It was eleven oâclock of a Spring night in Florida. It was Sunday. Any other night, Delia Jones would have been in bed for two hours by this time. But she was a wash-woman, and Monday morning meant a great deal to her. So she collected the soiled clothes on Saturday when she returned the clean things. Sunday night after church, she sorted them and put the white things to soak. It saved her almost a half dayâs start. A great hamper in the bedroom held the clothes that she brought home. It was so much neater than a number of bundles lying around.
She squatted in the kitchen floor beside the great pile of clothes, sorting them into small heaps according to color, and humming a song in a mournful key, but wondering through it all where Sykes, her husband, had gone with her horse and buckboard.
Just then something long, round, limp and black fell upon her shoulders and slithered to the floor beside her. A great terror took hold of her. It softened her knees and dried her mouth so that it was a full minute before she could cry out or move. Then she saw that it was the big bull whip her husband liked to carry when he drove.
She lifted her eyes to the door and saw him standing there bent over with laughter at her fright. She screamed at him.
âSykes, what you throw dat whip on me like dat? You know it would skeer meâlooks just like a snake, anâ you knows how skeered Ah is of snakes.â
âCourse Ah knowed it! Thatâs how come Ah done it.â He slapped his leg with his hand and almost rolled on the ground in his mirth. âIf you such a big fool dat you got to have a fit over a earth worm or a string, Ah donât keer how bad Ah skeer you.â
âYou aint got no business doing it. Gawd knows itâs a sin. Some day Ahâm goinâ tuh drop dead from some of yoâ foolishness. âNother thing, where you been wid mah rig? Ah feeds dat pony. He aint fuh you to be drivinâ wid no bull whip.â
âYou sho is one aggravatinâ nigger woman!â he declared and stepped into the room. She resumed her work and did not answer him at once. âAh done tole you time and again to keep them white folksâ clothes outa dis house.â
He picked up the whip and glared down at her. Delia went on with her work. She went out into the yard and returned with a galvanized tub and set it on the washbench. She saw that Sykes had kicked all of the clothes together again, and now stood in her way truculently, his whole manner hoping, praying, for an argument. But she walked calmly around him and commenced to re-sort the things.
âNext time, Ahâm gointer kick âem outdoors,â he threatened as he struck a match along the leg of his corduroy breeches.
Delia never looked up from her work, and her thin, stooped shoulders sagged further.
âAh aint for no fuss tânight Sykes. Ah just come from taking sacrament at the church house.â
He snorted scornfully. âYeah, you just come from de church house on a Sunday night, but heah you is gone to work on them clothes. You ainât nothing but a hypocrite. One of them amen-corner Christiansâsing, whoop, and shout, then come home and wash white folks clothes on the Sabbath.â
He stepped roughly upon the whitest pile of things, kicking them helter-skelter as he crossed the room. His wife gave a little scream of dismay, and quickly gathered them together again.
âSykes, you quit grindinâ dirt into these clothes! How can Ah git through by Satâday if Ah donât start on Sunday?â
âAh donât keer if you never git through. Anyhow, Ah done promised Gawd and a couple of other men, Ah aint gointer have it in mah house. Donât gimme no lip neither, else Ahâll throw âem out and put mah fist up side yoâ head to boot.â
Deliaâs habitual meekness seemed to slip from her shoulders like a blown scarf. She was on her feet; her poor little body, her bare knuckly hands bravely defying the strapping hulk before her.
âLooka heah, Sykes, you done gone too fur. Ah been married to you fur fifteen years, and Ah been takinâ in washinâ for fifteen years. Sweat, sweat, sweat! Work and sweat, cry and sweat, pray and sweat!â
âWhatâs that got to do with me?â he asked brutally.
âWhatâs it got to do with you, Sykes? Mah tub of suds is filled yoâ belly with vittles more times than yoâ hands is filled it. Mah sweat is done paid for this house and Ah reckon Ah kin keep on sweatinâ in it.â
She seized the iron skillet from the stove and struck a defensive pose, which act surprised him greatly, coming from her. It cowed him and he did not strike her as he usually did.
