It by no means lessened my pleasure
to discern that Hortense must feel herself to be in
a predicament; and as I sat writing my answer to the
note, which was from Mrs. Weguelin St. Michael and
contained an invitation to me for the next afternoon,
I thought of those pilots whose dangers have come
down to us from distant times through the songs of
ancient poets. The narrow and tempestuous channel
between Scylla and Charybdis bristled unquestionably
with violent problems, but with none, I should suppose,
that called for a nicer hand upon the wheel, or an
eye more alert, than this steering of your little
trireme to a successful marriage, between one man
who believed himself to be your destined bridegroom
and another who expected to be so, meanwhile keeping
each in ignorance of how close you were sailing to
the other. In Hortense’s place I should
have wished to hasten the wedding now, have it safely
performed this afternoon, say, or to-morrow morning;
thus precipitated by some invaluable turn in the health
of her poor dear father. But she had worn it
out, his health, by playing it for decidedly as much
as it could bear; it couldn’t be used again
without risk; the date must stand fixed; and, uneasy
as she might have begun to be about John, Hortense
must, with no shortening of the course, get her boat
in safe without smashing it against either John or
Charley. I wondered a little that she should
feel any uncertainty about her affianced lover.
She must know how much his word was to him, and she
had had his word twice, given her the second time
to put his own honor right with her on the score of
the phosphates. But perhaps Hortense’s
rich experiences of life had taught her that a man’s
word to a woman should not be subjected to the test
of another woman’s advent. On the whole,
I suppose it was quite natural those flowers should
annoy her, and equally natural that Eliza, the minx,
should allow them to do so! There’s a joy
to the marrow in watching your enemy harried and discomfited
by his own gratuitous contrivances; you look on serenely
at a show which hasn’t cost you a groat.
However, poor Eliza had not been so serene at the very
end, when she stormed out at me. For this I did
not have to forgive her, of course, little as I had
merited such treatment. Had she not accepted my
flowers? But it was a gratification to reflect
that in my sentimental passages with her I had not
gone to any great length; nothing, do I ever find,
is so irksome as the sense of having unwittingly been
in a false position. Was John, on his side, in
love with her? Was it possible he would fail
in his word? So with these thoughts, while answering
and accepting Mrs. Weguelin St. Michael’s invitation
to make one of a party of strangers to whom she was
going to show another old Kings Port church, “where
many of my ancestors lie,” as her note informed
me, I added one sentence which had nothing to do with
the subject “She is a steel wasp,” I ventured
to say. And when on the next afternoon I met the
party at the church, I received from the little lady
a look of highly spiced comprehension as she gently
remarked, “I was glad to get your acceptance.”
When I went down to the dinner-table,
Juno sat in her best clothes, still discussing the
Daughters of Dixie.
I can’t say that I took much
more heed of this at dinner than I had done at tea;
but I was interested to hear Juno mention that she,
too, intended to call upon Hortense Rieppe. Kings
Port, she said, must take a consistent position; and
for her part, so far as behavior went, she didn’t
see much to choose between the couple. “As
to whether Mr. Mayrant had really concealed the discovery
of his fortune,” she continued, “I asked
Miss Josephine-in a perfectly nice way,
of course. But old Mr. St. Michael Beaugarcon,
who has always had the estate in charge, did that.
It is only a life estate, unless Mr. Mayrant has lawful
issue. Well, he will have that now, and all that
money will be his to squander.”
Aunt Carola had written me again this
morning, but I had been in no haste to open her letter;
my neglect of the Bombos did not weigh too heavily
upon me, I fear, but I certainly did put off reading
what I expected to be a reprimand. And concerning
this I was right; her first words betokened reprimand
at once. “My dear nephew Augustus,”
she began, in her fine, elegant handwriting.
That was always her mode of address to me when something
was coming, while at other times it would be, less
portentously, “My dear Augustus,” or “My
dear nephew “; but whenever my name and my relationship
to her occurred conjointly, I took the communication
away with me to some corner, and opened it in solitude.
