Later he remembered differently: he did remember her moving about the house, attending to household affairs.
But at eight and nine and ten he thought of her as without legs, feet; as being only that thin face and the two eyes which seemed daily to grow bigger and bigger, as though about to embrace all seeing, all life, with one last terrible glare of frustration and suffering and foreknowledge, and that when that finally happened, he would hear it: it would be a sound, like a cry.
Already, before she died, he could feel them through all walls.
They were the house: he dwelled within them, within their dark and allembracing and patient aftermath of physical betrayal.
He and she both lived in them like two small, weak beasts in a den, a cavern, into which now and then the father entered—that man who was a stranger to them both, a foreigner, almost a threat: so quickly does the body’s wellbeing alter and change the spirit.
He was more than a stranger: he was an enemy.
He smelled differently from them.
He spoke with a different voice, almost in different words, as though he dwelled by ordinary among different surroundings and in a different world; crouching beside the bed the child could feel the man fill the room with rude health and unconscious contempt, he too as helpless and frustrated as they.
The third phantom was the negro woman, the slave, who had ridden away in the surrey that morning when the son and his bride came home.
She rode away a slave; she returned in ‘66 still a slave, on foot now—a huge woman, with a face both irascible and calm: the mask of a black tragedy between scenes.
After her master’s death and until she was convinced at last that she would never more see either him or her husband—the ‘boy,’ who had followed the master to the war and who also did not return—she refused to leave the house in the country to which her master had moved and of which he had left in her charge when he rode away.
After the father’s death the son went out, to close the house and remove his father’s private possessions, and he offered to make provision for her.
She refused.
She also refused to leave.
She made her own small kitchen garden and she lived there, alone, waiting for her husband to return, the rumor of whose death she refused to believe.
It was just rumor, vague: how, following his master’s death in Van Dorn’s cavalry raid to destroy Grant’s stores in Jefferson, the negro had been inconsolable.
One night he disappeared from the bivouac.
Presently there began to come back tales of a crazy negro who had been halted by Confederate pickets close to the enemy’s front, who told the same garbled story about a missing master who was being held for ransom by the Yankees.
They could not make him even entertain for a moment the idea that the master might be dead.
“No, suh,” he would say. “Not Marse Gail.
Not him.
Dey wouldn’t dare to kill a Hightower.
Dey wouldn’t dare.
Dey got ‘im hid somewhar, tryin’ to sweat outen him whar me and him hid Mistis’ coffee pot and de gole waiter.
Dat’s all dey wants.”
Each time he would escape.
Then one day word came back from the Federal lines of a negro who had attacked a Yankee officer with a shovel, forcing the officer to shoot him to protect his own life.
The woman would not believe this for a long time.
“Not dat he ain’t fool enough to done it,” she said. “He jest ain’t got ernough sense to know. a Yankee to hit at wid a shovel if he wuz to see um.”
She said that for over a year.
Then one day she appeared at the son’s home, the house which she had quitted ten years ago and had not entered since, carrying her possessions in a handkerchief.
She walked into the house and said:
“Here I is.
You got ernough wood in de box ter cook supper wid?”
“You’re free, now,” the son told her.
“Free?” she said.
She spoke with still and brooding scorn. “Free?
Whut’s freedom done except git Marse Gail killed and made a bigger fool outen Pawmp den even de Lawd Hisself could do?
Free?
Don’t talk ter me erbout freedom.”
This was the third phantom.
With this phantom the child (‘and he little better than a phantom too, then,’ that same child now thinks beside the fading window) talked about the ghost.
They never tired: the child with rapt, wide, half dread and half delight, and the old woman with musing and savage sorrow and pride.
But this to the child was just peaceful shuddering of delight.
He found no terror in the knowledge that his grandfather on the contrary had killed men ‘by the hundreds’ as he was told and believed, or in the fact that the negro Pomp had been trying to kill a man when he died.
No horror here because they were just ghosts, never seen in the flesh, heroic, simple, warm; while the father which he knew and feared was a phantom which would never die.
‘So it’s no wonder,’ he thinks, ‘that I skipped a generation.
It’s no wonder that I had no father and that I had already died one night twenty years before I saw light.
And that my only salvation must be to return to the place to die where my life had already ceased before it began.’
While at the seminary, after he first came there, he often thought how he would tell them, the elders, the high and sanctified men who were the destiny of the church to which he had willingly surrendered.