Date: Mon, 3 Nov 2008 13:41:18 -0500 From: John Ellison Subject: The Landing - Chapter 2 This story contains situations and scenes of graphic sex between consenting males. All legal disclaimers apply. If this topic offends you, do not read any further; and ask yourself why you are at this site. This is a work of fiction. Any resemblance to actual events or locations, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental, although it may be loosely based on real events and people. If you are under the age of 18 (21 in some areas) and too young to be reading such material or if you are in a locale or country where it is not legal to read such material then please leave immediately and come back when it is legal for you to do so. We'll be glad to have you back. Copyright 2008 by John Ellison Additional works publish in Nifty in the Military Category: The Phantom of Aurora The Boys of Aurora Aurora Tapestry The Knights of Aurora Aurora Crusade The "Aurora" books are a series and should be read in sequence. A Sailor's Tale Constructive criticism is always welcome, and comments are appreciated. Flames expounding a personal agenda are not appreciated and will be treated with the contempt they deserved. Please feel free to send comments to: paradegi@sympatico.ca The Landing Chapter Two It was the last Friday in August, and a typical summer's day. The sun was burning high in the sky above, the air muggy and humid. Ordinarily I would be down at the swimming hole with my mates. However, Mam Berta, our cook, housekeeper and disciplinarian, had finally tired of my procrastination and ordered me into town. She knew exactly what dirty things boys could be - she had three sons of her own, huge, strapping boys - and she could only imagine what the contents of my school locker were. Me too. I had no idea what I had left behind when school had closed in June, and left moldering in a hot, near-vacant building all summer. Mam Berta threatened to whup my skinny white butt proper if I didn't move myself. Having been the recipient of several whuppings from the old black woman, I moved and wandered down the street, heading for the County Consolidated Schools. The school building, which was located on a large, open plot of land across from the Evangelical Temple on Hampton Road, was a stern stone and brick series of buildings. Surrounded by playing fields and a makeshift stadium, where I was dragged every Friday night during football season, the buildings housed the County Elementary School and Hampton High School. The two schools were separated by what was laughingly called the Athletic Complex, actually a gymnasium that smelled abominably, some dressing rooms, which smelled worse, and a murky pool where the male students swam nekkid. The girls wore swimming costumes that looked like they'd been designed by Queen Victoria. The Consolidated Schools had been designed and built back in the middle of the Great Depression, and paid for by the WPA. As with the town, it was segregated. No blacks had seen the inside of the place, although that was going to change in a few days. The Supreme Court, the Congress, and the State Legislature had all decreed desegregation and that was that. The day after Labor Day, when the schools reopened, fifty blacks would be bussed from their normal temple of education - a long, low, clapboard building in Overbridge - to the Consolidated Schools. So far as I knew no protests were planned, although Stubby Richmond and Daddy Smith, the stalwarts of the Klan, were rumored to be planning a cross-burning, which would only make matters worse. For almost one hundred years race relations had been more or less stable. The white folks lived in their part of town, the black folks in theirs. Segregation, "Jim Crow" as it was called, was alive and well and living in the South. I won't lie and say that everything was fine between the races. It wasn't. While almost every white lady in town employed a black maid, cook or laundress, there was virtually no interaction between the races at all. The town was divided by Conyngham Creek. On the west side, which we all called Overbridge, lived the blacks, their houses and businesses lining winding, unpaved roads, except for Davis Street, which stretched in a straight line from the bridge to the town limits. The houses were all built of pine and cypress, and they all looked as if a good wind would blow them down. Most had never been painted, and more than half had sagging roofs and porches. The business buildings along Davis Street looked, well, tired. These were the usual collection of small town economic enterprise: a drug store, a beauty parlor, a tailor, a barber, and so on. There was a large, decrepit looking hotel where visiting blacks could rent rooms - the Landing Inn was segregated and barred to persons of color. There was a fire station, where all the firemen were black, with two rigs and a tall, brick tower, and a police station, where all the constables were black, a jail, and the schools. There was also, or so it seemed, a church on every corner, ranging from the AME Church, brick, four-square and with a bell tower, to small, one room converted shotgun shacks. As an added attraction the town's sewage treatment plant was located in Overbridge, next to the Heavenly Rest Cemetery, where only black folk were buried. White folk were accommodated in Magnolia Cemetery, which overlooked the river east of town. Both burial grounds were privately owned by Mr. William van Lews, the town undertaker and owner of van Lews' Furniture Mart. Magnolia Cemetery, tree-dotted and criss-crossed with well cared for walks and flower gardens, was where the white folks went when they were "called to Glory". On the east side of the Creek was the white section of town, the streets wide and paved, and lined with well kept houses with neat lawns and flower beds, usually tended by young blacks in the employ of Mr. Theophilus Monroe, a stately, well-spoken black gentleman. The Monroes had been tending the gardens and lawns of Charles Town Landing for generations, and were descended from slaves who had tended the gardens of Broadlands House and Conyngham Hall. Other than the house servants and Mr. Monroe's gardeners, one rarely saw a black face in the white part of town, and if one did one also could expect a Sheriff's deputy to pull up in his patrol car and ask what his or her business was in this part of town. Downtown there were blacks in evidence, as there had to be. Ravelli's employed black waiters, the better to lull the tourists into thinking they had stepped back in time to the days of the Old South. Biedermeyer's also employed blacks in the separate but equal cafeteria that occupied half of the main floor. Separating the cafeteria was a tall wooden partition, one side for whites, the other for blacks. The white side of the cafeteria had tall windows overlooking the street. The white folks sat in cushioned banquettes or at tables, with white linen clothes and silver plated cutlery. On the other side of the partition, black folk sat at a long Formica and chrome counter, or at long, bare deal tables lined with spindly wooden chairs. They ate off of plain white, heavy china with stainless steel utensils. There were two windows, both as tall as the windows in the white section, but these overlooked the alley behind the store. There were two kitchens, one where the food for the white folks was prepared, and another where food for the black folks was prepared. The only commonality was the wait staff - they were all black. Everything it seemed had been done to perpetuate the "separate but equal" society we lived in. Down at the bus station there were four rest rooms, two for whites (ladies and gentlemen), two for blacks (men and women), as there were in the railroad station. White folks ate, drank, and peed in separate facilities. Even the whore houses were segregated. If you were white, and horny, you went to Peckinham's Road House, where the booze and the girls (usually a Smith) were cheap. If you were black, and horny, you frequented Ethel's, a low, dark dive just outside the town limits. The only time the rules were relaxed was on Saturday Market Day, when the farmers and townsfolk gathered around small booths lining the square to buy vegetables and handicrafts, buy or sell a mule, sample fresh-baked pies and cakes and barbecue, and picnic on the Court House lawn. ****** Leaving the coolness of the house and walking into the heat of the day had been like slamming into a brick wall. I had barely reached the road before I was drenched in sweat and panting as I walked toward the schools. The street was quiet, as it almost always was, the only thing stirring being Lucy, a bitch of no known breed, sheltering on the porch of the Finch house. She was languidly licking herself and looked to be pregnant again. As I neared the terrace café of the hotel I could hear the low hum of conversation and saw that the tables were less than half-filled. Down on the landing steps the old, white-painted steam launch that brought tourists up from Charleston maintained steam, patiently waiting for the tourists to finish eating. As I passed the terrace I gave a short wave to Tony Ravelli, who was busy schmoozing with the tourists. Tony was a sometimes lover of mine, very receptive to my schoolboy ministrations and claimed to be straight. I gave him a small wave as I passed and grinned at him. For a straight boy Tony sure did love to have his pecker sucked, and never mentioned what we did in the privacy of his bedroom. I rounded the corner of the hotel and looked over the expanse of the square. It was populated, as it always seemed to be, by the usual suspects. Outside of Biedermeyer's, sitting on the benches provided, a clutch of old men, retired farmers for the most part, sat gossiping, chewing tobacco and taking sips from Mason jars of Daddy Smith's sippin' likker, which they hid in brown paper bags. These old men were a fixture. They gathered every morning in Sully's Café to have coffee, eat donuts, read the papers and argue in the manner of old men with too much time on their hands. Breakfast over, they would amble over to Biedermeyer's for the day. Outside of Lucille's a clutch of convent girls, easily identifiable by their black, habit-like school uniforms and white, short-sleeved blouses, giggled and pointed at what passed for the latest fashion in hats and frocks in the display window. As always they were chaperoned by two Ursiline sisters and I wondered how the ladies stood the heat in their ankle length, black habits and starched wimples. As always of late, Stubby Richmond was standing outside his hardware store, chewing on an unlit cigar and glaring across the square at one of the town radio patrol cars parked near the bridge over The Krik. The car had become a regular fixture for nearly five months, as had the two policemen sitting in it, riot guns close to hand, since the night of Thursday, the 4th of April, when Overbridge had exploded in protest at the assassination of Martin Luther King. It had been a day that no one would ever forget. Until that day, while relations between the races were not all sweetness and light, they weren't all that bad either. Most people in town were resigned to the coming changes. There wasn't a hell of a lot anyone could do about them, so being Southerners we accepted what was to come with as good a grace as possible and, as it turned out, figured out a way to get around the government orders. However, the events of that day changed everything. No longer were blacks and whites to live in uneasy harmony. Benign tolerance was replaced with blind hatred and deep distrust formed a chasm between the communities. The bond that had joined individuals through wars and depression was torn asunder. For the first time, and from then on, the long forbidden word was spoken openly and disdainfully; there were no longer white folks and colored folks. There were "us", and niggers. ****** I recall the day was a typical spring day, not too warm, not too cool. I did what I did every day, walked to school with the gang, sat in a drafty classroom listening to the drone of the teacher trying to pound some history, or geography or whatever, into my less than receptive skull. Lunch was the usual near inedible slop dished out every day. At 3:00 in the afternoon school let out and I ambled home, listening to Sinjin bitch, admiring the view of the Conyngham boys (I always let them walk ahead so I could admire their firmly packed little butts) and, as we strolled past van Lews' funeral parlor, admired the sleek horses waiting in the wide, covered driveway of the house. The horses were pulling one of Mr. van Lews pride and joy, a black, varnished, hearse. Funerals in the south tend to be old-fashioned and traditional. Mr. van Lews, never one to let the grass grow under his feet, catered to every taste. For the modern thinking, young, up-and-coming professional there was a long, sleek, black Cadillac "funeral coach", as he insisted on calling the