It wasn’t about the Bombos,
though; and for what she took me to task I was able
to defend myself, I think, quite adequately. She
found fault with me for liking the South too much,
and this she based upon the enthusiastic accounts
of Kings Port and its people that I had written to
her; nor had she at all approved of my remarks on the
subject of the negro, called forth by Daddy Ben and
his grandson Charles Cotesworth.
“When I sent you (wrote Aunt
Carola) to admire Kings Port good-breeding, I did
not send you to forget your country. Remember
that those people were its mortal enemies; that besides
their treatment of our prisoners in Libby and Andersonville
(which killed my brother Alexander) they displayed
in their dealings, both social and political, an arrogance
in success and a childish petulance at opposition,
which we who saw and suffered can never forget, any
more than we can forget our loved ones who laid down
their lives for this cause.”
These were not the only words with
which Aunt Carola reproved what she termed my “disloyalty,”
but they will serve to indicate her feeling about
the Civil War. It was-on her side-precisely the feeling of all the Kings
Port old ladies on Heir side. But why should it be mine? And so,
after much thinking how I might best reply respectfully yet say to Aunt Carola
what my feeling was, I sat down upstairs at my window, and, after some
preliminary sentences, wrote:-
“There are dead brothers here
also, who, like your brother, laid down their lives
for what they believed was their country, and whom
their sisters never can forget as you can never forget
him. I read their names upon sad church tablets,
and their boy faces look out at me from cherished
miniatures and dim daguerreotypes. Upon their
graves the women who mourn them leave flowers as you
leave flowers upon the grave of your young soldier.
You will tell me, perhaps, that since the bereavement
is equal, I have not justified my sympathy for these
people. But the bereavement was not equal.
More homes here were robbed by death of their light
and promise than with us; and to this you must add
the material desolation of the homes themselves.
Our roofs were not laid in ashes, and to-day we sit
in affluence while they sit in privation. You
will say to this, perhaps, that they brought it upon
themselves. But even granting that they did so,
surely to suffer and to lose is more bitter than to
suffer and to win. My dear aunt, you could not
see what I have seen here, and write to me as you
do; and if those years have left upon your heart a
scar which will not vanish, do not ask me, who came
afterward, to wear the scar also. I should then
resemble certain of the younger ones here, with less
excuse than is theirs. As for the negro, forgive
me if I assure you that you retain an Abolitionist
exaltation for a creature who does not exist, or whose
existence is an ineffectual drop in the bucket, a
creature on grateful knees raising faithful eyes to
one who has struck off his chains of slavery, whereas
the creature who does exist is-
I paused here in my letter to Aunt
Carola, and sought for some fitting expression that
should characterize for her with sufficient severity
the new type of deliberately worthless negro; and as
I sought, my eyes wandered to the garden next door,
the garden of the Cornerlys. On a bench near
a shady arrangement of vines over bars sat Hortense
Rieppe. She was alone, and, from her attitude,
seemed to be thinking deeply. The high walls
of the garden shut her into a privacy that her position
near the shady vines still more increased. It
was evident that she had come here for the sake of
being alone, and I regretted that she was so turned
from me that I could not see her face. But her
solitude did not long continue; there came into view
a gentleman of would-be venerable appearance, who
approached her with a walk carefully constructed for
public admiration, and who, upon reaching her, bent
over with the same sort of footlight elaboration and
gave her a paternal kiss. I did not need to hear
her call him father; he was so obviously General Rieppe,
the prudent hero of Chattanooga, that words would have
been perfectly superfluous in his identification.
I was destined upon another day to
hear the tones of his voice, and thereupon may as
well state now that they belonged altogether with the
rest of him. There is a familiar type of Northern
fraud, and a Southern type, equally familiar, but
totally different in appearance. The Northern
type has the straight, flat, earnest hair, the shaven
upper lip, the chin-beard, and the benevolent religious
expression. He will be the president of several
charities, and the head of one great business.
He plays no cards, drinks no wine, and warns young
men to beware of temptation. He is as genial
as a hair-sofa; and he is seldom found out by the
public unless some financial crash in general affairs
uncovers his cheating, which lies most often beyond
the law’s reach; and because he cannot be put
in jail, he quite honestly believes heaven is his
destination. We see less of him since we have
ceased to be a religious country, religion no longer
being an essential disguise for him. The Southern
type, with his unction and his juleps, is better company,
unless he is the hero of too many of his own anecdotes.
