked into the outer room.
“Thank God!” she murmured,
upon finding it empty. “Thank God! dey’s
all took deyselves off to town an’ lef’
him here, locked up by hisself. It raly is ‘stonishin’
to think how foolish dem creturs is; dey
moût ha’ knowed as someon’ would
ha’ come an’ let him loose.”
While thus thinking, she had crossed
the room, and was now endeavoring to open the door,
which gave admittance to the inner and larger apartment.
Finding, as she had anticipated, that this door was
fastened, she first called to the prisoner within,
and, when no answer was returned, she shook the door
until at length the crazy old lock gave way and the
door creaked slowly back upon its rusty hinges.
“Honey, whar’bouts is
you?” Mammy questioned, as, pausing upon the
threshold, she peered into the obscurity beyond.
The windowless room was dark, and Mammy, after again
calling, groped her way in, straining her eyes into
the gloom, but unable to discern any object. Then,
suddenly, the deep silence and the gloom smote upon
her senses, and a great horror came over her.
She turned to rush from the room, when her eyes, grown
more accustomed to the darkness, fell upon an object
which froze the lifeblood in her veins. It lay
almost at her feet. She stooped and bent over
it, with thick, laboring breath. Very still it
lay, with set white face and wide-open, unseeing eyes.