“I ain’t-a-gwine-ter-git-a-whuppin’!” sang Tobias in a passionate refrain.
“Now that’s just it,” said Gay, feeling as though he should like to throttle the procession of piccaninnies. “What I can’t understand is why the people about here—those I met at Bottom’s Ordinary, for instance, seem to have disliked me even before I came.”
Without surprise or embarrassment, she changed the basket from her right to her left arm, and this simple movement had the effect of placing him at a distance, though apparently by accident.
“That’s because of the old gentleman, I reckon,” she answered, “my folks all hated him, I don’t know why.”
“But can you guess? You see I really want to understand. I’ve been away since I was eight years old and I have only the haziest memories.”
The question brought them into a sudden intimacy, as if his impulsive appeal to her had established a relation which had not existed the minute before. He liked the look of her strong shoulders, of her deep bosom rising in creamy white to her throat; and the quiver of her red lower lip when she talked, aroused in him a swift and facile emotion. The melancholy of the landscape, reacting on the dangerous softness of his mood, bent his nature toward her like a flame driven by the wind. Around them the red-topped orchard grass faded to pale rose in the twilight, and beyond the crumbling rail fence miles of feathery broomsedge swept to the pines that stood straight and black against the western horizon. Impressions of the hour and the scene, of colour and sound, were blended in the allurement which Nature proffered him, for her own ends, through the woman beside him. Not Blossom Revercomb, but the great Mother beguiled him. The forces that moved in the wind, in the waving broomsedge, and in the call of the whip-poor-will, stirred in his pulses as they stirred in the objects around him. That fugitive attraction of the body, which Nature has shielded at the cost of finer attributes, leaped upon him like a presence that had waited in earth and sky. Loftier aspirations vanished before it. Not his philosophy but the accident of a woman’s face worked for destiny.
“I never knew just how it was,” she answered slowly as if weighing her words, “but your uncle wasn’t one of our folks, you know. He bought the place the year before the war broke out, and there was always some mystery about him and about the life he led—never speaking to anybody if he could help it, always keeping himself shut up when he could. He hadn’t a good name in these parts, and the house hasn’t a good name either, for the darkies say it is ha’nted and that old Mrs. Jordan—’ole Miss’ they called her—still comes back out of her grave to rebuke the ha’nt of Mr. Jonathan. There is a path leading from the back porch to the poplar spring where none of them will go for water after nightfall. Uncle Abednego swears that he met his old master there one night when he went down to fill a bucket and that