âNaw you wonât,â she panted, âthat ole snaggle-toothed black woman you runninâ with aint cominâ heah to pile up on mah sweat and blood. You aint paid for nothinâ on this place, and Ahâm gointer stay right heah till Ahâm toted out foot foremost.â
âWell, you better quit gittinâ me riled up, else theyâll be totinâ you out sooner than you expect. Ahâm so tired of you Ah donât know whut to do. Gawd! how Ah hates skinny wimmen!â
A little awed by this new Delia, he sidled out of the door and slammed the back gate after him. He did not say where he had gone, but she knew too well. She knew very well that he would not return until nearly daybreak also. Her work over, she went on to bed but not to sleep at once. Things had come to a pretty pass!
She lay awake, gazing upon the debris that cluttered their matrimonial trail. Not an image left standing along the way. Anything like flowers had long ago been drowned in the salty stream that had been pressed from her heart. Her tears, her sweat, her blood. She had brought love to the union and he had brought a longing after the flesh. Two months after the wedding, he had given her the first brutal beating. She had the memory of his numerous trips to Orlando with all of his wages when he had returned to her penniless, even before the first year had passed. She was young and soft then, but now she thought of her knotty, muscled limbs, her harsh knuckly hands, and drew herself up into an unhappy little ball in the middle of the big feather bed. Too late now to hope for love, even if it were not Bertha it would be someone else. This case differed from the others only in that she was bolder than the others. Too late for everything except her little home. She had built it for her old days, and planted one by one the trees and flowers there. It was lovely to her, lovely.
Somehow, before sleep came, she found herself saying aloud: âOh well, whatever goes over the Devilâs back, is got to come under his belly. Sometime or ruther, Sykes, like everybody else, is gointer reap his sowing.â After that she was able to build a spiritual earthworks against her husband. His shells could no longer reach her. Amen. She went to sleep and slept until he announced his presence in bed by kicking her feet and rudely snatching the covers away.
âGimme some kivah heah, anâ git yoâ damn foots over on yoâ own side! Ah oughter mash you in yoâ mouf fuh drawing dat skillet on me.â
Delia went clear to the rail without answering him. A triumphant indifference to all that he was or did.
*****
The week was as full of work for Delia as all other weeks, and Saturday found her behind her little pony, collecting and delivering clothes.
It was a hot, hot day near the end of July. The village men on Joe Clarkeâs porch even chewed cane listlessly. They did not hurl the cane-knots as usual. They let them dribble over the edge of the porch. Even conversation had collapsed under the heat.
âHeah come Delia Jones,â Jim Merchant said, as the shaggy pony came âround the bend of the road toward them. The rusty buckboard was heaped with baskets of crisp, clean laundry.
âYep,â Joe Lindsay agreed. âHot or colâ, rain or shine, jes ez regâlar ez de weeks roll rounâ Delia carries âem anâ fetches âem on Satâday.â
âShe better if she wanter eat,â said Moss. âSyke Jones aint wuth de shot anâ powder hit would tek tuh kill âem. Not to huh he aint. â
âHe shoâ aint,â Walter Thomas chimed in. âItâs too bad, too, cause she wuz a right pritty lil trick when he got huh. Ahâd uh mahâied huh mahseff if he hadnter beat me to it.â
Delia nodded briefly at the men as she drove past.
