Thus it was that I came to sojourn
in the most appealing, the most lovely, the most wistful
town in America; whose visible sadness and distinction
seem also to speak audibly, speak in the sound of the
quiet waves that ripple round her Southern front,
speak in the church-bells on Sunday morning, and breathe
not only in the soft salt air, but in the perfume
of every gentle, old-fashioned rose that blooms behind
the high garden walls of falling mellow-tinted plaster:
Kings Port the retrospective, Kings Port the belated,
who from her pensive porticoes looks over her two
rivers to the marshes and the trees beyond, the live-oaks,
veiled in gray moss, brooding with memories! Were
she my city, how I should love her!
But though my city she cannot be,
the enchanting image of her is mine to keep, to carry
with me wheresoever I may go; for who, having seen
her, could forget her? Therefore I thank Aunt
Carola for this gift, and for what must always go
with it in my mind, the quiet and strange romance
which I saw happen, and came finally to share in.
Why it is that my Aunt no longer wishes to know either
the boy or the girl, or even to hear their names mentioned,
you shall learn at the end, when I have finished with
the wedding; for this happy story of love ends with
a wedding, and begins in the Woman’s Exchange,
which the ladies of Kings Port have established, and
(I trust) lucratively conduct, in Royal Street.
Royal Street! There’s a
relevance in this name, a fitness to my errand; but
that is pure accident.
The Woman’s Exchange happened
to be there, a decorous resort for those who became
hungry, as I did, at the hour of noon each day.
In my very pleasant boarding-house, where, to be sure,
there was one dreadful boarder, a tall lady, whom
I soon secretly called Juno-but let unpleasant
things wait-in the very pleasant house where
I boarded (I had left my hotel after one night) our
breakfast was at eight, and our dinner not until three:
sacred meal hours in Kings Port, as inviolable, I
fancy, as the Declaration of Independence, but a gap
quite beyond the stretch of my Northern vitals.
Therefore, at twelve, it was my habit to leave my
Fanning researches for a while, and lunch at the Exchange
upon chocolate and sandwiches most delicate in savor.
As, one day, I was luxuriously biting one of these,
I heard his voice and what he was saying. Both
the voice and the interesting order he was giving caused
me, at my small table, in the dim back of the room,
to stop and watch him where he stood in the light
at the counter to the right of the entrance door.
Young he was, very young, twenty-two or three at the
most, and as he stood, with hat in hand, speaking to
the pretty girl behind the counter, his head and side-face
were of a romantic and high-strung look. It was
a cake that he desired made, a cake for a wedding;
and I directly found myself curious to know whose wedding.
Even a dull wedding interests me more than other dull
events, because it can arouse so much surmise and
so much prophecy; but in this wedding I instantly,
because of his strange and winning embarrassment, became
quite absorbed. How came it he was ordering the
cake for it? Blushing like the boy that he was
entirely, he spoke in a most engaging voice:
“No, not charged; and as you don’t know
me, I had better pay for it now.”
Self-possession in his speech he almost
had; but the blood in his cheeks and forehead was
beyond his control.
A reply came from behind the counter:
“We don’t expect payment until delivery.”
“But-a-but
on that morning I shall be rather particularly engaged.”
His tones sank almost away on these words.
“We should prefer to wait, then.
You will leave your address. In half-pound boxes,
I suppose?”
“Boxes? Oh, yes-I
hadn’t thought-no-just
a big, round one. Like this, you know!”
His arms embraced a circular space of air. “With
plenty of icing.”
I do not think that there was any
smile on the other side of the counter; there was,
at any rate, no hint of one in the voice. “And
how many pounds?”
He was again staggered. “Why-a-I
never ordered one before. I want plenty-and
the very best, the very best. Each person would
eat a pound, wouldn’t they? Or would two
be nearer? I think I had better leave it all
to you. About like this, you know.”
Once more his arms embraced a circular space of air.
Before this I had never heard the
young lady behind the counter enter into any conversation
with a customer. She would talk at length about
all sorts of Kings Port affairs with the older ladies
connected with the Exchange, who were frequently to
be found there; but with a customer, never. She
always took my orders, and my money, and served me,
with a silence and a propriety that have become, with
ordinary shopkeepers, a lost art. They talk to
one indeed! But this slim girl was a lady, and
consequently did the right thing, marking and keeping
a distance between herself and the public. To-day,
however, she evidently felt it her official duty to
guide the hapless young, man amid his errors.
He now appeared to be committing a grave one.
“Are you quite sure you want that?” the
girl was asking.
“Lady Baltimore? Yes, that is what I want.”
“Because,” she began to
explain, then hesitated, and looked at him. Perhaps
it was in his face; perhaps it was that she remembered
at this point the serious difference between the price
of Lady Baltimore (by my small bill-of-fare I was
now made acquainted with its price) and the cost of
that rich article which convention has prescribed as
the cake for weddings; at any rate, swift, sudden
delicacy of feeling prevented her explaining any more
to him, for she saw how it was - his means were
too humble for the approved kind of wedding cake!
She was too young, too unskilled yet in the world’s
ways, to rise above her embarrassment; and so she
stood blushing at him behind the counter, while he
stood blushing at her in front of it.
At length he succeeded in speaking. “That’s
all, I believe.
Good-morning.”
At his hastily departing back she, too, murmured:
“Good-morning.”
Before I knew it I had screamed out
loudly from my table - “But he hasn’t
told you the day he wants it for!”