hearse, the latest in a long line of "coaches". The undertaker bought a new hearse every two years, the old one going to his establishment in Overbridge, and eventually being sold to an up country mortician who couldn't afford a modern, up-to-date, funeral coach. For the tradition-minded, and this included many of the old families and country folk, Mr. van Lews maintained two horse drawn hearses, black and silver for adults, white painted for children. The hearses and horses were kept in a long, brick stable behind the funeral home. Leaving the horses, and playing grab ass, we ambled through the square, bade goodbye to the Ravelli boys, and continued on home. It was something we did every day, according to a pattern that never seemed to change. At home I saw that the usual Thursday pattern was well along. We lived according to established routines. After breakfast, if he were not out on a call, Father would take up his medical bag and drive to the town hospital. I would grumble and snort and drag my skinny behind off to school. Mother would go into the kitchen and sit with Mam Berta and plan the day's menus, drink gallons of coffee and gossip. When they were done that Mother would go off and sit in her sitting room, paying bills, writing letters and so on. Mam Berta would terrorize the day girls, supervise the cleaning, and head downtown to shop. For Mother, lunch was always at 1:15. After lunch she would call on her neighbors and friends, or shop. Wednesday she would drive into Charleston to visit my sister. Thursdays, Mother was "at home" and from 2:00 until 4:00 she would entertain her friends to tea and cake and more catty gossip. That afternoon I arrived at home and went into the house the back way. I had no desire to thrust myself into the nest of old cats in the drawing room, and much preferred to sit at the battered old kitchen table, drink milk and nibble freshly-baked cookies. Mam Berta would grumble and mumble away and eventually pack me off to do my homework. This was the rule: cookies and milk, and then homework until dinner time, which for me was 6:00 pm. Dinner for my parents was always at 8:15, and children were not invited. After I had been fed and watered I had an hour or two to kill before bedtime, which was 9:00 pm on week nights. I usually watched television, or went over to Sinjin's to pass the time with him. That evening I didn't watch television, and Sinjin asked me to go into town to the chemists shop to pick up a prescription - his mother was ailing. Normally I would have demurred, but as it was still warm out I said yes. As Sinjin and I started out I thought I heard the dull reports of gunfire. We looked at each other and then we noticed a sharp, acrid smell in the gentle breeze blowing from the west. Sinjin thought that there was a fire somewhere, probably in Overbridge. I thought so too, because something was always burning down over there, which was not surprising as most of the buildings were firetraps. The closer we got to town the stranger things seemed to be. As we entered the Landing I saw men, white men, carrying shotguns and hunting rifles, hurrying toward the Court House. Along Marion Street the shops and hotel were closing, and I saw Mr. Ravelli and his sons busily hanging the storm shutters that protected the windows of the ground floor from the periodic tropical storms that roared in from the Atlantic. Mama Ravelli was hurrying around the terrace restaurant, stopping at each table and waving at the black waiters to hurry with the service. Stubby Richmond was standing outside his hardware store with Simmons, Daddy Smith and two of the Smith boys. Each one carried a weapon, hunting rifles so far as I could see. A town patrol car went roaring by, its red roof light flashing ominously, and I watched it make the turn that would take it over the bridge and then I saw a huge, roiling column of flames and smoke lighting the sky above Overbridge. Something was definitely wrong and, frightened, Sinjin and I hurried into the chemist shop, snatched up the prescription and ran home. Twilight had waned and the street lights lit our way as we hurried down Broadlands Avenue. As we skittered past his house, I saw Mr. Conyngham standing on his front porch, a shotgun in his hands. He was looking toward town where the sound of sirens filled the still air. Sinjin peeled off and ran into his house while I hurried on home. As I turned into our driveway and under the porte-cochere, I could see some of the cadets from the military school in front of the gates that led to the school. The gates were closed but behind the ornate metalwork was what looked like a deuce-and-a-half truck. The truck's lights were on, brightly illuminating the boy cadets standing guard. I saw that they were wearing olive drab fatigues, helmets, and carrying more or less modern Garand rifles instead of their ceremonial Enfields. This, I think was the time I realized that a Southerner's worst nightmare might be on the cards. I had hardly entered the foyer when my mother pounced on me, demanding to know where I had got to. She had obviously been looking for me. She was calm, and her voice was icy for some reason, although I knew she was worried sick when she found me missing. I was worried sick when I saw what was in her hand: my father's old Webley pistol. Ignoring my sputtered excuse, Mother ordered me to go to my room and under no circumstance was I to leave it. Mother's icy calmness was frightening and I whined and begged her not to make me go upstairs where I would be alone. She relented and told me to go into the library where the two dailies, Flora and Annette were huddled, watching television. The images being broadcast showed a night of terror and destruction. Few people realize that there were more riots that night than the media could report. Detroit, Chicago, New York, all were featured in the news broadcasts, but there were others. Overbridge was our riot. When the first reports of King's assassination came over the air waves and blacks began to gather in protest, tempers began to rise and while the ministers and perceived community leaders tried to calm the people down, rocks began to fly, and then trash containers, and windows were smashed and Overbridge exploded in protest at the assassination of the Reverend Doctor Martin Luther King. The police were called and for whatever reason fists flew, truncheons were drawn and the riot was on. The Captain of the Overbridge police station called for reinforcements from the Landing, but the police there were all white and the Mayor, Mister Wallingford, refused to let the town officers anywhere near Overbridge. He ordered the cops to blockade the bridge. He also ordered them to use whatever force they needed to keep the blacks in their place, which was on the other side of the bridge. Much later I learned that Wallingford had more than just the town's ten-man police force to rely on. There was a State Troopers' barracks less than fifteen miles away, and he could appoint "Special Constables" at will. More importantly, the Mayor was not hesitant when it came to calling out the Klan. Stubby Richmond was always going on about the "niggers rising", and warning everyone who would listen to be prepared. Everybody was, for this was the South, and I doubt there was a house in town that didn't have at least a shotgun around. Daddy Smith hated coloreds with a passion, probably because they worked hard, didn't live in a falling down shack, or have a tribe of slatternly daughters or lummox sons. The average black showed Daddy Smith and his whelps up as swamp trash, and Daddy didn't like that at all. At the time I was too busy being terrified to worry about the various white cabals more than willing to shoot their black neighbors. Damian Lee had finally appeared. He'd been over to Goose Creek popping corn with one of the girls from school when he heard a report on his car radio. He broke speed records getting home and was soon running around trying to find the keys to my father's gun cabinet. Mam Berta was looking thunderous, and announced that she'd like to see the color of the free issue nigger that would dare to even look crossways at her lambs (I assume she meant me and Damian). For a while I parked myself in a chair in one corner of the entry hall, my eyes wide and my heart pounding. In the distance I could hear the shrill whistle of the tourist launch, a screaming banshee sounding in the humid air as it chugged downriver toward Charleston. I also heard the muffled, sharp cracks of what I knew to be rifle fire, interspersed with the dull thud of what could only be a shotgun being fired. As I waited, the Finch sisters came into the house, with their dog. Miss Adele, grim-faced and determined, was carrying a shotgun, while her sister, Miss Hester, carried an old horse pistol (which her Granddaddy had carried in some Indian war). The two old ladies didn't seem fazed at all. After seeing my mother, pistol in hand, ordering Flora and Annette to stop their sniveling and help her barricade the front door with an antique sofa and some tables, the Finch sisters took up position on either side of the door, vowing that none of "those people" would ever set foot in Broadlands House. There was a definite feeling of exodus and need for safety in numbers in the air, for the next thing I knew my mother's flimsy barricade was across the brilliantly polished floor as the Cecils pushed the front door open. Mrs. Cecil, her normally perfectly coiffed hair tied up in a ratty old bandana, pushed her boys into the hall. Nicholas immediately came to stand beside me, while Gregory and Bob Lee, men in their own eyes, went in search of Damian, and a gun. Over the next hour or so the smell of burning wood drifted in through the open windows. Bob Lee, who had gone up to the roof where there was a good view of the town, reported black columns of smoke and flame roiling over the rooflines of Overbridge. He also reported that there were State Troopers gathering outside the Ursiline Convent. The Misses Finch gripped their weapons even more tightly and Damian appeared. He handed me an old Purdy fowling piece and told me that my job was to guard the river entrance. With Nicholas, I reluctantly left my perch, walked down the long hall, through the Music Room and onto the wide porch that overlooked the normally gray waters of the Cooper River. The sun was now long set and deep shadows darkened the waters, which were empty of traffic, and a low mist was also settling across the black waters. I watched for a while and then realized that there was no way that rioters would ever appear on the river. First of all, there were few boats, mostly rowboats, the cutters from the military school marina, and the like. To get to them a mob would have to cross the bridge and somehow reach the wide steps leading down from the flood wall to the river, which didn't seem likely, given the number of armed men on the white side of the bridge and along the Krik. Second of all, the only other way to get to the river from Overbridge was an old, winding road that ran past the Smith place and God help the black man, woman or child on riot bent who dared to go anywhere near there. Every Smith, male or female, had figuratively been born with a gun in his hand, and could drill a squirrel at a hundred paces. Nick and I sat on the steps that led to the lawns for what seemed like hours. A gentle wind began to blow from the west, riffling the leaves and branches of the moss-draped live oak trees and jacaranda bushes, and bringing with it the sounds of yelling, the clanging of a bell, and what sounded like an explosion of some sorts. This caused Nick to hug me tightly, and for a while we just cuddled. The wind shifted and we no longer heard anything, which seemed to make matters worse. As the night deepened more neighbors appeared, the thick, stout, brick and stucco walls of Broadlands House offering safety and a measure of security. First were the Conynghams, Tristan and Damian and their mother left in my mother's care while Mr. Conyngham hurried into town to join the growing number of white men called out as "Special Constables". Mrs. Conyngham was also armed, with a shotgun. The boys carried their pillows and blankets and settled on sofas in the drawing room. Their mother sat nearby, peering out of the window into the darkness. Sinjin and his mother showed up. Mrs. Tradd was clutching a huge rosewood box - containing her jewels I found out later - while Sinjin tried to look brave, holding a Remington pump action shotgun that I was sure would have knocked him on his ass if he fired it. He and Bobby Lee Cecil were sent upstairs to sit in front of the Palladian window that overlooked the street. From time to time Damian Lee appeared, armed to the teeth, and then disappeared. I knew he wanted to head into town but as the only "adult" male in the house, he had to stay and protect the women and children. He knew that everybody was carrying a weapon, but the Code dictated that he stay. I was