âToo much knockinâ will ruin any âoman. He done beat huh ânough tuh kill three women, let âlone change they looks,â said Elijah Moseley. âHow Syke kin stommuck dat big black greasy Mogul heâs layinâ roun wid, gits me. Ah swear dat eight-rock couldnât kiss a sardine can Ah done throwed out de back doâ âway lasâ yeah.â
âAw, sheâs fat, thass how come. Heâs allus been crazy âbout fat women,â put in Merchant. âHeâd aâ been tied up wid one long time ago if he could aâ found one tuh have him. Did Ah tell yuh âbout him come sidlinâ rounâ mah wifeâbringinâ her a basket uh pecans outa his yard fuh a present? Yessir, mah wife! She tolâ him tuh take âem right straight back home, cause Delia works so hard ovah dat washtub she reckon everything on de place taste lak sweat anâ soapsuds. Ah jusâ wisht Ahâd aâ caught âim âdere! Ahâd aâ made his hips ketch on fiah down dat shell road.â
âAh know he done it, too. Ah sees âim grinninâ at every âoman dat passes,â Walter Thomas said. âBut even so, he useter eat some mighty big hunks uh humble pie tuh git dat lil âoman he got. She wuz ez pritty ez a speckled pup! Dat wuz fifteen yeahs ago. He useter be so skeered uh losinâ huh, she could make him do some parts of a husbandâs duty. Dey never wuz de same in de mind.â
âThere oughter be a law about him,â said Lindsay. âHe aint fit tuh carry guts tuh a bear.â
Clarke spoke for the first time. âTaint no law on earth dat kin make a man be decent if it aint in âim. Thereâs plenty men dat takes a wife lak dey do a joint uh sugar-cane. Itâs round, juicy anâ sweet when dey gits it. But dey squeeze anâ grind, squeeze anâ grind anâ wring tell dey wring every drop uh pleasure datâs in âem out. When deyâs satisfied dat dey is wrung dry, dey treats âem jes lak dey do a cane-chew. Dey throws em away. Dey knows whut dey is doinâ while dey is at it, anâ hates theirselves fuh it but they keeps on hanginâ after huh tell sheâs empty. Den dey hates huh fuh beinâ a cane-chew anâ in de way.â
âWe oughter take Syke anâ dat stray âoman uh hisân down in Lake Howell swamp anâ lay on de rawhide till they cainât say Lawd aâ mussy.â He allus wuz uh ovahbearinâ n***ah, but since dat white âoman from up north done teached âim how to run a automobile, he done got too biggety to liveâanâ we oughter kill âim,â Old Man Anderson advised.
A grunt of approval went around the porch. But the heat was melting their civic virtue, and Elijah Moseley began to bait Joe Clarke.
âCome on, Joe, git a melon outa dere anâ slice it up for yoâ customers. Weâse all sufferinâ wid de heat. De bearâs done got me!â
âThass right, Joe, a watermelon is jesâ whut Ah needs tuh cure de eppizudicks,â Walter Thomas joined forces with Moseley. âCome on dere, Joe. We all is steady customers anâ you aint set us up in a long time. Ah chooses dat long, bowlegged Floridy favorite.â
âA god, anâ be dough. You all gimme twenty cents and slice way,â Clarke retorted. âAh needs a colâ slice mâself. Heah, everybody chip in. Ahâll lend yâll mah meat knife.â
The money was quickly subscribed and the huge melon brought forth. At that moment, Sykes and Bertha arrived. A determined silence fell on the porch and the melon was put away again.
Merchant snapped down the blade of his jackknife and moved toward the store door.
âCome on in, Joe, anâ gimme a slab uh sow belly anâ uh pound uh coffeeâalmost fuhgot âtwas Satâday. Got to git on home.â Most of the men left also.
Just then Delia drove past on her way home, as Sykes was ordering magnificently for Bertha. It pleased him for Delia to see.
âGit whutsoever yoâ heart desires, Honey. Wait a minute, Joe. Give huh two bottles uh strawberry soda-water, uh quart uh parched ground-peas, anâ a block uh chewinâ gum.â
With all this they left the store, with Sykes reminding Bertha that this was his town and she could have it if she wanted it.
The men returned soon after they left, and held their watermelon feast.
âWhere did Syke Jones git da âoman from nohow?â Lindsay asked.
âOvah Apopka. Guess dey musta been cleaninâ out de town when she lefâ. She donât look lak a thing but a hunk uh liver wid hair on it.â
âWell, she shoâ kin squall,â Dave Carter contributed. âWhen she gits ready tuh laff, she jesâ opens huh mouf anâ latches it back tuh de lasâ notch. No ole grandpa alligator down in Lake Bell ainât got nothinâ on huh.â
*****
Bertha had been in town three months now. Sykes was still paying her room rent at Della Lewisââthe only house in town that would have taken her in. Sykes took her frequently to Winter Park to âstomps.â He still assured her that he was the swellest man in the state.
