The dust of rural Mississippi in 1933 clung to everything, a fine, red film over the Logan land, land that was ours, not leased or borrowed like so many others had. It was a fierce pride, that land, a silent testament to Big Ma's Papa, a former slave who had bought it. Our small, unpainted house stood sturdy amidst the sprawling cotton and towering trees, a stark contrast to the dilapidated shacks of the sharecroppers, and a constant, unspoken challenge to the white landowners like Harlan Granger, who still saw our acres as rightfully his. We were the Logan children - Stacey, the eldest and almost a man; Christopher-John, ever-cheerful; Little Man, who cherished cleanliness above all; and me, Cassie, nine years old and just beginning to see the world beyond our fields.
School brought the first bitter taste of the outside world's unfairness. Our school bus, a dilapidated hand-me-down, was a constant reminder of the grand, yellow vehicle that carried the white children, speeding past, splashing us with mud and dust. Little Man, pristine in his hand-me-down clothes, recoiled from the defiled books - those tattered, discarded remnants of the white school, emblazoned with a racial slur. Mama, our teacher, with a fire in her eyes, pasted over the offensive words, but the insult lingered, a shadow on the page. Our own act of defiance, digging a great ditch to disable the white children's bus, brought a thrill of victory, quickly followed by the chilling sight of "night riders" on our road, their trucks rumbling past in the darkness, a silent, terrifying warning.
Papa, who worked on the railroad far away in Louisiana to keep our land free of debt, returned home, bringing with him the imposing figure of Mr. Morrison. Mr. Morrison, with his quiet strength and scarred past, became our protector, a human bulwark against the rising tide of hostility. He stood guard when Papa was away, his presence a comfort and a silent promise of safety. It was during a trip to Strawberry, the nearest town, that I truly encountered the ugliness of the world. Pushed off the sidewalk by a white man, Mr. Simms, for his daughter Lillian Jean to pass, and then belittled by Mr. Barnett in the general store, a raw humiliation burned within me. Big Ma's insistence that I apologize to Lillian Jean, despite my innocence, was a lesson in the unspoken rules of their world, a world where a Black child's dignity was deemed worthless.
The Wallaces, a white family who ran a store on their land, were a source of much trouble. They were responsible for the burning of Black men, a horrific act that cemented Papa's resolve to boycott their establishment. Mama, with her unwavering principles, organized the community to shop in Vicksburg instead, backed by the kind white lawyer, Mr. Jamison. But this act of solidarity came at a heavy cost. Mama was fired from her teaching job, and the Wallaces, along with the powerful Harlan Granger, exerted immense pressure on the sharecroppers, threatening them with eviction and chain gangs if they continued to support our boycott.
The tension escalated, culminating in a violent ambush on Papa, Mr. Morrison, and Stacey on their way back from Vicksburg. Papa's leg was broken, a brutal reminder of the risks we faced. Uncle Hammer, Papa's hot-headed brother, arrived from the North, his shining Packard car a symbol of his defiance and a source of both pride and worry. He ultimately sold it to help us pay the mortgage, a profound sacrifice for the family land.
Meanwhile, Stacey's friendship with T.J. Avery, a boy of loose morals and eager to impress the older white Simms brothers, R.W. and Melvin, led to tragedy. T.J., desperate for acceptance, found himself caught in their web of deceit and crime. He was with them when they robbed the Barnett store, and when Mr. Barnett was killed, T.J. was framed, left to face the wrath of a lynch mob. The night filled with the terrifying cries of the mob, their torches flickering like malevolent stars. Papa, with a desperate, agonizing choice, set fire to his own cotton field, a desperate act to draw the white men away, to force them to fight a common enemy - the raging inferno - and thus save T.J. from their brutal justice. As the flames roared and the community, black and white, united against the fire, I wept not only for the burning cotton but for the land, for T.J., and for the harsh, unforgiving world we lived in.