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XXV. COMPETITION IN CUNNING. DR. FLINT had
not given me up. Every now and then he would say to my grandmother that I would
yet come back, and voluntarily surrender myself; and that when I did, I could
be purchased by my relatives, or any one who wished to buy me. I knew his
cunning nature too well not to believe that this was a trap laid for me; and so
all my friends understood it. I resolved to match my cunning against his
cunning. In order to make him believe that I was in New York, I resolved to
write him a letter dated from that place. I sent for my friend Peter, and asked
him if he knew any trustworthy seafaring person, who would carry such a letter
to New York, and put it in the post office there. He said he knew one that he
would trust with his own life to the ends of the world. I reminded him that it
was a hazardous thing for him to undertake. He said he knew it, but he was
willing to do any thing to help me. I expressed a wish for a New York paper, to
ascertain the names of some of the streets. He run his hand into his pocket, and
said, "Here is half a one, that was round a cap I bought of a pedler
yesterday." I told him the letter would be ready the next evening. He bade
me good by, adding, "Keep up your spirits, Linda; brighter days will come
by and by." My uncle Phillip
kept watch over the gate until our brief interview was over. Early the next
morning, I seated myself near the little aperture to examine the newspaper. It
was a piece of the New York Herald; and, for once, the paper that
systematically abuses the colored people, was made to render them a service.
Having obtained what information I wanted concerning streets and numbers, I
wrote two letters, one to my grandmother, the other to Dr. Flint. I reminded
him how he, a gray-headed man, had treated a helpless child, who had been
placed in his power, and what years of misery he had brought upon her. To my
grandmother, I expressed a wish to have my children sent to me at the north,
where I could teach them to respect themselves, and set them a virtuous
example; which a slave mother was not allowed to do at the south. I asked her
to direct her answer to a certain street in Boston, as I did not live in New
York, though I went there sometimes. I dated these letters ahead, to allow for
the time it would take to carry them, and sent a memorandum of the date to the
messenger. When my friend came for the letters, I said, "God bless and
reward you, Peter, for this disinterested kindness. Pray be careful. If you are
detected, both you and I will have to suffer dreadfully. I have not a relative
who would dare to do it for me." He replied, "You may trust to me,
Linda. I don't forget that your father was my best friend, and I will be a
friend to his children so long as God lets me live." It was necessary
to tell my grandmother what I had done, in order that she might be ready for
the letter, and prepared to hear what Dr. Flint might say about my being at the
north. She was sadly troubled. She felt sure mischief would come of it. I also
told my plan to aunt Nancy, in order that she might report to us what was said
at Dr. Flint's house. I whispered it to her through a crack, and she whispered
back, "I hope it will succeed. I shan't mind being a slave all my life,
if I can only see you and the children free." I had directed
that my letters should be put into the New York post office on the 20th of the
month. On that evening of the 24th my aunt came to say that Dr. Flint and his
wife had been talking in a low voice about a letter he had received, and that
when he went to his office he promised to bring it when he came to tea. So I
concluded I should hear my letter read the next morning. I told my grandmother
Dr. Flint would be sure to come, and asked her to have him sit near a certain
door, and leave it open, that I might hear what he said. The next morning I
took my station within sound of that door, and remained motionless as a statue.
It was not long before I heard the gate slam, and the well-known footsteps
enter the house. He seated himself in the chair that was placed for him, and
said, "Well, Martha, I've brought you a letter from Linda. She has sent me
a letter also. I know exactly where to find her; but I don't choose to go to
Boston for her. I had rather she would come back of her own accord, in a
respectable manner. Her uncle Phillip is the best person to go for her. With him,
she would feel perfectly free to act. I am willing to pay his expenses going
and returning. She shall be sold to her friends. Her children are free; at
least I suppose they are; and when you obtain her freedom, you'll make a happy
family. I suppose, Martha, you have no objection to my reading to you the
letter Linda has written to you." He broke the
seal, and I heard him read it. The old villian! He had suppressed the letter I
wrote to grandmother, and prepared a substitute of his own, the purport of
which was as follows:— "Dear
Grandmother: I have long wanted to write to you; but the disgraceful manner in
which I left you and my children made me ashamed to do it. If you knew how much
I have suffered since I ran away, you would pity and forgive me. I have
purchased freedom at a dear rate. If any arrangement could be made for me to
return to the south without being a slave, I would gladly come. If not, I beg
of you to send my children to the north. I cannot live any longer without them.
