Authors: Alex Haley
McCullough, who came from good family and shared Sarah's appetite for
adventure. His parents gave them a pretty house on good land, and several
slaves, and Sarah's doting father provided her with a bountiful dowry. It
was a good and happy marriage, and Sarah settled contentedly to her new
life, though she and Samuel talked frequently of moving west, to the new
territories, to lead the simple, rustic life of pioneers. When Sarah
became pregnant, Samuel attended her with affection, and fussed over her,
and bought her pretty gifts.
But a young slave girl on the property, Angel, who some said had the gift
of second sight, told Sarah the news almost before she knew it herself.
"You's gwine have a baby, Missy," Angel said, and Sarah was astonished
that Angel was right, and took it to be a good omen.
She became ill during her pregnancy, and the distraught Samuel rode to
town, to find a physician. There had been heavy rain, and the rivers were
swollen. Samuel urged his horse across a fast-flowing creek, but the
animal lost its footing and master and horse were swept away.
Sarah's grief was profound, and for weeks she blamed herself for her
husband's death. She took to her room and her Bible, and family friends
worried for her mental state. Her father spoke to her, sharply but
kindly.
"It is a tragedy," he said, "but it is not the end of the world. You must
think of your own future, and the child."
Sarah, raised to an understanding that death is a fact of life, took her
father's words to heart. To waste her life grieving for Samuel was an
insult to his memory and could prove to be a tragic misfortune for his
baby, who would need a father. Her unborn child became her reason for
living, proof of her husband's love and immortality. Through the child,
Samuel would live forever. She delivered a healthy baby girl, and named
her Elizabeth, after the mother of John the Baptist, who had been visited
by angels, and who was friend to the mother of Jesus. Faced with the
glory of procreation, Sarah's soul, like Elizabeth's and Mary's before
her, magnified the Lord.
But she could not live where she was, for the house and everything about
her was haunted by the ghost of Samuel. She
BLOODLINES 105
moved in with her family, but was not happy. She began to think that she
needed to move away from everything she had known, to cut all the links
with Samuel and the past, and create a new life, for herself and for
Elizabeth. Her father's good friend Thomas Polk offered Sarah and her
child the hospitality of his home in Nashville. Sarah's father was against
the idea, for he thought that Tennessee was still the wild and dangerous
frontier, but Sarah was intrigued by the challenge. She spoke to the
prescient Angel.
"Happen you gwine meet a new man dere, Missy," Angel said.
Sarah persuaded herself that Angel was right. The men of the settled
states bored her-they were too conscious of her money and her position,
and their own ambition-and, still young, she yearned for some of the
adventures she and Samuel had planned.
She was nineteen when she accepted the Polks' kind offer, and taking only
Angel with her as a friend and a mammy for Elizabeth, she set off for the
frontier.
She settled to the life as if she had been born to it. She loved living
so close to the edge of civilization, and endured its privations with
grace and a sense of humor. She stayed in mourning for Samuel for the
requisite twelve months, but toward the end of that year, she began to
venture out into society, anxious to enjoy herself to the full. Her first
outing was on a Saturday. She went with the Polks to the Cloverbottom
Race Track, enjoyed the fun of the meet, was amused by the slightly
drunken owner of the horse that had won the biggest purse, and was
introduced to a handsome and successful Irishman, who was some ten years
older than herself.
James, conscious of her widow's weeds, tipped his hat to the lovely young
woman and welcomed her to Nashville. He could hardly take his eyes off
her. Her grace and composure reminded him of Rachel, and the twinkle in
her eyes suggested, as with Rachel, that there was more, something wild
and capricious, beneath her calm exterior.
He talked of her all the way home, to Cap'n Jack, and when he got home
he talked of her to Eleanor and to Sara, and to anyone else who would
listen. She was just like Rachel, he
106 ALEX HALEY'S QUEEN
told them. His family breathed a collective sigh of relief. At last, they
thought, Jamie had met his bride.
But James, conscious of her mourning period, did not press his interest.
It made Eleanor cross.
"For heaven's sake, Jamie," she snapped, "she is almost out of the
mourning. And anyway, these things mean nothing here. "
"It is not polite to 'call on her," James said, dreaming of Sarah.
"Well, if you don't, someone else will," Eleanor said. "Or do you need
lessons in the etiquette of the heart?"
Eleanor's barb had struck a bull's-eye. James, who could be the most
dazzling and charming seducer of women with whom he did not envisage any
long-standing relationship, was naive in the face of love. He dreamed of
Sarah by night, and mooned about her by day, but he had no idea how to
tell her of his feelings, and was nervous in case she might reject him.
Sarah was not nearly so coy. She made inquiries about James, and learned
of his excellent character and obvious eligibility. She called at the
store on small errands, and it amused her that he, although unfailingly
charming to her, was always a little tongue-tied in her presence. She made
it her business to befriend his sisters Eleanor and Sara, who thought her
splendid. They invited her to a quilting party, and as they sat around the
frame creating the colorful comforter, they told her of James's interest,
and laughed at his shy reserve.
Sarah took matters into her own hands. If he would not come to her, she
would go to him.
She talked to Cap'n Jack.
Cap'n Jack was eager to see his Massa married and with a family. The
sooner James was settled, the sooner he might decide to fulfill his
promise, and free his slave. He was completely sympathetic to Sarah's
cause, because she was a sympathetic woman. Of the many that his Massa
might choose, Cap'n Jack hoped it would be this one, for Sarah made him
feel like an equal, despite the vast gulf between them, and he could not
imagine her lying to him, or treating him, or any of the slaves, badly.
