Read A Perilous Proposal Online
Authors: Michael Phillips
Tags: #Reconstruction (U.S. history, 1865–1877)—Fiction, #Women plantation owners—Fiction, #Female friendship—Fiction, #Plantation life—Fiction, #Race relations—Fiction, #North Carolina—Fiction, #Young women—Fiction, #Racism—Fiction
“I cudn't let dem hurt an ol' lady.”
“I suppose not. But just watch yourself, Jake. That's all I'm saying. These are dangerous times. Just watch yourself.”
C
OTTON
34
A
ll this time, unknown to Jeremiah or anyone else but me, Katie had money worries because of two loans her mama had taken out at the bank during the war. So late that summer we were picking the cotton Mrs. Clairborne and her hired blacks had planted earlier in the year that was now ready to harvest and sell. We hoped to make enough money from it to pay off one of the loans. By then we were gradually seeing more and more of Jeremiah, and his curiosity about what was going on was mounting too. He was walking out to Rosewood more regularly to help us with thingsâand maybe for an excuse to see me once in a while too!
One morning we were out in the fields picking when I glanced up and saw Jeremiah walking toward us.
I paused and stood and stretched my back. About the same time Katie noticed him too and walked over to meet him near where I was standing.
“You ladies is workin' mighty hard,” said Jeremiah. “I been watchin' the goin's-on at Mr. Watson's mill,” he went on. “It seems t' me dat you could use a couple more han's.”
Katie smiled a weary smile. “I'm not going to
pretend that we don't need help, Jeremiah,” she said. “But what about your father? Does Henryâ?”
“He don' know where I went. I ain't sayin' he ain't been askin' lots er questions. But I ain't tol' him nuthin' 'bout what I seen here.”
“Thank you, Jeremiah. We are all very appreciative of your help.”
Katie went back to the row she was working on. I started in picking again too and Jeremiah started working beside me. We noticed a difference right away in how fast the wagon filled. As we went Jeremiah and I talked a little, mostly about how life used to be when we were slaves. I suppose picking cotton couldn't help remind us.
We were dumping our pickings into two wagons on each side of the field. By the end of that day, with Jeremiah's help, we had one of them nearly full. Jeremiah came back the next day, and the day after that. We found another bag in the barn and now started moving even faster. The second day we worked till about noon, then finally stopped to get ready to take both wagons into town.
We ate some lunch, then hitched a team of two horses to each wagon. To get all the cotton to town I'd have to drive one of the wagons myself. It couldn't be helped. Jeremiah jumped up beside me. I shouldn't have been surprised, but I was. Pleased too. I felt his eyes on me and kept my own eyes straight ahead. I called to my two horses and followed Katie onto the road.
“You min' me ridin' wiff you?” he asked.
I shook my head. “No, I don't reckon I mind.”
“Dat's good.”
“I was right sorry to hear about your mama,” I added after a bit.
I felt him stiffen beside me, and I quickly regretted my words. We rode in silence for some time before he finally said anything more.
“She wuz a fine woman.”
“I'm sure she was,” I said. “Your papa too.”
He shrugged, and I was confused by the expression on his face. “Effen you say so,” he said.
“I lost my mama too,” I said. I blinked away sudden tears and focused on following the wagon ahead of me. Jeremiah didn't reply. I figured that was probably just as well. Talking about my family could lead to more questions I wasn't ready to answer.
About a mile from town, Jeremiah said suddenly, “Slow down an' I'll jump off here.”
I realized that was a good idea, so nobody in town would see us ride in together. I slowed the horses to a walk and just before he jumped off, he surprised me again by reaching for my hand and giving it a quick squeeze.
“I's sorry 'bout yer mama too,” he said, not quite meeting my eyes. Then he hopped off the wagon and disappeared across a field.
We rode into Greens Crossing a short time later on the two wagons, bouncing along the street toward Watson's Mill, Katie leading, me following. Out of the corner of my eye, I saw Henry as we passed the livery stable. I could tell he was watching us with an expression of growing curiosity.
A S
TRANGER
W
HO
W
ASN'T A
S
TRANGER
35
J
EREMIAH DIDN'T HEAD OUT TO
R
OSEWOOD THE
next day, since the girls were planning to take the day to catch up with their regular chores about the place and get a little rest. Jeremiah had his own catching up to do, both at Mr. Watson's and at the livery. It seemed his father thought he had some explaining to do too.
“Where you been dese las' few days, Jeremiah?” Henry asked.