quite grumpily uncomfortable, and sent Nick off for some blankets. The temperature dropped and it was cool, around 55 degrees or so. When he returned Nick wrapped himself in his blanket and huddled close against me. I was scared shitless to say the least, what with the house being turned into a fortress, and filled with women twittering about what was going on in Overbridge. The sound of buildings crashing and guns being fired did not help at all. I wanted to go find Sinjin, but I had been set a duty, and until Damian Lee told me to go to bed, I would stay. I had no choice. I was a little man and the Code was strongly ingrained in me. Sometime during that long evening Nick fell asleep, and snored softly, his head resting in my lap while I tried, ineffectually to keep my eyes open. Before I knew it, it was morning, and I was lying on my own bed, with Nick cuddled against me. I raised my head and saw that we had both slept in our clothes, a most uncomfortable feeling. I wondered how I had got there. I didn't remember going to bed, and assumed that someone, probably Mam Berta, maybe Damian, had carried both Nicholas and me to bed. Nick's hand was resting on my stomach, a bare inch away from my morning wood, which was pooching out the front of my shorts. Ordinarily this would not have bothered me at all, but the door suddenly opened and in walked Charlie Pegram, looking disheveled and not quite the neat, trim, Citadel cadet he was. "Hey, little man, how's it hanging?" Charlie asked as he crossed the room and sat on the bed beside me. I grinned at Charlie, the secret love of my life. "Hey. Where'd you come from?" I asked. He was supposed to be down in Charleston. Charlie chuckled. "Your daddy called the Superintendent, who let the cadets go for the week, what with the trouble and all. I called Philip Charles and we drove up here." "Gosh, you did?" I asked, visions of Charlie dashing to my rescue, waving a sword, with horn blaring and flags flying. "Yep. We had to fight our way through but Philip Charles waved his pistol at 'em, and then a Charleston cop car came up and the miscreants scattered." I couldn't help but giggle. Charlie tended to sound at times as if he were a character in a Victorian novel. Charlie smiled. "Not really. Charleston is quiet, not like Detroit or Chicago. They're still rioting up there and it looks like half the town is afire." "What about Overbridge?" Charlie stood up and looked out the window. "Cooper, it's about gone. The fools burned down most of Davis Street, the hotel, and the movie house. Mam Berta's house is gone and two of her boys are in the calaboose." "For sure?" Charlie nodded. "For sure. The governor called out the Guard and they're mopping up." Charlie shook his head sadly. "The damn fools! What did they gain? White folks won't trust 'em ever again! The fools yelled and danced and threw rocks and took pot shots at the police and burned down half the town and what did it get them?" I could understand Charlie's anger. It was like me burning down the house if I got punished for something I didn't do. All I was really doing was cutting off my nose to spite my face. "They'll rebuild," I said. "Folks have got to live and . . ." Charlie wheeled and glared at me. "No, no they won't!" he declared. "Your great granddaddy isn't around with a secret stash of Consols. Nobody, black or white, has any money to speak of, and if they do they sure aren't going to help folks who burn down the place everytime something happens they don't like!" I was a little surprised at Charlie's vehemence. Normally he was the kindest guy I knew. His anger caused his normal, peaches and cream complexion to turn a deep red. He took a deep breath. "Cooper, you know me." I nodded. "I know it's difficult around here, but that's the way it's been for two hundred and more years." He returned to sit beside me on the bed. He looked over to where Nicholas was snoring away and smiled. "That kid sure can make a noise." I grinned and shrugged. "He has adenoids," I said casually. "You should hear him during pollen season." Charlie laughed quietly and shook his head. "I'll pass." Then his face turned hard, and his blue, blue eyes darkened. "Coops, things are never going to be the same again. The niggers have drawn a line in the sand." I gasped. Charlie, my sweet, sweet Charlie, a boy who wouldn't say shit if he had a mouthful, had used the forbidden word! Gentle folk, folk like Charlie and my Daddy, folk of good blood and breeding, never, ever, called the Negroes "niggers". People like Stubby Richmond, the Smiths, they used the epithet all the time, but not good people. Never good people! Charlie saw the shocked look on my face. "I'm sorry Coops, but what else are they? We didn't shoot their Messiah. We were over here, on our side of the Krik, minding our own business, and what do they do?" "He was their hero," I temporized. "They don't have anyone else now," I said weakly. Charlie waved his hand dismissively. "I know they all loved Doctor King. So did a lot of white folk. He was a good man and he preached non-violence." "But . . ." I began. "No!" Charlie growled. "The niggers think they've got the upper hand. Well, there are folks around who will make sure that they go on thinking it. Only that's all they'll get." "The Klan?" I probed. "The Smiths?" Charlie nodded. "Bad times are a-comin' Coops." Charlie sighed. "Oh, the darkies will do the Jungle Bunny Stomp on the Court House lawn; they'll burn down a few businesses and pat themselves on the back and tell themselves that we're too frightened of them and give 'em what they want." He laughed angrily. "Well, let 'em think what they want. We'll make sure they get what we give 'em!" I was confused. I didn't understand the depth of desperation in the black community, and I didn't understand the depth of Charlie's anger. I also wondered who "we" were. I didn't have a chance to pursue Charlie's words. He stood up abruptly. "You and Grampus there get yourselves downstairs. Your momma's holding breakfast for you." Momma? Momma hadn't actually cooked in the kitchen in years! "Um, Mummy?" I asked tentatively. "Where's Mam Berta?" Charlie shook his head. "She went to Overbridge," he replied bluntly. His tone said that Overbridge was the best place for her to be. ****** Things never returned to normal. While no one was killed, the few blacks that ventured over the bridge separating the town trod carefully. Mam Berta appealed to my father and her sons, Moses and Layton, were released from jail on bail - which my father advanced, although I knew he could hardly afford it. In a good year he cleared forty thousand, out of which he had to maintain the house, his practice, and pay Philip Charles' Citadel tuition. Papa didn't care, and even though his standing surety for Mam Berta's sons caused some grumbling in town, as far as he was concerned they were, by definition, family, and that was that. Overbridge looked like a war zone. The State Troopers patrolled the streets, and the rank smell of charred wood lingered still. Very few of the burnt out businesses and homes were being rebuilt. One of these was Mam Berta's house. My father did manage to advance her a few thousand dollars to help her rebuild. Like I said, she was family, and Papa was only continuing a tradition begun back in 1865. ****** In 1861 Philip V Marigny was a millionaire. He owned Broadlands; he owned a townhouse in Charleston, and more importantly, he owned two, modern, steel-hulled screw driven ships, the Carpathia, and the Athenian and he was smart enough to know that the government in Richmond was composed of fools. The Secretary of the Treasury, Memminger, a South Carolinian, had proposed, and President Davis and his advisers had agreed, that the surest way to bring in France and Britain on the side of the Confederacy was to embargo cotton. The mills in Lancashire and France depended on Southern cotton; without it the mills would have to close, and economic chaos would follow. Philip V thought the politicians out of their minds. He, along with a host of others, ignored the embargo, filled both of his ships with bales of cotton, and sent them to England where his agent purchased new Enfield rifles, bayonets, uniforms and other accoutrements of war. He also filled one of the holds with luxury goods. The ships easily eluded the then ineffective Union blockade and sailed into Wilmington, where the cargoes were sold at auction. The rifles and articles of war were shipped inland, where Philip V parceled out the arms and ammunition. Some of the new rifles went to the boys at the military school, the rest went to outfit a regiment of infantry, Colonel Philip de Marigny commanding, which was eventually absorbed into Hampton's Legion and later became a part of the 2nd South Carolina Infantry. The Regiment fought at Gettysburg, where Philip V was wounded, and invalided home. Back home, Philip studied the terrain, so to speak, and decided that the South was lost. The Yankees were too numerous, too rich, and now that they had a cause, the freeing of the slaves, it was only a matter of time before the Stars and Bars was replaced by the white flag of surrender. Philip V had sunk half his fortune or thereabouts in Confederate bonds, which he knew would become worthless. His ships, battered and weather-beaten, still ran the blockade, and while much of their cargoes were war supplies, he still managed to bring in the luxury goods the people craved. He kept some of his profits in the bank in Charleston, but the bulk of his money was sunk in the gold-standard securities of the day: Consols. Consols, actually Consolidated Annuities issued by the British Government, paid three per cent interest, sometimes for a fixed period of years, sometimes not. They could be bought, or sold, on the London Change, and were the bedrock of the British financial system. The actual certificate didn't look like much, but presented at the Annuities Window at the Bank of England they could be exchanged for gold coin of the realm. Philip V had a satchel full of them. In 1865 the South was devastated, especially in those areas where Sherman's horde had laid waste to crops and houses, whole villages, and stolen everything from pigs to family silver that could not be hidden. Vast miles of land lay derelict, populated only by crows and long lines of returning Confederates. Lee had surrendered at Appomattox Court House. Richmond, Charleston, all the major cities and towns were occupied by hard-eyed, hard-visaged bluebellies, most of whom thought petty larceny a pleasant sideline. Nothing was safe if for some reason the troops entered your house. Grand Larceny was freely committed, at the hands of Carpetbaggers from the North, and their white sympathizers, Scalawags, and hordes of now freed slaves, all of whom were hell bent on looting every state treasury they could gain control of. Through vote-rigging, terror tactics, disenfranchising voters (all Democrats) and the "Oath of Allegiance", which nobody would take, they quickly gained the upper hand. The Landing was a typical small town of the era. The War was over, and the boys were returning home - those who had survived. Commerce was at a standstill, and the plantation fields, once green and white with cotton, were empty and weed-choked. The labor force, the black slaves, had decamped en masse, some following Sherman's barbarians, most flocking to Charleston or Columbia, to live in shanty towns and exist on handouts from the Freedman's Bureau. The Yankees had never understood the South. They thought they had won the War, and while they had won the final battle, they little realized that the War would go on for another fifty years or more. To the average Yankee, the South was beaten, desperate, on her knees, and ripe for plunder. With their Negro allies, in and out of uniform, they thought the South would buckle under, abandon her arrogance and gentility, and grovel at the feet of her new masters. Oh, how little they knew of the South! The collective South looked down its nose at the invaders, shrugged, and whenever possible, ignored them. They continued in their traditional ways as much as possible, knowing that they couldn't change things. Let the Carpetbaggers steal the election - the Radicals in Washington were bound to side with them anyway. Let the ex-slaves have their freedom. Let them see what freedom meant. There would be no more weekly issue of rations, no more yearly issue of new clothes or cloth to make them, no more "Chrismus Gifs". The former slaves were on their own. In the cities, Charleston, Columbia, Savannah, the aristocrats withdrew into their own special enclaves. In Charleston gentle folk returned to what was essentially the site of the original city of Charles Towne, the area south of Broad Street. On the plantations, folks rolled up their sleeves and set to work. They ignored the rapacious Yankees as best they could, and ineptly began to rebuild their lives. ****** Over the fireplace mantle in the drawing room at Broadlands is a