The Clansman
BOOK III
THE REIGN OF TERROR
CHAPTER VI
A WHISPER IN THE CROWD
THE excitement which proceeded the first Reconstruction election in
the South paralysed the industries of the country. When demagogues
poured down from the North and began their raving before crowds of
ignorant negroes, the plow stopped in the furrow, the hoe was dropped,
and the millenium was at hand.
Negro tenants, working under contracts issued by the Freedman's
Bureau, stopped work, and rode their landlords' mules and horses around
the county, following these orators.
The loss to the cotton crop alone from the abandonment of the
growing plant was estimated at over $60,000,000.
The one thing that saved the situation from despair was the large
grain and forage crops of the previous season which thrifty farmers had
stored in their barns. So important was the barn and its precious
contents that Dr. Cameron hired Jake to sleep in his.
This immense barn, which was situated at the foot of the hill some
two hundred yards behind the house, had become a favourite haunt of
Marion and Hugh. She had made a pet of the beautiful thoroughbred mare
which had belonged to Ben during the war. Marion went every day to give
her an apple or lump of sugar, or carry her a bunch of clover. The mare
would follow her about like a cat.
Another attraction at the barn for them was Becky Sharpe, Ben's
setter. She came to Marion one morning wagging her tail, seized her
dress, and led her into an empty stall, where beneath the trough lay
sleeping snugly ten little white-and-black spotted puppies.
The girl had never seen such a sight before and went into ecstasies.
Becky wagged her tail with pride at her compliments. Every morning she
would pull her gently into the stall just to hear her talk and laugh
and pet her babies.
Whatever election day meant to the men, to Marion it was one of
unalloyed happiness: she was to ride horseback alone and dance at her
first ball. Ben had taught her to ride, and told her she could take
Queen to Lover's Leap and back alone. Trembling with joy, her beautiful
face wreathed in smiles, she led the mare to the pond in the edge of
the lot and watched her drink its pure spring water.
When he helped her to mount in front of the hotel under her mother's
gaze, and saw her ride out of the gate, with the exquisite lines of her
little figure melting into the graceful lines of the mare's glistening
form, he exclaimed:
“I declare, I don't know which is the prettier, Marion or Queen!”
“I know,” was the mother's soft answer.
“They are both thoroughbreds,” said Ben, watching them admiringly.
“Wait till you see her to-night in her first ball-dress,” whispered
Mrs. Lenoir.
At noon Ben and Phil strolled to the polling-place to watch the
progress of the first election under Negro rule. The Square was jammed
with shouting, jostling, perspiring negroes, men, women, and children.
The day was warm, and the African odour was supreme even in the open
air.
A crowd of two hundred were packed around a peddler's box. There
were two of them—one crying the wares, and the other wrapping and
delivering the goods. They were selling a new patent poison for rats.
“I've only a few more bottles left now, gentlemen,” he shouted, “and
the polls will close at sundown. A great day for our brother in black.
Two years of army rations from the Freedman's Bureau, with old army
clothes thrown in, and now the ballot—the priceless glory of American
citizenship. But better still the very land is to be taken from these
proud aristocrats and given to the poor down-trodden black man. Forty
acres and a mule—think of it! Provided, mind you—that you have a
bottle of my wonder-worker to kill the rats and save your corn for the
mule. No man can have the mule unless he has corn; and no man can have
corn if he has rats—and only a few bottles left—”
“Gimme one,” yelled a negro.
“Forty acres and a mule, your old masters to work your land and pay
his rent in corn, while you sit back in the shade and see him sweat.”
“Gimme er bottle and two er dem pictures!” bawled another candidate
for a mule.
The peddler handed him the bottle and the pictures and threw a
handful of his labels among the crowd. These labels happened to be just
the size of the ballots, having on them the picture of a dead rat lying
on his back, and, above, the emblem of death, the cross-bones and
skull.
“Forty acres and a mule for every black man—why was I ever born
white? I never had no luck, nohow!”
Phil and Ben passed on nearer the polling-place, around which stood
a cordon of soldiers with a line of negro voters two hundred yards in
length extending back into the crowd.
The negro Leagues came in armed battallions and voted in droves,
carrying their muskets in their hands. Less than a dozen white men were
to be seen about the place.
