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XXVIII
THE LOST KNIFE
RENA
had found her task not a difficult one so far as discipline was concerned.
Her pupils were of a docile race, and school to them had all the charm
of novelty. The teacher commanded some awe because she was a stranger,
and some, perhaps, because she was white; for the theory of blackness
as propounded by Plato could not quite counter-balance in the young African
mind the evidence of their own senses. She combined gentleness with firmness;
and if these had not been sufficient, she had reserves of character which
would have given her the mastery over much less plastic material than
these ignorant but eager young people. The work of instruction was simple
enough, for most of the pupils began with the alphabet, which they acquired
from Webster's blue-backed spelling-book, the palladium of Southern education
at that epoch. The much abused carpet-baggers had put the spelling-book
within reach of every child of school age in North Carolina, -- a fact
which is often overlooked when the carpet-baggers are held up to public
odium. Even the devil should have his due, and is not so black as he is
painted.
At the time when she learned that Tryon lived in the neighborhood, Rena
had already been subjected for several weeks to a trying ordeal. Wain
had begun to persecute her with marked attentions. She had at first gone
to board at his house, -- or, by courtesy, with his mother. For a week
or two she had considered his attentions in no other light than those
of a member of the school committee sharing her own zeal and interested
in seeing the school successfully carried on. In this character Wain had
driven her to the town for her examination; he had busied himself about
putting the schoolhouse in order, and in various matters affecting the
conduct of the school. He had jocularly offered to come and whip the children
for her, and had found it convenient to drop in occasionally, ostensibly
to see what progress the work was making.
"Dese
child'en," he would observe sonorously, in the presence of the school,
"oughter be monst'ous glad ter have de chance er settin' under yo' instruction,
Miss Rena. I'm sho' eve'body in dis neighbo'hood 'preciates de priv'lege
er havin' you in ou' mids'."
Though
slightly embarrassing to the teacher, these public demonstrations were
endurable so long as they could be regarded as mere official appreciation
of her work. Sincerely in earnest about her undertaking, she had plunged
into it with all the intensity of a serious nature which love had stirred
to activity. A pessimist might have sighed sadly or smiled
cynically at the notion that a poor, weak girl, with a dangerous beauty
and a sensitive soul, and troubles enough of her own, should hope to accomplish
anything appreciable toward lifting the black mass still floundering in
the mud where slavery had left it, and where emancipation had found it,
-- the mud in which, for aught that could be seen to the contrary, her
little feet, too, were hopelessly entangled. It might have seemed like
expecting a man to lift himself by his boot-straps.
But
Rena was no philosopher, either sad or cheerful. She could not even have
replied to this argument, that races must lift themselves, and the most
that can be done by others is to give them opportunity and fair play.
Hers was a simpler reasoning, -- the logic by which the world is kept
going onward and upward when philosophers are at odds and reformers are
not forthcoming. She knew that for every child she taught to read and
write she opened, if ever so little, the door of opportunity, and she
was happy in the consciousness of performing a duty which seemed all the
more imperative because newly discovered. Her zeal, indeed, for the time
being was like that of an early Christian, who was more willing than not
to die for his faith. Rena had fully and firmly made up her mind to sacrifice
her life upon this altar. Her absorption in the work had not been without
its reward, for thereby she had been able to keep at a distance the spectre
of her lost love. Her dreams she could not control, but she
banished Tryon as far as possible from her waking thoughts.
When
Wain's attentions became obviously personal, Rena's new vestal instinct
took alarm, and she began to apprehend his character more clearly. She
had long ago learned that his pretensions to wealth were a sham. He was
nominal owner of a large plantation, it is true; but the land was worn
out, and mortgaged to the limit of its security value. His reputed droves
of cattle and hogs had dwindled to a mere handful of lean and listless
brutes.
