His massive frame moved with deliberate slowness as he gathered tools from the day’s work. Each movement careful and measured. The limp in his right leg was more pronounced after hours of labor, forcing him to pause every few steps as he made his way toward the barn. At 6’4″ and nearly 300 lb, big Eli was impossible to miss. Yet, he had mastered the art of seeming smaller than he was.
He kept his shoulders hunched, his eyes downcast, and his voice soft when speaking to white folks in town. They saw what they wanted to see, just another aging colored man, too simple to be a threat, too slow to be anything but pitiful. The evening air hung heavy with late summer heat as Eli secured the barn doors.
His isolated ranch sat on 20 acres of the richest soil in the Mississippi Delta, bordered by cypress trees and darkness. No neighbors for miles. No one to hear anything that might happen out here. He’d chosen this land carefully 15 years ago, knowing isolation cut both ways. Crickets chirped their evening song as Eli collected eggs from the henhouse.
His rough hands, gentled by practice, carefully placed each one in his basket. The chickens had settled in for the night, barely stirring as he worked. Everything was routine. Everything was ordinary. Until it wasn’t. The first torch appeared at the tree line like a demon’s eye opening in the darkness. Then, another. And another.
Soon the entire border of his property blazed with fire. Each flame held high by white-robed figures emerging from the shadows. They moved with the confidence of men who believed they owned the night. Eli straightened slowly, his bulk casting a massive shadow in the torchlight. He counted quickly, at least 100 men, their rifles glinting dully in the firelight.
The sight of their hoods didn’t surprise him. He’d known this day was coming from the moment he’d bought this land. Sheriff Halverson’s voice carried clearly across the yard, unchanged from how he spoke at town meetings. “Mercer, we know you’re out there. Best come to your house now. We’ve got business to settle before sunrise.” Eli’s eyes caught the glint of the sheriff’s badge, pinned proudly over his white robe.
Beside him stood Reverend Matthews, his hood pushed back to show his face clearly in the torchlight. No shame. No need to hide. The law and the church standing together with the Klan, making their message clear. This was justice in their eyes. More torches appeared, completing the circle around his property. The flames cast dancing shadows across the white hoods, making them seem to shift and writhe in the growing darkness.
The air filled with the smell of kerosene and pine tar. “Your time’s up, boy.” Another voice called out. “Shouldn’t have gotten ideas above your station.” Eli moved toward his house with exaggerated