painting. It is of Philip V late in life. His hair and beard are white, his frame lithe, the hands and face - he is staring directly at the viewer - are weathered and rough, the marks of a man who has had a hard life. Philip V is the picture of a proper Victorian gentleman. He is wearing a Confederate gray frock coat, open to reveal a matching waistcoat, across which is draped a heavy, gold chain. His trousers are pressed and under his wing collar is a colorful four-in-hand tie. He is sitting at his desk, battered and splintered here and there, the rosewood and mahogany dull with age. The desk is piled high with account books, factor's reports, bills of lading, a list of comestibles, the prices blurred. The artist, Sir Luke Fildes, had caught the mood, the light, the aura of a man who had faced adversity, and overcome it. I have a different portrait in mind. I see Philip V, not broken, but near to it, sitting on the old bundling board that has stood on the second floor porch for close on to two hundred years. He is staring out at his patrimony, what there is of it. Overhead the sky is leaden, bringing promise of rain. The river, dark and foreboding, is devoid of activity. There are no wooden skiffs or barges polled by black men, and piled high with the fruits of the land: cotton, corn, rice. Philip V does not wear broadcloth, or fine linen. His trousers, such as they are, have seen hard times, ripped and patched with whatever piece of cloth that came to hand, roughly sewn and showing it. On his feet his boots, taken from a dead Yank, not quite shoddy, but as split and patched as his trousers. Around his neck a rough neckerchief, torn from an old piece of calico, wet with perspiration, for it is a hot, muggy day. His hair, once red and shining with golden highlights, is matted and in need of cutting, and graying. Behind Philip V his house, a place once of laughter and good times, a haven of hospitality where fine china, good silver, and crystal graced tables laden with barons of beef, plump turkeys, delicate fish, shrimps brought upriver from the bay. Bottles of bourbon and fine wines waited to be passed by smiling footmen dressed in the house livery of the de Marignys. The hospitality of Broadlands House, gone now, replaced with leathery shad and grits. Philip's eyes drift, taking in the once-neat double row of brick cabins that stretched along the river bank and ended at the wall of the military school, the Quarters, now derelict, the glass of the windows shattered and now shards scattered across the wooden boards of the porches, small harbors where black slaves once lounged after work, laughing, watching their children playing. The cabin doors are broken and ripped from the hinges, the roof trees sagging. The people who had called these small structures home were gone. Some had followed Sherman's hordes. Others, mad with the excitement of freedom, had danced and laughed their ways into the city. They were free men all, and none had any idea of what awaited them. I can see the look of disgust on Philip's face. His slaves had abandoned the land. He made no apology to any man that he had owned slaves. Slavery, with its imagined horrors, had been forced on him, indeed on the South. But . . . he had been a good master. Never had a slave been whipped, or physically punished. He had never sold a slave, for such was an abomination. He had provided for his people, patronizing to be sure, but he had housed them, and fed them and, although it was illegal, schooled the more intelligent of them. He had done his Christian duty in providing a church for his people, and when they were sick or hurt, he called a proper physician to tend to them. He had thought that his people were happy and content. He had been a fool, and was paying the price thereby. As were his people. They flocked to the cities to find that there was no white "master" willing to see to their needs. They lived in shanty towns, except for the lucky ones who appealed to white ladies, who had not the heart to turn away an old darky. The unlucky ones lived on handouts, rations of salt pork and grits doled out by an uncaring Freedmen's Bureau, and believed the lies of free land, free houses, free schools. Little did the free slaves know, or understand, that they were little more than cannon fodder in a new war, a political war where power came from the ballot box and so long as the free blacks voted the Republican ticket, they were the new kings of the South. Philip V had no time, or patience to worry about what was happening beyond the confines of his country, his lands, and his patrimony. The fields, once lush with corn and cotton, barley and oats, were empty, for nothing had been planted in the spring. There had been no hands to till, or hoe, and there had been no seed to plant. The pine forests, and the weeds, were returning to reclaim the once fertile land. The town was as derelict, as empty as the fields, except for feral cats and rawboned curs searching for a meal. Black-draped wraiths hurried through the streets, widows without hope of seeing their men return from the War. There were too many widows, too many orphans, for there was not a family that Philip knew of that had not suffered a loss, even the no-account Smiths, who lived in squalor out on River Road. They had been loud, self-proclaimed Unionists, but when Sherman's Bummers and thieves came, even the Smiths had rallied to the Stars and Bars, and two of them were buried in the ruin of Magnolia Cemetery. People were starving; women who had never lifted a hand except to call a black slave or butler, were suffering from rickets and impetigo. Children, once cosseted and coddled by black Mammies, had the pinched, wan faces of the slums. Nobody had food, save for the fish that still could be caught, or a bag of rice or hominy hidden when the marauders rode through. Nobody had any money, and little hope of getting any anytime soon. Most people had silver and jewelry hidden. The Marigny silver, famous for its beauty and weight before the War, was hidden in a gator hole, guarded by an old bull that bellowed romantic invitation in the warm, muggy spring to any female gator in hearing distance. But what use was something that was inedible and unsaleable, or nearly so? The auction and sales rooms of Charleston were stuffed with old family possessions, silver of every kind, furniture, books and gewgaws beyond measure, with no takers at a decent price. The Carpetbaggers and Scalawags, the soldiers and their women, knew that it was a buyer's market and offered ten cents on the dollar, if that. I can see Philip's face, as red now as his hair once had been, his choler rising. He was a man of tempestuous temper, as all red heads seemed to be, and the thought of the insulting price offered by a smooth-talking, oily-faced Yankee from Maine for Broadlands, rankled. Fifty cents an acre, cash money, payable in good Yankee greenbacks. Philip had scornfully rejected the offer, taking a buggy whip to the man and his equally loathsome black companion, driving them off in as fine a fit of temper as the neighbors had seen in years! I can see Philip rising, pacing, ignoring the rising storm brewing on the horizon, remembering the snide words of the black man. "Who will till your fields? Who will plant your cotton? Who will pick it?" Who indeed? There were blacks, of course. But they were "house niggers", and all far along in years for the most part. There were ancient butlers, gray-haired Mammies, arthritic Cooks and maids. The old had stayed with their families, the young had fled, off to the Day of Jubilee. Those former slaves who had remained were as proud of their white families as Lucifer. Family status, family wealth and station, was reflected in them, or so they thought. Most had been chosen for their intelligence and looks, and carriage. They dressed in fine cloth and linen; they ate well; they enjoyed a privileged status in slave society and thought nothing of looking down their noses at the ignorant field hands, men for the most part incapable of anything other than picking cotton. The house slaves had never picked so much as a radish from the vegetable garden, and saw no reason to start now. Faced with the intransigence of the remaining blacks, Philip despaired of ever bringing his fields back to life. Even if he could entice laborers from the cities, how would he pay them? He had no money, save for $26.25 in silver coin, doled out to him in Abbeville by the paymaster from the small cache that was all that was left of the Confederate Treasury. Philip V had managed to be a part of the small escort guarding the refugee Government, President Davis and his wife and children, Secretary of State Benjamin, the hangers-on and aides and assorted camp followers that had fled Richmond. Philip V had ridden his spavined old horse south, scouting ahead for the fifty cadets from the Naval Academy that formed the main guard. In Abbeville, when it finally dawned on Davis and his Cabinet (those who were left) that it was over, the decision was made to release the boy cadets and cavalry escort. They were to go their own way, granted leave to return to their homes, and paid off. The money, $26.25, was $26.25 more than Lee's veterans received. Philip V knew of the poverty and deprivation that stalked the land. He knew that there were families that would lose their homes and plantations because the politicians in Columbia, determined to bring the Rebs to their knees, had jacked up taxes to impossible levels. The Yankees in Washington, the Radical politicians had coldly determined that the South would pay for its pride, pay for its arrogance, and live under the jackbooted heel of occupation for as long as it took to teach them the lessons they should have learned, and to pay for Chancellorsville, and Gettysburg, to pay for the defeat of blue-clad troops that fell in windrows and lines of blood and gore at Fredericksburg and Chancellorsville. I can see Philip V, pacing, pacing, wondering where the money to pay the taxes would come from. Wondering how he would pay for seed, or pay the workers needed to bring the land back. The Yankees had decreed that blacks could be hired, for thirteen dollars a month. Before the war, one hundred and twenty slaves, not counting babies and pickaninnys, had worked the land. Conyngham Hall, the nearest neighbor, had been home to near two hundred slaves. The Cecils had had only sixty-five slaves, while the Pegrams had only owned a handful, house slaves, for they were in banking, not land. The Tradds were, on paper, the wealthiest family in the county, on a par with Wade Hampton, the richest man in the state. They owned three plantations with over four hundred slaves. I can see Philip V ticking off a mental list of names and places, once-rich plantations, many now devoid of life. Each now needed help. The widows and orphans of the South were helpless, or nearly so. Philip V's neighbors were as bad off as he. They were struggling to put food on their tables, as he was, food to feed their children, their wounded husbands and brothers and sons, and the few blacks who had stayed. They were struggling to find a way to repair the roof, or the sagging porch, struggling to find a scrap of cloth to make a dress, or a pair of pantaloons. Like Philip, they were faced with starvation, and desolation, and despair. ****** I can see Philip V now, staring once again at the empty fields, at the destroyed cabins, staring at the emptiness. Gone were the chickens and cows and pigs that had helped each plantation be more or less self-sufficient. Gone were the vegetable gardens, the radishes, the corn, the heads of lettuce ground under the hooves of horses ridden by vengeful men, or under the wheels of artillery caissons, deliberately so, the better to starve the civilians into submission. I can see Philip V arguing in his mind, his temper in check for once. What to do? For almost a hundred years the Marignys had been the leaders. In peace and war they had always taken the lead. When a storm surge roared up the Cooper and wiped out the rice fields, a Marigny had come forward with advice and cotton seed. When the nation went to War, in 1812, Philip III rallied his neighbors and marched off to battle. When Lincoln ordered an armed suppression of The Glorious Cause and the Righteous Confederacy in 1861, a Marigny, Philip V, had stepped forward, saber in hand, and raised the colors. I can see Philip V, pacing, pacing, his mind racing and seeking a solution. Some of his neighbors would never pull themselves up out of the wreckage of war. Others would simply put aside their arrogance and their pride and do what they had to do. Let the Yankees have the arrogance. Southern pride would be like the silver, hidden until better times. ****** In time, and with the help of the Consols, the Landing revived. It was never the same as it had been, and never would be again. The old life, much of it, was gone. But life has a way of renewing itself. The damage from the War was repaired, new people