Each recent remarkable occurrence
had obliterated its predecessor, and it was with difficulty
that I made a straight parting in my hair. Had
it been Miss Rieppe that John so suddenly ran away
to? It seemed now more as if the boy had been
running away from somebody. The waitress had
stared at him with extraordinary interest; she had
seen his bruise; perhaps she knew how he had got it.
Her excitement-had he smashed up his official
superior at the custom house? That would be an
impossible thing, I told myself instantly; as well
might a nobleman cross swords with a peasant.
Perhaps the stare of the waitress had reminded him
of his bruise, and he might have felt disinclined
to show himself with it in a company of gossiping
strangers. Still, that would scarcely account
for it-the dismay with which he had so suddenly
left me. Was Juno the cause-she had
come up behind me; he must have seen her and her portentous
manner approaching-had the boy fled from
her?
And then, his fierce outbreak about
taking orders from a negro when I was moralizing over
the misfortune of marrying a jackass! I got a
sort of parting in my hair, and went down to the dining
room.
Juno was there before me, with her
bonnet, or rather her headdress, still on, and I heard
her making apologies to Mrs. Trevise for being so
late. Mrs. Trevise, of course, sat at the head
of her table, and Juno sat at her right hand.
I was very glad not to have a seat near Juno, because
this lady was, as I have already hinted, an intolerable
person to me. Either her Southern social position
or her rent (she took the whole second floor, except
Mrs. Trevise’s own rooms) was of importance
to Mrs. Trevise; but I assure you that her ways kept
our landlady’s cold, impervious tact watchful
from the beginning to the end of almost every meal.
Juno was one of those persons who possess so many and
such strong feelings themselves that they think they
have all the feelings there are; at least, they certainly
consider no one’s feelings but their own.
She possessed an inexhaustible store of anecdote, but
it was exclusively about our Civil War; you would
have supposed that nothing else had ever happened
in the world. When conversation among the rest
of us became general, she preserved a cold and acrid
inattention; when the fancy took her to open her own
mouth, it was always to begin some reminiscence, and
the reminiscence always began - “In September,
1862, when the Northern vandals,” etc.,
etc., or “When the Northern vandals were
repulsed by my husband’s cousin, General Braxton
Bragg,” etc., etc. Now it was
not that I was personally wounded by the term, because
at the time of the vandals I was not even born, and
also because I know that vandals cannot be kept out
of any army. Deeply as I believed the March to
the Sea to have been imperative, of “Sherman’s
bummers” and their excesses I had a fair historic
knowledge and a very poor opinion; and this I should
have been glad to tell Juno, had she ever given me
the chance; but her immodest sympathy for herself
froze all sympathy for her. Why could she not
preserve a well-bred silence upon her sufferings,
as did the other old ladies I had met in Kings Port?
Why did she drag them in, thrust them, poke them,
shove them at you? Thus it was that for her insulting
disregard of those whom her words might wound I detested
Juno; and as she was a woman, and nearly old enough
to be my grandmother, it was, of course, out of the
question that I should retaliate. When she got
very bad indeed, it was calm Mrs. Trevise’s
last, but effective, resort to tinkle a little handbell
and scold one of the waitresses whom its sound would
then summon from the kitchen. This bell was tinkled
not always by any means for my sake; other travellers
from the North there were who came and went, pausing
at Kings Port between Florida and their habitual abodes.
At present our company consisted of
Juno; a middle-class Englishman employed in some business
capacity in town; a pair of very young honeymooners
from the “up-country”; a Louisiana poetess,
who wore the long, cylindrical ringlets of 1830, and
who was attending a convention the Daughters of Dixie;
two or three males and females, best described as
et ceteras; and myself. “I shall only
take a mouthful for the sake of nourishment,”
Juno was announcing, “and then I shall return
to his bedside.”
“Is he very suffering?”
inquired the poetess, in melodious accent.
“It was an infamous onslaught,” Juno replied.
The poetess threw up her eyes and crooned, “Noble,
doughty champion!”
“You may say so indeed, madam,” said Juno.
“Raw beefsteak’s jolly good for your eye,”
observed the Briton.
This suggestion did not appear to be heard by Juno.
“I had a row with a chap,”
the Briton continued. He’s my best friend
now. He made me put raw beefsteak-
“I thank you,” interrupted
Juno. “He requires no beefsteak, raw or
cooked.”
The face of the Briton reddened. “Too groggy
to eat, is he?”
Mrs. Trevise tinkled her bell.
“Daphne! I have said to you twice to hand
those yams.”
“I done handed ’em twice, ma’am.”
“Hand them right away, Daphne,
and don’t be so forgetful.” It was
not easy to disturb the composure of Mrs. Trevise.
The poetess now took up the broken
thread. “Had I a son,” she declared,
“I would sooner witness him starve than hear
him take orders from a menial race.”
“But mightn’t starving
be harder for him to experience than for you to witness,
y’ know?” asked the Briton.
At this one of the et ceteras
made a sort of snuffing noise, and ate his dinner
hard.
It was the male honeymooner who next
spoke. “Must have been quite a tussle,
ma’am.”
“It was an infamous onslaught!”
repeated Juno. “Wish I’d seen it!”
sighed the honeymooner.