âShoâ you kin have dat lilâ ole house soonâs Ah kin git dat âoman outa dere. Everything bâlongs tuh me anâ you shoâ kin have it. Ah shoâ âbominates uh skinny âoman. Lawdy, you shoâ is got one portly shape on you! You kin git anything you wants. Dis is mah town anâ you shoâ kin have it.â
Deliaâs work-worn knees crawled over the earth in Gethsemane and up the rocks of Calvary many, many times during these months. She avoided the villagers and meeting places in her efforts to be blind and deaf. But Bertha nullified this to a degree, by coming to Deliaâs house to call Sykes out to her at the gate.
Delia and Sykes fought all the time now with no peaceful interludes. They slept and ate in silence. Two or three times Delia had attempted a timid friendliness, but she was repulsed each time. It was plain that the breaches must remain agape.
The sun had burned July to August. The heat streamed down like a million hot arrows, smiting all things living upon the earth. Grass withered, leaves browned, snakes went blind in shedding and men and dogs went mad. Dog days!
Delia came home one day and found Sykes there before her. She wondered, but started to go on into the house without speaking, even though he was standing in the kitchen door and she must either stoop under his arm or ask him to move. He made no room for her. She noticed a soap box beside the steps, but paid no particular attention to it, knowing that he must have brought it there. As she was stooping to pass under his outstretched arm, he suddenly pushed her backward, laughingly.
âLook in de box dere Delia, Ah done brung yuh somethinâ!â
She nearly fell upon the box in her stumbling, and when she saw what it held, she all but fainted outright.
âSyke! Syke, mah Gawd! You take dat rattlesnake âway from heah! You gottuh. Oh, Jesus, have mussy!â
âAh aint gut tuh do nuthinâ uh de kinââfact is Ah aint got tuh do nothinâ but die. Taint no use uh you puttinâ on airs makinâ out lak you skeered uh dat snakeâheâs gointer stay right heah tell he die. He wouldnât bite me cause Ah knows how tuh handle âim. Nohow he wouldnât risk breakinâ out his fangs âgin yoâ skinny laigs.â
âNaw, now Syke, donât keep dat thing ârounâ heah tuh skeer me tuh death. You knows Ahâm even feared uh earth worms. Thass de biggest snake Ah evah did see. Kill âim Syke, please.â
âDoan ast me tuh do nothinâ fuh yuh. Goinâ rounâ tryingâ tuh be so damn asterperious. Naw, Ah aint gonna kill it. Ah think uh damn sight moâ uh him dan you! Datâs a nice snake anâ anybody doan lak âim kin jesâ hit de grit.â
The village soon heard that Sykes had the snake, and came to see and ask questions.
âHow de hen-fire did you ketch dat six-foot rattler, Syke?â Thomas asked.
âHeâs full uh frogs so he caint hardly move, thass how. Ah eased up on âm. But Ahâm a snake charmer anâ knows how tuh handle âem. Shux, dat aint nothinâ. Ah could ketch one eveây day if Ah so wanted tuh.â
âWhut he needs is a heavy hickâry club leaned real heavy on his head. Datâs de bes âway tuh charm a rattlesnake.â
âNaw, Walt, yâll jesâ donât understand dese diamonâ backs lak Ah do,â said Sykes in a superior tone of voice.
The village agreed with Walter, but the snake stayed on. His box remained by the kitchen door with its screen wire covering. Two or three days later it had digested its meal of frogs and literally came to life. It rattled at every movement in the kitchen or the yard. One day as Delia came down the kitchen steps she saw his chalky-white fangs curved like scimitars hung in the wire meshes. This time she did not run away with averted eyes as usual. She stood for a long time in the doorway in a red fury that grew bloodier for every second that she regarded the creature that was her torment.
