whiteâ female intercoursin with a nigra. Before she was done, I naturally despised the lovin mama I remembered, despised her for a scarlet woman, as Miz Ida called her. This mixed me up because I missed her bad and was very sad when day by day and year by year I come to forget her kindly face. With Miz Ida seeing to my Christian upbringing, I reckon that was what was wanted.
Oldest boy Billy was my same age so we come up together from age four, done about everything together boys could do, hunted and fished, went swimming and exploring back up in the rivers. Them first years I slept in the boysâ room, but around about ten, I was moved into a shed back of the cookhouse, and Miz Ida told me I better get used to calling Billy âMister Billy.â That werenât Billyâs idea because first time I tried it, he hollered how next time I âmisteredâ him, he would punch me bloody or push me off the dock or something worse. But he must of got the hang of it cause after that day everything changed. We wasnât really friends no more and Mister Billy got the habit of that, too. From that day on, I lived in lonelihood out in the shed where I belonged, the only nigger on Chokoloskee Island.
Nobody knew no name for me exceptin Henry but the House kids used to call me âShortieâ on account I was so small. Later years, when I grew up close to six foot, I went by the name âShort.â I was very light-colored in my skin but I had them tight little blond curls, what they called âbad hair,â so I was âHouseâs niggerâ or âBlack Henry.â There was a white man around there that was somewhat darkerân what I was. Some called him âWhite Henryâ so folks would know which was the black man.
BILL HOUSE
Meân Henry Short worked for the Frenchman collecting wild birds and their eggs. The Frenchman claimed that except as a collector, he never shot uncommon birds, and he liked to tell how heâd trained up boys like Guy Bradley from Flamingo and myself never to shoot into the flock but single out the one bird we was after.
Plume hunters shoot early in breeding season when egret plumes are coming out real good. When them nestlings get pinfeathered, and squawking loud cause they are always hungry, them parent birds lose the little sense God give âem. They are going to come in to tend their young no matter what, and a man using one of them Flobert rifles that donât snap no louder than a twig can stand there under the trees in a big rookery and pick them birds off fast as he can reload.
A broke-up rookery, that ainât a picture you want to think about too much. The pile of carcasses left behind when you strip the plumes and move on to the next place is just pitiful, and itâs a piss-poor way to harvest, cause there ainât no adults left to feed them young and protect âem from the sun and rain, let alone the crows and buzzards that come sailing and flopping in, tear âem to pieces. A real big rookery like that one the Frenchman worked up Tampa Bay had four-five hundred acres of black mangrove, maybe ten nests to a tree. Might take you three-four years to clean it out but after that them birds are gone for good.
Itâs the dead silence after all the shooting that comes back today, though I never stuck around to hear it; I kind of remember it when I am dreaming. Them ghosty trees on dead white guano ground, the sun and silence and dry stink, the squawking and flopping of their wings, and varmints hurrying in without no sound, coons, rats, and possums, biting and biting, and the ants flowing up all them white trees in their dark ribbons to eat at them raw scrawny things thatâs backed up to the edge of the nest, gullets pulsing and mouths open wide for the food and water that ainât never going to come. Luckiest ones will perish before something finds âem, cause theyâs so many young that the carrion birds