Chapter 1

Chapter 2

 

Iris was silent as Uriah drove the rest of the way up to the Hitt farm. He eyed her a couple of times, as though to judge by her reaction what had taken place, but her face was impassive. For a while, he whistled tunelessly, and from time to time he grinned to himself. It was plain that he thought himself one heck of a fine fellow, a first class lover. Iris was his first virgin. All the other women he had taken had been second hand goods: bored or abandoned wives; an occasional good time girl; chance encounters in barns or hay ricks, or by summer waysides; furtive and hurried. But this woman was his, to have as he would, whenever he might please, and he liked the idea mightily. Nothing could give a man a better appetite.

He was whistling again when he pulled the horse to a stop in front of the Hitt home. He waited on the bench as though he expected a right royal welcome.

Jedediah came down from the step in front of the cabin to inspect his son, and looked at Uriah slyly. �Well, Gawd-Dayam, boy. Ain�t you jes� grinnin� like a baked possum?� He came down from the step in front of the cabin to inspect his son, and his voice was robust. He was a tall man, gaunt and rangy, back in his working clothes now, with a long full beard that gave him the air of a Biblical prophet. His tone was somewhere between envious and jovial, and his manner was earthy. �Damn. She mus�ve been purty good.�

He did not look at Iris, except in one quick sidelong glance that swept across her. She bit her lip to prevent herself from reddening. This old man might have been for all the world discussing the local stud servicing some farm animal, rather than his son and his bride.

Uriah jumped to the ground. He held himself proudly, like a banty rooster. It wasn�t every day a man brought home a freshly broken fifteen year old as a trophy. �Yeah, Paw. I got me a good ��un�. I could tell I was breaking new ground.�

The two men beamed at each other in a moment of male bonding, and Jedediah spat out a long stream of tobacco juice. �Well son, you done good.�

Jedediah looked at Iris directly for the first time, raising one finger towards the brim of his hat. But his finger stopped midway, and it was plain that he thought better of the gesture. She was Uriah�s woman now, part of the household. There was no sense letting think she deserved any fancy treatment. �Git yoursel� down, girl. Capitola�ll be looking for you to help get dinner on the table. �Riah and me got work to do.�

Iris lowered herself to the ground gingerly just as Uriah clucked the horse into motion towards the barn. She was still aching from his assault, and stumbled awkwardly as the step jerked from under her foot. She waited for the buggy to move away, and then climbed the cabin step and pushed the door open.

Capitola was busy frying ham in a big skillet, with hoe cakes on a griddle. Iris wrinkled her nose at the smell of food. She realized that she had eaten nothing since the previous night: normally she ate after serving Woodrow, but breakfast had gone lacking.

She stood respectfully behind the older woman. �Kin I help, Maw?� She thought the question the right thing to say, for she felt she needed to be on good terms with Uriah�s mother.

Capitola Hitt did not turn around. �Ain�t no call for you here, Missy. An� I ain�t your Maw.� Her tone was cold, all her chapel goodwill wholly gone. �Jes� you stay out�n ma way.�

Iris persisted. First impressions are lasting impressions, and she guessed Capitola was the only ally she might have. �Kin I at least turn the cakes for you, Ma�am?�

Capitola pushed at the ham in the skillet, then turned around, holding the long handled fork like a weapon in front of her. Iris backed up.

�I done tol� you to stay out�n ma way, girl. Out�n ma way means jes� that: out�n ma way. That�s plain American.� Capitola�s eyes blazed for a moment, and then turned cold again. �Uriah done hisself a fool thang, haulin� you out heah.� She was a dark woman, with fierce black eyes and black curly hair, and her voice held just a trace of a Southern accent. Jedediah claimed he had brought her up from Louisiana after a spell working on the flatboats. But some said her folks had been slaves, while others claimed she was part Indian. �He didn�t have no call to go and find hisself some po� white trash thing like you. He coulda had him a town girl, sumpin� fine.�

Iris� eyes hardened, but she stayed where she was. She was tempted to tell her mother-in-law that Jedediah had sent her in to help, and comment tartly that no town girl would spare a second glance for a shuckberry like Uriah, but she bit her words back. Capitola plainly wanted to make her feel small, and shuffle her nicely into the part of a servant girl, but it would take a sight better than this old woman to string a ring through her nose. But she did not speak, because she was fresh into the house, and she had no call to fight.

