His wife had been seized suddenly by a cramp
or colic, or so they called it, and now lay at home in bed in mortal
pain until Roberts should reach town and fetch help back to her.
Just outside of town as the troubled man was
urging on his nag to greater speed, he encountered Rance Joyner. The
boy was trudging steadily along the road in the grey light, coming
from town and going towards home, and, according to the story Roberts
told, Rance was carrying a heavy sack of meal which he had plumped
over his right shoulder and supported with his hand. As the man in
the buggy passed him, the boy half turned, paused, looked up at him,
and spoke. In this circumstance there was nothing unusual. Roberts
had passed the boy a hundred times coming or going to the town on
some errand.
On this occasion, Roberts
said he returned the boy's greeting some what absently and curtly,
weighted down as his spirit was with haste and apprehension, and
drove on without stopping. But before he had gone a dozen yards the
man recalled himself and pulled up quickly, intending to shout back
to the boy the reason for his haste, and to ask him to stop at his
house on the way home, do what he could to aid the stricken woman,
and wait there till the man returned with help. Accordingly, Roberts
pulled up, turned in his seat, and began to shout his message down
the road. To his stupefaction, the road was absolutely bare. Within a
dozen yards the boy had vanished from his sight, "as if,"
said Roberts, "the earth had opened up and swallered him."
But even as the man sat staring, gape-mouthed
with astonishment, the explanation occurred to him: "Thar were
some trees that down the road a little piece, a-settin' at the side
of the road, and I jest figgered," he said delicately, "that
Rance had stepped in behind one of 'em for a moment, so I didn't stop
no more. Hit was gettin' dark an' I was in a hurry, so I jest drove
on as hard as I could."
Roberts
drove in to town, got the woman's sister whom he had come to fetch,
and then returned with her as hard as he could go. But even as he
reached home and drove up the rutted lane, a premonition of calamity
touched him. The house was absolutely dark and silent: there was
neither smoke nor sound nor any light whatever, and, filled with a
boding apprehension, he entered. He called his wife's name in the
dark house, but no one answered him. Then, he raised the smoky
lantern which he carried, walked to the bed where his wife lay, and
looked at her, seeing instantly that she was dead.
That
night the people from the neighborhood swarmed into the house. The
women washed the dead woman's body, dressed her, "laid her out,"
and the men sat round the fire, whittled with knives, and told a
thousand drawling stories of the strangeness of death and destiny. As
Roberts was recounting for the hundredth time all of the
circumstances of the death, he turned to Lafayette Joyner, who had
come straightway when he heard the news, with his wife and several of
his brothers: "... and I was jest goin' to tell Rance to stop
and wait here till I got back, but I reckon it was just as well I
didn't--she would have been dead a-fore he got here, and I reckon it
might have frightened him to find her."
Fate
Joyner looked at him slowly with a puzzled face.
"Rance?"
he said.
"Why, yes," said
Roberts, "I passed him comin' home just as I got to town--and I
reckon if I hadn't been in such a hurry I'd a-told him to stop off
and wait till I got back."
The
Joyners had suddenly stopped their whittling. They looked upward from
their places round the fire with their faces fixed on Roberts' face
in a single, silent, feeding, fascinated stare, and he paused
suddenly, and all the other neighbors paused, feeling the dark, pre
monitory boding of some new phantasmal marvel in their look.
"You say you passed Rance as you were
goin' in to town?" Fate Joyner asked.
"Why,
yes," said Roberts, and described again all of the circumstances
of the meeting.
And, still looking at
him, Fate Joyner slowly shook his head.
"No,"
said he, "you never saw Rance. It wasn't Rance that you saw."
The man's flesh turned cold.
"What
do you mean?" he said.
"Rance
wasn't there," said Fate Joyner. "He went to visit Rufus
Alexander's people a week ago, and he's fifty miles away from here
right now. That's where he is tonight," said Fate quietly.
Roberts' face had turned grey in the
firelight. For several moments he said nothing. Then he muttered:
"Yes. Yes, I see it now. By God, that's it, all right."
Then he told them how the boy had seemed to
vanish right before his eyes a moment after he had passed him--"as
if--as if," he said, "the earth had opened up to swaller
him."
"And that was it?"
he whispered.
"Yes," Fate
Joyner answered quietly, "that was it."
He
paused, and for a moment all the feeding, horror-hungry eyes turned
with slow fascination to the figure of the dead woman on the bed, who
lay, hands folded, in composed and rigid posture, the fire flames
casting the long flicker of their light upon her cold, dead face.
"Yes, that was it," Fate Joyner
said. "She was dead then, at that moment--but you--you didn't
know it," he added, and quietly there was feeding a deep triumph
in his voice.
Thus, this good-hearted
and simple-minded boy became, without his having willed or
comprehended it, a supernatural portent of man's fate and destiny.
Rance Joyner, or rather, his spiritual substance, was seen by dusk
and darkness on deserted roads, was observed crossing fields and
coming out of woods, was seen to toil up a hill along a narrow path
at evening--and then to vanish suddenly. Often, these apparitions had
no discernible relation to any human happening; more often, they were
precedent, coincident, or subsequent to some fatal circumstance. And
this ghostly power was not limited to the period of his boyhood. It
continued, with increasing force and frequency, into the years of his
manhood and maturity.
Thus, one evening
early in the month of April, 1862, the wife of Lafayette Joyner,
coming to the door of her house--which was built on the summit of a
hill, or ledge, above a little river--suddenly espied Rance toiling
up the steep path that led up to the house. In his soiled and ragged
uniform, he looked footsore, unkempt, dusty, and unutterably
weary--"as if," she said, "he had come a long, long
ways"- as indeed, he must have done, since at that moment he was
a private soldier in one of Jackson's regiments in Virginia.
But Lafayette Joyner's wife could see him
plainly as he paused for a moment to push open a long gate that gave
upon the road below her, halfway down the hill.
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