Authors: Alex Haley
if anything should happen to me, I want you to be ready. Do you like the
Perkins girl?"
It came as a small bolt from the blue, and Jass was thrown by it,
although the connection was obvious to his father.
" Well, yes, I guess. Lizzie's charming" was the best Jass could manage.
"She is also a most eligible heiress." His father, having taken the
plunge, waded on. "'You're too young to even contemplate
anything-serious-with her, and if circumstances were different we would
not be having this conversation. But--
Jass knew where they were going. In that "but" a whole future lay.
It was apparent to Sally too, still fiddling with dead flowers in the
hall, and to Cap'n Jack, still uselessly trimming a wick that could
scarcely be trimmed any more.
11
-you will have to marry eventually, and I hope it will be sooner rather
than later. I was not a young man when I married your mother, and I
sometimes regret that I did not find her earlier."
He had completely lost track of how to say what he wanted, he knew,
although his goal still beckoned him, if only he could reach it. Why is
it so.difficult? he thought again, although he already knew the answer.
He was trying to control something that, ultimately, he did not believe
was his to control. He lost his temper with himself.
"You must have sons, Jass!" he announced angrily. "Sons to inherit what
I have created here."
As soon as he said it, his anger at himself increased, for he knew he
sounded even more pompous than before. Jass was puzzled by his father's
vehemence, but a second glass of port was making him bold.
"Of course, Papa," he said. "I'm looking forward to being married one
day. But I was wondering about-" He found
232 ALEX HALEY'S QUEEN
the word difficult to say, for he was suddenly feeling a complex anger,
too. Here he was with his father, drinking port and discussing his future
as man and master, yet he was still being treated as an inadequate boy.
He felt an intense, burning need to communicate to his father that he
wasn't a boy anymore, he was a man, in charge of his own destiny. Suddenly
he wanted answers from his father to some of the questions that had been
puzzling him.
"I was wondering," he repeated, "about love."
James stared at his son, as if staggered by his impudence. Love, he
thought, oh, love. That is the heart of it. That is what I should be
discussing with him, and what I am trying to deny him. I am considering
everything that matters--this house, this land, this estate, this family,
this fortune-but not the thing that matters most. I have not considered
his heart. Is that what my father did to me?
To his son he said: "Love?"
Jass began a confused apology. "Where that comes into it. I mean, I know
all about girls and things, and getting married, and babies, all the
fellows at school talk about that all the time, but no one's ever talked
to me about love."
It was eminently fair and reasonable, thought James, and completely
unanswerable. He struggled to describe the indescribable. "Love is-"
What? A young man's dream? An intangible, foolish, impractical something,
dictated by the heart, not the head, which if undirected could sabotage
everything he had worked for, all he had built, the tiny empire he had
created. Yet it was a most basic right of any man-and, he knew, totally
unpredictable, perhaps dangerously so. He had never questioned, would
never have challenged, A.J.'s right to love whom he would, for A.J. would
have loved the right woman, James was sure. A.J.'s sense of
responsibility would have dictated to his heart, and he would have chosen
a bride who would have been worthy mistress of this mansion. Why was he
not so sure that Jass would do the same?
"I hope you will find love," he assured his son, longing for Sally to
help. "But marriage and love do not necessarily go hand in hand."
They do, his heart insisted, they do. Let the boy love. But let him love
wisely, his mind responded.
MERGING 233
"When I first met your mother, I thought she was the most beautiful
creature I had ever seen, and I-wanted her-at that moment-"
The unguarded thought had slipped out. So anxious was he to impress duty
on his son that he was not embarrassed by the admission of lust.
--but I didn't love her then, I didn't know her, I'd never spoken to her.
Love came with knowledge. The more I came to know her, the more I came
to love her, until now I cannot bear to be apart from her. "
Sally's heart sang a sweet duet. This is my husband, whom I love. And
this is my son, who has dared my husband to speak of love.
"But we married for different reasons," she hardly heard James continue.
"We married for mutual benefit; we married to have a family. Love came
later."
Whatever motives she had for wanting to overhear the conversation in the
study now seemed irrelevant to Sally, for she knew her son would love
whom he would, marry whom he must. She hoped they would be one and the
same woman, but if not, she hardly cared, for the boy would be his own
man, and that, for Sally, was all that mattered. Only one tiny cloud
troubled her otherwise flawless horizon. She moved to the study and
softly she closed the door.
"Easter's turned into a fine girl," she said to Cap'n Jack.
"Yes, missus," the slave replied.
"Master James is very fond of her."
"Yes, missus."
Sally moved away, as if that were the end of the conversation, but, at
the stairs, turned back.
"Let us hope he doesn't become-too fond-of her." Her meaning was
precisely clear, and Cap'n Jack looked at her steadily.
"No, missus."
Why did she fear this so? Why, in this moment of otherwise complete
certainty about Jass's character, did she have such profound misgivings
about a simple slave girl?
Sally moved in what she often thought was a hypocritical hemisphere with
regard to her son's libido. She knew, as did all Southern mothers, that
most of their young men found their
234 ALEX HALEY'S QUEEN
first sexual pleasures with slave girls, and that many of these young men
continued to take that pleasure throughout their adult life. She knew-they
all did-of older male friends who kept a black mistress, or several
concubines, or of those who simply raped their slave women as and when the
urge took them. It was seldom discussed by the women, and then only
"behind the fan," but oh, how busy those fans could be, feeding the embers
of gossip into lurid flames of speculation.