However, her closeness still seemed to bother her mother-in-law, and the older woman waved towards the wall beyond the big pine table. �You git your stuff over yonder, and get yourself washed up.Then go busy yourself outside. I ain�t got no call fer you in heah.� She turned back to her stove, speaking to Iris without looking at her. �I cooked for my two men, man and boy, fer the best part of two score years, an� I reckon I kin go on cookin� another two score. You go out mess with them chickens, and tend that cow you brung with you. Go do somepin� useful.�

Iris circled round the table, and looked down at the dirt floor in surprise. A large straw mattress lay pushed to one cabin wall, close up by the door, and a second smaller mattress rested in a corner. But the smaller mattress looked to be just big enough for one person, and too small for a couple. It was something she would have to remedy, because she did not imagine Uriah would take kindly to sleeping all on his own.

She was also more than a little taken aback at the way the two mattresses were set so close. A lot of the poorfolk cabins around the hollers in Coates only possessed a single communal room, used for cooking, eating and sleeping.Even the Bethpages had four rooms. But decent people generally managed to have two rooms at least, boarded off one from the other, and the Hitts were not poor folk, for she reckoned they must be pulling in a good cash crop every year from their still.

�Y�all make sho� your man do what he gotta do out in the barn, too.� Capitola spoke again, and now her voice was threatening. �I ain�t gonna have you a�snufflin� and a�pantin� around when ah�m tryin� to get ma sleep.�

Iris reddened and bit her lip. Now she really felt like showing Uriah�s mother that she could also wield a sharp edge to her tongue, and deal back as good as she took. But she held herself in. One day the right time would come. But not yet.

She turned her back on Capitola and undressed quickly, changing into the feed sack dress she kept for work. Then she picked up the dress she had stained with her blood and walked quickly to the cabin door. She needed to get out into the fresh air and feel free. She looked around, and saw a well pipe by the cabin step, with a half-gallon well bucket hanging next to it, and a galvanized pail hanging from the porch beam, and began to work methodically, first lifting down the well bucket, then filling the bucket and emptying it into the pail, then filling the bucket again. When she judged she had enough water, she placed her soiled dress in the water to soak.

She heard a movement as she finished, and looked up. Capitola was standing in the cabin doorway, glowering at her. Uriah�s mother stepped forward, lifting her hand, and slapped her across her face, hard enough to bring tears to her eyes. Then the older woman stepped back, and her eyes were fierce. �Just what the tarnation do you think you�re doin�, Missy?�

Iris looked down, studying the ground at her feet, and thought back - perhaps for the first time in her life, fondly on her life with Woodrow. She scuffed her bare right foot in the dirt. �I�m just trying to get my blood out of my dress before it sets. Uriah told me. . .�

Capitola sniffed and leaned towards her until their noses were almost touching. �I don�t care what �Riah told yo, Missy.� She spoke in harsh, angry jerks of sound. �This is ma house and you don�t belong heah. You don�t touch a thang around this place less�en I warrant yo kin. Yo get that?�

Iris nodded.

�Right.� Capitola paused for a moment, triumphant. �Well, since you already got the water drawn, you might as well get the wash tub out. It�s hung on the shed out back. But let that be the last time you be drawin� water for your own washin� less�en you wash for the rest of us. We ain�t got enough water for that.�

Iris fetched the wash tub down, and walked slowly back to the cabin. Now she felt really miserable and downhearted. She knew that she should make an effort to hold up her head. A dog might expect better treatment. She collected a pile of dirty clothing, dropped it into the tub, and then went off to find Daisy. At least she could expect her cow to show her some gratitude at being milked.

She found herself a stool in the Hitt�s barn, and sat, resting her forehead against Daisy�s warm and comforting flank, whilst the familiar rhythm of milking slowly brought her peace of mind. She felt oppressed: she reckoned Capitola would do her best to tread her down, and knew that any attempt to hold her own would lead slowly an inexorably into a long and bitter war. But she also knew that the only other path ahead of her led to slavery. She weighed her two choices as she milked, and her mind seemed to turn round and round in long slow circles, and the circles twined in each amongst one another like children�s spinning hoops. She thought of Uriah, the man now her husband, and his father, and played for a moment with thoughts of trying to turn them against the woman in the cabin. But she was the newcomer, facing three people who shared their lives, and she knew that she would need to amass a great deal more power than she possessed to overcome the three of them. She thought briefly of running away. But she had no place to go, for Woodrow would certainly never take her back, and she had no education to help her make her way in the world.

