THE EYES OF THE JUNGLE
Elsie stood dreaming for a moment
in the shadow of the arbor-vitae, breathing the sensuous
perfumed air and listening to the distant music of
the falls, her heart quivering in pity for the anguish
of which she had been a witness. Again the spectral
cry of the whippoorwill rang near-by, and she noted
for the first time the curious cluck with which the
bird punctuated each call. A sense of dim foreboding
oppressed her.
She wondered if the chatter of Marion
about the girl in Nashville were only a child’s
guess or more. She laughed softly at the absurdity
of the idea. Never since she had first looked
into Ben Cameron’s face did she feel surer of
the honesty and earnestness of his love than to-day
in this quiet home of his native village. It
must be the queer call of the bird which appealed
to superstitions she did not know were hidden within
her being.
Still dreaming under its spell, she
was startled at the tread of two men approaching the
gate.
The taller, more powerful-looking
man put his hand on the latch and paused.
“Allow no white man to order
you around. Remember you are a freeman and as
good as any pale-face who walks this earth.”
She recognized the voice of Silas Lynch.
“Ben Cameron dare me to come about de house,”
said the other voice.
“What did he say?”
“He say, wid his eyes batten’
des like lightnen’, ‘Ef I ketch you
hangin’ ‘roun’ dis place
agin’, Gus, I’ll jump on you en stomp de
life outen ye.’”
“Well, you tell him that your
name is Augustus, not ‘Gus,’ and that the
United States troops quartered in this town will be
with him soon after the stomping begins. You
wear its uniform. Give the white trash in this
town to understand that they are not even citizens
of the nation. As a sovereign voter, you, once
their slave, are not only their equal you
are their master.”
“Dat I will!” was the firm answer.
The negro to whom Lynch spoke disappeared
in the direction taken by Marion and her mother, and
the figure of the handsome mulatto passed rapidly up
the walk, ascended the steps and knocked at the door.
Elsie followed him.
“My father is too much fatigued
with his journey to be seen now; you must call to-morrow,”
she said.
The negro lifted his hat and bowed:
“Ah, we are delighted to welcome
you, Miss Stoneman, to our land! Your father
asked me to call immediately on his arrival. I
have but obeyed his orders.”
Elsie shrank from the familiarity
of his manner and the tones of authority and patronage
with which he spoke.
“He cannot be seen at this hour,” she
answered shortly.
“Perhaps you will present my
card, then say that I am at his service,
and let him appoint the time at which I shall return?”
She did not invite him in, but with
easy assurance he took his seat on the joggle-board
beside the door and awaited her return.
Against her urgent protest, Stoneman
ordered Lynch to be shown at once to his bedroom.
When the door was closed, the old
Commoner, without turning to greet his visitor or
moving his position in bed, asked:
“Are you following my instructions?”
“To the letter, sir.”
“You are initiating the negroes
into the League and teaching them the new catechism?”
“With remarkable success.
Its secrecy and ritual appeal to them. Within
six months we shall have the whole race under our control
almost to a man.”
“Almost to a man?”
“We find some so attached to
their former masters that reason is impossible with
them. Even threats and the promise of forty acres
of land have no influence.”
The old man snorted with contempt.
“If anything could reconcile
me to the Satanic Institution it is the character
of the wretches who submit to it and kiss the hand
that strikes. After all, a slave deserves to
be a slave. The man who is mean enough to wear
chains ought to wear them. You must teach, teach,
TEACH these black hounds to know they are men, not
brutes!”
The old man paused a moment, and his
restless hands fumbled the cover.
“Your first task, as I told
you in the beginning, is to teach every negro to stand
erect in the presence of his former master and assert
his manhood. Unless he does this, the South will
bristle with bayonets in vain. The man who believes
he is a dog, is one. The man who believes himself
a king, may become one. Stop this snivelling and
sneaking round the back doors. I can do nothing,
God Almighty can do nothing, for a coward. Fix
this as the first law of your own life. Lift up
your head! The world is yours. Take it.
Beat this into the skulls of your people, if you do
it with an axe. Teach them the military drill
at once. I’ll see that Washington sends
the guns. The state, when under your control,
can furnish the powder.”
“It will surprise you to know
the thoroughness with which this has been done already
by the League,” said Lynch. “The white
master believed he could vote the negro as he worked
him in the fields during the war. The League,
with its blue flaming altar, under the shadows of night,
has wrought a miracle. The negro is the enemy
of his former master and will be for all time.”
“For the present,” said
the old man meditatively, “not a word to a living
soul as to my connection with this work. When
the time is ripe, I’ll show my hand.”
Elsie entered, protesting against
her father’s talking longer, and showed Lynch
to the door.
He paused on the moonlit porch and
tried to engage her in familiar talk.
She cut him short, and he left reluctantly.
As he bowed his thick neck in pompous
courtesy, she caught with a shiver the odour of pomade
on his black half-kinked hair. He stopped on the
lower step, looked back with smiling insolence, and
gazed intently at her beauty. The girl shrank
from the gleam of the jungle in his eyes and hurried
within.
She found her father sunk in a stupor.
Her cry brought the young surgeon hurrying into the
room, and at the end of an hour he said to Elsie and
Phil:
“He has had a stroke of paralysis.
He may lie in mental darkness for months and then
recover. His heart action is perfect. Patience,
care, and love will save him. There is no cause
for immediate alarm.”