Occurrences That Puzzle.
To the pagan yet remaining in man
it would seem that yon railroad train plunging toward
the Southland is somehow conscious of the fact that
it is playing a part in events of tremendous import,
for observe how it pierces the darkness with its one
wild eye, cleaves the air with its steely front and
causes wars and thunders to creep into the dreams of
the people by whose homes it makes its midnight rush.
Well, this train now moving toward
Almaville, queen city of the South, measured by the
results that developed from that night’s journey,
is fully entitled to all its fretting and fuming,
brag and bluster of steam and smoke, and to its wearisome
jangle of clanging bell and shrieking whistle and
rumbling wheel.
It was summer time. A Negro porter
passing through a coach set apart for white passengers
noted the fixedness with which a young woman with a
pretty face and a pair of beautiful blue eyes was regarding
him. Her head was inclined to one side, her hand
so supporting her face that a prettily shaped ear
peeped out from between her fingers. In the look
of her eye there was a slight suggestion of immaturity,
which, however, was contradicted by the firm outlines
of her face. As the porter drew near her seat
she significantly directed her look to a certain spot
on the car floor, thence to the eyes of the porter.
Having in mind the well understood
dictum of the white man of the South that the Negro
man and the white woman are to be utterly oblivious
of the existence of each other, this Negro porter
was loth to believe that the young woman was trying
surreptitiously to attract his attention, and he passed
out of the coach hurriedly. In a short while he
returned and again noted how intently the young woman
regarded him. This time he observed that she
had evidently been weeping and that there was a look
of hopeless sorrow in her eyes. Again the young
woman looked at him, then upon the floor and up at
him once more. The porter looked down upon the
spot indicated by her look, saw a note, stooped and
picked it up. He returned to the coach or rather
to the end of a coach, set apart for Negroes, took
a rear seat and surveyed the car preparatory to reading
the note which the young woman plainly indicated was
for him.
“I don’t want white girls
passing me notes,” thought the Negro, clutching
the note tightly and continuing to glance about the
coach in a half-frightened manner. He arose to
hoist the window by which he sat, intending to utilize
it to be rid of the note in case the occasion should
demand it. His fears had begun to suggest to him
that perhaps some white man had noticed his taking
cognizance of the young woman’s efforts to attract
his attention.
As the Negro section of the coach
was the forward section and next to the baggage car,
any person coming from the section set apart for the
whites would be to the back of the Negro passengers.
The porter therefore changed his seat, going forward
and taking a position where he would be facing any
one coming from the coach for whites. He raised
the window by which he sat and his eye wandered out
into the darkness amid the sombre trees that went
speeding along, and there arose to haunt him mental
visions of a sea of angry white faces closing around
some one dark face, perhaps guilty and perhaps innocent;
and as he thought thereon he shuddered. He felt
sorely tempted to toss the note out of the window
unread, but remembering the pleading look on the face
of the young woman he did not follow the promptings
of his fear.
“In case of trouble, this crew
in here couldn’t help a fellow much,”
said the porter, moving his eyes about slowly again,
taking note one by one of those in the section with
him. There was the conductor, who though a white
man, seemed always to prefer to sit in the section
set apart for the Negroes. There was the newsboy,
also white, taking up two seats with his wares.
“As well as they know me they
would go with the other gang. A white man is
a white man, and don’t you forget it,”
mused the porter.
There were two male passengers sitting
together, Negroes, one of whom was so light of complexion
that he could easily have passed for white, while
the other was of a dark brown hue.
“A fine looking fellow,”
thought the porter concerning the dark young man.
Across the aisle from the two young
men mentioned, and a seat or so in advance of them,
sat a young woman whose face was covered with a very
thick veil. The perfect mould of her shoulders,
the attractiveness of her wealth of black hair massed
at the back of her head these things were
demanding, the porter noticed, many an admiring glance
from the darker of the two young men.
The porter seemed about to forget
his note in observing with what regularity the young
man’s eyes would wander off and straightway return
to rest upon the beautiful form of the young woman,
but an incident occurred that brought his mind back
very forcibly to the note. The door from the
section for the whites opened and two white men entered.
