excerpt
from The Admiral’s Daughter:
The next
morning they went into town to buy some things at the general store.
As they walked past a group of Negroes he could feel the controlled
hostility directed at Kristy, which he hadn’t felt two days
ago.
“Something
has happened,” Kristy said.
“I
know. I can feel it.”
They
went into the store and found a local newspaper. She flipped through
it, looking for something. Deep into the paper she stopped.
Looking
over her shoulder, Nathan saw a small article about a young Negro man
who had been killed in a hunting accident. The story gave his name,
age, and address but not his occupation. It said he had died of a wound
from a shotgun, evidently from a hunter who had mistaken him for a deer.
“What
is it?” he asked.
“It’s
my father,” she said through clenched teeth.
She
gathered the things they had come to buy, and when there were no other
customers in the store she went to the counter and said to the owner:
“Hey, Mr. Carter, how y’all doing?”
“I’m
doing fine, Miss Kristy. How are you?”
“I’m
fine, thanks. Do you know anything about this hunting accident?”
The
man shook his head. ‘No, I don’t know anything about it.”
“Did
you hear anything?”
“Well,
I did hear some talk. But mind you, it’s just talk.”
“I
understand. What did you hear?”
“I
heard the young man was making advances at a white woman.”
“An
older woman or a younger woman?”
“A
younger woman. I heard they burned a cross in front of his house to
warn him. But I reckon he didn’t heed the warning.”
“I
reckon not,” Kristy said with a straight face.
“But
you didn’t hear about it from me.”
“No.
I didn’t. A bird told me.”
“Is
this it?” the storeowner asked, starting to tabulate her purchases.
“Yes,
sir. That’s it.”
Back
in the car Kristy dropped her composure and grabbed the steering wheel
as if she wanted to break it. “That’s what the meeting was
about.”
“What?
You mean those two guys – ?”
“They’re
Klansmen. And they were planning to kill this man.”
“Are
you sure?”
“I’m
sure. I know my father.”
“They
killed him because he was making advances at a white woman?”
“That’s
what it’s about – mixing the races.” She started the
car and backed out of the parking place.
“Where
are we going?”
“To
confront my father.”
“Well,
I’m with you all the way.”
“I
know you are,” she said appreciatively.
She
drove fast, and they got to her house within fifteen minutes. She marched
into the house and headed for her father’s office with Nathan
only a step behind her. Without knocking she opened the door.
“Where
are your manners?” her father asked. “You’re supposed
to knock before you come into a room when the door’s closed.”
“Forget
my manners. Where are your values?”
“What
are you talking about?”
“I’m
talking about the man who was killed in a hunting accident.”
Her
father looked at her blankly. “I didn’t hear about it. What
happened?”
“You
know perfectly well what happened.”
“Why
on earth do you think I know?”
“Because
you planned it.”
“Planned
what? An accident?”
“It
wasn’t an accident. It was a murder.”
Her
father laughed. “You’ve read too many novels about the South.
That kind of thing sells books, but it doesn’t happen in real
life.”
“The
man is dead. That’s real life.”
“Well,
I’m sorry about it. But there’s no call to accuse me of
murder. The poor man had an accident. That’s all.”
“So
the cross they burned in front of his house was an accident?”
“I
don’t know about any cross. You’ll have to ask the Klan
about that.”
“You
were meeting here with them yesterday.”
“They’re
not Klansmen. They’re just farmers. We were talking about the
new hybrid corn from DeKalb.”
“I
know who they are.”
“You
don’t know anything. You haven’t lived here for almost five
years. She gets these ideas from the books she reads,” the admiral
said to Nathan. “The ones by Faulkner and other writers who hate
the South.”
“I
think she has evidence to support what she’s saying,” Nathan
said.
“What
kind of evidence? Gossip that she heard in town?”
“I’m
going to catch you,” Kristy said with determination. “One
of these days I’m going to catch you.”