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en I’d hate darkies! Damn their black souls; they believe anything those scoundrels tell them and forget every living thing we’ve done for them。 Now the Yankees are talking about letting the darkies vote。 And they won’t let us vote。 Why; there’s hardly a handful of Democrats in the whole County who aren’t barred from voting; now that they’ve ruled out every man who fought in the Confederate Army。 And if they give the negroes the vote; it’s the end of us。 Damn it; it’s our state! It doesn’t belong to the Yankees! By God; Scarlett; it isn’t to be borne! And it won’t be borne! We’ll do something about it if it means another war。 Soon we’ll be having nigger judges; nigger legislators—black apes out of the jungle—”
“Please—hurry; tell me! What did you do?”
“Give me another mite of that pone before you wrap it up。 Well; the word got around that Wilkerson had gone a bit too far with his nigger…equality business。 Oh; yes; he talks it to those black fools by the hour。 He had the gall—the—” Tony spluttered helplessly; “to say niggers had a right to—to—white women。”
“Oh; Tony; no!”
“By God; yes! I don’t wonder you look sick。 But hell’s afire; Scarlett; it can’t be news to you。 They’ve been telling it to them here in Atlanta。”
“I—I didn’t know。”
“Well; Frank would have kept it from you。 Anyway; after that; we all sort of thought we’d call on Mr。 Wilkerson privately by night and tend to him; but before we could— You remember that black buck; Eustis; who used to be our foreman?”
“Yes。”
“Came to the kitchen door today while Sally was fixing dinner and—I don’t know what he said to her。 I guess I’ll never know now。 But he said something and I heard her scream and I ran into the kitchen and there he was; drunk as a fiddler’s bitch—I beg your pardon; Scarlett; it just slipped out。”
“Go on。”
“I shot him and when Mother ran in to take care of Sally; I got my horse and started to Jonesboro for Wilkerson。 He was the one to blame。 The damned black fool would never have thought of it but for him。 And on the way past Tara; I met Ashley and; of course; he went with me。 He said to let him do it because of the way Wilkerson acted about Tara and I said No; it was my place because Sally was my own dead brother’s wife; and he went with me arguing the whole way。 And when we got to town; by God; Scarlett; do you know I hadn’t even brought my pistol; I’d left it in the stable。 So mad I forgot—”
He paused and gnawed the tough pone and Scarlett shivered。 The murderous rages of the Fontaines had made County history long before this chapter had opened。
“So I had to take my knife to him。 I found him in the barroom。 I got him in a corner with Ashley holding back the others and I told him why before I lit into him。 Why; it was over before I knew it;” said Tony reflecting。 “First thing I knew; Ashley had me on my horse and told me to come to you folks。 Ashley’s a good man in a pinch。 He keeps his head。”
Frank came in; his greatcoat over his arm; and handed it to Tony。 It was his only heavy coat but Scarlett made no protest。 She seemed so much on the outside of this affair; this purely masculine affair。
“But Tony—they need you at home。 Surely; if you went back and explained—”
“Frank; you’ve married a fool;” said Tony with a grin; struggling into the coat。 “She thinks the Yankees will reward a man for keeping niggers off his women folks。 So they will; with a drumhead court and a rope。 Give me a kiss; Scarlett。 Frank won’t mind and I may never see you again。 Texas is a long way off。 I won’t dare write; so let the home folks know I got this far in safety。”
She let him kiss her and the two men went out into the driving rain and stood for a moment; talking on the back porch。 Then she heard a sudden splashing of hooves and Tony was gone。 She opened the door a crack and saw Frank leading a heaving; stumbling horse into the carriage house。 She shut the door again and sat down; her knees trembling。
Now she knew what Reconstruction meant; knew as well as if the house were ringed about by naked savages; squatting in breech clouts。 Now there came rushing to her mind many things to which she had given little thought recently; conversations she had heard but to which she had not listened; masculine talk which had been checked half finished when she came into rooms; small incidents in which she had seen no significance at the time; Frank’s futile warnings to her against driving out to the mill with only the feeble Uncle Peter to protect her。 Now they fitted themselves together into one horrifying picture。
The negroes were on top and behind them were the Yankee bayonets。 She could be killed; she could be raped and; very probably; nothing would ever be done about it。 And anyone who avenged her would be hanged by the Yankees; hanged without benefit of trial by judge and jury。 Yankee officers who knew nothing of law and cared less for the circumstances of the crime could go through the motions of holding a trial and put a rope around a Southerner’s neck。
“What can we do?” she thought; wringing her hands in an agony of helpless fear。 “What can we do with devils who’d hang a nice boy like Tony just for killing a drunken buck and a scoundrelly Scalawag to protect his women folks?”
“It isn’t to be borne!” Tony had cried and he was right。 It couldn’t be borne。 But what could they do except bear it; helpless as they were? She fell to trembling and; for the first time in her life; she saw people and events as something apart from herself; saw clearly that Scarlett O’Hara; frightened and helpless; was not all that mattered。 There were thousands of women like her; all over the South; who were frightened and helpless。 And thousands of men; who had laid down their arms at Appomattox; had taken them up again and stood ready to risk their necks on a minute’s notice to protect those women。
There had been something in Tony’s face which had been mirrored in Frank’s; an expression she had seen recently on the faces of other men in Atlanta; a look she had noticed but had not troubled to analyze。 It was an expression vastly different from the tired helplessness she had seen in the faces of men coming home from the war after the surrender。 Those men had not cared about anything except getting home。 Now they were caring about something again; numbed nerves were coming back to life and the old spirit was beginning to burn。 They were caring again with a cold ruthless bitterness。 And; like Tony; they were thinking: “It isn’t to be borne!”
She had seen Southern men; soft voiced and dangerous in the days before the war; reckless and hard in the last despairing days of the fighting。 But in the faces of the two men who stared at each other across the candle flame so short a while ago there had been something that was different; something that heartened her but frightened her—fury which could find no words; determination which would stop at nothing。
For the first time; she felt a kinship with the people about her; felt one with them in their fears; their bitterness; their determination。 No; it wasn’t to be borne! The South was too beautiful a place to be let