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The Ravelin’ Wolf
by
One evening, supper being over, Judge Priest lingered on in his low-ceiled dining room smoking his corncob pipe while Jeff cleared away the supper dishes. It was the same high-voiced deliberately ungrammatical Judge Priest that the kindly reader may recall–somewhat older than at last accounts, somewhat slower in his step–but then he never had been given to fast movements–and perhaps just a trifle balder.
“Wuz dey anythin’ else you wanted, jedge, ‘fore I locks up the back of the house an’ lights out?” Jeff inquired when the table had been reset for breakfast.
“Yes, I think mebbe there wuz,” drawled the old man. He hesitated a moment almost as though at a loss for a proper phrasing of the thing he meant to say next. Then: “Jeff, what’s come over your race in this town here lately?”
“Meanin’ w’ich, suh?” countered Jeff. “Me, I ain’t notice nothin’ out of the way–nothin’ particular.”
“Haven’t you? Well, I think I have. Jeff, I don’t want to be put in the position of pryin’ into the private and the personal affairs of other folks, reguardless of color. I have to do enough of that sort of thing in my official capacity when I’m settin’ in judgment up at the big cote house. But unless I can get some confidential information frum you I don’t know where else I’m likely to git it, and at the same time I sort of feel as ef I should try to get hold of it somewheres or other ef it’s humanly possible.”
“Yas, suh.”
“Now heretofore in this community the two races–white and black–have got along purty tolerably well together. We managed to put up with your shortcomings and you managed to put up with ours, which at times may have been considerable of a strain on both sides. Still we’ve done it. But it seems to me here of late there’s been a kind of an undercurrent of discontent stirrin’ amongst your people–and no logical reason fur it either, so fur as I kin see. Yet there it is.
“There wuz that rumpus two-three weeks ago down in Market Square. A little more and that affair could have growed into a first-class race riot. And here last Saturday night followed that mix-up out by the Union Depot when Policeman Gip Futtrell got all carved up and two darkies got purty extensively shot. And night before last the trouble that occurred on that Belt Line car out in Hollandville; that looked mighty threatenin’, too, fur a while. And in between all these more serious things a lot of little unpleasantnesses keep croppin’ up–always takin’ the form of friction between whites and blacks.
“One of these here occurrences might be what you’d call an accident and two of them in rapid succession a coincidence, but it looks to me like now it’s gittin’ to be a habit. It’s leadin’ to bad blood and what’s worse it’s leadin’ to a lot of spilt blood and our city gittin’ a bad name and all that.
“And I know the respectable black folks in this town don’t want that to happen any more than the respectable white people do.
“Now then, Jeff, whut’s at the bottom of all this–I mean on your side of the color line? Who’s stirrin’ up old grudges and kindlin’ new ones? I’ve sort of got my own private suspicions, but I’d like to see ef your ideas run along with mine. Got any suggestions as to the underlying causes of this ill feelin’ that’s sprung up so lately and without any good reason for it either so fur ez I kin see?”
Now ordinarily Jeff would have held firmly to the doctrine that white folks should tend to their business and let black folks tend to theirs. For all his loyalty to his master, a certain race consciousness in him would have bade him keep hands off and tongue locked. But here a strong personal prejudice operated to steer Jeff away from what otherwise would have been his customary course.