Tom’s attempts to avoid conflict speak less to his self-control than to his awareness of the power imbalance between White and Black people. The threat of violence is one way that White people sought to maintain power and control over Black people in the South long after the end of slavery. Tom might be Bob’s physical superior, but the White lynch mob reminds him—and readers—that real power lies in racial privilege. And all of this serves to further objectify Louisa, whom the story ultimately reduces to little more than the passive cause of two men’s deaths.