He is commonly the possessor of a poetic gaze, a mane
of silvery hair, and a noble neck. As war days
and cotton-factor days recede into a past more and
more filmed over with romance, he too grows rare among
us, and I regret it, for he was in truth a picturesque
figure. General Rieppe was perfect.
At first I was sorry that the distance
they were from me rendered hearing what they were
saying impossible; very soon, however, the frame of
my open window provided me with a living picture which
would have been actually spoiled had the human voice
disturbed its eloquent pantomime.
General Rieppe’s daughter responded
to her father’s caress but languidly, turning
to him her face, with its luminous, stationary beauty.
He pointed to the house, and then waved his hand toward
the bench where she sat; and she, in response to this,
nodded slightly. Upon which the General, after
another kiss of histrionic paternity administered
to her forehead, left her sitting and proceeded along
the garden walk at a stately pace, until I could no
longer see him. Hortense, left alone upon the
bench, looked down at the folds of her dress, extended
a hand and slowly rearranged one of them, and then,
with the same hand, felt her hair from front to back.
This had scarce been accomplished when the General
reappeared, ushering Juno along the walk, and bearing
a chair with him. When they turned the corner
at the arbor, Hortense rose, and greetings ensued.
Few objects could be straighter than was Juno’s
back; her card-case was in her hand, but her pocket
was not quite large enough for the whole of her pride,
which stuck out so that it could have been seen from
a greater distance than my window. The General
would have departed, placing his chair for the visitor,
when Hortense waved for him an inviting hand toward
the bench beside her; he waved a similarly inviting
hand, looking at Juno, who thereupon sat firmly down
upon the chair. At this the General hovered heavily,
looking at his daughter, who gave him no look in return,
as she engaged in conversation with Juno; and presently
the General left them. Juno’s back and
Hortense’s front, both entirely motionless as
they interviewed each other’ presented a stiff
appearance, with Juno half turned in her seat and
Hortense’s glance following her slight movement;
the two then rose, as the General came down the walk
with two chairs and Mrs. Gregory and Mrs. Weguelin
St. Michael. Juno, with a bow to them, approached
Hortense by a step or two, a brief touch of their
fingers was to be seen, and Juno’s departure
took place, attended by the heavy hovering of General
Rieppe.
“That’s why!” I
said to myself aloud, suddenly, at my open window.
Immediately, however, I added, “but can it be?”
And in my mind a whole little edifice of reasons for
Hortense’s apparent determination to marry John
instantly fabricated itself-and then fell
down.
Through John she was triumphantly
bringing stiff Kings Port to her, was forcing them
to accept her. But this was scarce enough temptation
for Hortense to marry; she could do very well without
Kings Port-indeed, she was not very likely
to show herself in it, save to remind them, now and
then, that she was there, and that they could not keep
her out any more; this might amuse her a little, but
the society itself would not amuse her in the least.
What place had it for her to smoke her cigarettes
in?
Eliza La Heu, then? Spite?
The pleasure of taking something that somebody else
wanted? The pleasure of spoiling somebody else’s
pleasure? Or, more accurately, the pleasure of
power? Well, yes; that might be it, if Hortense
Rieppe were younger in years, and younger, especially,
in soul; but her museum was too richly furnished with
specimens of the chase, she had collected too many
bits and bibelots from life’s Hotel Druot and
the great bazaar of female competition, to pay so great
a price as marriage for merely John; particularly
when a lady, even in Newport, can have but one husband
at a time in her collection. If she did actually
love John, as Beverly Rodgers had reluctantly come
to believe, it was most inappropriate in her!
Had I followed out the train of reasoning which lay
coiled up inside the word inappropriate, I might have
reached the solution which eventually Hortense herself
gave me, and the jewelled recesses of her nature would
have blazed still more brilliantly to my eyes to-day;
but in truth, my soul wasn’t old enough yet
to work Hortense out by itself, unaided!
