Deep Summer
Page 38
Ann chuckled. “What time is it?”
“It’s mighty nigh bedtime. Not much use gettin’ up now.” Mammy set the tray on the bedside table and as Ann sat up to pour her coffee mammy plumped up the pillows behind her. “Miss Ann, you got business to be up befo’ de day is half wo’ out.”
“If you scold me,” said Ann, “I’m going to set you to picking cotton and let Lucile dress me.”
Having heard this awful threat before, mammy paid no attention and kept on scolding. No matter how hot the day mammy always looked crisp, in her starched blue calico and her tignon wrapped smartly around her head. “Is you gonta get up, Miss Ann?” she demanded finally.
“Right this minute. Get me a cold bath.”
“Humph,” said mammy, and waddled out.
Setting down her coffee-cup, Ann thrust her feet into the slippers that stood waiting on the bedstep and crossed over to the washstand, where she tossed up a handful of water to clear the cobwebs out of her eyes. She stood a moment looking at herself in the glass. Jerry said she spent half her life before a mirror, an accusation that Ann laughed at without troubling to deny it. Undoubtedly she was a nice-looking person; even in a rumpled nightgown and with her front hair in curl-papers she looked well enough to believe Denis’ admiring eyes. Ann drew back from the minor. She really ought to be making up her mind. Next week she would have her twentieth birthday. Twenty was a horrid age, so final; it put a period to one’s girlhood and dragged one across the line of being entirely grown up. She ought to get married. In her lifetime Ann had had very few decisions to make, and these she had made in whatever fashion seemed at the moment likely to cause the least trouble for herself. So far life had dealt with her very pleasantly, and certainly a marriage to Denis would be the best possible insurance against having to trouble her mind about anything whatever. As she stood before her mirror considering, it seemed an inviting prospect.
There was a knock at the door. “Yes?” called Ann, thinking it was mammy with the bath.
“Howdy,” said Jerry’s voice. He pushed the door inward. As he came in Ann took up a dressing-gown from a chair and pulled it around her. Jerry was carrying a box. “You finally out of bed?” he greeted.
“I sure am,” said Ann. She adored Jerry. He had been named Cyril for his father, but his mother had started calling him Jerry for convenience and nobody had changed it. Jerry was so delightful and so ugly, and he had so much good sense—she quarreled with him frequently, but she always respected his opinions.
“Present for you,” he was saying.
“What is it?”
“How should I know?” Jerry dispersed himself over a chair, looking more ungainly than ever against its slender legs and upholstery of skim-milk blue damask. “Came by hand. Something Denis sent over.”
“Oh,” said Ann. She took the box and sat on the floor, struggling with the strings. The lid came off and showed her a pile of white roses.
“Mighty pretty,” Jerry remarked. He asked abruptly, “Say listen, Ann, are you going to marry Denis or aren’t you?”
She sat up straight, cross-legged on the floor. “I don’t know. None of your business anyway.”
“Sorry, ma’am.” Jerry grinned and stretched his long arms. “Only I understand he’s wandering about full of woe, hinting darkly of blowing his brains out.”
“Oh, shut up. I wish people would stop laughing at me.”
Jerry started to whistle, puckering his big mouth grotesquely.
“You look like a monkey’s uncle,” said Ann. She got up and laid the roses on the mantelpiece. Their whiteness shone against the marble, making its veins like black shadows. “Sure enough, Jerry,” she exclaimed, “tell me what you think. Should I marry Denis?”
Jerry ceased whistling. He put his feet back on the floor and sat forward in the flimsy little chair, his hands laced between his knees. “Of course you should. He’s a grand fellow. I don’t know what you’re worrying about.”
“Maybe—” She looked down, untying the girdle of her dressing-gown and tying it again. “Maybe he’s too grand. We’ve always been, well, rather informal over here—but at Ardeith—I mean, Mrs. Denis Larne will be as much a symbol as a person. It might be rather—difficult.”
“I don’t think so. Not for you.”
She came a step nearer. “Do you think he’ll expect me to keep that house the way his mother does, poking in the linen-closets and counting the silver every week and standing around when they cut the fieldhands’ clothes to make sure they don’t waste any material—”
Jerry began to laugh. “Hell and high water, Ann, Denis isn’t utterly idiotic.”
“I reckon you mean to imply that I am.” Ann poked out her lower lip. “I know I’m not terribly clever but I’m not as empty in the head as everybody keeps saying,” she exclaimed. “I can play the piano and I dance beautifully as you’d know if you’d ever danced with me, and Madame Bertrand said my French accent was mighty near perfect and that was a big compliment because she thought all Americans were savages riding buffaloes, and I can embroider, and I do know how to be a hostess.”
