it wasnât me had brushed her hair every morninâ, a hundred strokes, way she liked it.â She paused. In another womanâs voice Maggie said, âDear Maggie. You know how I care for you, child. But there is nothing, absolutely nothing, I can do. You do understand!â
Jesse shivered. When Maggie talked like this, Jesse felt there were two women living inside of his wife and one of them would remain a stranger.
âMistress using that Franky for ladyâs maid. Frankyâstraight out of the kitchen house into Mistressâs boudoir. You think Mistress ever give me my job back?â
Jesse shrugged. Had any man ever been asked so many questions he couldnât answer?
Jesse gave her his gift: a six-inch slippery-elm tube. Maggieâs face lit up briefly.
âWhatâs this?â
âWhistle. Rufus showed me how to whittle it. Took me three nights whittlinâ it while you and baby Jacob was sleepinâ.â
Jesse blew a high trill. âShapinâ that wooden ball inside without bustinâ the outsides, that was the sly part,â he said.
Jack the Driver slashed into the thickest part of the hog and twisted his blade to see the juces run. âHe ready,â he cried. âAnd he prime.â
Men slipped poles under the carcass and hoisted it onto the plank-and-barrel table. Aprons shielding their faces, women raked blackened yams out of the coals. Iron frypans filled with green kale fried in fatback were set on the table. Some celebrants owned plate and fork, others only spoon and wooden bowl. Jack ran his butcher knife over his whetstone, whisk, whisk, whisk, and tested the edge on the hair of his arm.
âDriver,â Rufus called, âwe donât need for you to be shavinâ that hog. We just want you cuttinâ him up.â
The children went to the head of the line. If the food ran out, it wouldnât be the children who suffered.
Someone said, âPraise the Lord for His blessings.â
Someone else said, âAmen.â
âYou want me to fetch your dinner?â Jesse asked.
âWhy you want to be with me?â Maggie stirred a circle in the dirt with her foot. She changed to her white-lady voice. âJesse, I am not intended for you. No doubt you are an excellent man, but when I look, I see nothing I desire. I cannot make you happy.â
Jesseâs voice was hoarse. âYou make me happy, give me what you can.â
Her dark swimming eyes turned away. âBut I ainât givinâ you nothinâ. I lie down with you and I donât feel nothinâ. Nary a itch!â
Jesse swallowed. âThat child wrapped warm enough?â He tucked cloth under the sleeping infantâs cheek.
The hog was speedily reduced. Rufus waved a ham hock. Grease streaked his chin.
Gunshots roared from the big house as the masters celebrated the birth of their Prince of Peace. When Mr. Coltâs pistol boomed its shots, all the coloreds fell silent except Rufus, who howled like a dog. âMaster got one of them guns you load on Sunday and shoot all week,â he whispered.
âMaster! Master!â children called as Samuel and his jolly guests came into the Quarters. Samuel put hard candies in every childâs hand.
âEvening, Uncle Agamemnon. Hope you got sufficient to eat. Rufus, Ellie. Iâm pleased that your new clothing fits you.â
Rufus stepped out to shake Duncanâs hand. âYoung Master, welcome home. Ainât no good sawmill work goinâ on since you gone away. We loafinâ all the time.â
Franky curtsied sillily. âMaster Duncan, you right fetchinâ in your soldier suit. Was that you shootinâ? Scared me half to death.â With focused concentration she aimed a mock rifle right at Duncanâs heart. âBang! Hee!â
Samuel said, âJack, youâve a grand bonfire and Hevenerâs George has his banjo tucked under his arm, so perhaps we could
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