Mallowbanks, November third. Carin, dear: Where did I leave off? Oh, yes, where I went running down the big dark, winding corridors, knocking and knocking at the strange doors! Well, presently one of them, far away from where I was, opened, and a voice called: “What is it? Oh, what is it?” “Is it you, Aunt Lorena,” I cried, running toward the voice. “Yes, yes, Azalea. Tell me what is the matter.” “Grandmother has gone out in the garden in her night clothes. I tried to follow her, but I’ve lost her somewhere.” “Oh, dear,” sighed my aunt. “It is her old trouble again. I suppose your coming excited her. She has little spells of forgetfulness and And, Oh, didn’t I know it, Carin! Never have I seen so much pride in such a little creature. Aunt Lorena called old Martha, and the poor black thing, with her huge nightcap on, and a great flowered robe, and slippers that flopped at every step, ran sleepily out into the garden, calling: “Ole Miss, ole Miss, where be ye? Cain’t ye answer Martha? She’s wanting ye bad! Please, ole Miss, where be ye?” Aunt Lorena and I followed along behind, running down a long shaded walk which the moonlight mottled, till at last we came to a little pool. This was like a shield of bright “What is it?” I whispered. “The swans. We have disturbed them.” And just then, Carin, out into that glistening pool swam a coal black swan followed by two white ones. They didn’t seem like real birds but like some sort of a vision. “It is just beyond the pond that mother used to go to meet your father,” said Aunt Lorena tenderly. I loved her for speaking like that. She was sorry for this old mother’s grief, and sympathized with the memories that haunted her and drove her from her bed. I put my arm right around her neck and kissed her. “Oh, Aunt Lorena,” I said, “I think you are very sweet.” “Hush!” she warned, and turning I saw Martha coming back with her arm around poor little madam grandmother. We stepped back in the shrubbery and kept very still while they passed. Grandmother was weeping like a hurt child. We stepped back in the shrubbery and kept very still “Jes’ nothin’ at all, ole Miss,” Martha said, her voice sounding more like that of a wild dove than anything else I could think of. “He’s sure all right, ole Miss. He’s jes’ doin’ fine. That’s why he didn’t need for to come for yo’ pretties. Yo’ jes’ take heart, ole Miss. That Mass’ Jack, he won’t let no hahm come to him.” “I pray heaven,” Aunt Lorena whispered to me when they had passed, “that good old Martha will outlive mother, for I have no idea how we should manage without her.” We stole softly into the house and up a little flight of stairs, and then down the corridor to grandmother’s door. We could hear Martha still crooning to her as if she were a frightened child, and then, little by little, grandmother ceased weeping. “Come,” whispered Aunt Lorena, and we “We’ll say nothing about this to your Uncle David,” she cautioned me. “It makes him wretched for days when he learns that his mother has been ‘wandering.’” “She’ll not be ill as a result of this?” “Probably not—only a little distrait and quiet.” I was left alone again in my fragrant room, and still I could not sleep for thinking of how my life had changed, and how curious were these people I had come among. I saw the stars moving along in their courses, and light beginning to break in the east. And then, just to show how inconsistent I could be, I fell asleep. I slept till noon. Think of it—me, the Early Riser! Perhaps I wouldn’t have awakened then if Semmy hadn’t come in with chocolate and rolls and an omelet. So I ate quickly and dressed in my dark blue frock with the crocheted lace collar and cuffs and was taken to her. She was in her bedroom still, or rather in her sitting room, for her bedroom is a stately alcove raised two or three feet above her sitting room. To-day she was all in purple, with studs of amethysts in her white lace chemisette and at the fastenings of her long lace sleeves. It was very difficult to imagine that this was the same little broken creature I had heard weeping aloud the night before, and being comforted like a baby. “My dear,” she said when I went in, “I hear that you did not rest well last night.” “Not very well, thank you, madam grandmother,” I said dropping her a curtsy as Aunt Lorena had told me to do. “Being in a new place no doubt disturbed you,” said my grandmother. “You did well to refresh yourself with sleep this morning. At your age, my dear, I seldom arose before noon, but that was because of the many gayeties in which I participated—a ball or a rout almost every night, and gentlemen riding out in the afternoon to call. The times are not so I curtsied again. Her queer quaint way of talking made me feel that nothing save a curtsy would suit the occasion. “Thank you, madam grandmother; I shall be honored.” My grandmother put up her lorgnette. “Azalea!” she said sharply. “Yes, grandmother.” “Your manners are admirable.” “Thank you, dear grandmother. I dare say they are—are inherited.” My grandmother smiled and traced her left eyebrow with her jeweled fingers. “You