came, trade revived. Phillip V died a man well-respected and truly mourned. He had survived storms and floods, war and earthquakes. He lived to a ripe old age, surrounded by his children and grandchildren. The pride that was the South returned. At his funeral he was called a Christian Gentleman, which he was. I have often wondered if his Christianity, his generosity, his love of his fellow man would have extended to his great grandson. How would he have looked upon the boy who had inherited his hair coloring, his flashing, emerald green eyes, his spirit and his temper? How would my ancestor have looked upon his gay great grandson? The Landing Chapter Two It was the last Friday in August, and a typical summer's day. The sun was burning high in the sky above, the air muggy and humid. Ordinarily I would be down at the swimming hole with my mates. However, Mam Berta, our cook, housekeeper and disciplinarian, had finally tired of my procrastination and ordered me into town. She knew exactly what dirty things boys could be - she had three sons of her own, huge, strapping boys - and she could only imagine what the contents of my school locker were. Me too. I had no idea what I had left behind when school had closed in June, and left moldering in a hot, near-vacant building all summer. Mam Berta threatened to whup my skinny white butt proper if I didn't move myself. Having been the recipient of several whuppings from the old black woman, I moved and wandered down the street, heading for the County Consolidated Schools. The school building, which was located on a large, open plot of land across from the Evangelical Temple on Hampton Road, was a stern stone and brick series of buildings. Surrounded by playing fields and a makeshift stadium, where I was dragged every Friday night during football season, the buildings housed the County Elementary School and Hampton High School. The two schools were separated by what was laughingly called the Athletic Complex, actually a gymnasium that smelled abominably, some dressing rooms, which smelled worse, and a murky pool where the male students swam nekkid. The girls wore swimming costumes that looked like they'd been designed by Queen Victoria. The Consolidated Schools had been designed and built back in the middle of the Great Depression, and paid for by the WPA. As with the town, it was segregated. No blacks had seen the inside of the place, although that was going to change in a few days. The Supreme Court, the Congress, and the State Legislature had all decreed desegregation and that was that. The day after Labor Day, when the schools reopened, fifty blacks would be bussed from their normal temple of education - a long, low, clapboard building in Overbridge - to the Consolidated Schools. So far as I knew no protests were planned, although Stubby Richmond and Daddy Smith, the stalwarts of the Klan, were rumored to be planning a cross-burning, which would only make matters worse. For almost one hundred years race relations had been more or less stable. The white folks lived in their part of town, the black folks in theirs. Segregation, "Jim Crow" as it was called, was alive and well and living in the South. I won't lie and say that everything was fine between the races. It wasn't. While almost every white lady in town employed a black maid, cook or laundress, there was virtually no interaction between the races at all. The town was divided by Conyngham Creek. On the west side, which we all called Overbridge, lived the blacks, their houses and businesses lining winding, unpaved roads, except for Davis Street, which stretched in a straight line from the bridge to the town limits. The houses were all built of pine and cypress, and they all looked as if a good wind would blow them down. Most had never been painted, and more than half had sagging roofs and porches. The business buildings along Davis Street looked, well, tired. These were the usual collection of small town economic enterprise: a drug store, a beauty parlor, a tailor, a barber, and so on. There was a large, decrepit looking hotel where visiting blacks could rent rooms - the Landing Inn was segregated and barred to persons of color. There was a fire station, where all the firemen were black, with two rigs and a tall, brick tower, and a police station, where all the constables were black, a jail, and the schools. There was also, or so it seemed, a church on every corner, ranging from the AME Church, brick, four-square and with a bell tower, to small, one room converted shotgun shacks. As an added attraction the town's sewage treatment plant was located in Overbridge, next to the Heavenly Rest Cemetery, where only black folk were buried. White folk were accommodated in Magnolia Cemetery, which overlooked the river east of town. Both burial grounds were privately owned by Mr. William van Lews, the town undertaker and owner of van Lews' Furniture Mart. Magnolia Cemetery, tree-dotted and criss-crossed with well cared for walks and flower gardens, was where the white folks went when they were "called to Glory". On the east side of the Creek was the white section of town, the streets wide and paved, and lined with well kept houses with neat lawns and flower beds, usually tended by young blacks in the employ of Mr. Theophilus Monroe, a stately, well-spoken black gentleman. The Monroes had been tending the gardens and lawns of Charles Town Landing for generations, and were descended from slaves who had tended the gardens of Broadlands House and Conyngham Hall. Other than the house servants and Mr. Monroe's gardeners, one rarely saw a black face in the white part of town, and if one did one also could expect a Sheriff's deputy to pull up in his patrol car and ask what his or her business was in this part of town. Downtown there were blacks in evidence, as there had to be. Ravelli's employed black waiters, the better to lull the tourists into thinking they had stepped back in time to the days of the Old South. Biedermeyer's also employed blacks in the separate but equal cafeteria that occupied half of the main floor. Separating the cafeteria was a tall wooden partition, one side for whites, the other for blacks. The white side of the cafeteria had tall windows overlooking the street. The white folks sat in cushioned banquettes or at tables, with white linen clothes and silver plated cutlery. On the other side of the partition, black folk sat at a long Formica and chrome counter, or at long, bare deal tables lined with spindly wooden chairs. They ate off of plain white, heavy china with stainless steel utensils. There were two windows, both as tall as the windows in the white section, but these overlooked the alley behind the store. There were two kitchens, one where the food for the white folks was prepared, and another where food for the black folks was prepared. The only commonality was the wait staff - they were all black. Everything it seemed had been done to perpetuate the "separate but equal" society we lived in. Down at the bus station there were four rest rooms, two for whites (ladies and gentlemen), two for blacks (men and women), as there were in the railroad station. White folks ate, drank, and peed in separate facilities. Even the whore houses were segregated. If you were white, and horny, you went to Peckinham's Road House, where the booze and the girls (usually a Smith) were cheap. If you were black, and horny, you frequented Ethel's, a low, dark dive just outside the town limits. The only time the rules were relaxed was on Saturday Market Day, when the farmers and townsfolk gathered around small booths lining the square to buy vegetables and handicrafts, buy or sell a mule, sample fresh-baked pies and cakes and barbecue, and picnic on the Court House lawn. ****** Leaving the coolness of the house and walking into the heat of the day had been like slamming into a brick wall. I had barely reached the road before I was drenched in sweat and panting as I walked toward the schools. The street was quiet, as it almost always was, the only thing stirring being Lucy, a bitch of no known breed, sheltering on the porch of the Finch house. She was languidly licking herself and looked to be pregnant again. As I neared the terrace café of the hotel I could hear the low hum of conversation and saw that the tables were less than half-filled. Down on the landing steps the old, white-painted steam launch that brought tourists up from Charleston maintained steam, patiently waiting for the tourists to finish eating. As I passed the terrace I gave a short wave to Tony Ravelli, who was busy schmoozing with the tourists. Tony was a sometimes lover of mine, very receptive to my schoolboy ministrations and claimed to be straight. I gave him a small wave as I passed and grinned at him. For a straight boy Tony sure did love to have his pecker sucked, and never mentioned what we did in the privacy of his bedroom. I rounded the corner of the hotel and looked over the expanse of the square. It was populated, as it always seemed to be, by the usual suspects. Outside of Biedermeyer's, sitting on the benches provided, a clutch of old men, retired farmers for the most part, sat gossiping, chewing tobacco and taking sips from Mason jars of Daddy Smith's sippin' likker, which they hid in brown paper bags. These old men were a fixture. They gathered every morning in Sully's Café to have coffee, eat donuts, read the papers and argue in the manner of old men with too much time on their hands. Breakfast over, they would amble over to Biedermeyer's for the day. Outside of Lucille's a clutch of convent girls, easily identifiable by their black, habit-like school uniforms and white, short-sleeved blouses, giggled and pointed at what passed for the latest fashion in hats and frocks in the display window. As always they were chaperoned by two Ursiline sisters and I wondered how the ladies stood the heat in their ankle length, black habits and starched wimples. As always of late, Stubby Richmond was standing outside his hardware store, chewing on an unlit cigar and glaring across the square at one of the town radio patrol cars parked near the bridge over The Krik. The car had become a regular fixture for nearly five months, as had the two policemen sitting in it, riot guns close to hand, since the night of Thursday, the 4th of April, when Overbridge had exploded in protest at the assassination of Martin Luther King. It had been a day that no one would ever forget. Until that day, while relations between the races were not all sweetness and light, they weren't all that bad either. Most people in town were resigned to the coming changes. There wasn't a hell of a lot anyone could do about them, so being Southerners we accepted what was to come with as good a grace as possible and, as it turned out, figured out a way to get around the government orders. However, the events of that day changed everything. No longer were blacks and whites to live in uneasy harmony. Benign tolerance was replaced with blind hatred and deep distrust formed a chasm between the communities. The bond that had joined individuals through wars and depression was torn asunder. For the first time, and from then on, the long forbidden word was spoken openly and disdainfully; there were no longer white folks and colored folks. There were "us", and niggers. ****** I recall the day was a typical spring day, not too warm, not too cool. I did what I did every day, walked to school with the gang, sat in a drafty classroom listening to the drone of the teacher trying to pound some history, or geography or whatever, into my less than receptive skull. Lunch was the usual near inedible slop dished out every day. At 3:00 in the afternoon school let out and I ambled home, listening to Sinjin bitch, admiring the view of the Conyngham boys (I always let them walk ahead so I could admire their firmly packed little butts) and, as we strolled past van Lews' funeral parlor, admired the sleek horses waiting in the wide, covered driveway of the house. The horses were pulling one of Mr. van Lews pride and joy, a black, varnished, hearse. Funerals in the south tend to be old-fashioned and traditional. Mr. van Lews, never one to let the grass grow under his feet, catered to every taste. For the modern thinking, young, up-and-coming professional there was a long, sleek, black Cadillac "funeral coach", as he insisted on calling the hearse, the latest in a long line of "coaches". The undertaker bought a new hearse every two years, the old one going to his establishment in Overbridge, and eventually being sold to an up country mortician who couldn't afford a modern, up-to-date, funeral coach. For the tradition-minded, and this included many of the old families and country folk, Mr. van Lews maintained two horse drawn hearses, black and silver for adults, white painted for children. The hearses and horses were kept in a long, brick stable behind the funeral home. Leaving the horses, and playing grab ass, we ambled through the square, bade goodbye to the Ravelli