Read Freeman Online

Authors: Leonard Pitts Jr.

Tags: #Historical, #War

Freeman (2 page)

“Well, I got to go,” she said. “See you later, Sam.” She turned to walk way.

He watched her go, his bowl of greens forgotten. “See you later, Tilda,” he said.

It was fifteen years since he had seen her. He didn’t know the last time he had thought of her. Sam had trained himself
not
to think of her, because thinking of her only made it hurt worse, only reminded him how far his poor life had meandered from everything that made living it worth the trouble. So he had learned to lie flat on his belly in an orchard, Minié balls chewing up peaches and men indiscriminately, and not think of her. He had learned to languish on a train, pulse thudding in his temples, fighting for breath, the air rent with the moans of dying men, and not think of her. He had learned to live quietly, to take his meals alone in a corner of Edwina Brewster’s kitchen, to recline on his narrow bed in a narrow room on the top floor of a rooming house and read his books, not thinking of her.

Now a bonfire blazed to life at the end of the block, people dancing in golden light, now a parade carried Jefferson Davis by in effigy, a linen figure stuffed with straw hanging by the neck from a pole, now someone raised three cheers for U.S. Grant and bells tolled all over the city and flags fluttered and Edwina Brewster wept unreservedly and thinking of Tilda was all he could do. Tilda. His Tilda.

It was too much. Sam slipped back inside, climbed the stairs to his room, sat on his bed, and opened his book.

He tried to remember how not to think of her. It had been so long. Would she be thinking of him? He did not think she would.

Surely it would hurt her too much, not just the years they had been apart but also the years they had been together, the son they’d had. And lost.

Down went the book. He went to his window, where he was met by his own reflection: dark skin, a broad, strong nose, full lips, and deep set brown eyes. To his surprise, the sober, unrevealing face he had long ago trained himself to show the world, the
white
world in particular, had cracked open. Tears were running out.

The tumult from below came to him as an indistinct murmuring. Another string of fire flung itself across the sky to open in broad, bright tendrils of red. He saw it hazily through the tears. A quote came to him, the way quotes often did.

Now conscience wakes despair

That slumber’d,—wakes the bitter memory

Of what was, what is, and what must be

Worse
.

John Milton. And the words were sour to him in their unutterable truth.

All the things he had trained himself not to remember came rushing in on him. He remembered how Tilda had looked, sweaty, exhausted, and aching from her labors, but smiling for him. He remembered how his son had looked, smudged with blood and afterbirth, hair matted to his scalp, eyes pressed closed. And he remembered how the boy had looked fourteen years later, lying with mouth agape in a muddy bog. You would have thought him asleep, except for the bloody red hole in his back. Ajax, the woman had called him, another of her Greek names. But to Sam and Tilda, he had always been Luke.

It confused him some at first. “Why I got two names?” he had asked one evening when they had all come in staggering from a long day in the fields.

The look Tilda gave him then caused him to shrink away. “
She
call you what she want,” Tilda had said, jerking her head toward the big house. “But to us, you always be Luke.”

Mistress was aware they had their own names for each other, but she never said anything about it. She was, Tilda always said, a good mistress, all things considered.

To which Sam had always replied, “Yeah, but she still a mistress.” It was their one argument.

Enough
, he thought, turning from the window.
Enough
.

Tilda was years behind him now. He did not even know where she
was. Maybe still with Mistress. Maybe long since sold away. And even if she still belonged to Mistress, who was to say Mistress was still on the old place down in Mississippi? So many masters and mistresses had abandoned their properties because of the war, had taken their slaves and run to Texas.

There was no telling where Tilda was. She might be anywhere. She might even be dead.

Sam lay back on the bed. He did not pick up the book again, knowing it would be useless. Instead he lay there with eyes closed listening to the thump of fireworks and the muted cheers from the streets, trying to remember how not to think of her.

Sleep was long in coming.

In the morning, he walked through streets littered with tiny American flags and the charred remains of bonfires. The city was in a stupor of joy. He bought a paper from every paperboy he saw. The headlines shouted:

Victory!! Victory!!

Lee Finds His Waterloo

The Rebels Want Peace

The Nation’s Thanks To Its Glorious Heroes

He read as he walked. Robert E. Lee had surrendered at a place in Virginia called Appomattox Courthouse. Gen. Grant had declined to take him prisoner. A day of thanksgiving had been declared on the recommendation of the governor. Churches were expected to be packed all day.

“I might have known,” said Billy Horn, as Sam entered the reading room of the Library Company of Philadelphia. “War or peace, you will come through the door right on schedule with your head buried in a newspaper.”

“Good morning,” said Sam. The sight of a colored man reading was a never-ending source of wonder and consternation to his coworker. Sam set the papers on a counter.

Louisa Prentiss had thought the law forbidding slaves from being educated a foolish one and had made a show of flouting it. But no one bothered her about it. Mistress was the widow of a former Mississippi governor, the wealthiest woman in the county, and one of its most powerful people of either gender. It was generally accepted that she was “unconventional,” and if she pampered her slaves, if she gave them fancy Greek names or allowed them to read books openly, or refused to sell them even when you offered
her a fair price because she didn’t believe in breaking up families—even
nigger
families—well, no one dared say anything about it. “Miss Prentiss’s niggers,” her slaves were called and it was generally understood that they were untouchable.