Angel, Sarah's maid, agreed with this view of her Missy.
BLOODLINES 107
"If'n I's gotta be a wit' someone," she said, "druther be wit' her. "
It was James's habit and pleasure to ride on Sunday mornings, after
church, to inspect his property. Away from the cotton fields, it was
lovely land, with several brooks and many shady trees. It pleased James's
soul to fide through what was his, to breathe the softly scented air, and
delight in nature.
"You will never amount to anything."
He had amounted to something, and would amount to much more yet. He had
proved his father wrong, and if it was not yet enough, already it was
considerable.
It was a warrn and sunny day. Whippoorwills sang in the trees. Squirrels
darted across the branches. Possums washed themselves at a spring, and
flocks of tiny quail chased through the grass.
He saw the horse first, tethered to a sapling. Nearby there was a gig,
and a picnic basket on the seat. He heard a small cry of alarm, and a
tiny black woman ran to her mistress and snatched a baby from her breast.
He saw Sarah, who looked at him and stood, as if surprised. But she
ignored, for a moment, Angel's pleas to make herself decent.
Without any sense of urgency, Sarah adjusted her bodice and blouse to
cover her breast, but not before she was sure James had seen her
fullness, the rounded, alabaster flesh and the rosy nipple. James, who
prided himself on being a gentleman, hesitated quite a long time before
politely averting his eyes.
He did not see Cap'n Jack crouched in a nearby bush, grinning happily at
the success of his plot with Sarah. Nor did Cap'n Jack feel the need to
look away from the seminakedness of the woman he hardly knew.
I 'Why, sir, you startled me," Sally said, a provocative smile dancing
at the comers of her lips.
"My most humble apologies," James responded, as politely. "I shall
withdraw."
"There is no need," Sarah said, determined to detain him. "I think I have
nothing to fear from you."
"Nothing at all," James agreed, not intending to go.
108 ALEX HALEY'S QUEEN
"It's such a pretty spot, and such a pretty day, we came for a picnic,"
Sarah said. "Should you care to join me?"
James nodded that he would, and as he dismounted, he thought he saw Cap'n
Jack in the distance, walking toward him. A tiny trace of suspicion
tickled at his sense of humor.
"How did you know about this place?" He came to Sarah and made himself
comfortable on the grass beside her. "It is private land."
Sarah's eyes were sparkling, teasing him.
"Should I leave?" she wondered.
"Oh, no," James said. "We have my permission to be here. It is my land."
Cap'n Jack came down the path and went to the gig. He organized lunch
from the picnic hamper and set it before them. No one made any reference
to his being there, or expressed any surprise at his presence. James
leaned back against the tree, at peace with the world. He knew he had
been most exquisitely conned, and didn't mind at all.
They passed a pleasant lunch, and found conversation easy between them.
Cap'n Jack chatted with Angel, a small distance away, and Sarah nursed
Elizabeth. James could not help but think of his afternoons with Rachel,
and the better he got to know Sarah, the more she reminded him of Rachel.
The time came when Sarah needed to go into the bushes, and Angel was
dozing, so James took Elizabeth, and held the child while her mother was
absent. Elizabeth gurgled and chuckled and reached up to grab James's
whiskers, and was perfectly happy in his arms. Later, when Sarah changed
Elizabeth's linen, James watched the simple domesticity, and yearned for
it in his life.
Toward sunset, when the mosquitoes came out, they realized they had
talked too long, and made a hasty departure. It was five miles to the
Polk residence, and Sarah should be home before dark. Cap'n Jack went
back to the house, and James drove the gig, his horse hitched to it,
pointing out the parameters of his land to Sarah, as if assuring her of
his financial eligibility. They arranged to attend church together the
following Sunday, and to picnic again, at the same spot.
They saw each other every Sunday of the summer after that, and when her
period of mourning was over, James began call-
BLOODLINES 109
ing on her at her home. His suit received the full approval of the Polks,
who wrote to Sarah's father, informing him of their hopes for a union
between his daughter and this splendid bachelor.
Mr. Moore came to visit his daughter, and his heart was touched by what
he found. The dull grief that had enshrouded Sarah was cast aside with
the black dress and veil. Now his daughter was herself again, as she had
been in the happier days of her life. She still thought fondly of her
late husband, but looked forward eagerly to her next.
All of James's many friends indicated their approval of the union, and
voiced their confidence in James. Mr. Moore questioned James most
carefully, and if he found a certain lack of flamboyance in his
prospective son-in-law, that only added luster to him, for Mr. Moore was
concerned that Sarah should make a solid and reliable marriage rather
than a spectacular one. There was enough flamboyance, enough cavalier
behavior, in the other men of the frontier, with Andrew Jackson as the
most grandiose of all, and while Mr. Moore was delighted by Andrew's
company, he was pleased that Sarah had chosen a quieter man.
Before Mr. Moore left Nashville, he had given his blessing to James, who
then formally proposed to Sarah, and she, as gravely, accepted. They had
a party at the new Nashville Inn, and danced until dawn, and were happy.
Perhaps because Samuel had been the first love of Sarah's life, she had
spent her youthful romance in that love, and what she felt for James was
deeper, more secure, and less intense. Sarah was the first true