The porter’s hand in which the
note was held cautiously crept toward the open window,
while he eyed the two white men whom he feared had
come to accuse him of an attempted flirtation with
a young white woman. One of the men reached behind
to his hip pocket and the porter half arose in his
seat, throwing up his hands in alarm, expecting a pistol
to appear to cover him. The white man was simply
drawing out a flask of whiskey to offer his companion
a drink.
Ensal Ellwood, the dark young man,
looking around to see if the parties who had entered
had closed the door behind them (for the adjoining
section was the white people’s smoking apartment,
and care had to be exercised to keep smoke and tobacco
fumes out), saw the two white men about to take a
drink. He arose quickly and advancing to the two
men, said quietly, urbanely and yet with an air of
firmness,
“Gentlemen, the law prescribes
that this coach shall be used exclusively by Negro
passengers and we must ask that you do not make our
first-class apartment a drinking room for the whites.”
The two men stared at Ensal and he
looked them frankly in the face that they might see
that in a dignified manner he would insist to the last
upon the rights of the Negro passengers. The justness
of Ensal’s request, his unostentatious, manly
bearing had the desired effect. The two men quietly
turned about and left the car.
The porter who had been standing during
this little scene now sat down, opened the note and
read as follows:
“Mr. Porter: When
this train is within a fifteen minutes’ run
of Almaville please pass through this coach and
so announce. Then stand on the platform
leading from this coach to the coach in which
the Negroes have their section.
“From the
girl that looked at you.”
The first part of this request the
porter concluded to comply with, but he registered
all sorts of vows to the effect that he would never
be found waiting on any platform for any white girl.
He murmered to himself.
“My young lady, you may sign
yourself, ’From the girl that looked at you;’
but with all due respect my signature is ’The
boy that wasn’t there.’”
Again he looked out of the window
at the same sombre trees and into the gloom of their
shadows, and he put his hand in his collar as though
it was already too tight.
“No, my God!” he said
softly. Tearing the note to shreds, he fed it
to the winds, lowered the window and began to whistle.
When the train was in the designated
distance of Almaville the porter entered the coach
for whites in which sat the young woman who wrote the
note. “Fifteen minutes and the train pulls
into Almaville,” he exclaimed, as he walked
the aisle in an opposite direction to that desired
by the young woman. She at once understood and
saw that she must depend upon herself.
The fragile, beautiful creature arose
and by holding to the ends of the various seats staggered
to the door. She opened it and by tenacious clinging
to the iron railings on the platform managed to pull
herself across to the adjoining coach. Passing
through the smoker for the white men she entered the
Negro section. With a half stifled sob she threw
herself into the lap of the Negro girl and nestled
her face on her shoulder.
The young woman from the coach for
the whites now tossed back the veil of the Negro girl
and the two girls kissed, looking each other in the
eyes, pledging in that kiss and in that look, the unswerving,
eternal devotion of heart to heart whatever the future
might bring. The young woman now slowly turned
away and went toward the coach whence she came, assisted
by the wondering conductor.
From large dark eyes whose great native
beauty was heightened by that tender look of the soul
that they harbored, the Negro girl stood watching
her visitor depart. The grace of her form that
was somewhat taller and somewhat larger than that
of the average girl, stamped her as a creature that
could be truthfully called sublimely beautiful, thought
Ensal. Whatever complexion on general principles
Ensal thought to be the most attractive, he was now
ready to concede that the delicate light brown color
of this girl could not be surpassed in beauty.
If, incredulous as to the accuracy
of the estimate of her beauty forced upon one at the
first glance, an effort was made to analyze that face
and study its parts separately, each feature was seen
to have a beauty all its own.
“So sweet and beautiful a face
and so lovely a form could only have been handed to
a soul of whom they are not even worthy,”
thought Ensal.
A sober look was in Ensal’s
eye and some kind of a mad gallop was in his heart.
There was more than soberness in the blue eyes of Earl
Bluefield, Ensal’s companion. When Ensal
looked around at his friend he was astonished at the
terribly bitter look on his face.
The train emptied a number of its
passengers and rushed on and on and on, as if fleeing
from the results to be anticipated from its deposit
of new and strange forces into the life of Almaville.