Authors: Alex Haley
James knew this, and saw it as a thing to be proud of in his son. -All
young men fight," he said, and Mrs. Perkins concurred. "All men fight," she
said. "It is part of being masculine."
So Sally had a fit of motherly pique instead. "He never brings me his
shirts to mend," she complained, but James smiled. "You'd only give them to
a slave."
"That's not the point," Sally insisted. "I'm his mother."
Lizzie had reasons for disappointment, too. She spent most of her life
being desperately bored. She had been brought up to it and should have been
used to it, but she wasn't. The only ripples in her life were school, which
was quite fun, although, try as she might, she wasn't overly popular with
the other girls and there were no young men around, and visiting, when she
could persuade herself, if only because she had a perky personality, that
she was popular, and there were likely to be young men. Such as Jass. She'd
spent the last hour waiting for him to come home, was bored with Sassy, who
seemed much more interested in discussing her own suitors and playing
mother to the three-year-old Jane Jackson than discussing Lizzie's future,
and now here was Jass, looking gorgeousshe hadn't lied-and then he was
gone.
"Why doesn't he come talk to us?" she complained. Sassy
MERGING 209
shrugged. "He's probably been in a fight. Easter cleans him up and mends
his clothes so that we won't know." She giggled again. "He's so silly."
"Easter?" Lizzie's antennae were out for potential rivals, and she knew
of no young lady in the district called Easter.
"A slave girl," Sassy explained. "She does the weaving."
Lizzie was considerably relieved. "Oh," she said. "Is that all. "
Had Lizzie known more of the weaving house, her relief might have been
short-lived. It hadn't changed much over the years; it still wasn't much
of a place, a little shack nestled in a peaceful grove. The roof leaked
in heavy rain, and it sorely needed a coat of paint, but the atmosphere
inside was warm and comfortable and loving. Home is the familiar, home is
where you are loved, and Jass knew that he was loved here, loved by Cap'n
Jack and loved, without knowing that it was love, by Easter. He knew that
his parents loved him, in their fashion, and his brothers and sisters, and
he them, but when he thought of home it was as much this shabby shack as
the great mansion on the hill. For this place was different. This was the
cottage where he was king.
He brought his horse to a halt and dismounted. He knew he should have
stopped to greet Mrs. Perkins and her daughter, but he didn't want Lizzie
to see him battered and torn from his fight. "See to Morgan," he called,
unnecessarily for both he and Cap'n Jack knew that the horse would be
seen to, but an order given because he was the young Massa, and that's
what good Massas did to prove they were not insensible to the chores of
routine. Cap'n Jack was content to oblige, beyond the fact that it was
his job, because he was content that this young Massa, whom he, as much
as anyone, he believed, had fashioned and shaped, would be, one day, his
ol' Massa.
Easter had been at the loom, but on hearing the arrival of the horses,
she glanced out of the window, saw the state Jass was in, and went to
fetch water, iodine, and a cloth. Thirteen years old and still a little
gangly, she held the promise of a beautiful woman, with all of her
mother's gentle calm but a certain cheekiness as well-sparky, fiery
quirks to her personality that might have been inherited from her father,
or perhaps
210 ALEX HALEY'S QUEEN
came from being brought up in a somewhat privileged atmosphere. The sale
of Annie was seldom referred to anymore, but it still had powerful
resonance for those who could remember. For the blacks it signified the
most blatant example of the white man's dominance that had ever occurred
at The Forks. For the whites, particularly ol' Massa James, it represented
the nadir of the treatment of slaves under his dominion, and he preferred
to block the event from his mind. Easter had grown up in the shadow of
that memory, and was consequently much indulged by the blacks to solace
her for the outrage, by the whites to atone for their guilt. She had
always lived in this house with Cap'n Jack, she had received some general
schooling, although not, of course, reading and writing, in the big house
with the Jackson daughters, and she had inherited the role of weaver
without question or demur. Tiara had shown her the ways, and she seemed
to have a natural talent for the skill, a rhythm and grace about her that
made it a pleasure to watch her work and gave the resulting cloth a
neatness and texture to be admired.
And she had grown up with Jass, who spent at least as much time here,
with her, as anywhere, with anyone. As his constant companion, she found
few doors closed to her, and although she had felt the sting of the
switch, infrequently, as punishment for minor infringements of adult
rules, she was a wellmannered girl who was mostly content with the
confines of her existence. A small part of her, of course, longed to live
in the big house, or go to grand parties and wear pretty frocks, and
another part of her wanted to be free, but only a part, and not a very
large one. The concept of freedom, of being able to do what she wanted
with her life, was a desirable ideal, but she had heard many stories of
slaves, freed, whose lives were very much less than hers now. But then
almost every slave's life was less than hers now, and if she was free,
she might not have the thing she most wanted.
Because what she wanted was Jass. The fact that it was he who had
occasionally inflicted the mild stinging pain of the switch was not
without pleasure to her. It meant, in her mind, that she mattered to him.
And she knew how to get her own back.
He strode into the cottage like a husband coming home, and
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stripped to the waist. "Fix my shirt," he said, throwing the garment to
her. He took an empty corncob pipe from the shelf and sat in an old
rocking chair by the empty fireplace. Easter came to him to tend his
wounds and knew that only his pride needed real attention. "You gwine have
some mighty bruises. "
Easter's recognition that he had fought hard and well mollified Jass a
little. "It's always the same old rut," he complained. "They won't admit
that we've got to expand the economy, and whenever I try to talk about
it, they all say I'm advocating abolition-Owwwwww-for pity's sake! " He
flinched at the sting of the iodine.