While Mrs. Gregory and Mrs. Weguelin
sat on their chairs, and Hortense sat on her bench,
tea was brought and a table laid, behind whose whiteness
and silver Hortense began slight offices with cups
and sugar tongs. She looked inquiry at her visitors,
in answer to which Mrs. Gregory indicated acceptance,
and Mrs. Weguelin refusal. The beauty of Hortense’s
face had strangely increased since the arrival of these
two visitors. It shone resplendent behind the
silver and the white cloth, and her movement, as she
gave the cup to Mrs. Gregory St. Michael, was one
of complete grace and admirable propriety. But
once she looked away from them in the direction of
the path. Her two visitors rose and left her,
Mrs. Gregory setting her tea-cup down with a gesture
that said she would take no more, and, after their
bows of farewell, Hortense sat alone again pulling
about the tea things.
I saw that by the table lay a card-case
on the ground, evidently dropped by Mrs. Gregory;
but Hortense could not see it where she sat. Her
quick look along the path heralded more company and
the General with more chairs. Young people now
began to appear, the various motions of whom were
more animated than the approaches and greetings and
farewells of their elders; chairs were moved and exchanged,
the General was useful in handling cups, and a number
of faces unknown to me came and went, some of them
elderly ones whom I had seen in church, or passed while
walking; the black dresses of age mingled with the
brighter colors of youth; and on her bench behind
the cups sat Hortense, or rose up at right moments,
radiant, restrained and adequate, receiving with deferential
attention the remarks of some dark-clothed elder,
or, with sufficiently interested countenance, inquiring
something from a brighter one of her own generation;
but twice I saw her look up the garden path. None
of them stayed long, although when they were all gone
the shadow of the garden wall had come as far as the
arbor; and once again Hortense sat alone behind the
table, leaning back with arms folded, and looking straight
in front of her. At last she stirred, and rose
slowly, and then, with a movement which was the perfection
of timidity, began to advance, as John, with his Aunt
Eliza, came along the path. To John, Hortense
with familiar yet discreet brightness gave a left
hand, as she waited for the old lady; and then the
old lady went through with it. What that embrace
of acknowledgment cost her cannot be measured, and
during its process John stood like a sentinel.
Possibly this was the price of his forgiveness to
his Aunt Eliza.
The visitors accepted tea, and the
beauty in Hortense’s face was now supreme.
The old lady sat, forgetting to drink her tea, but
very still in outward attitude, as she talked with
Hortense; and the sight of one hand in its glove lying
motionless upon her best dress, suddenly almost drew
unexpected tears to my eyes. John was nearly as
quiet as she, but the glove that he held was twisted
between his fingers. I expected that he would
stay with his Hortense when his aunt took her leave;
he, however, was evidently expected by the old lady
to accompany her out and back, I suppose, to her house,
as was proper.
But John’s departure from Hortense
differed from his meeting her. She gave no left
hand to him now; she gazed at him, and then, as the
old lady began to go toward the house, she moved a
step toward him, and then she cast herself into his
arms! It was no acting, this, no skilful simulation;
her head sank upon his shoulder, and true passion spoke
in every line of that beautiful surrendered form,
as it leaned against her lover’s.
“So that’s why!” I exclaimed, once
more aloud.
It was but a moment; and John, released,
followed Miss Eliza. The old lady walked slowly,
with that half-failing step that betokens the body’s
weariness after great mental or moral strain.
Indeed, as John regained her side, she put her arm
in his as if her feebleness needed his support.
Thus they went away together, the aunt and her beloved
boy, who had so sorely grieved and disappointed her.
But if this sight touched me, this
glimpse of the vanquished leaving the field after
supreme acknowledgment of defeat, upon Hortense it
wrought another effect altogether. She stood
looking after them, and as she looked, the whole woman
from head to foot, motionless as she was, seemed to
harden. Yet still she looked, until at length,
slowly turning, her eyes chanced to fall upon Mrs.
Gregory St. Michael’s card-case. There
it lay, the symbol of Kings Port’s capitulation.
She swooped down and up with a flying curve of grace,
holding her prey caught; and then, catching also her
handsome skirts on either side, she danced like a
whirling fan among the empty chairs.