So we did a lot of stopping and resting and I didn't know if we'd gone more than three or four miles before ten or eleven or whatever time it was getting to be. And I was still nervous and listening and looking out for anyone who might be following us. Still, I suppose, three or four miles from Rosewood meant that we were six or eight miles from the McSimmons place, and by the time we stopped somewhere to sleep for the night, we'd likely be ten or twelve miles away. So we were probably safe from anyone seeing us who shouldn't.
K
ATIE WATCHED UNTIL
M
RS
. M
C
S
IMMONS RODE
from sight, then turned back in our direction, as if to assure herselfâand convince herselfâthat we were really gone. Katie stood there and cried for a few minutes, relief and grief mingling in her tears. Then she wiped her eyes and walked across the yard to where her uncle was standing while his men unloaded two wagons.
He glanced up as she approached.
ââThey're gone, Uncle Burchard,'' said Katie.
ââWho's gone?'' he said gruffly.
ââMayme and the othersâthey've left.''
He glanced about, then peered down the road toward town.
ââI didn't see anyone,'' he said.
Katie said nothing.
ââWell, no matter,'' he added, ââas long as they're gone. I'm glad to see you came to your senses and decided to stay. Be a plumb fool thing to leave a good life here just for some no-good niggersâ''
A reply that would not have been kind rushed to Katie's lips, but she held it back.
âââI'm offering to let you stay and do as you please,'' her uncle continued. ââAin't too many girls with no family and no money that have it so good. So I hope you're grateful.''
ââI won't be staying, Uncle Burchard,'' said Katie.
ââWhat are you talking about?''
ââI'm leaving too.''
ââWith the niggers?''
ââNo.''
ââWhere are you going?''
ââI don't know, just away from here.''
He kept looking at her, then shook his head almost as if in disgust.
ââWell . . . suit yourself,'' he said. ââSounds like a fool thing to me, but I ain't going to make you stay. Don't expect me to nursemaid you.''
ââNo, sir. I don't, sir.''
Again Burchard Clairborne glanced toward town and this time frowned. Katie followed her uncle's gaze and saw Jeremiah walking toward them along the road.
ââWhat is he. . . . It's that colored boy from townâwhat does he want?''
ââHe and his father are friends of mine, Uncle Burchard,'' said Katie.
ââFriends . . . of
yours
?''
ââYes, sir.''
ââWhat in blazes . . . are all your friends colored! How'd your mama raise you, girl?''
ââTo show respect to everyone, sir,'' said Katie a little crossly, her feelings at last getting the better of her.
She turned and walked toward Jeremiah. ââThey're already gone,'' she said to him.
ââGone!'' exclaimed Jeremiah. ââYou mean Mayme and the others?''
Katie nodded. ââMayme said they'd already said enough good-byes and thought it would be easier this way.''
ââDangnashun!'' said Jeremiah under his breath, glancing about in every direction. ââHow long ago?''
Katie sighed. ââJust long enough. Mistress McSimmons was just here.''
ââSo dat's who was in dat buggy! She din't see dem, did she?''
ââNo. They left just in time. Your papa rode out to warn us.''
ââSo dat's what my daddy was shoutin' bout back dere when he passed me on de road.''
They walked past her uncle and his men toward the house. Katie felt her uncle watching her from the corner of his eye. She did her best to ignore him and led Jeremiah toward the door. Henry had seen Jeremiah arrive and had been ambling toward them. He now followed.
ââWha'chu gwine do, chil'?'' Henry asked when all three entered the kitchen.
ââI thought I ought to wait until Uncle Burchard and Mr. Sneed do whatever they're going to do at ten o'clock,'' said Katie. ââThen I'll go to Oakwood and see if I can find a job. My suitcase is all packed,'' she said, nodding toward the last remaining suitcase on the floor. They all stared at it for a moment, saddened at the sight.
ââWell, we's stayin' wiff you as long as you like, an' den we'll go inter town tergether. We'll carry dat bag er yers, Miz Kathleen. Don' seem right fo' a girl like you ter hab ter carry hit yerse'f.''
ââThank you, Henry, but I am sure I will manage. I have to get used to living on my own.''
ââStill don' seem right. But effen you's determined ter go ter Oakwood, leastways let us take you dere in one ob da livery's wagons. Dat's a long way ter walk.''
ââWould you like one last cup of coffee here with me?'' asked Katie as the three of them sat down at the table.
ââSoun's right fine ter me, Miz Kathleen.'' Henry nodded.
But Katie had barely begun to boil the water when the door opened behind her and her uncle walked in.
ââWhat are these two darkies doing in my house?'' he said angrily.
ââThey're my friends,'' said Katie. ââI'm fixing them some coffee.''
ââI thought you understood me, Kathleen, that I wanted no darkies around. You said the others were gone, andâ''
ââUncle Burchard,'' Katie interrupted, now getting angry herself. ââThis is still
my
kitchen and
my
house, or at least my mama's and daddy's. And it will be mine until Mr. Sneed tells me otherwise. Then I will leave and it will be yours. But until then, it is mine and my friends are welcome in it. And if you don't treat them with a little more respect, I just may ask
you
to leave.''
Her uncle stared at her, clearly dumbfounded that she would speak that way to him. He turned around and left, fuming but silent.
A
T A LITTLE AFTER NINE-THIRTY, MR. SNEED RODE
into Rosewood in his buggy.
Other people also arrived, including Mr. Taylor from the bank, who Katie's uncle had asked to be present as a witness to the proceedings. Then Mrs. Hammond was there, though what business it was of hers I didn't know, and a few other people from town that Katie recognized. I'm not sure exactly why, but I guess when things like this happen, they have to announce it to the public to make it legal or something so that people have a chance to speak up or say if Rosewood has any debts they haven't paid before there is a change of ownership. Some folks were probably there for that, although most, like Mrs. Hammond, were just almighty curious after all they had heard.