may sit down near me,” she said. “I want to talk to you about your coming-out party.” So then she told me something about her friends; who had done this and who that, and every one she mentioned was at least sixty years of age and some, as nearly as I could reckon, were eighty or over. So at last I said: I couldn’t help thinking how I would like to have Haystack Thompson play at my party, and how horrified grandmother would be if she knew my thought and what Haystack is like. “Are you sure,” said my grandmother, “that these friends of yours would find congenial surroundings at Mallowbanks, my dear Azalea? There is such a thing as propriety to be considered.” “Would it be proper for me to neglect the friends who were faithful to me for years and years?” I asked. “I was an orphan and poor as a beggar, and they took me in to sit beside their hearths. They gave me the best they had; hospitality and love and learning. If I know anything at all, it is owing to them.” “I speak the truth.” “You have a loyal heart.” “Yes, madam grandmother, I admit it. When I once love, I can never forget.” “How do you know? You are only a child.” “I shall be like you,” I declared boldly. “I wish to be like you and never to forget!” She looked at me sideways. Then she tilted her delicate chin and faced me straight. “Azalea—last night—did you know? Did you see?” “I saw, grandmother dear. Forgive me.” “Ah, Azalea, your father was my dearest! They almost killed me when they came between him and me. He was wayward, I know, but he didn’t have the same ideas of goodness and badness that others have. I always loved him. I love him still.” “It is beautiful of you, madam grandmother. I hope to be just like that.” “Very well, Azalea. You shall have your friends to your party if they will come. You shall ask the humblest if you choose.” “Thank you, thank you, grandmother; you “No doubt they are charming, my dear granddaughter. But you must remember that you have now come into an important position. Much will be expected of you. You will probably wed a Ravanel. Many of the women of my family did. My son David did also, as you know. It is a custom with us I may say. Yes, a Ravanel or a GrÉvy.” “But, dearest grandmother, I must marry the person I love. What will his last name have to do with it?” “Everything, my dear child. Kindly fetch me yonder book.” “Yonder book,” Carin, was very much done up in an embroidered cover and was lying on grandmother’s far cabinet. I wish you could see her cabinet of fans. Some are quite historic and all are exquisite. I brought the book and it proved to be a genealogy of the Bryce family. (Bryce was grandmother’s maiden name.) We studied this for at least an hour, and then grandmother “You will see,” she said, “that the Bryce ladies have married Ravanels, GrÉvys or Knoxes from time immemorial. You are a Knox. You will marry a Bryce, a Ravanel or a GrÉvy.” I tried not to laugh, but to save my life I couldn’t help it. “Perhaps none of them will approve of me. Remember, madam grandmother, I am only a homespun mountain maid.” “Ah, but we will transform you into a shining princess,” cried my grandmother excitedly. “I already have had that matter in mind.” Then she clapped her jeweled old hands together as hard as she could, and when Martha came running, gasping: “Yessum, ole Miss, yessum, ole Miss,” grandmother said, like a potentate in the Arabian Nights: “Have the chests brought.” Then I remembered what Aunt Lorena had told me about the chests in which grandmother kept her old treasures. So I was to see these darling old brocades and crepes and So presently two of the men servants came staggering in under the weight of a great chest, and when they had set that down they went back for another, and then for another yet. I wouldn’t have the chests opened till I had looked all over the outside of them. One was covered with carmine leather all tooled with gilt, and it had a great clasp with cupids on it. Another was of dark carved wood, very heavy, and lined with sandalwood that filled the whole room with an old, dry perfume when it was opened. The other was a sea chest with a sailor’s name carved on it. “‘Samuel Bings,’” said I. “What a funny name.” My grandmother frowned. “I see nothing funny about it,” she said. “Samuel Bings was a very distinguished and unfortunate man.” “Oh, I should love to hear his story some time,” I said contritely. “You shall,” said my grandmother relenting, Well, then, Carin, my little squirrel, we came to the opening of the chests. How shall I ever describe to you what was in them? I couldn’t—not in one letter nor three. Shawls and dolmans, and great flounced skirts and lace petticoats and silken nubias, and beaded fascinators, and real lace and fans and slippers and silken stockings, and flowing undersleeves, and old gloves and hats and feathers, and embroidered lingerie and lace handkerchiefs and—Oh, mercy, Carin, everything a belle of long ago would wear. And a belle of to-day throw away. But, no, I must not be disrespectful to old lace and brocade, nor to China crepe and Irish poplin. I tried on the