Sylvia was awakened on her wedding
morning by a curious choking sound, and starting up
found Prue crying over her as if her heart were broken.
“What has happened? Is
Geoffrey ill? Is all the silver stolen? Can’t
the Bishop come?” she asked, wondering what
calamity could move her sister to tears at such a
busy time.
Prue took Sylvia in her arms, and
rocking to and fro as if she were still a baby, poured
forth a stream of words and tears together.
“Nothing has happened; I came
to call you, and broke down because it was the last
time I should do it. I’ve been awake all
night, thinking of you and all you’ve been to
me since I took you in my arms nineteen years ago,
and said you should be mine. My little Sylvia,
I’ve been neglectful of so many things, and
now I see them all; I’ve fretted you with my
ways, and haven’t been patient enough with yours;
I’ve been selfish even about your wedding, and
it won’t be as you like it; you’ll reproach
me in your heart, and I shall hate myself for it when
you are gone never to be my care and comfort any more.
And oh, my dear, my dear, what shall I
do without you?”
This unexpected demonstration from
her prosaic sister touched Sylvia more than the most
sentimental lamentations from another. It brought
to mind all the past devotion, the future solitude
of Prue’s life, and she clung about her neck
tearless but very tender.
“I never shall reproach you,
never cease to love and thank you for all you’ve
been to me, my dear old girl. You mustn’t
grieve over me, or think I shall forget you, for you
never shall be forsaken; and very soon I shall be
back, almost as much your Sylvia as ever. Mark
will live on one side, I shall live on the other,
and we’ll be merry and cosy together. And
who knows but when we are both out of your way you
will learn to think of yourself and marry also.”
At this Prue began to laugh hysterically,
and exclaimed, with more than her usual incoherency
“I must tell you, it was so
very odd! I didn’t mean to do so, because
you children would tease me; but now I will to make
you laugh, for it’s a bad omen to cry over a
bride, they say. My dear, that gouty Mr. MacGregor,
when I went in with some of my nice broth last week
(Hugh slops so, and he’s such a fidget, I took
it myself), after he had eaten every drop before my
eyes, wiped his mouth and asked me to marry him.”
“And you would not, Prue?”
“Bless me, child, how could
I? I must take care of my poor dear father, and
he isn’t pleasant in the least, you know, but
would wear my life out in a week. I really pitied
him, however, when I refused him, with a napkin round
his neck, and he tapped his waistcoat with a spoon
so comically, when he offered me his heart, as if
it were something good to eat.”
“How very funny! What made him do it, Prue?”
“He said he’d watched
the preparations from his window, and got so interested
in weddings that he wanted one himself, and felt drawn
to me I was so sympathetic. That means a good
nurse and cook, my dear. I understand these invalid
gentlemen, and will be a slave to no man so fat and
fussy as Mr. Mac, as my brother calls him. It’s
not respectful, but I like to refresh myself by saying
it just now.”
“Never mind the old soul, Prue,
but go and have your breakfast comfortably, for there’s
much to be done, and no one is to dress me but your
own dear self.”
At this Prue relapsed into the pathetic
again, and cried over her sister as if, despite the
omen, brides were plants that needed much watering.
The appearance of the afflicted Maria,
with her face still partially eclipsed by the chamomile
comforter, and an announcement that the waiters had
come and were “ordering round dreadful,”
caused Prue to pocket her handkerchief and descend
to turn the tables in every sense of the word.
The prospect of the wedding breakfast
made the usual meal a mere mockery. Every one
was in a driving hurry, every one was very much excited,
and nobody but Prue and the colored gentlemen brought
anything to pass. Sylvia went from room to room
bidding them good-by as the child who had played there
so long. But each looked unfamiliar in its state
and festival array, and the old house seemed to have
forgotten her already. She spent an hour with
her father, paid Mark a little call in the studio
where he was bidding adieu to the joys of bachelorhood,
and preparing himself for the jars of matrimony by
a composing smoke, and then Prue claimed her.
The agonies she suffered during that
long toilet are beyond the powers of language to portray,
for Prue surpassed herself and was the very essence
of fussiness. But Sylvia bore it patiently as
a last sacrifice, because her sister was very tender-hearted
still, and laughed and cried over her work till all
was done, when she surveyed the effect with pensive
satisfaction.
“You are very sweet, my dear,
and so delightfully calm, you really do surprise me.
I always thought you’d have hysterics on your
wedding-day, and got my vinaigrette all ready.
Keep your hands just as they are, with the handkerchief
and bouquet, it looks very easy and rich. Dear
me, what a spectacle I’ve made of myself!
But I shall cry no more, not even during the ceremony
as many do. Such displays of feeling are in very
bad taste, and I shall be firm, perfectly firm, so
if you hear any one sniff you’ll know it isn’t
me. Now I must go and scramble on my dress; first,
let me arrange you smoothly in a chair. There,
my precious, now think of soothing things, and don’t
stir till Geoffrey comes for you.”
