Excerpt from The Known
World
Chapter One
Liaison. The Warmth of Family. Stormy Weather.
The evening his master died he worked again well after
he ended the day for the other adults, his own wife
among them, and sent them back with hunger and tiredness
to their cabins. The young ones, his son among them,
had been sent out of the fields an hour or so before
the adults, to prepare the late supper and, if there
was time enough, to play in the few minutes of sun that
were left. When he, Moses, finally freed himself of
the ancient and brittle harness that connected him to
the oldest mule his master owned, all that was left
of the sun was a five-inch-long memory of red orange
laid out in still waves across the horizon between two
mountains on the left and one on the right. He had been
in the fields for all of fourteen hours. He paused before
leaving the fields as the evening quiet wrapped itself
about him. The mule quivered, wanting home and rest.
Moses closed his eyes and bent down and took a pinch
of the soil and ate it with no more thought than if
it were a spot of cornbread. He worked the dirt around
in his mouth and swallowed, leaning his head back and
opening his eyes in time to see the strip of sun fade
to dark blue and then to nothing. He was the only man
in the realm, slave or free, who ate dirt, but while
the bondage women, particularly the pregnant ones, ate
it for some incomprehensible need, for that something
that ash cakes and apples and fatback did not give their
bodies, he ate it not only to discover the strengths
and weaknesses of the field, but because the eating
of it tied him to the only thing in his small world
that meant almost as much as his own life.
This was July, and July dirt tasted even more like sweetened
metal than the dirt of June or May. Something in the
growing crops unleashed a metallic life that only began
to dissipate in mid-August, and by harvest time that
life would be gone altogether, replaced by a sour moldiness
he associated with the coming of fall and winter, the
end of a relationship he had begun with the first taste
of dirt back in March, before the first hard spring
rain. Now, with the sun gone and no moon and the darkness
having taken a nice hold of him, he walked to the end
of the row, holding the mule by the tail. In the clearing
he dropped the tail and moved around the mule toward
the barn.
The mule followed him, and after he had prepared the
animal for the night and came out, Moses smelled the
coming of rain. He breathed deeply, feeling it surge
through him. Believing he was alone, he smiled. He knelt
down to be closer to the earth and breathed deeply some
more. Finally, when the effect began to dwindle, he
stood and turned away, for the third time that week,
from the path that led to the narrow lane of the quarters
with its people and his own cabin, his woman and his
boy. His wife knew enough now not to wait for him to
come and eat with them. On a night with the moon he
could see some of the smoke rising from the world that
was the lane -- home and food and rest and what passed
in many cabins for the life of family. He turned his
head slightly to the right and made out what he thought
was the sound of playing children, but when he turned
his head back, he could hear far more clearly the last
bird of the day as it evening-chirped in the small forest
far off to the left.
He went straight ahead, to the farthest edge of the
cornfields to a patch of woods that had yielded nothing
of value since the day his master bought it from a white
man who had gone broke and returned to Ireland. "I
did well over there," that man lied to his people
back in Ireland, his dying wife standing hunched over
beside him, "but I longed for all of you and for
the wealth of my homeland." The patch of woods
of no more than three acres did yield some soft, blue
grass that no animal would touch and many trees that
no one could identify. Just before Moses stepped into
the woods, the rain began, and as he walked on the rain
became heavier. Well into the forest the rain came in
torrents through the trees and the mighty summer leaves
and after a bit Moses stopped and held out his hands
and collected water that he washed over his face. Then
he undressed down to his nakedness and lay down. To
keep the rain out of his nose, he rolled up his shirt
and placed it under his head so that it tilted just
enough for the rain to flow down about his face. When
he was an old man and rheumatism chained up his body,
he would look back and blame the chains on evenings
such as these, and on nights when he lost himself completely
and fell asleep and didn't come to until morning, covered
with dew.
The ground was almost soaked. The leaves seemed to soften
the hard rain as it fell and it hit his body and face
with no more power than the gentle tapping of fingers.
He opened his mouth; it was rare for him and the rain
to meet up like this. His eyes had remained open, and
after taking in all that he could without turning his
head, he took up his thing and did it. When he was done,
after a few strokes, he closed his eyes, turned on his
side and dozed. After a half hour or so the rain stopped
abruptly...
The foregoing is excerpted
from The Known World by Edward P. Jones. All rights
reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced
without written permission from HarperCollins Publishers,
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