It was my lot to attend but one of
the weddings which Hortense precipitated (or at least
determined) by her plunge into the water; and, truth
to say, the honor of my presence at the other was not
requested; therefore I am unable to describe the nuptials
of Hortense and Charley. But the papers were
full of them; what the female guests wore, what the
male guests were worth, and what both ate and drank,
were set forth in many columns of printed matter;
and if you did not happen to see this, just read the
account of the next wedding that occurs among the New
York yellow rich, and you will know how Charley and
Hortense were married; for it’s always the same
thing. The point of mark in this particular ceremony
of union lay in Charley’s speech; Charley found
a happy thought at the breakfast. The bridal
party (so the papers had it) sat on a dais, and was
composed exclusively of Oil, Sugar, Beef, Steel, and
Union Pacific; merely at this one table five hundred
million dollars were sitting (so the papers computed),
and it helped the bridegroom to his idea, when, by
the importunate vociférations of the company,
he was forced to get on his unwilling legs.
“Poets and people of that sort
say” (Charley concluded, after thanking them)
“that happiness cannot be bought with money.
Well, I guess a poet never does learn how to make
a dollar do a dollar’s work. But I am no
poet; and I have learned it is as well to have a few
dollars around. And I guess that my friends and
I, right here at this table, could organize a corner
in happiness any day we chose. And if we do, we
will let you all in on it.”
I am told that the bride looked superb,
both in church and at the reception which took place
in the house of Kitty; and that General Rieppe, in
spite of his shattered health, maintained a noble appearance
through the whole ordeal of parting with his daughter.
I noticed that Beverly Rodgers and Gazza figured prominently
among the invited guests - Bohm did not have to
be invited, for some time before the wedding he had
become the husband of the successfully divorced Kitty.
So much for the nuptials of Hortense and Charley;
they were, as one paper pronounced them, “up
to date and distingue.” The paper omitted
the accent in the French word, which makes it, I think,
fit this wedding even more happily.
“So Hortense,” I said
to myself as I read the paper, “has squared
herself with Charley after all.” And I sat
wondering if she would be happy. But she was
not constructed for happiness. You cannot be
constructed for all the different sorts of experiences
which this world offers - each of our natures
has its specialty. Hortense was constructed for
pleasure; and I have no doubt she got it, if not through
Charley, then by other means.
The marriage of Eliza La Heu and John
Mayrant was of a different quality; no paper pronounced
it “up to date,” or bestowed any other
adjectival comments upon it; for, being solemnized
in Kings Port, where such purely personal happenings
are still held (by the St. Michael family, at any
rate) to be no business of any one’s save those
immediately concerned, the event escaped the famishment
of publicity. Yes, this marriage was solemnized,
a word that I used above without forethought, and
now repeat with intention; for certainly no respecter
of language would write it of the yellow rich and their
blatant unions. If you’re a Bohm or a Charley,
you may trivialize or vulgarize or bestialize your
wedding, but solemnize it you don’t, for that
is not “up to date.”
And to the marriage of Eliza and John I went; for not only
was the honor of my presence requested, but John wrote me, in both their names,
a personal note, which came to me far away in the mountains, whither I had gone
from Kings Port. This was the body of the note:-
“To the formal invitation which
you will receive, Miss La Heu joins her wish with
mine that you will not be absent on that day.
We should both really miss you. Miss La Heu begs
me to add that if this is not sufficient inducement,
you shall have a slice of Lady Baltimore.”
Not a long note! But you will
imagine how genuinely I was touched by their joint
message. I was not an old acquaintance, and I
had done little to help them in their troubles, but
I came into the troubles; with their memory of those
days I formed a part, and it was a part which it warmed
me to know they did not dislike to recall. I had
actually been present at their first meeting, that
day when John visited the Exchange to order his wedding-cake,
and Eliza had rushed after him, because in his embarrassment
he had forgotten to tell her the date for which he
wanted it. The cake had begun it, the cake had
continued it, the cake had brought them together;
and in Eliza’s retrospect now I doubted If she
could find the moment when her love for John had awakened;
but if with women there ever is such a moment, then,
as I have before said, it was when the girl behind
the counter looked across at the handsome, blushing
boy, and felt stirred to help him in his stumbling
attempts to be businesslike about that cake.
If his youth unwittingly kindled hers, how could he
or she help that? But, had he ever once known
it and shown it to her during his period of bondage
to Hortense, then, indeed, the flame would have turned
to ice in Eliza’s breast. What saved him
for her was his blind steadfastness against her.