She thought of Uriah again, and shivered momentarily, even though it was a warm summer day. He had violated her, and taken her innocence, and she knew that he would return, and force himself on her, and into her, and take his pleasure of her, and that she would be unable to gainsay him, however much she might want to resist him. She wondered how she could again bear the weight of his body, and his panting and grunting, without feeling physically sick within herself.

She sighed, finishing her milking, and stood up, taking her two milk pails in her hands. She had come in a space of a few hours from being a carefree girl into a new life as a careworn woman, and the thought made her want to weep. But then she straightened her back, and began to walk towards the cabin, and her straightening was a sign from within her. She was not a dog for Uriah and his parents to kick. She would watch and wait, and bide her time, and patience might well reward her. Woodrow had sometimes taken her fishing in the creek below the Bethpage cabin, and taught her to build traps from woven sticks to catch crawfish. Crawfish could be crafty, and elusive, but they could also be caught by stealth. She would be crafty in her turn, and use craft to shape her future.

She carried the two buckets onto the porch step, and stood them in a shaded corner to cool. Uriah and his father and mother were already sitting at the table, eating. Capitola looked up her.

�Yo� kin help yersel, now that we�re sat.� She waved with her fork at the skillet on the stove. �We ain�t got no call to wait on sluggards.�

Iris pretended not have to have heard, and shovelled a hoe cake and some ham out onto a cracked plate. It was greasy looking provender, grey and unappetising, as much bacon grease as corn meal around the edges, but it was food, and she was hungry.

The four ate in silence, and then she got to her feet, leaving her dirty plate where she had been sitting. The two men looked up at her curiously, and she sensed, without any need for speaking, that Uriah wanted to take her out into the barn, and that his father felt envy for his son.

Capitola frowned. �Ain�t you going to clean up, Missy?� It was plain she knew what was in her son�s mind, and wanted first to exact her own tribute.

Iris tossed her head. �You tol� me to take the mess out to the chickens, and thet�s jes� whar I�m going.�

She glanced at Uriah out of the corner of her eye as she spoke, and noted with a quick spark of pleasure the way his face fell. The cabin was silent for a moment, and she made purposefully for the door. The Hitts could hatch out their own priorities.

She had brought six hens along with her rooster, and found the birds all pecking equably with Capitola�s fowls in a patch of grass under a big old oak tree at the back of the Hitts� barn. She smiled as Albert, her rooster, gave off pecking every now and then to have his way indiscriminately with one of her hens, or one that she saw must belong to the Hitts. He seemed to be the only cockerel in sight, and must have decided that he had come to hen heaven. She thought she might, in her own mind, rechristen him Uriah.

But she pushed frivolity out of her mind as she looked into the big coop behind the oak. The coop was absolutely filthy: it seemed crusted with several years� deposits of chicken droppings, and urgently needed cleaning. She needed a shovel to clear the mess out, and she guessed she would find one in the barn.

She found Uriah instead. He was standing by the barn looking shifty, and Iris knew immediately what was in his mind. She decided she had best treat him as she had treated Woodrow when he had been drinking.

�I need a scraper to clean out the coop.� She stared Uriah straight in the eyes. A woman must start the way she means to go on.

Uriah leered. �I need you, �cos yer mine.�

Iris snorted. �You ain�t havin� none of me �til I got some work outta you.� She stared at him, matching hardness for lechery, and Uriah looked down, avoiding her eyes.