The negroes, under the drill of the League and the Freedman's
Bureau, protected by the bayonet, were voting to enfranchise
themselves, disfranchise their former masters, ratify a new
constitution, and elect a legislature to do their will. Old Aleck was a
candidate for the House, chief poll-holder, and seemed to be in charge
of the movements of the voters outside the booth as well as inside. He
appeared to be omnipresent, and his self- importance was a sight Phil
had never dreamed. He could not keep his eyes off him.
“By George, Cameron, he's a wonder!” he laughed.
Aleck had suppressed as far as possible the story of the painted
stakes and the deed, after sending out warnings to the brethren to
beware of two enticing strangers. The surveyors had reaped a rich
harvest and passed on. Aleck made up his mind to go to Columbia, make
the laws himself, and never again trust a white man from the North or
South. The agent of the Freedman's Bureau at Piedmont tried to choke
him off the ticket. The League backed him to a man. He could neither
read nor write, but before he took to whiskey he had made a specialty
of revival exhortation, and his mouth was the most effective thing
about him. In this campaign he was an orator of no mean powers. He knew
what he wanted, and he knew what his people wanted, and he put the
thing in words so plain that a wayfaring man, though a fool, couldn't
make any mistake about it.
As he bustled past, forming a battalion of his brethren in line to
march to the polls, Phil followed his every movement with amused
interest.
Besides being so bow-legged that his walk was a moving joke, he was
so striking a negro in his personal appearance, he seemed to the young
Northerner almost a distinct type of man.
His head was small and seemed mashed on the sides until it bulged
into a double lobe behind. Even his ears, which he had pierced and hung
with red earbobs, seemed to have been crushed flat to the side of his
head. His kinked hair was wrapped in little hard rolls close to the
skull and bound tightly with dirty thread. His receding forehead was
high and indicated a cunning intelligence. His nose was broad and
crushed flat against his face. His jaws were strong and angular, mouth
wide, and lips thick, curling back from rows of solid teeth set
obliquely in their blue gums. The one perfect thing about him was the
size and setting of his mouth—he was a born African orator,
undoubtedly descended from a long line of savage spell-binders, whose
eloquence in the palaver houses of the jungle had made them native
leaders. His thin spindle-shanks supported an oblong, protruding
stomach, resembling an elderly monkey's, which seemed so heavy it
swayed his back to carry it.
The animal vivacity of his small eyes and the flexibility of his
eyebrows, which he worked up and down rapidly with every change of
countenance, expressed his eager desires.
He had laid aside his new shoes, which hurt him, and went barefooted
to facilitate his movements on the great occasion. His heels projected
and his foot was so flat that what should have been the hollow of it
made a hole in the dirt where he left his track.
He was already mellow with liquor, and was dressed in an old army
uniform and cap, with two horse-pistols buckled around his waist. On a
strap hanging from his shoulder were strung a half-dozen tin canteens
filled with whiskey.
A disturbance in the line of voters caused the young men to move
forward to see what it meant.
Two negro troopers had pulled Jake out of the line, and were
dragging him toward old Aleck.
The election judge straightened himself up with great dignity:
“What wuz de rapscallion doin'?”
“In de line, tryin' ter vote.”
“Fetch 'im befo' de judgment bar,” said Aleck, taking a drink from
one of his canteens.
The troopers brought Jake before the judge.
“Tryin' ter vote, is yer?”
“ 'Lowed I would.”
“You hear 'bout de great sassieties de Gubment's fomentin' in dis
country?”
“Yes, I hear erbout 'em.”
“Is yer er member er de Union League?”
“Na-sah. I'd rudder steal by myself. I doan' lak too many in de
party!”
“En yer ain't er No'f Ca'liny gemmen, is yer—yer ain't er member
er de 'Red Strings'?”
“Na-sah, I come when I'se called—dey doan' hatter put er string on
me—ner er block, ner er collar, ner er chain, ner er muzzle—”
“Will yer 'sprain ter dis cote—” railed Aleck.
“What cote? Dat ole army cote?” Jake laughed in loud peals that rang
over the square.
Aleck recovered his dignity and demanded angrily:
“Does yer belong ter de Heroes ob Americky?”
“Na-sah. I ain't burnt nobody's house ner barn yet, ner hamstrung no
stock, ner waylaid nobody atter night—honey, I ain't fit ter jine.
Heroes ob Americky! Is you er hero?”
