Authors: Alex Haley
much money, and Jass thought they would be a nice gift to some young woman,
even Lizzie perhaps, for he was intent on cultivating relationships with
girls. Sally and Sassy sheltered from the sun at the inn on the northern
shore, so he saw little of Easter. She was wide-eyed at this exotic new
adventure of travel-she had never left The Forks before-but she was taking
her new duties as Sassy's maid seriously, and hardly left Angel's side.
MERGING 257
The Trio had stayed behind at The Forks. They were not invited to the
wedding, and were not returning to their school in Nashville. much to
Sally's relief. She hated sending these youngsters so far away from home to
school, too young, she told herself, for such separation from a mother's
watchful eye and warm embrace. A.J. had done it, and Jass, and she'd hated
that as much, but they'd had little choice-the Stevens School in Nashville
was the nearest suitable institution. Since then, Reverend Sloss had opened
his Preparatory Academy in Florence, but that had no facilities for
elementary education. James had murmured platitudes about character
building, which left Sally entirely unimpressed, and the only consolation
Sally could find was that the boys would be under the careful eye of
Eleanor. Now, and not before time, thought Sally, the reverend gentleman
had extended the age limits of boys he would accept, and the Trio were to
go there, as did Jass, and could live at home.
The journey was slow, the pace dictated by the slave cart. The carriage was
hot and uncomfortable, jarring their bones as it bounced over the rough
roads. Sometimes Jass rode on Morgan, but he didn't want to tire the horse
unnecessarily, and mostly kept him tethered to the slave cart. Then Jass
preferred to ride on the box with Samuel, the coachman, who claimed to have
covered all this territory before, in the few short days of his freedom,
when actually he had never left the outskirts of Florence, and knew the
road only because he had driven the coach to Nashville and back many times.
Ephraim drove the luggage wagon, and Easter and Angel were with Cap'n Jack
in the slave cart.
Each evening they would stop while it was still light at travelers' hotels,
around which small settlements had grown, and Jass was allowed to join his
father in after-dinner conversations with the older men or, in the hour
before sunset, free to explore the surroundings.
Jass had made the journey many times, but as a boy, going to and coming
from his school, and he now saw the adventure with a young man's eyes. This
is still the frontier, he thought, and it thrilled him and horrified him.
He saw a slave being mercilessly lashed in public for some hurt, real or
imagined, to his master, and he had turned away, for it provoked sub-
258 ALEX HALEY'S QUEEN
conscious memories of another lashing he had seen, as a boy, to a man who
was now his friend and walked beside him. Once he saw a white man shoot
another to death with a pistol, in full view outside the hotel, for what
Cap'n Jack, talking to other slaves, discovered was a question of honor.
Conversely, he experienced hospitality from almost everyone he met, a sense
of welcome to a stranger, which his father assured him was the nature of
these people. He knew his family occupied a privileged position-because of
his father's status, because they were guests traveling to an important oc-
casion, and because they had made the journey so often that many of the
innkeepers and their families remembered thembut even so, the generosity
that was extended to them warmed his heart.
The later discussions with older men, in his father's company, both
intrigued and bored him. Alfred and Gracie's wedding was on everyone's
lips, a source of amusement to some, evidence of the increasing uppitiness
of niggers to others, and this led to discussion of the man Jass called
Uncle Andrew, who, however, was not related to him and whom he had never
met.
Here in the West, Andrew's actions as president had only increased his
already legendary status. He was seen as champion of the little man, the
settler, the battling individual. People here believed him dedicated to
enfeebling the bureaucracy in Washington, reducing the undue influence of
the industrial Northeast over their lives, and by removing the federal de-
posits from it, curbing the outrageous power the centralized bank had
previously enjoyed. Only a few speculators and businessmen dissented from
this view, and then vehemently.
It had always been the same, his father explained. Andrew was an
extraordinary man, capable of arousing violent passions in people, both
toward him and against him.
Above all else, Andrew was seen as the salvation of the white settler from
the bloodthirsty savages, the consensus being that the sooner the land was
rid of all Indians, the better life would be. It puzzled Jass that his
father would walk away every time this subject was raised, nor would he
discuss it with Jass.
MERGING 259
Easter had hoped to see more of Jass on this journey than she had done all
summer, but she knew something had happened in their relationship,
something he had to come to terms with for himself. He didn't ignore her,
he still visited the weaving house, but now he kept a distance between
them, as if determined to avoid actual physical contact with her, and she
missed the easy familiarity they used to- enjoy. Here on the journey, when
he was riding Morgan, he'd trot beside the slave cart for a while,
pointing out new things to her, but Angel and Cap'n Jack were an obvious,
inhibiting influence to any intimacy between them.
At night she'd be too busy to see him, for she and Angel had to unpack
the trunk, prepare the clothes for the morning, and see to their
mistress's comforts before they could even begin to think about their
own. They ate and slept in the dingy slave accommodations attached to the
hotels, and while she enjoyed listening to the slaves of other travelers,
she was too shy to voice opinions of her own. Up from well before sunrise
to iong after dark, drowsy on some uncomfortable cot in a lousy communal
shed, Easter decided that traveling was an overrated experience and
longed for the comforts of the little shack that was home.
