The Mostly True Adventures of Homer P. Figg (6 page)

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Authors: Rodman Philbrick

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BOOK: The Mostly True Adventures of Homer P. Figg
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Mr. Brewster drapes his long arm over my shoulders and holds on, like he expects me to bolt any second. He lowers his big voice to a ragged whisper. “Ebenezer Smelt is well-known in these parts,” he confides. “Mr. Smelt is often found in the company of William Mullins, better known as ‘Stink.’ I mention this because thee told Mrs. Bean thee hailed from a place called Smelt. To my knowledge, no such place exists. So I must assume thee are in league with the murderous Mr. Smelt and his evil associate.”

I started out keeping my mouth shut on purpose, but Jebediah Brewster has knocked the words right out of me.

 

 

H
AROLD READ ME A STORY
once about a man who could see into your mind. Think of a number and he’d pull it out of a deck of cards. Man could tell what you were thinking before you thought it. He knew your aunt Mildred’s birthday, and how many horses your brother owned, and if you preferred rhubarb to apple pie. At the end he saw things that got him tarred and feathered and run out of town on a rail, and that was the best part of the story.

I’m wondering if Jebediah Brewster has that same power to read minds. Doesn’t seem possible he’d figure everything out because of one measly word.

Turns out it wasn’t only the word
Smelt
, it was seeing the man himself.

“Mr. Smelt has been following us,” Brewster explains softly, his hard blue eyes lifted to the hills around us. “Thinks he’s being clever, but the good Lord gave me the eyes of an eagle. That isn’t a dirty old weasel, that’s Ebenezer Smelt, scuttling among the rocks. He’s the color of dirt, but I see him, indeed I do.”

“He made me do it,” I manage to say. “Made me come here on a rotten lie.”

Mr. Brewster and Mrs. Bean have been so good and decent it makes me want to cry, having to admit that I’ve been sent to betray them.

“Maybe he did and maybe he didn’t,” Mr. Brewster says, not unkindly. “Makes no difference. Our strategy remains the same. Let them watch us, Smelt and his confederates. See what it gets them, doing the Devil’s work.”

“They got a darky man,” I tell him, eager to make up for all my falsehoods. “I think they mean to kill him, or sell him for a slave.”

Brewster glances at me sort of sideways, his eyes never straying long from the hills. “‘Darky’ is not a proper word,” he says, very stern. “If a man has dark skin, say that he is colored, or that he is African. Or better yet, do not refer to his complexion. Does the Lord care if we be pink or brown? I assure thee, He does not.”

“They put a sack on his head,” I tell him. “The colored man.”

“That would be Mr. Samuel Reed, the conductor,” says Brewster, squinting into the distance. “He has been leading a group of slaves to freedom and was abducted two days ago. We’ve been on the lookout ever since.”

I figure by conductor he means the colored man works on a train, collecting tickets, but Mr. Brewster is talking about the Underground Railroad, which is a different thing. He explains there aren’t any actual trains on the Underground Railroad, and no rails to speak of. But they do have conductors, who guide fugitive slaves from station to station. Each “station” being a house or a hiding place. Could be a root cellar or a shed or a mine, anywhere they can hide fugitives on their way north to Canada, where slavery has been outlawed.

“Thousands have come this way,” he explains. “They are given safety at this station and many others like it. Men like Samuel Reed risk their own freedom so that others may be free. And men like Mullins and Smelt are always waiting in the shadows, eager to betray them for a few pieces of silver. The evil that men do for money continues to astound me. Are thee kin to such men, Homer Figg? Speak the truth, for I shall know if thee lie.”

I decide that lying to Jebediah Brewster is like lying to God — you can’t fool either one — so I tell him about coming upon Stink and Smelt in the woods. How they stole Bob the horse and took me prisoner, and how Smelt will be waiting for me when night comes, and that he will want to know where the fugitives have been hid.

Mr. Brewster nods. “It’s as I suspected. Come along, Homer. Back to the house, as if we are not aware that Mr. Smelt is watching us. This evening after supper thee wilt report to him, as instructed.”

“What should I tell him?” I ask. Mr. Brewster’s smile is as hard and cold as a diamond gemstone. “Tell him the truth,” he says. “The truth shall set thee free.”

 

 

N
IGHT NEVER TOOK SO LONG
to come. It’s like someone nailed the sun in the sky just to torment me. Because the last thing in the world I want to do is come face-to-face with Ebenezer Smelt. He might try to snatch me away, and even though Mr. Brewster says to tell him the truth, I’m afraid of what he’ll do with the truth, because the real truth is I don’t know what’s going to happen when night finally gets here.

Mr. Brewster is as calm as some old white mountain waiting for the wind to wear it down. There’s no rush about him. He waits like waiting is all he ever wanted to do.

“I was raised among the Society of Friends, the people thee call Quakers,” he says, staring at me like a great bearded barn owl.

We’re on the side porch, facing the rolling hills to the west, and every shadow looks like someone coming to steal me away. In the big warm kitchen Mrs. Bean is cooking supper. The smell of beef and potatoes wafting out to the porch makes my throat feel thick, like it’s hard to swallow. Like I still have a few fat lies stuck in my throat.