Let me know in time, and I will meet them in New York or Philadelphia,
whichever place best suits my uncle's convenience. Write as soon as possible to
your unhappy daughter, LINDA." "It is very
much as I expected it would be," said the old hypocrite, rising to go.
"You see the foolish girl has repented of her rashness, and wants to
return. We must help her to do it, Martha. Talk with Phillip about it. If he
will go for her, she will trust to him, and come back. I should like an answer
tomorrow. Good morning, Martha." As he stepped
out on the piazza, he stumbled over my little girl. "Ah, Ellen, is that
you?" he said, in his most gracious manner. "I didn't see you. How do
you do?" "Pretty
well, sir," she replied. "I heard you tell grandmother that my mother
is coming home. I want to see her." "Yes,
Ellen, I am going to bring her home very soon," rejoiced he; "and you
shall see her as much as you like, you little curly-headed nigger." This was as good
as a comedy to me, who had heard it all; but grandmother was frightened and
distressed, because the doctor wanted my uncle to go for me. The next evening
Dr. Flint called to talk the matter over. My uncle told him that from what he
had heard of Massachusetts, he judged he should be mobbed if he went there
after a runaway slave. "All stuff and nonsense, Phillip!" replied the
doctor. "Do you suppose I want you to kick up a row in Boston? The
business can all be done quietly. Linda writes that she wants to come back. You
are her relative, and she would trust you. The case would be different
if I went. She might object to coming with me; and the damned
abolitionists, if they knew I was her master, would not believe me, if I told
them she had begged to go back. They would get up a row; and I should not like
to see Linda dragged through the streets like a common negro. She has been very
ungrateful to me for all my kindness; but I forgive her, and want to act the
part of a friend towards her. I have no wish to hold her as my slave. Her
friends can buy her as soon as she arrives here." Finding that his
arguments failed to convince my uncle, the doctor "let the cat out of the
bag," by saying that he had written to the mayor of Boston, to ascertain
whether there was a person of my description at the street and number from
which my letter was dated. He had omitted this date in the letter he had made
up to read to my grandmother. If I had dated from New York, the old man would
probably have made another journey to that city. But even in that dark region,
where knowledge is so carefully excluded from the slave, I had heard enough
about Massachusetts to come to the conclusion that slaveholders did not
consider it a comfortable place to go to in search of a runaway. That was
before the Fugitive Slave Law was passed; before Massachusetts had consented to
become a "nigger hunter" for the south. My grandmother,
who had become skittish by seeing her family always in danger, came to me with
a very distressed countenance, and said, "What will you do if the mayor of
Boston sends him word that you haven't been there? Then he will suspect the letter
was a trick; and maybe he'll find out something about it, and we shall all get
into trouble. O Linda, I wish you had never sent the letters." "Don't
worry yourself, grandmother," said I. "The mayor of Boston won't
trouble himself to hunt niggers for Dr. Flint. The letters will do good in the
end. I shall get out of this dark hole some time or other." "I hope you
will, child," replied the good, patient old friend. "You have been
here a long time; almost five years; but whenever you do go, it will break your
old grandmother's heart. I should be expecting every day to hear that you were
brought back in irons and put in jail. God help you, poor child! Let us be
thankful that some time or other we shall go "where the wicked cease from troubling, and the weary are at
rest." My heart responded, Amen. The fact that
Dr. Flint had written to the mayor of Boston convinced me that he believed my
letter to be genuine, and of course that he had no suspicion of my being any
where in the vicinity. It was a great object to keep up this delusion, for it
made me and my friends feel less anxious, and it would be very convenient
whenever there was a chance to escape. I resolved, therefore, to continue to
write letters from the north from time to time. Two or three weeks passed, and as no news came from the mayor of Boston, grandmother began to listen to my entreaty to be allowed to leave my cell, sometimes, and exercise my limbs to prevent my becoming a cripple. I was allowed to slip down into the small storeroom, early in the morning, and remain there a little while. The room was all filled up with barrels, except a small open space under my trap-door. This faced the door, the upper part of which was of glass, and purposely left uncurtained that the curious might look in. The air of this place was close; but it was so much better than the atmosphere of my cell, that I dreaded to return. I came down as soon as it was light, and remained till eight o'clock, when people began to be about, and there was danger that some one might come on the piazza. I had tried various applications to bring warmth and feeling into my limbs, but without avail. They were so numb and stiff that it was a painful effort to move; and had my enemies come upon me during the first mornings I tried to exercise them a little in the small unoccupied space of the storeroom, it would have been impossible for me to have escaped. |