That night she broached the subject as soon as Sykes sat down to the table.
âSyke, Ah wants you tuh take dat snake âway fum heah. You done starved me anâ Ah put up widcher, you done beat me an Ah took dat, but you done kilt all mah insides bringinâ dat varmint heah.â
Sykes poured out a saucer full of coffee and drank it deliberately before he answered her.
âA whole lot Ah keer âbout how you feels inside uh out. Dat snake aint goinâ no damn wheah till Ah gits ready fuh âim tuh go. So fur as beatinâ is concerned, yuh aint took near all dat you gointer take ef yuh stay ârounâ me.â
Delia pushed back her plate and got up from the table. âAh hates you, Sykes,â she said calmly. âAh hates you tuh de same degree dat Ah useter love yuh. Ah done took anâ took till mah belly is full up tuh mah neck. Datâs de reason Ah got mah letter fum de church anâ moved mah membership tuh Woodbridgeâso Ah donât haf tuh take no sacrament wid yuh. Ah donât wantuh see yuh ârounâ me atall. Lay ârounâ wid dat âoman all yuh wants tuh, but gwan âway fum me anâ mah house. Ah hates yuh lak uh suck-egg dog.â
Sykes almost let the huge wad of corn bread and collard greens he was chewing fall out of his mouth in amazement. He had a hard time whipping himself up to the proper fury to try to answer Delia.
âWell, Ahâm glad you does hate me. Ahâm shoâ tiahed uh you hanginâ ontuh me. Ah donât want yuh. Look at yuh stringey ole neck! Yoâ rawbony laigs anâ arms is enough tuh cut uh man tuh death. You looks jesâ lak de devvulâs doll-baby tuh me. You cainât hate me no worse dan Ah hates you. Ah been hatinâ you fuh years.â
âYoâ ole black hide donât look lak nothinâ tuh me, but uh passle uh wrinkled up rubber, wid yoâ big ole yeahs flappinâ on each side lak uh paih uh buzzard wings. Donât think Ahâm gointuh be run âway fum mah house neither. Ahâm goinâ tuh de white folks bout you, mah young man, de very nexâ time you lay yoâ hanâs on me. Mah cup is done run ovah.â Delia said this with no signs of fear and Sykes departed from the house, threatening her, but made not the slightest move to carry out any of them.
That night he did not return at all, and the next day being Sunday, Delia was glad she did not have to quarrel before she hitched up her pony and drove the four miles to Woodbridge.
She stayed to the night serviceââlove feastââwhich was very warm and full of spirit. In the emotional winds her domestic trials were borne far and wide so that she sang as she drove homeward.
âJurden water, black anâ colâ
Chills de body, not de soul
Anâ Ah wantah cross Jurden in uh calm time.â
She came from the barn to the kitchen door and stopped.
âWhutâs de mattah, olâ satan, you aint kickinâ up yoâ racket?â She addressed the snakeâs box. Complete silence. She went on into the house with a new hope in its birth struggles. Perhaps her threat to go to the white folks had frightened Sykes! Perhaps he was sorry! Fifteen years of misery and suppression had brought Delia to the place where she would hope anything that looked towards a way over or through her wall of inhibitions.
She felt in the match safe behind the stove at once for a match. There was only one there.
âDat n***ah wouldnât fetch nothinâ heah tuh save his rotten neck, but he kin run thew whut Ah brings quick enough. Now he done toted off nigh on tuh haff uh box uh matches. He done had dat âoman heah in mah house, too.â
Nobody but a woman could tell how she knew this even before she struck the match. But she did and it put her into a new fury.
Presently she brought in the tubs to put the white things to soak. This time she decided she need not bring the hamper out of the bedroom; she would go in there and do the sorting. She picked up the pot-bellied lamp and went in. The room was small and the hamper stood hard by the foot of the white iron bed. She could sit and reach through the bedpostsâresting as she worked.