“The Friends believe no man may be enslaved by another,” Mr. Brewster continues, very stern. “We also believe no man has the right to kill another, even in war, no matter how just the war. Forbidden from the battlefield, I must find another path toward righteousness. Such a place is here,” he says, thumping his rocking chair with his fist.

Jebediah Brewster stands up tall as the world and takes hold of my hand.

“Come along, Homer Figg. There’s a sight thee must see.”

He takes me to the basement door. Figure he’s going to lock me up like Squint and throw away the key, except there are no locks on the doors in the Brewster house.

“Be not afraid,” he says. “No harm will come to thee.”

He lights a glowing lantern and throws open the basement door. From below comes the light of other lanterns and a gentle murmur that sounds like a deep river.

A deep river that cries like a baby.

 

 

T
HERE’S A WHOLE OTHER WORLD
in Mr. Brewster’s basement. Must be twenty people hiding down there, and two babies wrapped in blankets. Two or three families, all on the run, looking to find a new life. On the run, all the way from Maryland, with slave catchers dogging their trail. The fugitives look thin and hungry and scared. They jump at every sound from above. The squeak of the floor when Mrs. Bean walks across the kitchen, a window rattling in the wind, the sad cooing of a mourning dove up in the eaves — every noise makes them nervous and fearful.

Mr. Brewster says that fear is something slaves carry with them, and they won’t be rid of it until they’re safe across the border in Canada, with nobody to snatch them back. Some of these folks have escaped more than once, only to be seized by slave catchers and taken back. Makes it worse for this particular group because their brave conductor, Samuel Reed, vanished into thin air. They figure if it can happen to him, it can happen to them.

If Stink and Smelt have their way, it will.

“All I do is offer shelter for a night or two,” Mr. Brewster explains. “The real work, the dangerous work, is done by the likes of Mr. Reed.”

The basement is fixed up real nice, with rugs on the floor and rows of sturdy bunks, and plenty of food, and special baffles to keep the lantern light from shining out the basement windows. It’s way better than the barn where me and Harold lived. But no matter how nice Mr. Brewster made the place, it’s still a kind of dungeon, even if there are no padlocks or chains. You can feel it in the air, the people wanting to get out, to be free of this place, or any place where they’ve got to be afraid.

“I would have these poor folk in my own house, as honored guests, but there are many who would burn us out if we did so,” Mr. Brewster says, bringing me up out of the basement. “Burn us to the ground they would! Thee think runaway slaves are fearful? Their fear is nothing to the fear the white man has of the black. Abolitionists who preach against slavery will not let colored worshippers sit with whites in their churches. They think it unclean that light and dark should mix.”

“How will they get to where they’re going?” I ask.

“Same way they got here,” he says. “On foot and in wagons. But mostly on foot. With slave catchers lurking, they must travel at night, under cover of darkness. Especially on cloudy or moonless nights. Like this evening, for example.”

He doesn’t say so, exactly, but he means the slaves will be on the move tonight.

“What should I do?” I ask him.

Mr. Brewster sets me down in the kitchen, where Mrs. Bean has put out steaming plates of beef and potatoes, slathered in gravy.

“Thee must do whatever is true to thee,” he says. “It is not for me to force a thing upon thee, or to make thee believe as I believe.”

I never had such a plate of food in my life — Squint wasn’t much for plates, for that matter — but what I saw in the basement has killed my appetite. Men and women and children and babies, all running from those who would chain them up, and buy them and sell them like cattle. Gets me thinking how much I hated it when Squinton Leach locked us up, or whipped us with his belt, or sold Harold into the army like he was something Squint owned.

“Get a gun,” I urge Mr. Brewster.

He shakes his great white head. “That I can not do. I am sworn to peace.”

“Mrs. Bean,” I say. “Tell him to get a gun!”

Mrs. Bean chuckles and gives me a sad smile. “Gave up on that years ago,” she says. “He will not stir from his beliefs.”

“If you won’t get a gun, then tell me what to do,” I ask, pleading.

He sighs so deep it almost makes the windows rattle. “Thee must decide,” he says again. “But I will say this much. It all boils down to this: A person has only two options in life, to do something or to do nothing.”

“What’s that supposed to mean?”

“It means that if thee do nothing, thee may stay in this house. Thee will be safe and cared for and will never go hungry. Mrs. Bean will see to that. Or thee can do something. Something to help Mr. Smelt and his confederates, or something to help those who have escaped their chains.”

“This isn’t fair,” Mrs. Bean admonishes him, shaking her gravy ladle. “He’s just a boy, and a scrawny one at that!”

“I know,” says Mr. Brewster, sounding regretful. “But boys are fighting this cruel war. Boys are enslaved, and boys own slaves. None may escape. All must decide.”

“If you won’t get a gun then give me one,” I ask, begging.

“There are no guns in this house. Not for thy purpose.”

I shake my head. Comes to me that Jebediah Brewster is crazy, and that’s like God Himself being crazy. As crazy as plagues and pestilence, as crazy as the tree that fell on my father, and my Dear Mother dying so young, and Squint being so mean. I can’t stand another minute of this, with all the questions in my head, trying to decide things that are better left to God and Mr. Brewster.

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