An Illusion in Red and White
Stephen Crane*
Nights on the Cuban Blockade were long, at times
exciting, often dull. The men on the small leaping dispatch-boats
became as intimate as if they had all been buried in the same
coffin. Correspondents who, in New York, had passed as fairly good
fellows sometimes turned out to be perfect rogues of vanity and
selfishness, but still more often the conceited chumps of park row
became the kindly and thoughtful men of the Cuban blockade. Also
each correspondent told all he knew, and sometimes more. For this
gentle tale I am indebted to one of the brightening stars of New York
journalism.
Now, this is how I imagine it happened. I don't
say it happened this way, but this is how I imagine it happened.
And it always struck me as being a very interesting story. I
hadn't been on the paper very long, but just about long enough to get a
good show, when the city editor suddenly gave me this sparkling murder
assignment.
It seems that up in one of the back counties of New
York State a farmer had taken a dislike to his wife; and so he went into
the kitchen with an axe, and in the presence of their four little
children he just casually rapped his wife on the nape of the neck with
the head of this axe. It was early in the morning, but he told the
children they had better go to bed. Then he took his wife's body
out in the woods and buried it.
This farmer's name was Jones. The widower's
eldest child was named Freddy. A week after the murder, one of the
long-distance neighbors was rattling past the house in his buckboard
when he saw Freddy playing in the road. He pulled up, and asked
the boy about the welfare of the Jones family.
"Oh, we're all right," said Freddy,
"only ma she ain't — she's dead."
"Why, when did she die?" cried the startled
farmer. "What did she die of?"
"Oh," answered Freddy, "last week a
man with red hair and big white teeth and real white hands came into the
kitchen, and killed ma with an axe."
The farmer was indignant with the boy for telling him
this strange childish nonsense and drove off much disgruntled, but he
recited the incident at a tavern that evening, and when people began to
miss the familiar figure of Mrs. Jones at the Methodist Church on Sunday
mornings, they ended by having an investigation. The calm Jones
was arrested for murder, and his wife's body was lifted from its grave
in the woods and buried by her own family.
The chief interest now centered upon the
children. All four declared that they were in the kitchen at the
time of the crime, and that the murderer had red hair. The hair of
the virtuous Jones was grey. They said that the murderer's teeth
were large and white. Jones only had about eight teeth, and these
were small and brown. They said the murderer's hands were
white. Jones's hands were the colour of black walnuts. They
lifted their dazed, innocent faces, and crying, simply because the
mysterious excitement and their new quarters frightened them, they
repeated their heroic legend without important deviation, and without
the parroty sameness which would excite suspicion.
Women came to the jail and wept over them, and made
little frocks for the girls, and little breeches for the boys, and
idiotic detectives questioned them at length. Always they upheld
the theory of the murderer with red hair, big white teeth, and white
hands. Jones sat in his cell, his chin sullenly on his first
vest-button. He knew nothing about any murder, he said. He
thought his wife had gone on a visit to some relatives. He had had
a quarrel with her, and she had said that she was going to leave him for
a time, so that he might have proper opportunities for cooling
down. Had he seen the blood on the floor? Yes, he had seen
the blood on the floor. But he had been cleaning and skinning a
rabbit at that spot on the day of his wife's disappearance. He had
thought nothing of it. What had his children
said when he returned from the fields? They had told him that
their mother had been killed by an axe in the hands of a man with red
hair, big white teeth, and white hands. To questions as to why he
had not informed the police of the county, he answered that he had not
thought it a matter of sufficient importance. He had cordially
hated his wife, anyhow, and he was glad to be rid of her. He
decided afterward that she had run off; and he had never credited the
fantastic tale of the children.
Of course, there was very little doubt in the minds
of the majority that Jones was guilty, but there was a fairly strong
following who insisted that Jones was a coarse and brutal man, and
perhaps weak in his head — yes — but not a murderer. They
pointed to the children and declared that children could never lie, and
these kids, when asked, said the murder had been committed by a man with
red hair, large white teeth, and white hands. I myself had a
number of interviews with the children, and I was amazed at the
convincing power of their little story. Shining in the depths of
the limpid up-turned eyes, one could fairly see tiny mirrored images of
men with red hair, big white teeth, and white hands.
Now I'll tell you how it happened — how I imagine
it was done. Some time after burying his wife in the woods Jones
strolled back into the house. Seeing nobody, he called out in the
familiar fashion, "Mother!" Then the kids came out
whimpering. "Where is your mother?" said Jones.