That was the very thing she prized most, once it became
hers; whereas, any secret swerving toward her from
Hortense during his heavy hours of probation would
have degraded John to nothing in Eliza’s eyes.
And so, making all this out by myself in the mountains
after reading John’s note, I ordered from the
North the handsomest old china cake-dish that Aunt
Carola could find to be sent to Miss Eliza La Heu
with my card. I wanted to write on the card,
“Rira bien qui viva lé dernier”;
but alas! so many pleasant thoughts may never be said
aloud in this world of ours. That I ordered china,
instead of silver, was due to my surmise that in Kings
Port-or at any rate by Mrs. Weguelin and
Miss Josephine St. Michael-silver from
any one not of the family would be considered vulgar;
it was only a surmise, and, of course, it was precisely
the sort of thing that I could not verify by asking
any of them.
But (you may be asking) how on earth
did all this come about? What happened in Kings
Port on the day following that important swim which
Hortense and John took together in the waters of the
harbor?
I wish that I could tell you all that
happened, but I can only tell you of the outside of
things; the inside was wholly invisible and inaudible
to me, although we may be sure, I think, that when
the circles that widened from Hortense’s plunge
reached the shores of the town, there must have been
in certain quarters a considerable splashing.
I presume that John communicated to somebody the news
of his broken engagement; for if he omitted to do
so, with the wedding invitations to be out the next
day, he was remiss beyond excuse, and I think this
very unlikely; and I also presume (with some evidence
to go on) that Hortense did not, in the somewhat critical
juncture of her fortunes, allow the grass to grow
under her feet-if such an expression may
be used of a person who is shut up in the stateroom
of a steam yacht. To me John Mayrant made no
sign of any sort by word or in writing, and this is
the highest proof he ever gave me of his own delicacy,
and also of his reliance upon mine; for he must have
been pretty sure that I had overheard those last destiny-deciding
words spoken between himself and Hortense in the boat,
as we reached the Hermana’s gangway. In
John’s place almost any man, even Beverly Rodgers,
would have either dropped a hint at the moment, or
later sent me some line to the effect that the incident
was, of course, “between ourselves.”
That would have been both permissible and practical;
but there it was, the difference between John of Kings
Port and us others; he was not practical when it came
to something “between gentlemen,” as he
would have said. The finest flower of breeding
blossoms above the level of the practical, and that
is why you do not find it growing in the huge truck-garden
of our age, save in corners where it has not yet been
uprooted. John’s silence to me was something
that I liked very much, and he must have found that
it was not misplaced.
The first external splash of the few
that I have to narrate was a negative manifestation,
and occurred at breakfast - Juno supposed if the
wedding invitations would be out later in the day.
The next splash was somewhat louder on, was at dinner,
when Juno inquired of Mrs. Trevise if she had received
any wedding invitation. At tea time was very decided
splashing. No invitation had come to anybody.
Juno had called at five of the St. Michael houses
and got in at none of them, and there was a rumor
that the Hermana had disappeared from the harbor.
So far, none of the splashing had wet me but I now
came in for a light sprinkle.
“Were you not on board that
boat yesterday?” Juno inquired; and to see her
look at me you might have gathered that I was suspected
of sinking the vessel.
“A most delightful occasion!”
I exclaimed, filling my face with a bright blankness.
“Isn’t he awful to speak
that way about Sunday!” said the up-country
bride.
This was a chance for the poetess,
and she took it. “To me,” she mused,
“every day seems fraught with an equal holiness.”
“But I should think,”
observed the Briton, “that you could knock off
a hymn better on Sundays.”
All this while Juno was looking at
me, and I knew it, and therefore I ate my food in
a kindly sort of unconscious way, until she fired another
shot at me. “There is an absurd report that
somebody fell overboard.”
“Dear me!” I laughed.
“So that is what it has grown to already!
I did go out on the boat boom, and I did drop off-but
into a boat.”
At this confession of mine the up-country
bride became extraordinarily arch on the subject of
the well-known hospitality of steam yachts, and for
this I was honestly grateful to her; but Juno brooded
still. “I hope there is nothing wrong,”
she said solemnly.
Feeling that silence at this point
would not be golden, I went into it with spirit I
told them of our charming party, of General Rieppe’s
rich store of quotations, of the strict discipline
on board the well-appointed Hermana, of the great
beauty of Hortense, and her evident happiness when
her lover was by her side. This talk of mine turned
off any curiosity or suspicion which the rest of the
company may have begun to entertain; but upon Juno
I think it made scant impression, save causing her
to set me down as an imbecile. For there was Doctor
Beaugarcon when we came into the sitting-room, who
told us before any one could even say “How-do-you-do,”
that Miss Hortense Rieppe had broken her engagement
with John Mayrant, and that he had it from Mrs. Cornerly,
whom he was visiting professionally. I caught
the pitying look which Juno threw at me at this news,
and I was happy to have acquitted myself so creditably
in the manipulation of my secret - nobody asked
me any more questions!