At a small village on the last night before reaching their destination,
James took Jass to a revival meeting in a field nearby. the settlement
being too small for a church. James, although he believed devoutly in God,
was not a deeply religious man and adhered to no particular church, but
the emotional ferocity that the frontier preachers could arouse fascinated
him, and he thought the experience would be interesting for Jass.
The meeting was already in progress when they arrived. Some fifty people
attended, country folk, poor whites, gathered in from outlying farms and
settlements. Many of them had traveled many miles to find some relief
from the abject hardships they daily endured, some promise of future
glory. Simply clad as they were, with weathered faces and gnarled, knotty
hands, Jass could not imagine that these austere people would provide any
of the exotic entertainment his father had promised. He had not reckoned
on the Preacher man.
260 ALEX HALEY'S QUEEN
He heard the Preacher before he saw him, a voice thundering at heaven,
but in a language that Jass had no knowledge of, and could not
understand. He was silent as they reached the clearing, and all heads
were bowed in prayer. The Preacher was standing on a cart, his Bible
clenched in his fist. A couple of lanterns tied to sticks in the ground
provided small illumination and ghostly shadows. Jass could see some
spectators watching from the surrounding trees, a few black faces among
them, but his father led him closer to the cart, the center of things.
Suddenly, the Preacher looked up. "You are all sinners," the Preacher
yelled, and a murmur of agreement ran through his congregation. It
unnerved Jass, for in the dim light he thought the Preacher was staring
directly at him.
"Liars! Swindlers! Hypocrites!" the Preacher cried. The assenting murmur
of response from the accused was louder now.
"Fornicators! "
Jass blushed. He knew what the word ft)rnicator meant. Wesley used it all
the time, and while Jass had never had actual physical contact with a
woman, the private fantasies he sometimes enjoyed seemed just as
reprehensible. He wondered if his father knew, or could guess, for his
guilt must surely be branded on his brow.
"And as sinners you are damned," the Preacher shouted again.
"Yes! Yes!" a responsive voice yelled back.
"There is only one way to redemption," the Preacher continued, waving the
Good Book of direction in the air. "God is your only salvation, and your
only path to Him is the blood of the Lamb!"
Now the Preacher shouted again in that alien tongue, and another man in
the crowd called something in response, but it seemed to Jass to be in
a different language. He wondered if the two understood each other.
It made no difference. It wouldn't have mattered if the entire sermon had
been delivered in tongues-and much of it wasbecause even if the sounds
were incomprehensible to others, Jass knew what they meant, and knew they
were all directed exclusively at him.
The throbbing voice of the Preacher touched some deep well
MERGING 261
of unchanneled, teenage emotion in Jass, and he was gathered into the
mounting ecstasy. He moved forward, away from his father, perhaps to hear
the Preacher better, perhaps to be part of the now swaying throng. The
Preacher warned fire and brimstone, and the crowd shivered from the heat.
The Preacher cried hell and damnation, and the crowd simply cried. The
Preacher held out the promise of salvation, and someone fainted in relief.
The voice roared on. Jass was not an individual now but an engulfed
fraction of a mounting collective frenzy. The Preacher jumped down from
the cart, and came into the midst of it, ranting eye of a hysterical
cyclone, laying his hands on swooning bodies, casting demons out of a
babbling fannhand, and yet seeming to direct a torrential energy on Jass,
as if demanding from him some ultimate submission. Jass was euphoric.
The unspeakable happened. Jass was incredulous. How could the vile
monster assert itself here, in this exquisite company? The dreadful
hardness was incontrovertible proof to Jass that he was guilty of sin
beyond all reckoning, and he fell to his knees at the Preacher's feet,
weeping for forgiveness of something he could not even name, and begging
for salvation from his accursed path.
Then it all seemed to stop. The Preacher, having done his work, gave a
few final, less extravagant admonitions; the congregation got up, dusted
themselves down, resumed their earlier, self-contained composure, and
departed, on carts, horseback, and foot, into the night.
Jass looked at James a little sheepishly, wondering what his father would
think of it all. James didn't say very much. He walked his son back to
the hotel, asking only a few mild questions about the evening, but Jass
couldn't shake the conviction that his father was laughing. At him.
Sally was furious. A devout Presbyterian, she had an aversion to all
extravagant forms of worship and had tried to stop James from taking Jass
to the meeting. She rounded on her husband in fury and demanded to know
why he hadn't stopped Jass from taking part.
"He was being saved %for Jesus," James responded calmly. "I didn't think
it was my place to interfere." Jass saw the
262 ALEX HALEY'S QUEEN
twinkle in his father's eye, and knew for sure what he had guessed. James
thought the whole evening was the best fun. Sally knew it too, because she
also saw the twinkle, and ordered Jass to bed so she could have a few
words with James alone.
She came to him a little later, before he fell asleep, sat on the edge
of his bed and talked to him calmly, whispering, because Sassy was
slumbering in the next bed.
"I am very angry with your father," she said softly. "I have no love for
these evangelist religions. They bring comfort to a number of the poor
country folk, I know, but for me God is to be found in quiet
contemplation, not in public display."
She paused, not sure quite how to phrase what she wanted to say, for it
didn't pertain only to God.
"If you have truly found Jesus, of course, I couldn't be happier for you,