He was silent for a moment, before looking up again, and now Iris could see that he was uncertain. �That ain�t right, talkin� to me that way.� He made a move to catch hold of her arm, but Iris was too quick for him, and stepped back, out of his reach. �Yo�re my woman now, I got rights.�

She lifted her chin. �Yo�re my man now, and you got work to do.� She pointed towards the barn. �You go get in there, and find me a shovel, and some kind of thang where yo� can shift thet stuff. Mebbe we kin use it as fertilizer, to make stuff grow.�

But Uriah was still undecided, and Iris judged that he was not much of a man for rushing to make himself useful. She decided to add a small carrot. �You help clean out the coop, an� we�ll see whar� we get from there.�

Her husband�s eyes narrowed. She could see that he was accustomed to bargaining. �What does thet signify?�

�That don� signify nuthin�, les� you get to working.�

�And then?�

�Then? Why, wait �n see.� She smiled slightly, and squared her shoulders back, making the line of her body stand out against her sacking dress. It was the first time in her life that she had done such a thing for a man, and she did not know why she did it. But she saw Uriah�s eyes gleam, and realised that she had begun to tempt her crawfish into its trap. �But make sure you find some clean hay first fer what y�re thinking about. I ain�t lying around in no grass again with varmints running around.�

Uriah was a good worker when he put his mind to it, with powerful shoulders and a broad back. Iris shovelled chicken dirt out into a heap at the mouth of the coop, and Uriah filled a wheelbarrow to cart it away. He looked at her hopefully from time to time, but she pointedly ignored him. She wanted to tire him out, and maybe he would only be fit for a nap.

The work took them both perhaps a couple of hours, but then they were done. Uriah waited for her to come out of the coop, and pointed wordlessly at the barn. It was time for his reward, and he would not be denied.

Iris pretended to hesitate, though she knew that she was committed. �You found clean straw?�

�I did.�

�You ain�t gonna force down on me again?�

Uriah shrugged. �A man does what a man does.�

�I guess so.� Iris took a deep breath. �Well, let�s get through with it.�

She followed her husband into the barn, and stood by a rough bed that he had spread out, and waited.

Uriah shucked his bib-alls, and stripped off his shirt, letting it fall around his ankles. He was wearing a pair of grubby long johns beneath them, and dropped these in their turn. Iris tried not to stare at the way he was made. But she did not move, as she stared at the naked man facing her.

Uriah seemed discomforted. �Ain�t you gonna do nuthin?�

�Like what?�

�Ain�t you gonna take off yer dress?�

She reached down to lift the hem of her sacking dress a little. �I don�t hev to do that. I kin jes� lie on my back.�

�That ain�t the same.� Suddenly Uriah pounced, seizing her arm, and forcing her down. �You take a good look at me, woman, and see what I got fer you.�

He reached down, tearing at her sacking dress in an attempt to rip it from her. But Iris was too quick for him. She rolled away sideways in the straw, and sat up. �You ain�t getting nuthin� from me, the way you want to beat it out of me.�

They stared at each other. Now Uriah�s eyes were burning, and Iris judged that she must surrender, or risk provoking him too far. She reached down to pull up her dress, widening her legs and lying back with her arms limp at her sides.

�You do what you got to do, and that�s all you git.�

It was a brief encounter. Uriah moved on top of her, and Iris began to understand why some women made so much of going with men. But it was all finished almost before it had begun, and she rolled away from under him as he panted his completion. Yet, nevertheless, she realised that practice might enable her to control what had driven him, and she stored the thought in her mind.

They dressed again, and walked back to the cabin. Iris saw something move, out of the corner of her eye, as they crossed the open ground, and could have sworn that someone, perhaps Capitola or Jedediah, had been near the barn when Uriah had been panting. But she was not sure. She might have seen a mule grazing.

Capitola was at her stove again, but Iris saw that the table had been cleared. Uriah�s mother swung round to face her, her face contorted.

�What you been up to out theah�, girl? Cain�t you keep your hands off�n �Riah? You bin out there after him like some bitch in heat.�

Iris looked to Uriah for support, but realised that he was gone. She shook her head. She was a woman now, and she would not be forced into slavery. �We cleaned out the hens.�

�And then took him in the barn?�

Iris heard a sniggering sound and turned to see that Jedediah had come in silently behind her. She sat down at the table. �No, ma�am, he did the takin�. He figgered I owed him somewhat fer makin� him work.�

Capitola looked at the doorway. �Thet true, boy?�

Now Uriah was standing in the cabin entrance. He grunted angrily. �I ain�t a boy no more. I�m a married man. I got rights.�

�Rights? You got rights to go be like an animal in the straw out theah?� Capitola�s voice rose sharply. Iris could see that she was accustomed to ruling the cabin in her own way, and had begun working herself up into a fury. �You got rights?�

Suddenly Jedediah stepped forward, and slapped his wife hard with his open palm. �Quit this fool talk, woman, and fix us somethin� to eat.�

Capitola stared up at him, and it looked for a moment as though she might swing her skillet on him. But then she lowered the heavy cast iron pan back on to her stove. �Leave me be.�

It was a surrender. But she only filled three of her cracked plates, and Iris had to help herself again. The hoe cake she was left was only partly heated, and Iris made up her mind that - come what may - she would eat better on her next sitting down.

The four of them ate in silence again, and then Iris got to her feet, and stepped out into the open air. She had no reason to pick a fight that she might well lose. She set out for the barn: she had seen several stalls set along one side, and one might do well for Daisy. She also planned to take a look at what the Hitts kept for a vegetable garden. She had already eaten two meals at the Hitt table, with never a sight of a potato or vegetable of any kind, and she found their victuals very dull. Then she needed a churn, to make up some butter - she had seen none of that, either.

But the barn presented more work. Uriah and Jedediah plainly kept their mules in the stalls when the weather turned bad, because they had mucked them all out. But they had dumped all the manure in a big heap at the back, and that needed shifting. Iris felt Daisy deserved a proper whitewashed stall into the bargain, because a dairy cow rates a good deal higher than a mule when it comes to shelter. She stepped out of the barn again. The Hitts did not seem much for working - perhaps that was why they made moonshine. But moonshine was good money, when the sheriff�s men were paid up good and proper to keep looking elsewheres. Maybe Jedediah and Uriah were just too idle to brew up more than an occasional batch of liquor.

She walked around the cabin to find Capitola�s vegetable patch. She did not expect to find much, because she now knew the woman for a lame sort of lazy thing. But a patch can always be developed. However she found nothing. She circled the cabin again in disbelief, to find Uriah standing waiting for her, midway between the cabin and the barn, with a hopeful gleam in his eyes.

�What y�re doing?� His voice was conciliatory. It was plain that he liked taking her in the hay.

�Where�s your Maw�s garden patch?�

The gleam faded from Uriah�s eyes, and he shook his head. �She don�t do nothing like that.� He made as though to move towards her, but Iris stepped back, safely out of his reach.

�Nothing? Never?� Iris� voice rose in disbelief.

�She buys all that stuff when she has call fer it.�

She was still unpersuaded. �Taters come dear in winter.�

�The still pays for �em.�

Iris was silent. Now she understood what happened to the proceeds from brewing up moonshine: the money financed Capitola�s idleness. She frowned. �Ain�t you never tempted by a good mess of corn and tomatoes?�

Uriah�s eyes gleamed again. But this time they showed a different kind of hunger. �I git to eat stuff like that when I goes visitin� folks, but Maw won�t allow it.�

She smiled faintly. �Mebbe you could get me a little stove, an� I c�ld cook fer you.�

Now Uriah looked alarmed. �She�d never allow that.�

�Up by the still mebbe?�

�It�d have to be secret.�

�Like the still?�

Suddenly Uriah smiled. �You want to go up there?�

�Ain�t got no hay there?�

�It ain�t far.�

Iris scuffed her bare foot in the dirt. It was still light, but she disliked strange places. �I ain�t goin� up there fer no messin� around.�

Uriah held out his hand. �I�ll show you the place, and I�ll bring you back.�

Now it was Iris� turn to smile. �Don�t count on too much.�

Uriah grinned. �I ain�t countin� on nothin�, gal. But mebbe we�ll be walkin� back after sundown, and you�ll need a man to keep the b�ars from gittin� yer honey. You gotta keep close for that.�

Iris took his hand. Maybe the world held worse men than Uriah, and she knew now that she could manage him. She also knew that she would have to line him up alongside her if she were to combat Capitola. Maybe they could find a cabin of their own. Woodrow might think of moving, if he took up seriously with Widow Law, and she would be more than happy to move back into her old home as its mistress. But Uriah would need some persuading. She began to think she might have been a little shortsighted, going so cold on him in the barn. Uriah was not a bright man, but he might be made manageable.

 

 

 

Chapter 3