Too tired to care what happened just
then, Sylvia sat as she was placed, feeling like a
fashion-plate of a bride, and wishing she could go
to sleep. Presently the sound of steps as fleet
as Mark’s but lighter, waked her up, and forgetting
orders, she rustled to the door with an expression
which fashion-plates have not yet attained.
“Good morning, little bride.”
“Good morning, bonny bridegroom.”
Then they looked at one another, and
both smiled. But they seemed to have changed
characters, for Moor’s usually tranquil face
was full of pale excitement; Sylvia’s usually
vivacious one, full of quietude, and her eyes wore
the unquestioning content of a child who accepts some
friendly hand, sure that it will lead it right.
“Prue desires me to take you
out into the upper hall, and when Mr. Deane beckons,
we are to go down at once. The rooms are full,
and Jessie is ready. Shall we go?”
“One moment: Geoffrey, are you quite happy
now?”
“Supremely happy!”
“Then it shall be the first
duty of my life to keep you so,” and with a
gesture soft yet solemn, Sylvia laid her hand in his,
as if endowing him with both gift and giver.
He held it fast and never let it go until it was his
own.
In the upper hall they found Mark
hovering about Jessie like an agitated bee, about
a very full-blown flower, and Clara Deane flapping
him away, lest he should damage the effect of this
beautiful white rose. For ten minutes, ages they
seemed, the five stood together listening to the stir
below, looking at one another, till they were tired
of the sight and scent of orange blossoms, and wishing
that the whole affair was safely over. But the
instant a portentous “Hem!” was heard,
and a white glove seen to beckon from the stair foot,
every one fell into a flutter. Moor turned paler
still, and Sylvia felt his heart beat hard against
her hand. She herself was seized with a momentary
desire to run away and say “No” again;
Mark looked as if nerving himself for immediate execution,
and Jessie feebly whispered
“Oh, Clara, I’m going to faint!”
“Good heavens, what shall I
do with her? Mark, support her! My darling
girl, smell this and bear up. For mercy sake do
something, Sylvia, and don’t stand there looking
as if you’d been married every day for a year.”
In his excitement, Mark gave his bride
a little shake. Its effect was marvellous.
She rallied instantly, with a reproachful glance at
her crumpled veil and a decided
“Come quick, I can go now.”
Down they went, through a wilderness
of summer silks, black coats, and bridal gloves.
How they reached their places none of them ever knew;
Mark said afterward, that the instinct of self preservation
led him to the only means of extrication that circumstances
allowed. The moment the Bishop opened his book,
Prue took out her handkerchief and cried steadily
through the entire ceremony, for dear as were the proprieties,
the “children” were dearer still.
At Sylvia’s desire, Mark was
married first, and as she stood listening to the sonorous
roll of the service falling from the Bishop’s
lips, she tried to feel devout and solemn, but failed
to do so. She tried to keep her thoughts from
wandering, but continually found herself wondering
if that sob came from Prue, if her father felt it
very much, and when it would be done. She tried
to keep her eyes fixed timidly upon the carpet as
she had been told to do, but they would rise and glance
about against her will.
One of these dérélictions
from the path of duty, nearly produced a catastrophe.
Little Tilly, the gardener’s pretty child, had
strayed in from among the servants peeping at a long
window in the rear, and established herself near the
wedding group, looking like a small ballet girl in
her full white frock and wreath pushed rakishly askew
on her curly pate. As she stood regarding the
scene with dignified amazement, her eye met Sylvia’s.
In spite of the unusual costume, the baby knew her
playmate, and running to her, thrust her head under
the veil with a delighted “Peep a bo!”
Horror seized Jessie, Mark was on the brink of a laugh,
and Moor looked like one fallen from the clouds.
But Sylvia drew the little marplot close to her with
a warning word, and there she stayed, quietly amusing
herself with “pooring” the silvery dress,
smelling the flowers and staring at the Bishop.
After this, all prospered. The
gloves came smoothly off, the rings went smoothly
on; no one cried but Prue, no one laughed but Tilly;
the brides were admired, the grooms envied; the service
pronounced impressive, and when it ended, a tumult
of congratulations arose.
Sylvia always had a very confused
idea of what happened during the next hour. She
remembered being kissed till her cheeks burned, and
shaken hands with till her fingers tingled; bowing
in answer to toasts, and forgetting to reply when
addressed by the new name; trying to eat and drink,
and discovering that everything tasted of wedding cake;
finding herself up stairs hurrying on her travelling
dress, then down stairs saying good by; and when her
father embraced her last of all, suddenly realizing
with a pang, that she was married and going away, never
to be little Sylvia any more.
Prue was gratified to her heart’s
content, for, when the two bridal carriages had vanished
with handkerchiefs flying from their windows, in answer
to the white whirlwind on the lawn, Mrs. Grundy, with
an approving smile on her aristocratic countenance,
pronounced this the most charming affair of the season.