Jeremiah shrugged, determined to keep the girls' secret, but not wanting to lie to his father if he could avoid it. “Here and dere,” he answered.
“What you keepin' from me, boy?”
A bit of Jeremiah's old anger flared up. “Don' be callin' me boy,” he said. “No need to be fussin' over me neither. I been doin' fine on my own fer years.”
“Hab you? Hab you truly?”
Jeremiah looked away from Henry's searching eyes. No, he hadn't done fine, not always. But no use his father knowing that.
Henry sighed. “I ain't fussin', son,” he said. “I's worried 'bout you is all. Mr. Watson come here lookin' fer you. Says
you din't show up at the mill all day.”
“Well, I'm jes' fine. I be working at the mill all day today.”
The day after that, he was out again in the fields around Rosewood, picking cotton with Mayme, Katie, and Emma.
They worked all morning, though not quite so fast and frantic as before, laughing and talking and almost enjoying itâif a black person in the South could ever be said to enjoy picking cotton. Suddenly Jeremiah looked up and saw a rider approaching. The rider caught them all by surprise. Beside him, Jeremiah noticed the others stop working too and stand still, watching the man on horseback come from the direction of the house.
Jeremiah glanced at Mayme, but she was looking at Katie. He glanced next at Emma, who had a look of terror on her face. Suddenly Emma dropped her satchel, ran to grab William from the buckboard where he was sleeping, then bolted for the house. Jeremiah was giving mighty serious consideration to bolting in the opposite direction himself. But he stood there and waited with the others.
As the rider came closer, Jeremiah saw the look on Katie's face change from fear to relief. She gasped and it was clear she recognized the white man on the horse. She set down her satchel and began walking toward him as he reined in.
“Well now,” the stranger said, and even from where Jeremiah stood he could see his teeth glisten white as he flashed a mischievous grin, “are my eyes deceiving me! Is this my sister Rosalind out in the fields, or would this be . . .”
He hesitated, still with the grin on his lips, but also with a sudden look of doubt, as if he wasn't sure anymore who this tanned, strong, hardworking girl actually was.
“It's me,” said Katie, walking up to where he sat on his horse, “âit's me . . . Katie.”
“Well . . . Kathleen!” said the rider. “You have turned into a woman since I saw you!”
He began to dismount. “And you look so much like your mama,” he went on. “You've got her hair, her eyes, andâ”
Before he could say anything more, suddenly the man found himself smothered in the girl's embrace. Taken by surprise, he stood a moment with Katie's arms around him as if he didn't know what to think. Then slowly he put his arms around her and hugged her back.
Tired and worn though the man seemed, he looked like a dandy in Jeremiah's eyes. His white shirt had ruffles and bright buttons down the front. Showing from beneath the end of his fancy jacket were cuff links sparkling from the ends of his shirtsleeves. If he wasn't rich, he sure dressed like a man who was. Jeremiah saw the man look over Katie's head at Mayme for a few seconds with a puzzled expression.
Jeremiah took a step closer to Mayme. “Who dat?” he asked softly.
Mayme turned to face him. “Katie's uncle, I think,” she whispered.
“You know him?”
“I've never seen him before.”
“Does he know . . .'bout . . . ?”
“No. But it seems likely he will before long.”
“What you think he'll do?”
“I don't know.”
Mayme turned again to Jeremiah. “Maybe you oughta go,” she said. “One less person for Katie to have to explain will make it easier for her.” She smiled, though it wasn't quite convincing. No doubt she was worried about what this man's coming would mean to their future. “Thank you so much for your help.”
“Don' mention it, Mayme,” he said. “I jes' hope no trouble comes fer you.”
“We'll try to get word to you. I don't know what me and Emma will do if he makes us leave, but I'll come see you somehow, whatever happens.”
K
INFOLK
36
I
watched Jeremiah walk away across the field with his long strides and the broad stretch of his shoulders. Yes, sir, he was a strong and mighty fine-looking boy.
I turned back to where Katie still stood in her uncle's arms, just holding him tight. The man was obviously uncomfortable. He relaxed his own arms and tried to ease away.
“Where's your mama, Kathleen?” he said. “I need to have a talk with her.”
“Oh, Uncle Templeton!” cried Katie. “âshe's dead! They're all dead!”
She burst into the most mournful wail and began to sob, like a dam that had been held back all these months was bursting inside her. At the word dead, her uncle's face went ashen. Katie's wailing and sobbing left no doubt that she was telling the truth.