boys, and continued on home. It was something we did every day, according to a pattern that never seemed to change. At home I saw that the usual Thursday pattern was well along. We lived according to established routines. After breakfast, if he were not out on a call, Father would take up his medical bag and drive to the town hospital. I would grumble and snort and drag my skinny behind off to school. Mother would go into the kitchen and sit with Mam Berta and plan the day's menus, drink gallons of coffee and gossip. When they were done that Mother would go off and sit in her sitting room, paying bills, writing letters and so on. Mam Berta would terrorize the day girls, supervise the cleaning, and head downtown to shop. For Mother, lunch was always at 1:15. After lunch she would call on her neighbors and friends, or shop. Wednesday she would drive into Charleston to visit my sister. Thursdays, Mother was "at home" and from 2:00 until 4:00 she would entertain her friends to tea and cake and more catty gossip. That afternoon I arrived at home and went into the house the back way. I had no desire to thrust myself into the nest of old cats in the drawing room, and much preferred to sit at the battered old kitchen table, drink milk and nibble freshly-baked cookies. Mam Berta would grumble and mumble away and eventually pack me off to do my homework. This was the rule: cookies and milk, and then homework until dinner time, which for me was 6:00 pm. Dinner for my parents was always at 8:15, and children were not invited. After I had been fed and watered I had an hour or two to kill before bedtime, which was 9:00 pm on week nights. I usually watched television, or went over to Sinjin's to pass the time with him. That evening I didn't watch television, and Sinjin asked me to go into town to the chemists shop to pick up a prescription - his mother was ailing. Normally I would have demurred, but as it was still warm out I said yes. As Sinjin and I started out I thought I heard the dull reports of gunfire. We looked at each other and then we noticed a sharp, acrid smell in the gentle breeze blowing from the west. Sinjin thought that there was a fire somewhere, probably in Overbridge. I thought so too, because something was always burning down over there, which was not surprising as most of the buildings were firetraps. The closer we got to town the stranger things seemed to be. As we entered the Landing I saw men, white men, carrying shotguns and hunting rifles, hurrying toward the Court House. Along Marion Street the shops and hotel were closing, and I saw Mr. Ravelli and his sons busily hanging the storm shutters that protected the windows of the ground floor from the periodic tropical storms that roared in from the Atlantic. Mama Ravelli was hurrying around the terrace restaurant, stopping at each table and waving at the black waiters to hurry with the service. Stubby Richmond was standing outside his hardware store with Simmons, Daddy Smith and two of the Smith boys. Each one carried a weapon, hunting rifles so far as I could see. A town patrol car went roaring by, its red roof light flashing ominously, and I watched it make the turn that would take it over the bridge and then I saw a huge, roiling column of flames and smoke lighting the sky above Overbridge. Something was definitely wrong and, frightened, Sinjin and I hurried into the chemist shop, snatched up the prescription and ran home. Twilight had waned and the street lights lit our way as we hurried down Broadlands Avenue. As we skittered past his house, I saw Mr. Conyngham standing on his front porch, a shotgun in his hands. He was looking toward town where the sound of sirens filled the still air. Sinjin peeled off and ran into his house while I hurried on home. As I turned into our driveway and under the porte-cochere, I could see some of the cadets from the military school in front of the gates that led to the school. The gates were closed but behind the ornate metalwork was what looked like a deuce-and-a-half truck. The truck's lights were on, brightly illuminating the boy cadets standing guard. I saw that they were wearing olive drab fatigues, helmets, and carrying more or less modern Garand rifles instead of their ceremonial Enfields. This, I think was the time I realized that a Southerner's worst nightmare might be on the cards. I had hardly entered the foyer when my mother pounced on me, demanding to know where I had got to. She had obviously been looking for me. She was calm, and her voice was icy for some reason, although I knew she was worried sick when she found me missing. I was worried sick when I saw what was in her hand: my father's old Webley pistol. Ignoring my sputtered excuse, Mother ordered me to go to my room and under no circumstance was I to leave it. Mother's icy calmness was frightening and I whined and begged her not to make me go upstairs where I would be alone. She relented and told me to go into the library where the two dailies, Flora and Annette were huddled, watching television. The images being broadcast showed a night of terror and destruction. Few people realize that there were more riots that night than the media could report. Detroit, Chicago, New York, all were featured in the news broadcasts, but there were others. Overbridge was our riot. When the first reports of King's assassination came over the air waves and blacks began to gather in protest, tempers began to rise and while the ministers and perceived community leaders tried to calm the people down, rocks began to fly, and then trash containers, and windows were smashed and Overbridge exploded in protest at the assassination of the Reverend Doctor Martin Luther King. The police were called and for whatever reason fists flew, truncheons were drawn and the riot was on. The Captain of the Overbridge police station called for reinforcements from the Landing, but the police there were all white and the Mayor, Mister Wallingford, refused to let the town officers anywhere near Overbridge. He ordered the cops to blockade the bridge. He also ordered them to use whatever force they needed to keep the blacks in their place, which was on the other side of the bridge. Much later I learned that Wallingford had more than just the town's ten-man police force to rely on. There was a State Troopers' barracks less than fifteen miles away, and he could appoint "Special Constables" at will. More importantly, the Mayor was not hesitant when it came to calling out the Klan. Stubby Richmond was always going on about the "niggers rising", and warning everyone who would listen to be prepared. Everybody was, for this was the South, and I doubt there was a house in town that didn't have at least a shotgun around. Daddy Smith hated coloreds with a passion, probably because they worked hard, didn't live in a falling down shack, or have a tribe of slatternly daughters or lummox sons. The average black showed Daddy Smith and his whelps up as swamp trash, and Daddy didn't like that at all. At the time I was too busy being terrified to worry about the various white cabals more than willing to shoot their black neighbors. Damian Lee had finally appeared. He'd been over to Goose Creek popping corn with one of the girls from school when he heard a report on his car radio. He broke speed records getting home and was soon running around trying to find the keys to my father's gun cabinet. Mam Berta was looking thunderous, and announced that she'd like to see the color of the free issue nigger that would dare to even look crossways at her lambs (I assume she meant me and Damian). For a while I parked myself in a chair in one corner of the entry hall, my eyes wide and my heart pounding. In the distance I could hear the shrill whistle of the tourist launch, a screaming banshee sounding in the humid air as it chugged downriver toward Charleston. I also heard the muffled, sharp cracks of what I knew to be rifle fire, interspersed with the dull thud of what could only be a shotgun being fired. As I waited, the Finch sisters came into the house, with their dog. Miss Adele, grim-faced and determined, was carrying a shotgun, while her sister, Miss Hester, carried an old horse pistol (which her Granddaddy had carried in some Indian war). The two old ladies didn't seem fazed at all. After seeing my mother, pistol in hand, ordering Flora and Annette to stop their sniveling and help her barricade the front door with an antique sofa and some tables, the Finch sisters took up position on either side of the door, vowing that none of "those people" would ever set foot in Broadlands House. There was a definite feeling of exodus and need for safety in numbers in the air, for the next thing I knew my mother's flimsy barricade was across the brilliantly polished floor as the Cecils pushed the front door open. Mrs. Cecil, her normally perfectly coiffed hair tied up in a ratty old bandana, pushed her boys into the hall. Nicholas immediately came to stand beside me, while Gregory and Bob Lee, men in their own eyes, went in search of Damian, and a gun. Over the next hour or so the smell of burning wood drifted in through the open windows. Bob Lee, who had gone up to the roof where there was a good view of the town, reported black columns of smoke and flame roiling over the rooflines of Overbridge. He also reported that there were State Troopers gathering outside the Ursiline Convent. The Misses Finch gripped their weapons even more tightly and Damian appeared. He handed me an old Purdy fowling piece and told me that my job was to guard the river entrance. With Nicholas, I reluctantly left my perch, walked down the long hall, through the Music Room and onto the wide porch that overlooked the normally gray waters of the Cooper River. The sun was now long set and deep shadows darkened the waters, which were empty of traffic, and a low mist was also settling across the black waters. I watched for a while and then realized that there was no way that rioters would ever appear on the river. First of all, there were few boats, mostly rowboats, the cutters from the military school marina, and the like. To get to them a mob would have to cross the bridge and somehow reach the wide steps leading down from the flood wall to the river, which didn't seem likely, given the number of armed men on the white side of the bridge and along the Krik. Second of all, the only other way to get to the river from Overbridge was an old, winding road that ran past the Smith place and God help the black man, woman or child on riot bent who dared to go anywhere near there. Every Smith, male or female, had figuratively been born with a gun in his hand, and could drill a squirrel at a hundred paces. Nick and I sat on the steps that led to the lawns for what seemed like hours. A gentle wind began to blow from the west, riffling the leaves and branches of the moss-draped live oak trees and jacaranda bushes, and bringing with it the sounds of yelling, the clanging of a bell, and what sounded like an explosion of some sorts. This caused Nick to hug me tightly, and for a while we just cuddled. The wind shifted and we no longer heard anything, which seemed to make matters worse. As the night deepened more neighbors appeared, the thick, stout, brick and stucco walls of Broadlands House offering safety and a measure of security. First were the Conynghams, Tristan and Damian and their mother left in my mother's care while Mr. Conyngham hurried into town to join the growing number of white men called out as "Special Constables". Mrs. Conyngham was also armed, with a shotgun. The boys carried their pillows and blankets and settled on sofas in the drawing room. Their mother sat nearby, peering out of the window into the darkness. Sinjin and his mother showed up. Mrs. Tradd was clutching a huge rosewood box - containing her jewels I found out later - while Sinjin tried to look brave, holding a Remington pump action shotgun that I was sure would have knocked him on his ass if he fired it. He and Bobby Lee Cecil were sent upstairs to sit in front of the Palladian window that overlooked the street. From time to time Damian Lee appeared, armed to the teeth, and then disappeared. I knew he wanted to head into town but as the only "adult" male in the house, he had to stay and protect the women and children. He knew that everybody was carrying a weapon, but the Code dictated that he stay. I was quite grumpily uncomfortable, and sent Nick off for some blankets. The temperature dropped and it was cool, around 55 degrees or so. When he returned Nick wrapped himself in his blanket and huddled close against me. I was scared shitless to say the least, what with the house being turned into a fortress, and filled with women twittering about what was going on in Overbridge. The sound of buildings crashing and guns being fired did not help at all. I wanted to go find Sinjin, but I had been set a duty, and until Damian Lee told me to go to bed, I would stay. I had no choice. I was a little man and the Code was strongly ingrained in