There is almost nothing else to tell
you of how the splashes broke on Kings Port.
Before the day when I was obliged to call in Doctor
Beaugarcon’s professional services (quite a sharp
attack put me to bed for half a week) I found merely
the following things - the Hermana gone to New
York, the automobiles and the Replacers had also disappeared,
and people were divided on the not strikingly important
question as to whether Hortense and the General had
accompanied Charley on the yacht, or continued northward
in an automobile, or taken the train. Gone, in
any case, the whole party indubitably was, leaving,
I must say, a sense of emptiness - the comedy
was over, the players departed. I never heard
any one, not even Juno, doubt that it was Hortense
who had broken the engagement; this part of the affair
was conducted by the principals with great skill.
Hortense had evidently written her version to the
Cornerlys, and not a word to any other effect ever
came from John’s mouth, of course. One
result I had not looked for, though it was a natural
one - if the old ladies had felt indignation at
Hortense for her determination to marry John Mayrant,
this indignation was doubled by her determination
not to! I fear that few of us live by logic, even
in Kings Port; and then, they had all called upon
her in that garden for nothing! The sudden thought
of this made me laugh alone in my bed of sickness;
and when I came out of it, had such a thing been possible,
I should have liked to congratulate Miss Josephine
St. Michael on her absence from the garden occasion.
I said, however, nothing to her, or to any of the other
ladies, upon this or any subject, for I was so unlucky
as to find them not at home when I paid my round of
farewell visits. Nor (to my real distress) did
I see John Mayrant again. The boy wrote me (I
received it in bed) a short, warm note of regret,
with nothing else in it save the fact that he was
leaving town, having become free from the Custom House
at last. I fancy that he ran away for a judicious
interval. Who would not?
Was there one person to whom he told
the truth before he went? Did the girl behind
the counter hear the manner in which the engagement
was broken? Ah, none of us will ever know that!
But, although I could not, without the highest impropriety,
have spoken to any of the old ladies about this business,
unless they had chosen to speak to me-and
somehow I feel that after the abrupt close of it not
even Mrs. Gregory St. Michael would have been likely
to touch on the subject with an outsider-there
was nothing whatever to forbid my indulging in a skirmish
with Eliza La Heu; therefore I lunched at the Exchange
on my last day.
“To the mountains?” she
said, in reply to my information about my plans of
travel.
“Doctor Beaugarcon says nothing
else can so quickly restore me.”
“Stay there for the rhododendrons,
then,” she bade me. “No sight more
beautiful in all the South.”
“Town seems deserted,” I pursued.
“Everybody gone.”
“Oh, not everybody!”
“All the interesting people.”
“Thank you.”
“I meant, interesting to you.”
I saw her decide not to be angry;
and her decision changed and saved our conversation
from the trashy, bantering tone which it was taking,
and brought it to a pass most unexpected to both of
us.
She gave me a charming and friendly
smile. “Well, you, at any rate, are going
away. And I am really sorry for that.”
Her eyes rested upon me with perfect
frankness. I was not in love with Eliza La Heu,
but nearer to love than I had ever been then, and it
would have been easy, very easy, to let one’s
self go straight onward into love. There are
for a man more ways of falling into that state than
romancers would have us to believe, and one of them
is by an assent of the will at a certain given moment,
which the heart promptly follows-just as
a man in a moment decides he will espouse a cause,
and soon finds himself hotly fighting for it body
and soul. I could have gone out of that Exchange
completely in love with Eliza La Heu; but my will
did not give its assent, and I saw John Mayrant not
as a rival, but as one whose happiness I greatly desired.
“Thank you,” I said, “for
telling me you are sorry I am going. And now,
may I treat you more than ever as a friend, and tell
you of a circumstance which Kings Port does not know?”
It put her on her guard. “Don’t
be indiscreet,” she laughed.
“Isn’t timely indiscretion discretion?”
“And don’t be clever,”
she said. “Tell me what you have to say-if
you’re quite sure you’ll not be sorry.”
“Quite sure. There’s
no reason-now that the untruth is properly
and satisfactorily established-that one
person should not know that John Mayrant broke that
engagement.” And I told her the whole of
it. “If I’m outrageous to share this
secret with you,” I concluded, “I can only
say that I couldn’t stand the unfairness any
longer.”
