HF - 03 - The Devil's Own (26 page)

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Authors: Christopher Nicole

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BOOK: HF - 03 - The Devil's Own
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'By God,' Kit said. 'A runaway.'

She buttoned his shirt for him. 'Every so often there is a new arrival who behaves in this fashion.'

'And you knew this, yesterday?' He held her shoulders. 'And did not tell me?'

'It was your wedding day.'

'Was it not yours?'

She smiled, and kissed him on the mouth. 'Slaves are a problem I grew up with. To you they may appear to be a problem. And as it happened, you would have been needlessly concerned. The poor savage but sought the beach, and clung there until my people found him, this morning. Now come, we must attend his execution.'

'His ...' Kit's hands slowly fell to his side. 'His execution?'

'Of course,' she said. 'There is only one punishment for runaways. He will be burned alive, as soon as you are dressed.'

 

 

6

 

Across the Water

 

Marguerite had already left the house and was about to mount her horse when Kit caught up with her. 'You cannot mean that,' he said.

 

A Negro slave held her bridle, and Maurice Peter waited to give her a knee up to her side-saddle. Her six mastiffs trotted from the house to follow her. She settled herself, reins in her left hand, and looked down at him. "What else can I mean? There is no other punishment for runaways.'

'But ...' he grasped her stirrup. 'It is barbaric, Marguerite. I ... I had no idea of what they spoke, when they warned me that I might not find everything here to my liking. But this ...'

She frowned, very slightly. 'They?'

He waved his hand. 'Everyone. Barnee

Her forehead cleared. "What did Barnee have to say about me, Kit?'

He felt his cheeks burning. She was so calm, and so admonitory, as if she were a schoolmarm and he a little boy. 'He said your methods were your own.'

'Ah,' she said. 'Indeed they are, sweet Kit.'

'I could detect no approval in his tone. Rather the reverse.'

She smiled. 'No doubt Barnee's approval is important to you. We will discuss my methods, you and I, my darling. But not in front of the house servants. Will you mount, and ride with me?'

Another horse waited. Kit scrambled into the saddle, and grasped the reins with both hands. She regarded him with a critical look.

'We will have to make you practise, I think. Nothing so earns a man respect as to sit a horse well.'

Now he was angry. 'I assure you, madam, I need to earn respect from no man.'

'I never doubted that for an instant, Kit. I but wished to be sure you always possessed mine.' She walked her horse in front of him, began the descent of the gradual slope towards the slave compound. She pointed, with her whip, at the houses grouped perhaps half a mile to their right. 'I have not had the chance to show you our plantation, my darling. That is the village of the white staff.'

'I had gathered that for myself.'

She half turned her head, then changed her mind and ignored the brusqueness in his tone. 'Have you any idea how many people live there, as you are so knowledgeable?'

'You told me you employed thirty overseers.'

'Only twenty overseers,' she said. 'The other ten are bookkeepers, and men with a knowledge of machinery who are required to keep the grinding house in good repair. For upon that our entire prosperity depends.' Her whip moved, a few inches, to point to the bulk of the boiling house, dominated by its huge square chimney, even larger than that which rose from the kitchen of the Great House. 'But of course,' she said, 'they have their wives and families living with them. I even employ a schoolteacher, a lady from St John's. My intention is to make Green Grove entirely self-supporting. In all, counting you and me, my darling, there are fifty-seven white people on this plantation.'

'A sizeable number.'

'And yet hardly sufficient.' The whip moved again, to point to the rows of barracoons at the bottom of the hill. 'When you consider that there are five hundred blacks. Now tell me, Kit, what do you think keeps them down there, and us up here? For I do assure you, it is a mistake to assume the blacks entirely lack intelligence, or the ability to count. Perhaps you imagine that it is the knowledge of your good right arm, your unerring accuracy with a pistol, your terrible prowess with a sword. But you arrived here only last month, and they have been there for twenty years and more.'

'Now you seek to mock me.'

'I shall never do that, Kit. I give you my word. But I must make you understand that we l
ive in a world which is con
structed upon fear, and fear alone. Those blacks fear my overseers, because they know the overseers will punish them savagely for any transgressions, but they fear me more, because they know also that my overseers are but carrying out my will. And now it is our will, Kit. There can be no doubt in anyone's mind that this is so.'

'I understand everything you say, Marguerite. And I appreciate the reasoning behind it. I even appreciate that it may be necessary to execute runaways, although by my faith I find it hard to punish a man so terribly for behaving as I should myself. But if it is to be the case, why not hang him or shoot him or behead him? Is not the mere fact of dying awful enough? To burn a man alive ... can there be a worse fate?'

'There can indeed,' she remarked. 'But that is reserved for the black who raises his or her hand to a white. As for burning alive, it is barbaric to be sure. But then, you
see, we are not concerned with
the man who is about to die. He is dead from the moment he makes the fateful decision to break out. We are concerned with the effect we must have upon the brains of those who remain behind upon this earth and more particularly upon this estate. They must hold at the forefront of their minds, for the rest of their lives, the awful spectacle, the awful sound, the awful stench, of a man they know being consumed to ashes, so that whenever the idea of escape enters their minds, they will reject it instinctively. Now come, they are ready.'

They had reached the foot of the hill, and the entrance to the slave compound. Here the majority of the overseers were gathered, for in view of the escape there was no field work today, as yet; the white men were mounted, and armed, at once with the fearful cartwhip and with swords and pistols. In front of them, gathered in a vast concourse, dressed uniformly in white calico, drawers for the men and chemises for the women, were the slaves; their children milled about them, but these were permitted to be naked. They looked no different to the previous afternoon, save that today they were silent, and there were no smiles to be seen. They watched the overseers, and they watched their approaching mistress, and they watched too the stake erected outside their gate, made of green timber, but surrounded by carefully dried wood and leaves
stacked as high as a man's knees.