me. Sometime during that long evening Nick fell asleep, and snored softly, his head resting in my lap while I tried, ineffectually to keep my eyes open. Before I knew it, it was morning, and I was lying on my own bed, with Nick cuddled against me. I raised my head and saw that we had both slept in our clothes, a most uncomfortable feeling. I wondered how I had got there. I didn't remember going to bed, and assumed that someone, probably Mam Berta, maybe Damian, had carried both Nicholas and me to bed. Nick's hand was resting on my stomach, a bare inch away from my morning wood, which was pooching out the front of my shorts. Ordinarily this would not have bothered me at all, but the door suddenly opened and in walked Charlie Pegram, looking disheveled and not quite the neat, trim, Citadel cadet he was. "Hey, little man, how's it hanging?" Charlie asked as he crossed the room and sat on the bed beside me. I grinned at Charlie, the secret love of my life. "Hey. Where'd you come from?" I asked. He was supposed to be down in Charleston. Charlie chuckled. "Your daddy called the Superintendent, who let the cadets go for the week, what with the trouble and all. I called Philip Charles and we drove up here." "Gosh, you did?" I asked, visions of Charlie dashing to my rescue, waving a sword, with horn blaring and flags flying. "Yep. We had to fight our way through but Philip Charles waved his pistol at 'em, and then a Charleston cop car came up and the miscreants scattered." I couldn't help but giggle. Charlie tended to sound at times as if he were a character in a Victorian novel. Charlie smiled. "Not really. Charleston is quiet, not like Detroit or Chicago. They're still rioting up there and it looks like half the town is afire." "What about Overbridge?" Charlie stood up and looked out the window. "Cooper, it's about gone. The fools burned down most of Davis Street, the hotel, and the movie house. Mam Berta's house is gone and two of her boys are in the calaboose." "For sure?" Charlie nodded. "For sure. The governor called out the Guard and they're mopping up." Charlie shook his head sadly. "The damn fools! What did they gain? White folks won't trust 'em ever again! The fools yelled and danced and threw rocks and took pot shots at the police and burned down half the town and what did it get them?" I could understand Charlie's anger. It was like me burning down the house if I got punished for something I didn't do. All I was really doing was cutting off my nose to spite my face. "They'll rebuild," I said. "Folks have got to live and . . ." Charlie wheeled and glared at me. "No, no they won't!" he declared. "Your great granddaddy isn't around with a secret stash of Consols. Nobody, black or white, has any money to speak of, and if they do they sure aren't going to help folks who burn down the place everytime something happens they don't like!" I was a little surprised at Charlie's vehemence. Normally he was the kindest guy I knew. His anger caused his normal, peaches and cream complexion to turn a deep red. He took a deep breath. "Cooper, you know me." I nodded. "I know it's difficult around here, but that's the way it's been for two hundred and more years." He returned to sit beside me on the bed. He looked over to where Nicholas was snoring away and smiled. "That kid sure can make a noise." I grinned and shrugged. "He has adenoids," I said casually. "You should hear him during pollen season." Charlie laughed quietly and shook his head. "I'll pass." Then his face turned hard, and his blue, blue eyes darkened. "Coops, things are never going to be the same again. The niggers have drawn a line in the sand." I gasped. Charlie, my sweet, sweet Charlie, a boy who wouldn't say shit if he had a mouthful, had used the forbidden word! Gentle folk, folk like Charlie and my Daddy, folk of good blood and breeding, never, ever, called the Negroes "niggers". People like Stubby Richmond, the Smiths, they used the epithet all the time, but not good people. Never good people! Charlie saw the shocked look on my face. "I'm sorry Coops, but what else are they? We didn't shoot their Messiah. We were over here, on our side of the Krik, minding our own business, and what do they do?" "He was their hero," I temporized. "They don't have anyone else now," I said weakly. Charlie waved his hand dismissively. "I know they all loved Doctor King. So did a lot of white folk. He was a good man and he preached non-violence." "But . . ." I began. "No!" Charlie growled. "The niggers think they've got the upper hand. Well, there are folks around who will make sure that they go on thinking it. Only that's all they'll get." "The Klan?" I probed. "The Smiths?" Charlie nodded. "Bad times are a-comin' Coops." Charlie sighed. "Oh, the darkies will do the Jungle Bunny Stomp on the Court House lawn; they'll burn down a few businesses and pat themselves on the back and tell themselves that we're too frightened of them and give 'em what they want." He laughed angrily. "Well, let 'em think what they want. We'll make sure they get what we give 'em!" I was confused. I didn't understand the depth of desperation in the black community, and I didn't understand the depth of Charlie's anger. I also wondered who "we" were. I didn't have a chance to pursue Charlie's words. He stood up abruptly. "You and Grampus there get yourselves downstairs. Your momma's holding breakfast for you." Momma? Momma hadn't actually cooked in the kitchen in years! "Um, Mummy?" I asked tentatively. "Where's Mam Berta?" Charlie shook his head. "She went to Overbridge," he replied bluntly. His tone said that Overbridge was the best place for her to be. ****** Things never returned to normal. While no one was killed, the few blacks that ventured over the bridge separating the town trod carefully. Mam Berta appealed to my father and her sons, Moses and Layton, were released from jail on bail - which my father advanced, although I knew he could hardly afford it. In a good year he cleared forty thousand, out of which he had to maintain the house, his practice, and pay Philip Charles' Citadel tuition. Papa didn't care, and even though his standing surety for Mam Berta's sons caused some grumbling in town, as far as he was concerned they were, by definition, family, and that was that. Overbridge looked like a war zone. The State Troopers patrolled the streets, and the rank smell of charred wood lingered still. Very few of the burnt out businesses and homes were being rebuilt. One of these was Mam Berta's house. My father did manage to advance her a few thousand dollars to help her rebuild. Like I said, she was family, and Papa was only continuing a tradition begun back in 1865. ****** In 1861 Philip V Marigny was a millionaire. He owned Broadlands; he owned a townhouse in Charleston, and more importantly, he owned two, modern, steel-hulled screw driven ships, the Carpathia, and the Athenian and he was smart enough to know that the government in Richmond was composed of fools. The Secretary of the Treasury, Memminger, a South Carolinian, had proposed, and President Davis and his advisers had agreed, that the surest way to bring in France and Britain on the side of the Confederacy was to embargo cotton. The mills in Lancashire and France depended on Southern cotton; without it the mills would have to close, and economic chaos would follow. Philip V thought the politicians out of their minds. He, along with a host of others, ignored the embargo, filled both of his ships with bales of cotton, and sent them to England where his agent purchased new Enfield rifles, bayonets, uniforms and other accoutrements of war. He also filled one of the holds with luxury goods. The ships easily eluded the then ineffective Union blockade and sailed into Wilmington, where the cargoes were sold at auction. The rifles and articles of war were shipped inland, where Philip V parceled out the arms and ammunition. Some of the new rifles went to the boys at the military school, the rest went to outfit a regiment of infantry, Colonel Philip de Marigny commanding, which was eventually absorbed into Hampton's Legion and later became a part of the 2nd South Carolina Infantry. The Regiment fought at Gettysburg, where Philip V was wounded, and invalided home. Back home, Philip studied the terrain, so to speak, and decided that the South was lost. The Yankees were too numerous, too rich, and now that they had a cause, the freeing of the slaves, it was only a matter of time before the Stars and Bars was replaced by the white flag of surrender. Philip V had sunk half his fortune or thereabouts in Confederate bonds, which he knew would become worthless. His ships, battered and weather-beaten, still ran the blockade, and while much of their cargoes were war supplies, he still managed to bring in the luxury goods the people craved. He kept some of his profits in the bank in Charleston, but the bulk of his money was sunk in the gold-standard securities of the day: Consols. Consols, actually Consolidated Annuities issued by the British Government, paid three per cent interest, sometimes for a fixed period of years, sometimes not. They could be bought, or sold, on the London Change, and were the bedrock of the British financial system. The actual certificate didn't look like much, but presented at the Annuities Window at the Bank of England they could be exchanged for gold coin of the realm. Philip V had a satchel full of them. In 1865 the South was devastated, especially in those areas where Sherman's horde had laid waste to crops and houses, whole villages, and stolen everything from pigs to family silver that could not be hidden. Vast miles of land lay derelict, populated only by crows and long lines of returning Confederates. Lee had surrendered at Appomattox Court House. Richmond, Charleston, all the major cities and towns were occupied by hard-eyed, hard-visaged bluebellies, most of whom thought petty larceny a pleasant sideline. Nothing was safe if for some reason the troops entered your house. Grand Larceny was freely committed, at the hands of Carpetbaggers from the North, and their white sympathizers, Scalawags, and hordes of now freed slaves, all of whom were hell bent on looting every state treasury they could gain control of. Through vote-rigging, terror tactics, disenfranchising voters (all Democrats) and the "Oath of Allegiance", which nobody would take, they quickly gained the upper hand. The Landing was a typical small town of the era. The War was over, and the boys were returning home - those who had survived. Commerce was at a standstill, and the plantation fields, once green and white with cotton, were empty and weed-choked. The labor force, the black slaves, had decamped en masse, some following Sherman's barbarians, most flocking to Charleston or Columbia, to live in shanty towns and exist on handouts from the Freedman's Bureau. The Yankees had never understood the South. They thought they had won the War, and while they had won the final battle, they little realized that the War would go on for another fifty years or more. To the average Yankee, the South was beaten, desperate, on her knees, and ripe for plunder. With their Negro allies, in and out of uniform, they thought the South would buckle under, abandon her arrogance and gentility, and grovel at the feet of her new masters. Oh, how little they knew of the South! The collective South looked down its nose at the invaders, shrugged, and whenever possible, ignored them. They continued in their traditional ways as much as possible, knowing that they couldn't change things. Let the Carpetbaggers steal the election - the Radicals in Washington were bound to side with them anyway. Let the ex-slaves have their freedom. Let them see what freedom meant. There would be no more weekly issue of rations, no more yearly issue of new clothes or cloth to make them, no more "Chrismus Gifs". The former slaves were on their own. In the cities, Charleston, Columbia, Savannah, the aristocrats withdrew into their own special enclaves. In Charleston gentle folk returned to what was essentially the site of the original city of Charles Towne, the area south of Broad Street. On the plantations, folks rolled up their sleeves and set to work. They ignored the rapacious Yankees as best they could, and ineptly began to rebuild their lives. ****** Over the fireplace mantle in the drawing room at Broadlands is a painting. It is of Philip V late in life. His hair and beard are white, his frame lithe, the hands and face - he is staring directly at the viewer - are weathered and rough, the marks of a man who has had a hard life. Philip V is the picture of a proper Victorian gentleman. He is wearing a Confederate gray frock coat, open to reveal a matching waistcoat, across which is draped a heavy, gold chain. His trousers are pressed and under his wing collar is a colorful four-in-hand tie. He is sitting at his desk, battered and splintered here and there, the rosewood and mahogany dull with age. The desk is piled high with account books, factor's