“He jumped straight in?” said Eliza.
“Oh, straight!”
“Of course,” she murmured.
“And just after declaring that he wouldn’t.”
“Of course,” she murmured again.
“And the current took them right away?”
“Instantly.”
“Was he very tired when you got to him?”
I answered this question and a number
of others, backward and forward, until she had led
me to cover the whole incident about twice-and-a-half
times. Then she had a silence, and after this
a reflection.
“How well they managed it!”
“Managed what?”
“The accepted version.”
“Oh, yes, indeed!”
“And you and I will not spoil it for them,”
she declared.
As I took my final leave of her she
put a flower in my buttonhole. My reflection
was then, and is now, that if she already knew the
truth from John himself, how well she managed it!
So that same night I took the lugubrious
train which bore me with the grossest deliberation
to the mountains; and among the mountains and their
waterfalls I stayed and saw the rhododendrons, and
was preparing to journey home when the invitation
came from John and Eliza.
I have already said that of this wedding
no word was in the papers. Kings Port by the
war lost all material things, but not the others,
among which precious privacy remains to her; and, O
Kings Port, may you never lose your grasp of that
treasure! May you never know the land where the
reporter blooms, where if any joy or grief befall you,
the public press rings your doorbell and demands the
particulars, and if you deny it the particulars, it
makes them up and says something scurrilous about
you into the bargain. Therefore nothing was printed,
morning or evening, about John and Eliza. Nor
was the wedding service held in church to the accompaniment
of nodding bonnets and gaping stragglers. No
eye not tender with regard and emotion looked on while
John took Eliza to his wedded wife, to live together
after God’s ordinance in the holy state of matrimony.
In Royal Street, not many steps from
South Place, there stands a quiet house a little back,
upon whose face sorrow has struck many blows, but
made no deep wounds yet; no scorch from the fires of
war is visible, and the rending of the earthquake
does not show too plainly; but there hangs about the
house a gravity that comes from seeing and suffering
much, and a sweetness from having sheltered many generations
of smiles and tears. The long linked chain of
births and deaths here has not been broken and scattered,
and the grandchildren look out of the same windows
from which the grandsires gazed, whose faces now in
picture frames still watch serenely the sad present
from their happy past. Therefore the rooms lie
in still depths of association, and from the walls,
the stairs, the furniture, flows the benign influence
of undispersed memories; it sheds its tempered radiance
upon the old miniatures, and upon every fresh flower
that comes in from the garden; it seems to pass through
the open doors to and fro like a tranquil blessing;
it is beyond joy and pain, because time has distilled
it from both of these; it is the assembled essence
of kinship and blood unity, enriched by each succeeding
brood that is born, is married, is fruitful in its
turn, and dies remembered; only the balm of faith
is stronger to sustain and heal; for that comes from
heaven, while it is earth that gives us this; and
the sacred cup of it which our native land once held
is almost empty.
Amid this influence John and Eliza
were made one, and the faces of the older generations
grew soft beneath it, and pensive eyes became lustrous,
and into pale cheeks the rosy tint came like an echo
faintly back for a short hour. They made so little
sound in their quiet happiness of congratulation that
it might have been a dream; and they were so few that
the house with the sense of its memories was not lost
with the movement and crowding, but seemed still to
preside over the whole, and send down its benediction.
When it was my turn to shake the hands of bride and groom,
John asked:-
“What did your friend do with your advice?”
And I replied. “He has taken it.”
“Perhaps not that,” John
returned, “but you must have helped him to see
his way.”
When the bride came to cut the cake,
she called me to her and fulfilled her promise.
“You have always liked my baking,” she
said.
“Then you made it after all,” I answered.
“I would not have been married without doing
so,” she declared sweetly.
When the time came for them to go
away, they were surrounded with affectionate God-speeds;
but Miss Josephine St. Michael waited to be the last,
standing a little apart, her severe and chiselled face
turned aside, and seeming to watch a mocking-bird
that was perched in his cage at a window halfway up
the stairs.
“He is usually not so silent,”
Miss Josephine said to me. “I suppose we
are too many visitors for him.”
Then I saw that the old lady, beneath
her severity, was deeply moved; and almost at once
John and Eliza came down the stairs. Miss Josephine
took each of them to her heart, but she did not trust
herself to speak; and a single tear rolled down her
face, as the boy and girl continued to the hall-door.
There Daddy Ben stood, and John’s gay good-by
to him was the last word that I heard the bridegroom
say. While we all stood silently watching them
as they drove away from the tall iron gate, the mocking-bird
on the staircase broke into melodious ripples of song.