Anyway, that's something like it, and because of those announcements that Mr. Sneed had posted in both Greens Crossing and Oakwood, and had put in the Charlotte newspaper, there were ten or fifteen other people who came, most of whom Katie didn't know.
Mr. Sneed was dressed in his business suit as usual, and carrying his briefcase with the papers in it. After he arrived, everybody gradually started clustering around and moving toward the front of the house, around the other side from the barn where they'd been unloading the wagons.
Katie got her suitcase and carried it out of the kitchen and set it down outside. She wanted to be ready to leave as soon as it was over, and not have to go back into the house once it officially became her uncle's. Then she and Henry and Jeremiah followed the small crowd around to the front of the house. Some of the people glanced toward her now and then, wearing expressions she couldn't altogether understand. Were they glad to see the place taken away from her after she'd fooled everybody, including them? Katie couldn't tell.
Mr. Sneed and her uncle were already standing up on the porch, and Mr. Sneed had opened his briefcase and began talking to the small gathering of people standing listening. Katie and Henry and Jeremiah stood in back. Mr. Sneed and her uncle paid no attention to them, but every once in a while Mrs. Hammond or one of the other people from town glanced back at Katie. Katie couldn't tell whether they were sorry for her, or just curious what she was thinking.
ââ. . . all for coming today,'' Mr. Sneed was saying. ââWe are here to comply with certain legalities connected with the papers filed by Mr. Burchard Clairborne for the disposition of the estate known as Rosewood in light of the tragic death of its owner, Mr. Richard Clairborne, brother of the filer in these proceedings.
ââAs part of that process,'' he went on, ââthe law requires that the opportunity be given to any and all persons who may have claims to put forward in the matter of unpaid loans, debts, or other encumbrances on the property or incurred by the owners or his heirs, including, I might add,'' he said, glancing for the first time to where Katie stood, ââany and all of those, of whatever race, who have been living here and operating the plantation since the unfortunate deaths of Mr. Richard Clairborne and his wife and sons.
ââThis will provide a final opportunity for any and all interested parties to set forth the claims to which they consider themselves entitled, after which time the court documents that have been prepared, along with a new deed to the property, will be enforced as per the instructions of the court, and title will officially be granted and turned over to the brother of the deceased, Mr. Burchard Clairborne.''
Mr. Sneed paused briefly, cleared his throat, put on a pair of reading spectacles, and then began to read from the document he was holding in his hand.
ââWhereas the land and real property known as Rosewood and situated near Greens Crossing in Shenandoah County, North Carolina,'' he began, continuing on with a lot of legal-sounding talk and descriptions, with words like
wherefore
and
insofar as
and
lien
and
deed
and
encumbrance
and
encroachment
and
just cause
and
due notice
and
failure to comply
. Katie couldn't understand more than a dozen words of most of it. And if she didn't understand any more than that, how much less did Henry and Jeremiah understand as they stood there with her at the back of the small crowd.
Henry leaned close and whispered, ââDon' seem dat dese yere lawyers kin speak a word ob real English nohow!''
Katie nodded, thinking that no matter how highfalutin' Mr. Sneed made it sound, all his fancy words didn't change the fact that they were taking her home away.
But the three of them stood patiently listening, waiting for Mr. Sneed to get finished. Then they would leave.
Nobody said anything, even after Mr. Sneed paused to give them the chance to say if Rosewood owed them anything or if anyone objected or had any kind of what he called a claim to put forward. Katie wondered why they'd all come if they didn't have anything to say. But if Mrs. Hammond was anything like the rest, they probably came just to get a look at the place and to snoop around, and maybe see the new owner after all they'd heard about Katie and me and what we'd done. They tried to pretend they weren't interested and didn't notice, but they stole glances at Katie now and then. Whatever it was they were thinking, the fact was that we'd been written about in the newspaper and those who'd heard about it, and even those who'd just heard all the gossip about us, couldn't help being mighty curious about the girl Kathleen Clairborne, who had grown up to be a fetching young woman but who, folks said, seemed to take to coloreds more than was natural for any white person. And as she stood there with Henry and Jeremiah, everything they'd heard seemed to their own eyes to be true enough.
M
R
. S
NEED PUT DOWN THE PAPER HE'D BEEN
reading and adjusted his spectacles. The people shuffled about where they were standing as if they were getting bored with it just like Katie was.
Then Mr. Sneed picked up another single sheet of paper.
ââI have here a new deed to Rosewood,'' he said. ââIn the absence of the original deed to the property, which we have unfortunately not been able to locate, and as authorized by the court and the laws of the United States government and the state of North Carolina, a new deed has been executed and duly witnessed, and will now be issued to Mr. Burchard Clairborne, and, with his signature, will entitle him to full legal ownership, and with all the incumbent rights and privileges therein, to theâ''
It had been so quiet for so long, with no sound but the droning of Mr. Sneed's voice, that when the hooves of a galloping horse intruded into the proceedings, everyone noticed the sound immediately and began turning their heads to see where it was coming from. It even startled Mr. Sneed enough that he stopped what he'd been saying in midsentence.
But no one saw the horse coming on the road from town on the other side of the house, even though they heard clearly enough that whoever it was, was riding fast, and coming their way.
Just as Mr. Sneed had decided to try to start speaking again and finish the transfer of ownership, suddenly the horse and rider tore around the corner of the house in a tumult of sound and commotion, sending Katie and Henry and Jeremiah and the rest of the small crowd scurrying to get out of the way.
A man was yelling and whipping his horse into as much speed as it had left, even though the poor thing was exhausted and sweating and frothing from coming a long way.