The children looked at him blankly. "Why, pa," said
Freddy, "you came in here, and hit ma with the axe; and then you
sent us to bed." "Me?" cried Jones. "I
haven't been near the house since breakfast-time."
The children did not know how to reply. Their
meagre little sense informed them that their father had been the man
with the axe, but he denied it, and to their minds everything was a mere
great puzzle with no meaning whatever, save that it was mysteriously sad
and made them cry.
"What kind of a looking man was it?" said
Jones.
Freddy hesitated. "Now — he looked a
good deal like you, pa."
"Like me?" said Jones. "Why, I thought
he had red hair?"
"No, I didn't," replied Freddy.
"I thought he had grey hair, like yours."
"Well," said Jones, "I saw a man with
kind of red hair going along the road up yonder, and I thought maybe
that might have been him."
Little Lucy, the second child, here piped up with
intense conviction. "His hair was a little teeny bit
red. I saw it."
"No." said Jones, "The man I saw had
very red hair. And what did his teeth look like? Were they
big and white?"
"Yes," answered Lucy, "they
were."
Even Freddy seemed to incline to think it.
"His teeth may have been big and white."
Jones said little more at that time. Later he
intimated to the children that their mother had gone off on a visit, and
although they were full of wonder, and sometimes wept because of the
oppression of an incomprehensible feeling in the air, they said
nothing. Jones did his chores. Everything was smooth.
The morning after the day of the murder, Jones and
his children had a breakfast of hominy and milk.
"Well, this man with red hair and big white
teeth, Lucy," said Jones. "Did you notice anything else
about him?"
Lucy straightened in her chair, and showed the
childish desire to come out with brilliant information which would gain
her father's approval. "He had white hands — hands all
white-."
How about you, Freddy?"
"I didn't look at them much, but I think they
were white," answered the boy.
"And what did little Martha notice?" cried
the tender parent. "Did she see the big bad man?"
Martha, aged four, replied solemnly, "His hair
was all red, and his hand was white — all white."
"That's the man I saw up the road," said
Jones to Freddy.
"Yes sir, it seems like it must have been
him," said the boy, his brain now completely muddled.
Again Jones allowed the subject of his wife's murder
to lapse. The children did not know that it was a murder, of
course. Adults were always performing in a way to make children's
heads swim. For instance, what could be more incomprehensible than
that a man with two horses, dragging a queer thing, should walk all day,
making the grass turn down and the earth turn up? And why did they
cut the long grass and put it in a barn? And what was a cow
for? Did the water in the well like to be there? All these
actions and things were grand, because they were
associated with the high estate of grownup people, but they were deeply
mysterious. If, then, a man with red hair, big white teeth, and
white hands should hit their mother on the nape of the neck with an axe,
it was merely a phenomenon of grown-up life. Little Henry, the
baby, when he had a want, howled and pounded the table with his
spoon. That was all of life to him. He was not concerned
with the fact that his mother had been murdered.
One day Jones said to his children suddenly,
"Look here: I wonder if you could have made a mistake. Are
you absolutely sure that the man you say had red hair, big white teeth,
and white hands?"
The children were indignant with their father.
"Why of course, pa, we ain't made no mistake. We saw him as
plain as day."
Later young Freddy's mind began to work like
ketchup. His nights were haunted with terrible memories of the man
with the red hair, big white teeth, and white hands, and the prolonged
absence of his mother made him wonder and wonder. Presently he
quite gratitiously developed the theory that his mother was dead.
He knew about death. He had once seen a dead dog; also dead
chickens, rabbits, and mice. One day he asked his father,
"Pa, is ma ever coming back?"
Jones said; "Well, no; I don't think she
is." This answer confirmed the boy in his theory. He
knew that dead people did not come back.
The attitude of Jones towards this descriptive legend
of the man with the axe was very peculiar. He came to be in
opposition to it. He protested against the convictions of the
children, but he could not move them. It was the one thing in
their lives of which they were stonily and absolutely positive.
Now that really ends the story. But I will
continue for your amusement. The jury hung Jones as high as they
could, and they were quite right: because Jones confessed before he
died. Freddy is now a highly respected driver of a grocery wagon
in Ogdensburg. When I was up there a good many years afterwards
people told me that when he ever spoke of the tragedy at all he was
certain to denounce the alleged confession as a lie. He considered
his father a victim to the stupidity of juries, and some day he hopes to
meet the man with the red hair, big white teeth, and white hands, whose
image still remains so distinct in his memory that he could pick him out
in a crowd of ten thousand.
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