nothing. He just left the room, pretty quick, plunging outside into the darkness. Cavil sighed, picked up the lantern, and followed him. He found Thrower leaning over the pump. He could hear Roach skittering out of the room where Salamandy died, heading for her own quarters, but he didn't give no never mind to her. It was Thrower - surely the man wasn't so beside himself that he'd throw up on the drinking water!
"I'm all right," whispered Thrower. "I just - the same room - I'm not at all superstitious, you understand. It just seemed disrespectful to the dead."
These northerners. Even when they understood somewhat about slavery, they couldn't get rid of their notion of Blacks as if they was people. Would you stop using a room just because a mouse died there, or you once killed a spider on the wall? Do you burn down your stable just because your favorite horse died there?
Anyway, Thrower got himself together, hitched up his trousers and buttoned them up proper, and they went back into the house. Brother Cavil put Thrower in their guest room, which wasn't all that much used, so there was a cloud of dust when Cavil slapped the blanket. "Should have known the house slaves'd be slacking in this room," said Brother Cavil.
"No matter," said Thrower. "On a night this warm, I'll need no blanket."
On the way down the hall to his own bedroom, Cavil paused a moment to listen for his wife's breathing. As sometimes happened, he could hear her whimpering softly in her bedroom. The pain must be bad indeed. Oh Lord, thought Cavil, how many more times must I do Thy bidding before You'll have mercy and heal my Dolores? But he didn't go in to her - there was nothing he could do to help her, besides prayer, and he'd need his sleep. This had been a late night, and tomorrow had work enough.
* * *
Sure enough, Dolores had had a bad night - she was still asleep at breakfast time. So Cavil ended up eating with Thrower. The preacher put away an astonishingly large portion of sausage and grits. When his plate was clean for the third time, he looked at Cavil and smiled. "The Lord's service can give a man quite an appetite!" They both had a good laugh at that.
After breakfast, they walked outside. It happened they went near the woods where Salamandy had been buried. Thrower suggested looking at the grave, or else Cavil probably never would have known what the Blacks did in the night. There were footprints all over the grave itself, which was churned into mud. Now the drying mud was covered with ants.
"Ants!" said Thrower. "They can't possibly smell the body under the ground."
"No," said Cavil. "What they're finding is fresher and right on top. Look at that - cut-up entrails."
"They didn't exhume her body and - "
"Not her guts, Reverend Thrower. Probably a squirrel or blackbird or something. They did a devil sacrifice last night."
Thrower immediately began murmuring a prayer.
"They know I forbid such things," said Cavil. "By evening, the proof of it would no doubt be gone. They're disobeying me behind my back. I won't have it."
"Now I understand the magnitude of the work you slaveowners have. The devil has an iron grip upon their souls."
"Well, never you mind. They'll pay for it today. They want blood dropped on her grave? It'll be their own. Mr. Lashman! Where are you! Mr. Lashman!"
The overseer had only just arrived for the day's work.
"A little half-holiday for the Blacks this morning, Mr. Lashman," said Cavil.
Lashman didn't ask why. "Which ones you want whipped?"
"All of them. Ten lashes each. Except the pregnant women, of course. But even they - one lash for each of them, across the thighs. And all to watch."
"They get a bit unruly, watching it, sir," said Lashman.
"Reverend Thrower and I will watch also," said Cavil.
While Lashman was off assembling the slaves, Thrower murmured something about not really wanting to watch.
"It's the Lord's work," said Cavil. "I have stomach enough to watch any act of righteousness. I thought after last night that you did too."
So they watched together as each slave in turn was whipped, the blood dripping down onto Salamandy's grave. After a while Thrower didn't even flinch. Cavil was glad to see it - the man wasn't weak, after all, just a little soft from his upbringing in Scotland and his life in the North.
Afterward,