An hour later, Andrew Jackson
presented himself at Bob’s door. After
shaking the rain from his coat, he handed it to Bob who hung it on a nearby
peg. Neither man knew how to proceed. A white man making a social call on a black
man was a new experience for both.
“I believe you said you had a
drink.”
Bob threw back an animal skin to
reveal a cache of jugs and selected one.
“You want a cup or you just drink
from the jug? It ain’t
been touched.”
Andrew Jackson could not believe
what he had just seen. He picked up
Bob’s candle from the cask it sat on, held it aloft, and looked about the
room. He saw food stores, tanned hides
of several kinds of animals, and kegs stacked three deep and two high.
“Bob, this looks like a storeroom. What are you doing with all this
merchandise?”
“You mean this stuff? I works for white
people and they pays me. I help make
whiskey all the time. Sometimes we do it
on shares. I hunts, smoke meat, grind
meal, whatever they wants, I do. I trade
a little with the black folks. They ain’t got much, but it don’t hurt
for them to have a few of the pleasures of life.”
“You have so much here. Does your owner know about this?”
“Mistress Shaw ain’t never
been here. She say,
‘Bob, you can keep what you earn.’ This is what I earn.”
“This is worth a lot of money.”
“I don’t have much need for
money.”
“I wish I could say that.”
Andrew Jackson’s astonishment at
what he was seeing had made him forget his superior attitude. He thought, “This little black man has a
small fortune in here, and nobody knows about it. And it’s all his. Says he has no need of money, but I sure
do.” He blurted aloud, “Have you given
consideration to employing an agent to act on your behalf.”
“Mister Jackson, that must be
lawyer talk, ‘cause I ain’t understood a word you
say.”
“Let me think about this for a
minute.” Jackson
pulled the stopper from the jug and poured the clear liquid into a cup. He took the strong drink into his mouth and
savored it briefly before swallowing it.
He made the appropriate grimace and said, “That’s good stuff” before
pouring another. Then he remembered he
was in this man’s home, and his manners returned. Bob was no longer black; he was a potential
client for the ambitious lawyer.
“Did you want a drink? I’ve been caught a little off guard and
forgot myself.”
“Oh, I drinks
a little. I don’t care much for that hot
stuff. I like the more gen’le.”
“What do you mean by more
gentle?”
“I shows
you.”
Bob took a keg and pulled the
plug. He picked up the lawyer’s cup and
tossed the contents in a nearby bucket.
He poured two cups and handed one to Jackson. “I calls this sippin’ whiskey.”