Her
clear eye, when once set to take Wain's measure, soon fathomed his shallow,
selfish soul, and detected, or at least divined, behind his mask of good-nature
a lurking brutality which filled her with vague distrust, needing only
occasion to develop it into active apprehension, -- occasion which was
not long wanting. She avoided being alone with him at home by keeping
carefully with the women of the house. If she were left alone, -- and
they soon showed a tendency to leave her on any pretext whenever Wain
came near, -- she would seek her own room and lock the door. She preferred
not to offend Wain; she was far away from home and in a measure in his
power, but she dreaded his compliments and sickened at his smile. She
was also compelled to hear his relations sing his praises.
"My
son Jeff," old Mrs. Wain would say, "is de bes' man you ever seed. His
fus' wife had de easies' time an' de happies' time er ary
woman in dis settlement. He's grieve' fer her a long time, but I reckon
he's gittin' over it, an' de nex' 'oman w'at marries him'll git a box
er pyo' gol', ef I does say it as is his own mammy."
Rena
had thought Wain rather harsh with his household, except in her immediate
presence. His mother and sister seemed more or less afraid of him, and
the children often anxious to avoid him.
One
day, he timed his visit to the schoolhouse so as to walk home with Rena
through the woods. When she became aware of his purpose, she called to
one of the children who was loitering behind the others, "Wait a minute,
Jenny. I'm going your way, and you can walk along with me."
Wain
with difficulty hid a scowl behind a smiling front. When they had gone
a little distance along the road through the woods, he clapped his hand
upon his pocket.
"I
declare ter goodness," he exclaimed, "ef I ain't dropped my pocket-knife!
I thought I felt somethin' slip th'ough dat hole in my pocket jes' by
the big pine stump in the schoolhouse ya'd. Jinny, chile, run back an'
hunt fer my knife, an' I'll give yer five cents ef yer find it. Me an'
Miss Rena'll walk on slow 'tel you ketches us."
Rena
did not dare to object, though she was afraid to be alone with this man.
If she could have had a moment to think, she would have volunteered to
go back with Jenny and look for the knife, which, although a palpable
subterfuge on her part, would have been one to which Wain
could not object; but the child, dazzled by the prospect of reward, had
darted back so quickly that this way of escape was cut off. She was evidently
in for a declaration of love, which she had taken infinite pains to avoid.
Just the form it would assume, she could not foresee. She was not long
left in suspense. No sooner was the child well oat of sight than Wain
threw his arms suddenly about her waist and smilingly attempted to kiss
her.
Speechless
with fear and indignation, she tore herself from his grasp with totally
unexpected force, and fled incontinently along the forest path. Wain --
who, to do him justice, had merely meant to declare his passion in what
he had hoped might prove a not unacceptable fashion -- followed in some
alarm, expostulating and apologizing as he went. But he was heavy and
Rena was light, and fear lent wings to her feet. He followed her until
he saw her enter the house of Elder Johnson, the father of several of
her pupils, after which he sneaked uneasily homeward, somewhat apprehensive
of the consequences of his abrupt wooing, which was evidently open to
an unfavorable construction. When, an hour later, Rena sent one of the
Johnson children for some of her things, with a message explaining that
the teacher had been invited to spend a few days at Elder Johnson's, Wain
felt a pronounced measure of relief. For an hour he had even thought it
might be better to relinquish his pursuit. With a fatuousness born of
vanity, however, no sooner had she sent her excuse than he
began to look upon her visit to Johnson's as a mere exhibition of coyness,
which, together with her conduct in the woods, was merely intended to
lure him on.
Right
upon the heels of the perturbation caused by Wain's conduct, Rena discovered
that Tryon lived in the neighborhood; that not only might she meet him
any day upon the highway, but that he had actually driven by the schoolhouse.
That he knew or would know of her proximity there could be no possible
doubt, since she had freely told his mother her name and her home. A hot
wave of shame swept over her at the thought that George Tryon might imagine
she were following him, throwing herself in his way, and at the thought
of the construction which he might place upon her actions. Caught thus
between two emotional fires, at the very time when her school duties,
owing to the approaching exhibition, demanded all her energies, Rena was
subjected to a physical and mental strain that only youth and health could
have resisted, and then only for a short time.
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