old frocks and strutted and pranced around in them, and put on the queer, short gloves which were as freckled with mildew as Jim’s face. Of course I don’t mean that Jim is mildewed. Only that he is freckled. I wore the shawls, and dropped preposterous curtsies in the flounced skirts, and I coquetted “My dear,” said my grandmother at length, “you must have these interesting fabrics made over for you. Some slight alteration will be necessary I suppose, but on the whole they become you immensely. You look completely a Bryce in them.” Just then Aunt Lorena came in. When she saw the litter in that room and myself in a flowered silk seven yards around the bottom of the skirt, and eighteen inches around the waist—I was almost smothered by this time—she dropped in a chair and turned white. “At last!” she gasped. “Yes, Lorena,” said my grandmother with great dignity. “At last I have found someone who appreciates these rare things. They were offered to you as the wife of my only living son. You rejected them. You preferred to wear inferior fabrics and passing styles. But the styles in which these exquisite fabrics are made up, are historic, Lorena, historic. This however, is a point which you do not seem to appreciate. I therefore pass them on to my “No, no, dear grandmother,” I cried struggling with the hook of that terrible dress, that held me as if it were made of steel, “not tightened. Don’t say tightened! I am suffocating!” Aunt Lorena came to my rescue and between us we got that band undone and I was able to draw a long breath. “In my day,” said my little grandmother, “girls were more delicate than they are now. I grieve, Lorena, to discover that Azalea’s foot is far too substantial for these slippers.” She looked regretfully at some yellowed satin slippers with tarnished sequins on them. Aunt Lorena and I looked down at my good sizable feet—they have done a powerful lot of mountain climbing, as you know—and we both laughed. “Come,” said Aunt Lorena, “we must forget dressmaking for the day and go for a drive. You too, mother. Won’t you come in the motor just this once?” “You know very well that I will not, Lorena. My pony cart will do for me. Have young So all the finery was carted off to a big empty room where, as Aunt Lorena explained to grandmother, we would be able to look it over better, and I was told to dress warmly, and so got into the nice thick coat Mother McBirney had made for me, and put on my mole-skin cap, and my veil and gloves—for Aunt Lorena is terribly fussy about having people well wrapped when they go motoring—and uncle and auntie and I went off. We were gone for an hour or two and saw many beautiful old estates, but none that I liked better than our own. “Mother is being drawn about the garden in the pony cart,” Aunt Lorena told me. “It is curious, but she never was a horsewoman. Even as a girl she was rather timid with horses, and now she is very much afraid of them. As for an automobile, it fills her with terror. So it seems best to let her do the thing she enjoys, which is riding about the garden and scolding the gardeners.” “My dear!” said Uncle David. “I’m sure I didn’t mean to say anything disrespectful,” she said. “I was only describing things as they are.” That her description was quite right, we were soon to see. Grandmother was still going about the garden when we got home, and it was plain that she had “everybody by the ears.” Young James was almost in tears, the head gardener was sulky, the boys who helped him were laughing, and every one was or pretended to be quite frightened. “Young James,” said my aunt, “you have kept Madam Knox out too long.” “Yessum, I know it, mum. I wanted her to go in, mum, but she wouldn’t, mum.” “Oh, mum, mum, mum!” snapped grandmother, quivering with fatigue. “Who ever heard such talk? Mum, mum, mum!” Uncle David said nothing. He got out of the motor and gathered his little silver-headed mother up in his arms and carried her into the house as if she were a baby. She put her two arms around his neck and held on tight, and I saw him kiss her very tenderly when he put her down and called Martha to her. So, Carin, this is the life at Mallowbanks. My party is to be Thanksgiving Day. Say, Oh, say that you can come! To have you here, to have you see all I am so stupidly telling you about, to get off in my own room with you and laugh and talk as we used, would, perhaps, make this life seem real to me. Now, I confess, it seems like a dream. You keep writing about that young Southerner. You say he is leaving the North and going home. He lives in Charleston? Is his name Bryce or Ravanel or GrÉvy? If so, I’ve got to marry him! Aunt Lorena said, however, that the only unmarried Ravanel was at least seventy and deaf as an adder, and that she wouldn’t, if she were in my place, be so hackneyed as to marry a GrÉvy. As for the Bryces, they are my very own kin and out of the question. So you can imagine my distress! Tut, tut, no bridegroom. And me in long dresses with my hair up. How long must I wait? As long, perhaps, as my coming-out party. Carin, you must come! Fondly Azalea. |