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XXVII
AN INTERESTING ACQUAINTANCE
A FEW
days later, Rena looked out of the window near her desk and saw a low
basket phaeton, drawn by a sorrel pony, driven sharply into the clearing
and drawn up beside an oak sapling. The occupant of the phaeton, a tall,
handsome, well-preserved lady in middle life, with slightly gray hair,
alighted briskly from the phaeton, tied the pony to the sapling with a
hitching-strap, and advanced to the schoolhouse door.
Rena
wondered who the lady might be. She had a benevolent aspect, however,
and came forward to the desk with a smile, not at all embarrassed by the
wide-eyed inspection of the entire school.
"How
do you do?" she said, extending her hand to the teacher. "I live in the
neighborhood and am interested in the colored people -- a good many of
them once belonged to me. I heard something of your school, and thought
I should like to make your acquaintance."
"It
is very kind of you, indeed," murmured Rena respectfully.
"Yes,"
continued the lady, "I am not one of those who sit back and
blame their former slaves because they were freed. They are free now,
-- it is all decided and settled, -- and they ought to be taught enough
to enable them to make good use of their freedom. But really, my dear,
-- you must 't feel offended if I make a mistake, -- I am going to ask
you something very personal." She looked suggestively at the gaping pupils.
"The
school may take the morning recess now," announced the teacher. The pupils
filed out in an orderly manner, most of them stationing themselves about
the grounds in such places as would keep the teacher and the white lady
in view. Very few white persons approved of the colored schools; no other
white person had ever visited this one.
"Are
you really colored?" asked the lady, when the children had withdrawn.
A year
and a half earlier, Rena would have met the question by some display of
self-consciousness. Now, she replied simply and directly.
"Yes,
ma'am, I am colored."
The
lady, who had been studying her as closely as good manners would permit,
sighed regretfully.
"Well,
it's a shame. No one would ever think it. If you chose to conceal it,
no one would ever be the wiser. What is your name, child, and where were
you brought up? You must have a romantic history."
Rena
gave her name and a few facts in regard to her past. The lady was so much
interested, and put so many and such searching questions,
that Rena really found it more difficult to suppress the fact that she
had been white, than she had formerly had in hiding her African origin.
There was about the girl an air of real refinement that pleased the lady,
-- the refinement not merely of a fine nature, but of contact with cultured
people; a certain reserve of speech and manner quite inconsistent with
Mrs. Tryon's experience of colored women. The lady was interested and
slightly mystified. A generous, impulsive spirit, -- her son's own mother,
-- she made minute inquiries about the school and the pupils, several
of whom she knew by name. Rena stated that the two months' term was nearing
its end, and that she was training the children in various declamations
and dialogues for the exhibition at the close.
"I
shall attend it," declared the lady positively. "I'm sure you are doing
a good work, and it's very noble of you to undertake it when you might
have a very different future. If I can serve you at any time, don't hesitate
to call upon me. I live in the big white house just before you turn out
of the Clinton road to come this way. I'm only a widow, but my son George
lives with me and has some influence in the neighborhood. He drove by
here yesterday with the lady he is going to marry. It was she who told
me about you."
Was
it the name, or some subtle resemblance in speech or feature, that recalled
Tryon's image to Rena's mind? It was not so far away -- the image of the
loving Tryon -- that any powerful witchcraft was required
to call it up. His mother was a widow; Rena had thought, in happier days,
that she might be such a kind lady as this. But the cruel Tryon who had
left her -- his mother would be some hard, cold, proud woman, who would
regard a negro as but little better than a dog, and who would not soil
her lips by addressing a colored person upon any other terms than as a
servant. She knew, too, that Tryon did not live in Sampson County, though
the exact location of his home was not clear to her.
"And
where are you staying, my dear?" asked the good lady.
"I'm
boarding at Mrs. Wain's," answered Rena.
"Mrs.
Wain's?"
"Yes,
they live in the old Campbell place."
"Oh,
yes -- Aunt Nancy. She's a good enough woman, but we don't think much
of her son Jeff. He married my Amanda after the war -- she used to belong
to me, and ought to have known better. He abused her most shamefully,
and had to be threatened with the law. She left him a year or so ago and
went away; I have 't seen her lately. Well, good-by, child; I'm coming
to your exhibition. If you ever pass my house, come in and see me."
The
good lady had talked for half an hour, and had brought a ray of sunshine
into the teacher's monotonous life, heretofore lighted only by the uncertain
lamp of high resolve. She had satisfied a pardonable curiosity,
and had gone away without mentioning her name.
Rena
saw Plato untying the pony as the lady climbed into the phaeton.
"Who
was the lady, Plato?" asked the teacher when the visitor had driven away.
"Dat
'uz my ole mist'iss, ma'm," returned Plato proudly, -- s; ole Mis' 'Liza."
"Mis'
'Liza who?" asked Rena.
"Mis'
'Liza Tryon. I use' ter b'long ter her. Dat 'uz her son, my young Mars
Geo'ge, w'at driv pas' hyuh yistiddy wid 'is sweetheart."
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