“Ef yer doan' b'long ter no s'iety,” said Aleck with judicial
deliberation, “what is you?”
“Des er ole-fashun all-wool-en-er-yard-wide nigger dat stan's by his
ole marster 'cause he's his bes' frien', stays at home, en tends ter
his own business.”
“En yer pay no 'tenshun ter de orders I sent yer ter jine de
League?”
“Na-sah. I ain't er takin' orders f'um er skeercrow.”
Aleck ignored his insolence, secure in his power.
“You doan b'long ter no sassiety, what yer git in dat line ter vote
for?”
“Ain't I er nigger?”
“But yer ain't de right kin' er nigger. 'Res' dat man fer 'sturbin'
de peace.”
They put Jake in jail, persuaded his wife to leave him, and expelled
him from the Baptist Church, all within the week.
As the troopers led Jake to prison, a young negro apparently about
fifteen years old approached Aleck, holding in his hand one of the
peddler's rat labels, which had gotten well distributed among the
crowd. A group of negro boys followed him with these rat labels in
their hands, studying them intently.
“Look at dis ticket, Uncle Aleck,” said the leader.
“Mr. Alexander Lenoir, sah—is I yo' uncle, nigger?”
The youth walled his eyes angrily.
“Den doan' you call me er nigger!”
“Who yer talkin' to, sah? You kin fling yer sass at white folks,
but, honey, yuse er projeckin' wid death now!”
“I ain't er nigger—I'se er gemman, I is,” was the sullen answer.
“How ole is you?” asked Aleck in milder tones.
“Me mudder say sixteen—but de Buro man say I'se twenty-one
yistiddy, de day 'fo' 'lection.”
“Is you voted to-day?”
“Yessah; vote in all de boxes 'cept'n dis one. Look at dat ticket.
Is dat de straight ticket?”
Aleck, who couldn't read the twelve-inch letters of his favourite
bar-room sign, took the rat label and examined it critically.
“What ail it?” he asked at length.
The boy pointed at the picture of the rat.
“What dat rat doin', lyin' afar on his back, wid his heels cocked up
in de air—'pear ter me lak a rat otter be standin' on his feet?”
Aleck reexamined it carefully, and then smiled benignly on the
youth.
“De ignance er dese folks. What ud yer do widout er man lak me
enjued wid de sperit en de power ter splain sings?”
“You sho' got de sperits,” said the boy, impudently touching a
canteen.
Aleck ignored the remark and looked at the rat label smilingly.
“Ain't we er votin', ter-day, on de Constertooshun what's ter take
de ballot away f'um de white folks en gib all de power ter de cullud
gemmen—I axes yer dat?”
The boy stuck his thumbs under his arms and walled his eyes.
“Yessah!”
“Den dat means de ratification ob de Constertooshun!”
Phil laughed, followed, and watched them fold their tickets, get in
line, and vote the rat labels.
Ben turned toward a white man with gray beard, who stood watching
the crowd.
He was a pious member of the Presbyterian church, but his face
didn't have a pious expression to-day. He had been refused the right to
vote because he had aided the Confederacy by nursing one of his wounded
boys.
He touched his hat politely to Ben.
“What do you think of it, Colonel Cameron?” he asked with a touch of
scorn.
“What's your opinion, Mr. McAllister?”
“Well, Colonel, I've been a member of the church for over forty
years. I'm not a cussin' man—but there's a sight I never expected to
live to see. I've been a faithful citizen of this state for fifty
years. I can't vote, and a nigger is to be elected to-day to represent
me in the Legislature. Neither you, Colonel, nor your father are good
enough to vote. Every nigger in this county sixteen years old and up
voted to-day-I ain't a cussin' man, and I don't say it as a cuss-word,
but all I've got to say is, IF there BE such a thing as a d—-d shame—
that's it!”
“Mr. McAllister, the recording angel wouldn't have made a mark had
you said it without the 'IF.' “
“God knows what this country's comin' to—I don't,” said the old
man, bitterly. “I'm afraid to let my wife and daughter go out of the
house, or stay in it, without somebody with them.”
Ben leaned closer and whispered, as Phil approached:
“Come to my office to-night at ten o'clock; I want to see you on
some important business.”
The old man seized his hand eagerly.
“Shall I bring the boys?”
Ben smiled.
“No. I've seen them some time ago.”