His bride smiled at him beamingly.
“You’d have felt right lonesome to be
out of it, David.”
“No apology has yet been offered,” continued
Juno.
“But must your nephew apologize
besides taking a licking?” inquired the Briton.
Juno turned an awful face upon hint.
“It is from his brutal assailant that apologies
are due. Mr. Mayrant’s family” (she
paused here for blighting emphasis) “are well-bred
people, and he will be coerced into behaving like
a gentleman for once.”
I checked an impulse here to speak
out and express my doubts as to the family coercion
being founded upon any dissatisfaction with John’s
conduct.
“I wonder if reading or recitation
might not soothe your nephew?” said the poetess,
now.
“I should doubt it,” answered
Juno. “I have just come from his bedside.”
“I should so like to soothe
him, if I could,” the poetess murmured.
“If he were well enough to hear my convention
ode-
“He is not nearly well enough,” said Juno.
The et cetera here coughed and
blew his nose so remarkably that we all started.
A short silence followed, which Juno relieved.
“I will give the young ruffian’s
family the credit they deserve,” she stated.
“The whole connection despises his keeping the
position.”
Another et cetera now came into
it. “Is it known what exactly precipitated
the occurrence?”
Juno turned to him. “My
nephew is a gentleman from whose lips no unworthy
word could ever fall.’
“Oh!” said the et cetera,
mildly. “He said something, then?”
“He conveyed a well-merited rebuke in fitting
terms.”
“What were the terms?” inquired the Briton.
Juno again did not hear him.
“It was after a friendly game of cards.
My nephew protested against any gentleman remaining
at the custom house since the recent insulting appointment.”
I was now almost the only member of
the party who had preserved strict silence throughout
this very interesting conversation, because, having
no wish to converse with Juno at any time, I especially
did not desire it now, just after her seeing me (I
thought she must have seen me) in amicable conference
with the object of her formidable displeasure.
“Every Mayrant is ferocious
that I ever heard of,” she continued. “You
cannot trust that seemingly delicate and human exterior.
His father had it, too-deceiving exterior
and raging interior, though I will say for that one
that he would never have stooped to humiliate the family
name as his son is doing. His regiment was near
by when the Northern vandals burned our courthouse,
and he made them run, I can tell you! It’s
a mercy for that poor girl that the scales have dropped
from her eyes and she has broken her engagement with
him.”
“With the father?” asked a third et
cetera.
Juno stared at the intruder.
Mrs. Trevise drawled a calm contribution.
“The father died before this boy was born.”
“Oh, I see!” murmured the et cetera,
gratefully.
Juno proceeded. “No woman’s life
would be safe with him.”
“But mightn’t he be safer
for a person’s niece than for their nephew?”
said the Briton.
Mrs. Trevise’s hand moved toward the bell.
But Juno answered the question mournfully:
“With such hereditary bloodthirstiness, who
can tell?” And so Mrs. Trevise moved her hand
away again.
“Excuse me, but do you know
if the other gentleman is laid up, too?” inquired
the male honeymooner, hopefully.
“I am happy to understand that he is,”
replied Juno.
In sheer amazement I burst out, “Oh!”
and abruptly stopped.
But it was too late. I had instantly
become the centre of interest. The et ceteras
and honeymooners craned their necks; the Briton leaned
toward me from opposite; the poetess, who had worn
an absent expression since being told that the injured
champion was not nearly well enough to listen to her
ode, now put on her glasses and gazed at me kindly;
while Juno reared her headdress and spoke, not to
me, but to the air in my general neighborhood.
“Has any one later intelligence
than what I bring from my nephew’s bedside?”
So she hadnt perceived who my companion at the step had
been! Well, she should be enlightened, they all should be enlightened, and
vengeance was mine. I spoke with gentleness:-
“Your nephew’s impressions,
I fear, are still confused by his deplorable misadventure.”
“May I ask what you know about his impressions?”
Out of the corner of my eye I saw
the hand of Mrs. Trevise move toward her bell; but
she wished to hear all about it more than she wished
concord at her harmonious table; and the hand stopped.
Juno spoke again. “Who,
pray, has later news than what I bring?”
My enemy was in my hand; and an enemy
in the hand is worth I don’t know how many in
the bush.
I answered most gently - “I
do not come from Mr. Mayrant’s bedside, because
I have just left him at the front door in sound health-saving
a bruise over his left eye.”
During a second we all sat in a high-strung
silence, and then Juno became truly superb. “Who
sees the scars he brazenly conceals?”
It took away my breath; my battle
would have been lost, when the Briton suggested:
“But mayn’t he have shown those to his
Aunt?”
We sat in no silence now; the first
et cetera made extraordinary sounds on his plate,
Mrs. Trevise tinkled her handbell with more unction
than I had ever yet seen in her; and while she and
Daphne interchanged streams of severe words which
I was too disconcerted to follow, the other et ceteras
and the honeymooners hectically effervesced into small
talk. I presently found myself eating our last
course amid a reestablished calm, when, with a rustle,
Juno swept out from among us, to return (I suppose)
to the bedside. As she passed behind the Briton’s
chair, that invaluable person kicked me under the
table, and on my raising my eyes to him he gave me
a large, robust wink.