We got up at four in the morning, that first day in
the east. On the evening before we had climbed
off a freight train at the edge of town, and with
the true instinct of Kentucky boys had found our way
across town and to the race track and the stables
at once. Then we knew we were all right.
Hanley Turner right away found a nigger we knew.
It was Bildad Johnson who in the winter works at Ed
Becker’s livery barn in our home town, Beckersville.
Bildad is a good cook as almost all our niggers are
and of course he, like everyone in our part of Kentucky
who is anyone at all, likes the horses. In the
spring Bildad begins to scratch around. A nigger
from our country can flatter and wheedle anyone into
letting him do most anything he wants. Bildad
wheedles the stable men and the trainers from the
horse farms in our country around Lexington.
The trainers come into town in the evening to stand
around and talk and maybe get into a poker game.
Bildad gets in with them. He is always doing
little favors and telling about things to eat, chicken
browned in a pan, and how is the best way to cook sweet
potatoes and corn bread. It makes your mouth
water to hear him.
When the racing season comes on and the horses go
to the races and there is all the talk on the streets
in the evenings about the new colts, and everyone
says when they are going over to Lexington or to the
spring meeting at Churchhill Downs or to Latonia, and
the horsemen that have been down to New Orleans or
maybe at the winter meeting at Havana in Cuba come
home to spend a week before they start out again,
at such a time when everything talked about in Beckersville
is just horses and nothing else and the outfits start
out and horse racing is in every breath of air you
breathe, Bildad shows up with a job as cook for some
outfit. Often when I think about it, his always
going all season to the races and working in the livery
barn in the winter where horses are and where men
like to come and talk about horses, I wish I was a
nigger. It’s a foolish thing to say, but
that’s the way I am about being around horses,
just crazy. I can’t help it.
Well, I must tell you about what we did and let you
in on what I’m talking about. Four of us
boys from Beckersville, all whites and sons of men
who live in Beckersville regular, made up our minds
we were going to the races, not just to Lexington
or Louisville, I don’t mean, but to the big
eastern track we were always hearing our Beckersville
men talk about, to Saratoga. We were all pretty
young then. I was just turned fifteen and I was
the oldest of the four. It was my scheme.
I admit that and I talked the others into trying it.
There was Hanley Turner and Henry Rieback and Tom
Tumberton and myself. I had thirty-seven dollars
I had earned during the winter working nights and
Saturdays in Enoch Myer’s grocery. Henry
Rieback had eleven dollars and the others, Hanley
and Tom had only a dollar or two each. We fixed
it all up and laid low until the Kentucky spring meetings
were over and some of our men, the sportiest ones,
the ones we envied the most, had cut out—then
we cut out too.
Copyrights
Triumph of the Egg, and Other Stories from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.