Passmore waited some distance from his fellows. Now he urged his horse closer to Marguerite's. 'It is ready, Mistress Hilton.' His eyes flickered to Kit, and then back again.

Marguerite turned her head. 'Will you give the order, my darling?'

He gazed at her in utter horror. 'Me? I cannot, Marguerite, I swore an oath, after Panama, that I would never again take a human life, except in defence of my own.'

Her frown was beginning to gather, as Passmore was beginning to smile.

'Surely you were then suffering from the pangs of conscience, my darling,' she said gently. 'Oaths should be sworn only in the clear light of sober day.'

'None the less, it was sworn,' Kit insisted. 'And can you not make an exception, this day of all days? It is the first of your new married life. No one could possibly mistake a gesture of magnanimity as weakness this morning. Why, kings and queens are accustomed to grant an amnesty on the morrow of their coronation.'

Marguerite looked at him for some seconds, then she said, still without taking her eyes from her husband's face, 'You may bring the prisoner out, Passmore.' She waited until the overseer was out of earshot, then she said, still speaking very softly, 'Dear, dear Kit, I do admire your humanity. But please believe me when I say that even if you meant to honour your oath, it would hardly apply to these blacks.'

'Are they not human?' Kit demanded.

A slight shrug of those exquisite shoulders. 'Perhaps, if we stretch the term. But I would not do so. They are certainly an inferior species. Can you doubt that? Oh, you will hold up Agrippa, of course. Then Agrippa is a human amongst the sub-humans. I would willingly hold
you
up, as a demigod. Yet would I not suppose you the Deity Himself. And are we not in His image created? There are classes of all things. So there is God, and His angels, and there are men, and there are blacks. Believe me, Kit, as you have studied seamanship and battle, the use of weapons and the leadership of men, I have, perforce, had to study these creatures to whom you would arrogate a humanity equal to your own. If you have a 158 fault at all, it is your own modesty, your own diminution of yourself and your species. I would correct that so slight fault. Now hear me out. You have but to ask of me. No, I would not have it so. Demand of me, Kit, and it shall be yours, of my person and of my wealth. Both are considerable. Would you have a ship, larger than any ever built? I will build it for you. Would you have a sword, made of solid gold, and yet sewn through with steel to make it a serviceable weapon? Be sure that you shall have it. Would you take the whip to my back? Be sure, that in the privacy of our bedchamber, I will bend before you, and smile while the blood flows. In return I ask only two things of you. Nay, I demand only two things of you, in exchange for the immensity I now place within your grasp. Support me in the rule of Green Grove, for upon this rock are all our powers founded. And love me, and me alone. I am sufficiently a woman, who has already been married, to understand that my body may not always satisfy a true man. But
love
only me, Kit, no matter where you may find your comfort. Supposing I should become unable to provide it for you. Now let us, together, supervise this execution.'

 

For the black man was being brought from the hut in which he had been chained, by four of the Negro foremen, heads held high as they dragged their victim forth, because they were acting for the superior being, the demi goddess, the mistress.

 

The man himself scarce wasted his time in fighting them or in struggling, and he knew better than to waste his precious breath in begging for mercy. But as he was taken to the stake he stared at Marguerite, and occasionally his lips moved, silently.

'He is cursing you,' Kit said.

'I have been cursed before. But he left his gods behind in Africa. They will not help him here.'

The man was at the stake, and being pressed against it while iron chains were passed around his waist and under his armpits, and secured to keep him upright. Meanwhile his drawers were removed from his thighs, to leave him naked.

'Can you not spare him that, at the least?' Kit asked.

'Material costs money,' Marguerite pointed out. 'Even

 

calico, my darling. One makes a profit from a sugar plantation by saving wherever possible. Not by throwing one's goods away.' She raised her voice. '
You may light the fire, Mr Pass
more.'

 

Passmore nodded, and dismounted. The torch had already been kindled, and was held by another of the Negro foremen. Now it was handed to the overseer, and a moment later a puff of smoke rose from the pyre, accompanied by the first tongues of flame. Kit wrapped his hands tight round the reins, and felt the sweat start out on his cheeks and shoulders. But then, the morning was starting to heat as the sun rose above the eastern hilltops, out of that endless ocean from whence this man had come, and upon which he now looked for the last time.

A moan arose from the throats of the slaves, rising and falling like a dirge. Kit glanced at Marguerite, but she gave no indication of having heard it. Certainly she was not affected. Her face was expressionless as she gazed at the man, who still stared at her, through the pain and the anguish which filled his eyes. Her own eyes were soft, almost perhaps filled with tears. The schoolteacher. She regretted what must be done, because there were good muscles being wasted. But done it must be, for the good of all. For the discipline of all.

And now the dying man cried out, time and again, and his own wail joined the chant of the slaves. But it lasted a surprisingly short time. He inhaled smoke and choked, and died, before his body was consumed. Yet must they sit there, and stand there, and watch, as the fire crackled and the smoke pyre reached upwards towards the clear blue of the heavens. Once I was a buccaneer, Kit thought, a common cutpurse, a creature of passion, who fought and robbed and raped while convulsed with pa
ssion. But now I am one of the e
lite. There is none higher than me in all the Caribee Isles. I live like a king, and I command like a king. And I punish like a king, as well, with slow and deliberate enmity. Did I not always dream of possessing such power?

'Be sure the ashes are scattered, Passmore,' Marguerite said. She touched her horse's flanks with her heels. 'You'll stay by my side, Kit,' she said, without looking over her shoulder.

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