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The Ravelin’ Wolf
by
This night the session opened with a prayer–by Doctor Duvall; an eloquent and a moving prayer indeed, its sonorous periods set off and adorned with noble big words and quotations in foreign tongues. The prayer would be followed, it had been announced, by the reading of the minutes of the previous session, after which Doctor Duvall would speak at length with particular reference to things lately accomplished and the even more important things in contemplation for the near future.
Standing for the prayer, Jeff could look out over what a master of words before now has fitly described as a sea of upturned faces–faces black, brown and yellow. Had he been minded to give thought to details he might have noted how at every polysyllabic outburst from the inspired invocationist old Uncle Ike Fauntleroy, himself accounted a powerful hand at wrestling with sinners in prayer, was visibly jolted by admiration; might, if he had had a head for figures, have kept count of the hearty amens with which Sister Eldora Menifee punctuated each pause when Doctor Duvall was taking a fresh breath; might have cast a side glance upon Ophelia Stubblefield in a new and most becoming hat with ostrich plumage grandly surmounting it. But under the hand which he held reverently cupped over his brow Jeff’s eyes were fixed upon a certain focal point,–to wit, the door of the main entrance at the length of the hall from him. It was as though Jeff waited for something or somebody he was expecting.
Nor did he have so very long to wait. The prayer was done and well done. In its wake, so to speak, there spouted up from every side veritable geysers of hallelujahs and amens. The honorary secretary, Brother Lemuel Diuguid, smelling grandly of expensive hair ointments–Brother Diuguid being by calling a head barber–stood up to read the minutes of the preceding regular session, and having read them sat down again. A friendly and flattering bustle of anticipation filled the body of the hall as Doctor Duvall rose and moved one pace forward and–raising a hand for silence–began to speak. But he had no more than begun, had progressed no farther than part way of his first smoothly launched sentence, when he was made to break off by an unseemly interruption at the rear. The honorary grand inner guard on duty at the far street door, after a brief and unsuccessful struggle with unseen forces, was observed to be shoved violently aside from his post. Bursting in together there entered two strangers–a tall yellow woman and a short black man, and both of them of a most grim and determined aspect. He moved fast, this man, but even so his companion moved faster still. She was three paces ahead of him when, bulging impetuously past those who sprang into the center aisle as though to halt her onward rush–all others present being likewise up on their feet–she came to a halt near the middle of the hall and, glaring about her defiantly, just double-dog-dared any present to lay so much as the weight of one detaining finger upon her. There was something about her calculated to daunt the most willing of volunteer opponents, and so while those at a safe distance demanded the ejection of the intruders, those nearer her hesitated.
“Th’ow me out?” she whooped, echoing the words of outraged and startled members of the Shining Star. “I’d lak to see de one dat’s gwine try it! An’ ‘fo’ anybody talk ’bout th’owin’ out lettum heah me whilst I sez my say!”
Towering until she seemed to increase in stature by inches, she aimed a long and bony finger dead ahead.
“Ax dat slinky yaller man up yonder on dat flatfo’m ef he gwine give de order to th’ow me out!” she clarioned in a voice which rose to a compelling shriek. “But fust off ax him whut he meant–marryin’ me in Mobile, Alabama, an’ den runnin’ ‘way frum his lawful wedded wife under cover of de night! Ax him–dat’s all, ax him!”