Easter ignored his yell, and carried on, as did Jass. --and I'm not
saying we should abolish slavery, I'm saying we have to think beyond it-"
Easter hated talk of slavery and abolition. Most of the time she was able
to convince herself of the lie that she wasn't really a slave, and this
mystical new word, abolition, had frightening connotations, such as the
possibility of not living at The Forks, of living somewhere else, of
being apart from Jass. "Them's five-dollar words," she complained, hoping
to shut him up, knowing she was wasting her breath.
"You've had learning; you know what they mean." He puffed contentedly on
the empty pipe, but she flared a little.
"You scare me when you talk like that! Freein' slaves. Where would I go?
What would I do?"
Jass looked at her. She seemed at that moment so vulnerable, so in need
of protection, that all he wanted to do was take her in his anns and hold
her safe from the world, for the rest of her life. She made the boy feel
manly.
"It's never going to happen; it's just silly talk," he said gently. "This
is your home and always will be."
Then he smiled. "Besides," he said, "whatever would I do without you?,"
which is what she had wanted to hear from the moment he came in the door,
but she would not let him off the hook too easily-
"That's all very well and fine, Massa," she sniffed, "but I still don't
get to go to no wedding."
He looked at her in genuine surprise, for he had been at
212 ALEX HALEY'S QUEEN
school when the invitations arrived and thought the visit of Mrs. Perkins
and Lizzie to be purely social. "What wedding?"
Parson Dick needed no telling. News of it had reached the slaves days before
the formal correspondence had reached the whites, but since it was to be a
black wedding, between black folk, none of the slaves had felt any need to
inform their masters, and although they heard rumors that some white folk
were to be invited, none of them were sure if their Massa was on the list,
although Parson Dick, who could speak three languages but couldn't read or
write, was fairly convinced that theJacksons were when he had taken the
envelope to his Master's study earlier that day.
"We will be going to Nashville next month, Parson Dick, to a wedding-" was
as far as James got.
"Yes, sir, I know," said the butler, to save time. And perhaps to score a
point. James looked at him in amazement. The accuracy and speed of the
slave grapevine was a constant and remarkable amusement to him.
Parson Dick was helpful. "Everybody talkin' about it, sub. Alfred is
marrying Miss Gracie."
James laughed. "How is it that whenever anything happens in this country,
the slaves all know about it before we do?"
"Jungle drums, perhaps, Massa," Parson Dick ventured, maintaining a poker
face. James was never sure quite how to take Parson Dick, although Mrs.
Perkins had no such hesitation. "That's exactly right," she cried. "Voodoo!
Sheer voodoo! White folk and nigras guests at the same wedding!"
Parson Dick looked at her. "Disgraceful, m'm, I agree," but Mrs. Perkins's
skin was far too thick for such subtle sarcasm. "You see!" she crowed in
triumph, reluctantly preparing to leave. "Even the nigras are agin it!"
Slaves had brought the Perkins landau to the house. Soon it would be
sundown, and so it was time to go, but Mrs. Perkins was not anxious to
depart without at least some discourse between Lizzie and Jass. Playing for
time, she was also looking for ways to shake the Jacksons from their
complaisancy.
"You don't suppose she'll actually allow nigras to dance with whites?" she
gasped, but the wretched people wouldn't even take that idea seriously.
They only laughed.
"It's a wedding, my dear, not a revolution," Sally tried to
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placate her. Mrs. Perkins sniffed, taking a long time to put on her
gloves. "You never know. Sarah's obviously a freethinker. "
It was Lizzie who saw him first, face iodined, shirt damed, hovering at
the side of the house, staring, she was sure, at her. She made a-hurried
farewell to Sassy, and moved as quickly as feigned lack of interest would
allow to be near him.
"Why, who's this mess of a boy?" she asked the world, thus drawing
everyone's attention to their proximity. "It can't be young James?"
Mrs. Perkins beamed in satisfaction; Sally concerned herself with tea
things and Parson Dick; Sassy giggled and gave unnecessary orders to the
slave nurse to tend little Jane.
But James stared at his son and Lizzie as if the best idea in all the
world had just occurred to him.
Jass smiled shyly at her attention. "Miss Lizzie, you're looking lovely,"
he said.
Generally, girls of his own age confused Jass, but he liked Lizzie. She
was so pretty. Somehow, she always made him feel like a callow boy, but
that didn't matter because he had an exquisite revenge. Alone in his bed
at night, when that vile thing happened to his body that demanded
attention but could not be spoken of to anyone, or even considered in
waking hours, he would fight against it and sometimes win. But sometimes
the urge for the pleasure was so intense that he would lose the battle,
and when he did, it was often Lizzie's face that he imagined, and her
golden hair, and lovely body. He had no clear idea of what the unclad
white female form looked like, but he assumed, and was assured by his
schoolmates, that it was simply a paler version of the black, and so he
had an intimate familiarity with what he imagined Lizzie's nakedness to
be. It was his constant triumph over her perpetual skittishness with him.
Having no idea of what was in his mind, Lizzie rejected the spoken
compliment. "Tush," she drawled, "just thinking of these nigra nuptials
makes me glow. Poor Mamma's in a terfible pother."
Jass was puzzled; he couldn't imagine Lizzie missing out on a party. "You