âAh wantah cross Jurden in uh calm time,â she was singing again. The mood of the âlove feastâ had returned. She threw back the lid of the basket almost gaily. Then, moved by both horror and terror, she sprang back toward the door. There lay the snake in the basket! He moved sluggishly at first, but even as she turned round and round, jumped up and down in an insanity of fear, he began to stir vigorously. She saw him pouring his awful beauty from the basket upon the bed, then she seized the lamp and ran as fast as she could to the kitchen. The wind from the open door blew out the light and the darkness added to her terror. She sped to the darkness of the yard, slamming the door after her before she thought to set down the lamp. She did not feel safe even on the ground, so she climbed up in the hay barn.
There for an hour or more she lay sprawled upon the hay a gibbering wreck.
Finally, she grew quiet, and after that, coherent thought. With this, stalked through her a cold, bloody rage. Hours of this. A period of introspection, a space of retrospection, then a mixture of both. Out of this an awful calm.
âWell, Ah done de besâ Ah could. If things aint right, Gawd knows taint mah fault.â
She went to sleepâa twitch sleepâand woke up to a faint gray sky. There was a loud hollow sound below. She peered out. Sykes was at the wood-pile, demolishing a wire-covered box.
He hurried to the kitchen door, but hung outside there some minutes before he entered, and stood some minutes more inside before he closed it after him.
The gray in the sky was spreading. Delia descended without fear now, and crouched beneath the low bedroom window. The drawn shade shut out the dawn, shut in the night. But the thin walls held back no sound.
âDat olâ scratch is woke up now!â She mused at the tremendous whirr inside, which every woodsman knows, is one of the sound illusions. The rattler is a ventriloquist. His whirr sounds to the right, to the left, straight ahead, behind, close under footâeverywhere but where it is. Woe to him who guesses wrong unless he is prepared to hold up his end of the argument! Sometimes he strikes without rattling at all.
Inside, Sykes heard nothing until he knocked a pot lid off the stove while trying to reach the match safe in the dark. He had emptied his pockets at Berthaâs.
The snake seemed to wake up under the stove and Sykes made a quick leap into the bedroom. In spite of the gin he had had, his head was clearing now.
ââMah Gawd!â he chattered, âef Ah could onây strack uh light!â
The rattling ceased for a moment as he stood paralyzed. He waited. It seemed that the snake waited also.
âOh, fuh de light! Ah thought heâd be too sickââSykes was muttering to himself when the whirr began again, closer, right underfoot this time. Long before this, Sykesâ ability to think had been flattened down to primitive instinct and he leapedâonto the bed.
Outside Delia heard a cry that might have come from a maddened chimpanzee, a stricken gorilla. All the terror, all the horror, all the rage that man possibly could express, without a recognizable human sound.
A tremendous stir inside there, another series of animal screams, the intermittent whirr of the reptile. The shade torn violently down from the window, letting in the red dawn, a huge brown hand seizing the window stick, great dull blows upon the wooden floor punctuating the gibberish of sound long after the rattle of the snake had abruptly subsided. All this Delia could see and hear from her place beneath the window, and it made her ill. She crept over to the four-oâclocks and stretched herself on the cool earth to recover.
She lay there. âDelia. Delia!â She could hear Sykes calling in a most despairing tone as one who expected no answer. The sun crept on up, and he called. Delia could not moveâher legs were gone flabby. She never moved, he called, and the sun kept rising.
âMah Gawd!â She heard him moan, âMah Gawd fum Heben!â She heard him stumbling about and got up from her flower-bed. The sun was growing warm. As she approached the door she heard him call out hopefully, âDelia, is dat you Ah heah?â
She saw him on his hands and knees as soon as she reached the door. He crept an inch or two toward herâall that he was able, and she saw his horribly swollen neck and his one open eye shining with hope. A surge of pity too strong to support bore her away from that eye that must, could not, fail to see the tubs. He would see the lamp. Orlando with its doctors was too far. She could scarcely reach the Chinaberry tree, where she waited in the growing heat while inside she knew the cold river was creeping up and up to extinguish that eye which must know by now that she knew.