Nevertheless, Sam had been glad to land in Philadelphia, where, he thought, a colored man with a book in hand would be no particular novelty, nor incite sidelong glances of threat and hostility. He had been mostly right about that, but there were exceptions. Billy Horn was one of them. Sam hoped without any real expectation that the white man would have nothing more to say on the subject. But that was impossible, he knew, for this particular white man on the first day of peace.

Horn was a shaggy young man who had been one of the first volunteers to join the federal army, driven by a profound conviction that no state could be allowed to just pick up and leave the Union whenever it so pleased. He had lost an arm in the first big engagement at Bull Run, convalesced, and then returned to Philadelphia where he promptly lost his fiancée, who could not envision her prospects married to a man with one arm. But as far as he was concerned, the ultimate betrayal had come the next year, when Abraham Lincoln issued his Emancipation Proclamation.

“He turned it into a slavery war,” Horn had groused darkly one day. He had been talking to a patron, but staring at Sam, who stood above him on the catwalk that circled the reading room, shelving books from a cart. “I did not sign up for that, sir. This was supposed to be a war to restore the Union, nothing more. I did not lose my arm for nigger freedom.” He had raised his voice on the last words. People had looked around reproachfully. Mary Cuthbert, the no-nonsense spinster who managed the library, had called him into her office.

He would apologize the next day. He would say he had been drunk. Sam knew better. Billy Horn had been sober as a funeral dirge. He came around the desk now, grinning beneath the heavy underbrush of a brown beard, and clapped Sam heartily on the shoulder. “I suppose you are pleased,” he said.

“We are at peace again,” said Sam. “I would think we would all be pleased.” He said it the way he said everything, especially to white men: his voice even and clear and free from any trace of Negro dialect. His enunciation was always pointedly correct. Everything about him was always pointedly correct. Especially with white men.

“You know what I mean,” Horn said, leaning close. His voice was like metal scraping stone and Sam smelled the awful, fermented breath. There would be no need for Horn to lie about it this time.

“You have been drinking,” said Sam.

“I have been
celebratin’
,” said Horn. “I’d expect you would, too. The slavery war is over. The niggers are free.”

Sam made himself smile, made his voice amiable. “Look, Billy, I have books to shelve.”

Horn’s face clouded. “Oh, now you think you’re good enough to give orders to a white man, is that it? I guess I shouldn’t be surprised. That’s what comes of nigger freedom.”

“You are inebriated,” said Sam.

Horn’s brow wrinkled as Sam had known it would. “Inny-
what
?” he demanded.

Sam smiled. He liked using big words, five-dollar words, on people who presumed to treat him as less than he was just because he was a Negro. He especially liked using them on white men like Horn, arrogant without just cause. It amused him to see them have to grope for the definition.

“It means you are drunk,” he said, turning on his heel and walking away. Not only were there books to shelve, but also returns to sort through, floors to sweep, garbage to empty. He did not have time for this. Sam began to gather the books patrons had left on the table Saturday night at closing. It did not escape him that it had been Horn’s job to re-shelve them before leaving work.

Sam got two tables away before Horn moved to intercept him. “Please allow me to pass,” said Sam. He spoke politely, spoke correctly, and he tried to ignore the heat he felt spike in his chest.

“You do like giving orders to white men, don’t you?”

“I have work to do,” said Sam. “Please allow me to do my work.”

“Free niggers,” snarled Horn with contempt. The big right hand came up and he shoved Sam. The books fell from Sam’s arms and he rocked back a single pace.

It was enough. Sam’s hands came up and before he could think, his right fist shot forward and smashed the tip of the bigger man’s nose. Billy Horn staggered, right hand coming up to catch the blood that gushed from his nostrils.

Sam was instantly appalled. He had just struck a one-armed man. Few things could be more despicable. He stepped forward, palms up, intending
to apologize. But now Horn’s one arm was coming toward him, the hand bloody and grasping. Sam leaned back out of range and the big man, drunken and overbalanced, stumbled and swept a stack of books to the floor.

“Free niggers!” he cried. “I’ll show you.”

“Mr. Horn!” A woman’s voice stabbed the moment and the air rushed out of it. Mary Cuthbert was standing in the doorway to her office, cheeks bloodless, mouth compressed to a thin, angry line. Sam wondered how long she had been standing there, watching them. Long enough, he decided. She didn’t even look his way.

“Join me in my office,” she told Horn, and that voice would brook no dissent.

Horn’s expression was that of a man just awakening and finding himself in a place he did not know. “Miss Cuthbert,” he said, stupidly.

She wheeled about and he had no choice but to follow. The door closed softly behind him. Miss Cuthbert lowered her shade.

Sam busied himself picking up books from the floor and off the desks. He could see the shadows of them against the shade, Miss Cuthbert seated at her desk, leaning back, hands tented before her, Horn perching on the edge of his chair, his single hand gesturing wildly. Sam could hear their voices, but he couldn’t make out the words. Not that it was necessary. The tone told him enough. Her voice was icy and sharp, his rose toward falsetto.

When the door opened five minutes later, Sam looked up in time to see Horn leave the room at something just short of a trot. He went straight for the front door, which closed behind him with a bang that made the windows rattle.

“Sam.” Miss Cuthbert was at her office door, beckoning for him.

“I am sorry,” he said, lowering himself into a seat that still bore the heat of its previous occupant.

She waved the apology down. “I saw it all,” she said. “You were the soul of forbearance as you have been every time that loutish man has sought to bait you. I should have dismissed him long ago, but what with his arm and his service to the Union, well, I could not do it. I suppose I felt sorry for him.”

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