In the more sensational cases, such as that of Mr. Herrisvale, only three
counties away, who had taken his black concubine into the main house,
into the very nuptial bed, relegating his true and lovely white wife to
the second-best guest room, the fans had worked overtime, for every white
woman could only too easily imagine herself in a similar predicament. The
dear, sweet Mrs. Herrisvale had absolutely no recourse of any kind. As
wife she was chattel, to be done with as her husband wished-in many ways,
Sally frequently thought, no better than a slave-and no matter how much
her family might rail on her behalf, the husband was lord of the estate
and king of the lives of those who dwelt therein, and if he was of a can-
tankerous nature, like Mr. Herrisvale, all the suffering Edna could do
was bear the indignity with as much fortitude as she could muster. Her
outraged brothers had demanded her return to them, with or without her
substantial dowry, but Mr. Herrisvale had kept them at bay with shotguns
and the full force of the law. "We can only be grateful," swooned the
fanning gossips, "that our dear husbands are reasonable, faithful,
Christian men."
But were they? What woman could be sure that her husband was not finding
some pleasure, at least, in the slave quarters, and if he was, what might
this lead to? Surely Edna Herrisvale had put her complete faith and trust
in her husband, and look at her now. Yet for many of the wives, the slave
concubines were a considerable relief, for it meant fewer sexual demands
on them. And a mightier relief too, on behalf of their daughters. for if
the young beaux had no other outlet for their base desires, the virginity
of every young Southern belle was potentially at risk, and for a girl to
go to the altar already deflowered was a shame no mother could bear.
Still Sally worried about Jass's fondness for Easter. She
MERGING 235
guessed that any eventual physical relationship with Easter would keep him
satisfied and happy, for the realist in her knew that her son must be
developing carnal needs, and she prayed that he would eventually find a
bride who would not be too obtuse in the bedroom. Yet that other,
maternal, side of her dreamed that her boy might be temperate of desire,
that he would remain a virgin until his marriage, and that he would be as
sweet and undemanding of his spouse in bed as he was in life. That this
hope somehow emasculated her son was a demon fear she worked very hard to
keep at bay.
She wanted for Jass a simple life, she told herself, and Easter was an
unnecessary complication.
"Good night, Cap'n Jack," she said, and went up the stairs. If anyone had
influence over Easter and lass it was Cap'n Jack, and she was relying on
him to do his utmost to put restraints on their friendship.
"Good night, Missus Sally," Cap'n Jack replied, and started turning down
lamps.
What Sally did not understand, for she had no knowledge of it, was the
bitter complexity of Cap'n Jack's ambition. Unable to persuade Annie's
new owner to part with his new slave, even for considerable sums of
money, Sally had spent countless hours comforting Cap'n Jack, and
believed that his pain had eventually healed.
She was wrong.
All the furious vows of vengeance Cap'n Jack had made the day Annie was
sold away still raged beneath his compliant exterior. He had no clear
idea of how to achieve his goal, or even what his goal might be, but he
had the slave's gift of patience, and fortune seemed to be playing
directly into his hands. The deep friendship of his daughter and Jass
held promise of future fruition, and the death of A.J. would eventually
elevate Jass to a position in which Cap'n Jack's primitive oath to
subvert his father's expectation of him would have some real hope of
success. The stories of Mr. Herrisvale and his black concubine had
encouraged exaggerated ambitions in Cap'n Jack, and the thought of Easter
as surrogate mistress of this mansion, however disparaged by the world
at large, put him at direct variance with what Sally wanted. If this were
not possible, if Easter's ascendancy, or his own, were
236 ALEX HALEY'S QUEEN
less spectacular, something else would happen, Cap'n Jack was sure, for
the actual focus of his triumph didn't matter. The revenge itself was all.
Leaving a few candles burning to light his Massas, young and old, to bed,
he left the hall and went out into the night.
In the study, James thought things were going rather well. "A family is
everything, Jass, in this world of ours. Without family we are nothing,
and you must start thinking of your future. You will meet many young
women, of course, at Nashville, and when you go to college-"
He felt the need to invite some comment from his son, since he was trying
to exercise such control over the boy's future. "Are you content with New
Jersey?" he asked.
"Oh, yes, very much," saidJass. "If they'll have me-"
"You won't have a problem there," James said. "Money talks, even to the
old Yankee colleges." He could have bitten his tongue off; he was even
denying his son's scholastic ability. So he looked for a compliment.
"Always remember that you are a highly desirable young man, if only
because of your position and your wealth, and you will be much sought
after. But you could do a lot worse than Lizzie Perkins. She's a fine
girl, and would make a splendid wife, I'm sure. Talk to her, call on her,
get to know her."
"Yes, sir." Jass was dutiful again.
"Good," said his father, anxious now for it to be over. "Well-that's
about it. Best to bed, eh? It's getting late."
"Yes, sir." Jass, who had been hoping for another glass of port, went to
the door.
James could not let it go at that. He'd botched the whole thing, had
probably confused the boy more than clarified anything, and felt that