Before she knew it she had flown to
the door-my cry had set her going, as if
I had touched a spring-and there he was
at the door himself, rushing back. He, too, had
remembered. It was almost a collision, and nothing
but their good Southern breeding, the way they took
it, saved it from being like a rowdy farce.
“I know,” he said simply
and immediately. “I am sorry to be so careless.
It’s for the twenty-seventh.”
She was writing it down in the order-book.
“Very well. That is Wednesday of next week.
You have given us more time than we need.”
She put complete, impersonal business into her tone;
and this time he marched off in good order, leaving
peace in the Woman’s Exchange.
No, not peace; quiet, merely; the
girl at the counter now proceeded to grow indignant
with me. We were alone together, we two; no young
man, or any other business, occupied her or protected
me. But if you suppose that she made war, or
expressed rage by speaking, that is not it at all.
From her counter in front to my table at the back she
made her displeasure felt; she was inaudibly crushing;
she did not do it even with her eye, she managed it-well,
with her neck, somehow, and by the way she made her
nose look in profile. Aunt Carola would have embraced
her-and I should have liked to do so myself.
She could not stand the idea of my having, after all
these days of official reserve that she had placed
between us, startled her into that rush to the door
annihilated her dignity at a blow. So did I finish
my sandwiches beneath her invisible but eloquent fire.
What affair of mine was the cake? And what sort
of impertinent, meddlesome person was I, shrieking
out my suggestions to people with whom I had no acquaintance?
These were the things that her nose and her neck said
to me the whole length of the Exchange. I had
nothing but my own weakness to thank; it was my interest
in weddings that did it, made me forget my decorum,
the public place, myself, everything, and plunge in.
And I became more and more delighted over it as the
girl continued to crush me. My day had been dull,
my researches had not brought me a whit nearer royal
blood; I looked at my little bill-of-fare, and then
I stepped forward to the counter, adventurous, but
polite.
“I should like a slice, if you
please, of Lady Baltimore,” I said with extreme
formality.
I thought she was going to burst;
but after an interesting second she replied, “Certainly,”
in her fit Regular Exchange tone; only, I thought
it trembled a little.
I returned to the table and she brought
me the cake, and I had my first felicitous meeting
with Lady Baltimore. Oh, my goodness! Did
you ever taste it? It’s all soft, and it’s
in layers, and it has nuts-but I can’t
write any more about it; my mouth waters too much.
Delighted surprise caused me once
more to speak aloud, and with my mouth full.
“But, dear me, this Is delicious!”
A choking ripple of laughter came
from the counter. “It’s I who make
them,” said the girl. “I thank you
for the unintentional compliment.” Then
she walked straight back to my table. “I
can’t help it,” she said, laughing still,
and her delightful, insolent nose well up; “how
can I behave myself when a man goes on as you do?”
A nice white curly dog followed her, and she stroked
his ears.
“Your behavior is very agreeable to me,”
I remarked.
“You’ll allow me to say
that you’re not invited to criticise it.
I was decidedly put out with you for making me ridiculous.
But you have admired my cake with such enthusiasm
that you are forgiven. And-may I hope
that you are getting on famously with the battle of
Cowpens?”
I stared. “I’m frankly
very much astonished that you should know about that!”
“Oh, you’re just known all about in Kings
Port.”
I wish that our miserable alphabet
could in some way render the soft Southern accent
which she gave to her words. But it cannot.
I could easily misspell, if I chose; but how, even
then, could I, for instance, make you hear her way
of saying “about”? “Aboot”
would magnify it; and besides, I decline to make ugly
to the eye her quite special English, that was so
charming to the ear.
“Kings Port just knows all about
you,” she repeated with a sweet and mocking
laugh.
“Do you mind telling me how?”
She explained at once. “This place is death
to all incognitos.”
The explanation, however, did not,
on the instant, enlighten me. “This?
The Woman’s Exchange, you mean?”
“Why, to be sure! Have you not heard ladies
talking together here?”
I blankly repealed her words. “Ladies talking?”
She nodded.
“Oh!” I cried. “How dull of
me! Ladies talking! Of course!”
She continued. “It was
therefore widely known that you were consulting our
South Carolina archives at the library-and
then that notebook you bring marked you out the very
first day. Why, two hours after your first lunch
we just knew all about you!”
“Dear me!” said I.
“Kings Port is ever ready to
discuss strangers,” she further explained.
“The Exchange has been going on five years, and
the resident families have discussed each other so
thoroughly here that everything is known; therefore
a stranger is a perfect boon.” Her gayety
for a moment interrupted her, before she continued,
always mocking and always sweet - “Kings
Port cannot boast intelligence offices for servants;
but if you want to know the character and occupation
of your friends, come to the Exchange!” How
I wish I could give you the raciness, the contagion,
of her laughter! Who would have dreamed that
behind her primness all this frolic lay in ambush?
“Why,” she said, “I’m only
a plantation girl; it’s my first week here,
and I know every wicked deed everybody as done since
1812!”
She went back to her counter.
It had been very merry; and as I was settling the
small debt for my lunch I asked - “Since
this is the proper place for information, will you
kindly tell me whose wedding that cake is for?”
She was astonished. “You
don’t know? And I thought you were quite
a clever Ya-I beg your pardon-Northerner.
“Please tell me, since I know
you’re quite a clever Reb-I beg your
pardon-Southerner.”
“Why, it’s his own!
Couldn’t you see that from his bashfulness?”
“Ordering his own wedding cake?”
Amazement held me. But the door opened, one of
the elderly ladies entered, the girl behind the counter
stiffened to primness in a flash, and I went out into
Royal Street as the curly dog’s tail wagged
his greeting to the newcomer.