reports, bills of lading, a list of comestibles, the prices blurred. The artist, Sir Luke Fildes, had caught the mood, the light, the aura of a man who had faced adversity, and overcome it. I have a different portrait in mind. I see Philip V, not broken, but near to it, sitting on the old bundling board that has stood on the second floor porch for close on to two hundred years. He is staring out at his patrimony, what there is of it. Overhead the sky is leaden, bringing promise of rain. The river, dark and foreboding, is devoid of activity. There are no wooden skiffs or barges polled by black men, and piled high with the fruits of the land: cotton, corn, rice. Philip V does not wear broadcloth, or fine linen. His trousers, such as they are, have seen hard times, ripped and patched with whatever piece of cloth that came to hand, roughly sewn and showing it. On his feet his boots, taken from a dead Yank, not quite shoddy, but as split and patched as his trousers. Around his neck a rough neckerchief, torn from an old piece of calico, wet with perspiration, for it is a hot, muggy day. His hair, once red and shining with golden highlights, is matted and in need of cutting, and graying. Behind Philip V his house, a place once of laughter and good times, a haven of hospitality where fine china, good silver, and crystal graced tables laden with barons of beef, plump turkeys, delicate fish, shrimps brought upriver from the bay. Bottles of bourbon and fine wines waited to be passed by smiling footmen dressed in the house livery of the de Marignys. The hospitality of Broadlands House, gone now, replaced with leathery shad and grits. Philip's eyes drift, taking in the once-neat double row of brick cabins that stretched along the river bank and ended at the wall of the military school, the Quarters, now derelict, the glass of the windows shattered and now shards scattered across the wooden boards of the porches, small harbors where black slaves once lounged after work, laughing, watching their children playing. The cabin doors are broken and ripped from the hinges, the roof trees sagging. The people who had called these small structures home were gone. Some had followed Sherman's hordes. Others, mad with the excitement of freedom, had danced and laughed their ways into the city. They were free men all, and none had any idea of what awaited them. I can see the look of disgust on Philip's face. His slaves had abandoned the land. He made no apology to any man that he had owned slaves. Slavery, with its imagined horrors, had been forced on him, indeed on the South. But . . . he had been a good master. Never had a slave been whipped, or physically punished. He had never sold a slave, for such was an abomination. He had provided for his people, patronizing to be sure, but he had housed them, and fed them and, although it was illegal, schooled the more intelligent of them. He had done his Christian duty in providing a church for his people, and when they were sick or hurt, he called a proper physician to tend to them. He had thought that his people were happy and content. He had been a fool, and was paying the price thereby. As were his people. They flocked to the cities to find that there was no white "master" willing to see to their needs. They lived in shanty towns, except for the lucky ones who appealed to white ladies, who had not the heart to turn away an old darky. The unlucky ones lived on handouts, rations of salt pork and grits doled out by an uncaring Freedmen's Bureau, and believed the lies of free land, free houses, free schools. Little did the free slaves know, or understand, that they were little more than cannon fodder in a new war, a political war where power came from the ballot box and so long as the free blacks voted the Republican ticket, they were the new kings of the South. Philip V had no time, or patience to worry about what was happening beyond the confines of his country, his lands, and his patrimony. The fields, once lush with corn and cotton, barley and oats, were empty, for nothing had been planted in the spring. There had been no hands to till, or hoe, and there had been no seed to plant. The pine forests, and the weeds, were returning to reclaim the once fertile land. The town was as derelict, as empty as the fields, except for feral cats and rawboned curs searching for a meal. Black-draped wraiths hurried through the streets, widows without hope of seeing their men return from the War. There were too many widows, too many orphans, for there was not a family that Philip knew of that had not suffered a loss, even the no-account Smiths, who lived in squalor out on River Road. They had been loud, self-proclaimed Unionists, but when Sherman's Bummers and thieves came, even the Smiths had rallied to the Stars and Bars, and two of them were buried in the ruin of Magnolia Cemetery. People were starving; women who had never lifted a hand except to call a black slave or butler, were suffering from rickets and impetigo. Children, once cosseted and coddled by black Mammies, had the pinched, wan faces of the slums. Nobody had food, save for the fish that still could be caught, or a bag of rice or hominy hidden when the marauders rode through. Nobody had any money, and little hope of getting any anytime soon. Most people had silver and jewelry hidden. The Marigny silver, famous for its beauty and weight before the War, was hidden in a gator hole, guarded by an old bull that bellowed romantic invitation in the warm, muggy spring to any female gator in hearing distance. But what use was something that was inedible and unsaleable, or nearly so? The auction and sales rooms of Charleston were stuffed with old family possessions, silver of every kind, furniture, books and gewgaws beyond measure, with no takers at a decent price. The Carpetbaggers and Scalawags, the soldiers and their women, knew that it was a buyer's market and offered ten cents on the dollar, if that. I can see Philip's face, as red now as his hair once had been, his choler rising. He was a man of tempestuous temper, as all red heads seemed to be, and the thought of the insulting price offered by a smooth-talking, oily-faced Yankee from Maine for Broadlands, rankled. Fifty cents an acre, cash money, payable in good Yankee greenbacks. Philip had scornfully rejected the offer, taking a buggy whip to the man and his equally loathsome black companion, driving them off in as fine a fit of temper as the neighbors had seen in years! I can see Philip rising, pacing, ignoring the rising storm brewing on the horizon, remembering the snide words of the black man. "Who will till your fields? Who will plant your cotton? Who will pick it?" Who indeed? There were blacks, of course. But they were "house niggers", and all far along in years for the most part. There were ancient butlers, gray-haired Mammies, arthritic Cooks and maids. The old had stayed with their families, the young had fled, off to the Day of Jubilee. Those former slaves who had remained were as proud of their white families as Lucifer. Family status, family wealth and station, was reflected in them, or so they thought. Most had been chosen for their intelligence and looks, and carriage. They dressed in fine cloth and linen; they ate well; they enjoyed a privileged status in slave society and thought nothing of looking down their noses at the ignorant field hands, men for the most part incapable of anything other than picking cotton. The house slaves had never picked so much as a radish from the vegetable garden, and saw no reason to start now. Faced with the intransigence of the remaining blacks, Philip despaired of ever bringing his fields back to life. Even if he could entice laborers from the cities, how would he pay them? He had no money, save for $26.25 in silver coin, doled out to him in Abbeville by the paymaster from the small cache that was all that was left of the Confederate Treasury. Philip V had managed to be a part of the small escort guarding the refugee Government, President Davis and his wife and children, Secretary of State Benjamin, the hangers-on and aides and assorted camp followers that had fled Richmond. Philip V had ridden his spavined old horse south, scouting ahead for the fifty cadets from the Naval Academy that formed the main guard. In Abbeville, when it finally dawned on Davis and his Cabinet (those who were left) that it was over, the decision was made to release the boy cadets and cavalry escort. They were to go their own way, granted leave to return to their homes, and paid off. The money, $26.25, was $26.25 more than Lee's veterans received. Philip V knew of the poverty and deprivation that stalked the land. He knew that there were families that would lose their homes and plantations because the politicians in Columbia, determined to bring the Rebs to their knees, had jacked up taxes to impossible levels. The Yankees in Washington, the Radical politicians had coldly determined that the South would pay for its pride, pay for its arrogance, and live under the jackbooted heel of occupation for as long as it took to teach them the lessons they should have learned, and to pay for Chancellorsville, and Gettysburg, to pay for the defeat of blue-clad troops that fell in windrows and lines of blood and gore at Fredericksburg and Chancellorsville. I can see Philip V, pacing, pacing, wondering where the money to pay the taxes would come from. Wondering how he would pay for seed, or pay the workers needed to bring the land back. The Yankees had decreed that blacks could be hired, for thirteen dollars a month. Before the war, one hundred and twenty slaves, not counting babies and pickaninnys, had worked the land. Conyngham Hall, the nearest neighbor, had been home to near two hundred slaves. The Cecils had had only sixty-five slaves, while the Pegrams had only owned a handful, house slaves, for they were in banking, not land. The Tradds were, on paper, the wealthiest family in the county, on a par with Wade Hampton, the richest man in the state. They owned three plantations with over four hundred slaves. I can see Philip V ticking off a mental list of names and places, once-rich plantations, many now devoid of life. Each now needed help. The widows and orphans of the South were helpless, or nearly so. Philip V's neighbors were as bad off as he. They were struggling to put food on their tables, as he was, food to feed their children, their wounded husbands and brothers and sons, and the few blacks who had stayed. They were struggling to find a way to repair the roof, or the sagging porch, struggling to find a scrap of cloth to make a dress, or a pair of pantaloons. Like Philip, they were faced with starvation, and desolation, and despair. ****** I can see Philip V now, staring once again at the empty fields, at the destroyed cabins, staring at the emptiness. Gone were the chickens and cows and pigs that had helped each plantation be more or less self-sufficient. Gone were the vegetable gardens, the radishes, the corn, the heads of lettuce ground under the hooves of horses ridden by vengeful men, or under the wheels of artillery caissons, deliberately so, the better to starve the civilians into submission. I can see Philip V arguing in his mind, his temper in check for once. What to do? For almost a hundred years the Marignys had been the leaders. In peace and war they had always taken the lead. When a storm surge roared up the Cooper and wiped out the rice fields, a Marigny had come forward with advice and cotton seed. When the nation went to War, in 1812, Philip III rallied his neighbors and marched off to battle. When Lincoln ordered an armed suppression of The Glorious Cause and the Righteous Confederacy in 1861, a Marigny, Philip V, had stepped forward, saber in hand, and raised the colors. I can see Philip V, pacing, pacing, his mind racing and seeking a solution. Some of his neighbors would never pull themselves up out of the wreckage of war. Others would simply put aside their arrogance and their pride and do what they had to do. Let the Yankees have the arrogance. Southern pride would be like the silver, hidden until better times. ****** In time, and with the help of the Consols, the Landing revived. It was never the same as it had been, and never would be again. The old life, much of it, was gone. But life has a way of renewing itself. The damage from the War was repaired, new people came, trade revived. Phillip V died a man well-respected and truly mourned. He had survived storms and floods, war and earthquakes. He lived to a ripe old age, surrounded by his children and grandchildren. The pride that was the South returned. At his funeral he was called a Christian Gentleman, which he was. I have often wondered if his Christianity, his generosity, his love of his fellow man would have extended to his great grandson. How would he have looked upon the boy who had inherited his hair coloring, his flashing, emerald green eyes, his spirit and his temper? How would my ancestor have looked upon his gay great grandson?