“All of that,” said Jerry, nodding gravely, “sounds to me as if the good Lord has destined you to be Mrs. Denis Larne.”
Ann spread her arms along the mantel and rested her forehead on it. She wished her mother were alive to be consulted. Her mother had died when she was ten, and all she remembered was a lovable black-haired woman who scampered about with a merriment very unlike the quiet hauteur of Mrs. Larne.
At that instant the door opened and mammy panted in, carrying two big jugs of water. “Massa Jerry!” she exclaimed. “Ain’t you ’shame’, comin’ in here and yo’ young lady sister got no clothes on?”
Ann and Jerry turned laughing. Ann was relieved that mammy had come in; such deep thought as she had been trying to indulge in was difficult if continued too long. “She’s got on plenty of clothes,” Jerry was defending himself.
“She ain’t neither. And I got to give her a bath. Go on, Massa Jerry. Ain’t you got no business to tend to?”
“No business at all. You’d better leave me alone, mammy. I’ve been a good boy, riding the cotton all morning.
“Did you see the new overseer?” Ann asked.
“Sure, I saw him. Name’s Gilday. Big red face and got a Northern accent that twangs like a tuning-fork.”
“What’s he doing overseeing cotton if he comes from up North?”
“That wouldn’t matter. He says he’s been South quite awhile, and he does know about cotton. But I don’t think we’re going to keep him. He’s got a mean way of doing. Mean with the Negroes, and that always goes with a fellow who’s mean with the land.”
“Go on out, Massa Jerry,” mammy ordered again.
“All right, I’m going.” Jerry started to retire obediently. “What’ll you be doing, Ann?”
“I think I’ll ride down the road toward town.”
“You’ll bake your so-called brain in this heat.”
“I don’t care. I’ve got to do something, haven’t I?”
Without answering, Jerry pulled the door shut and went off down the stairs whistling. Mumbling about the ways of the young, mammy helped Ann out of her dressing-gown and nightgown and poured the cold water into the tub she produced from its hiding-place behind the armoire. Ann sat down in the water, shivered at the first shock of it and then stretched happily, sending teasing looks to mammy’s righteous countenance. Mammy grumbled incessantly, but she loved Ann very much; Ann had nursed at mammy’s bosom when she was a baby, and had been washed and dressed and scolded by her ever since, and mammy would have cut the heart out of anybody who made such remarks about her white child as she herself made every day.
After she was finally dressed Ann looked herself over in the mirror again, hoping she might meet Denis on the road, for she looked unusually well. Her green riding-
habit, spreading around her on the floor, gave her an elongated appearance like an image in the bowl of a spoon, but above the waistline it fitted her figure trimly. One reason Ann liked to ride was that she knew there was no severer test of one’s figure than a riding-dress, and her own stood the test so well. Mammy had done her hair in curls on her shoulders, and she wore a pert little green hat with a plume that curved down to kiss her cheek just below where the dimple would be if she chanced to smile at somebody. Ann pulled on her gauntlets, accepted her riding-crop from mammy’s hands and tossed her skirt over her arm to make it short enough for walking.
The house was very quiet as she went downstairs. Evidently the colonel was still riding the cotton, and Jerry must have gone out too. Ann went across the back gallery to the kitchen-house. Half a dozen pickaninnies, clustering around the kitchen door in hope of handouts, shouted “Howdy, Miss Ann,” as she approached. “Hello,” said Ann, grinning upon them and reflecting that she’d at least make a nice mother, for she adored children. Going in to see the cook, she received an elaborate scolding for being unwilling to wait for dinner, but eventually was given some hot biscuits spread with peach preserves. Munching, Ann went back through the house to where black Plato waited by the carriage-block.
Plato helped her mount and got on his own horse to follow her. They rode to the end of the avenue, where the wide iron gates stood open. A plantation wagon was about to pass. As Ann approached, a white man astride a mule alongside the wagon yelled at the Negro driver.
“Hey, you dirty black nigger! Let the lady go by, damn your hide!”
Ann winced. She hated to hear people howl at Negroes. As she slowed her horse she spoke distantly.
“I can pass quite easily, thank you.”
The white man gave her a searching impertinent look, his eyes going up and down her as if she were standing up at the market for sale. He had a flat red face and little nasty black eyes, like a side of beef with two raisins stuck in it. As he took off his hat she observed that his fingers were thick, and there were drops of sweat among the hairs on the back of his hand. Bowing with what was meant to be an ingratiating smile, he said,
“My respects, ma’am. Could I make so bold as to ask if I’m having the honor to speak to Miss Sheramy?”
His manner was oily, and he talked through his nose in the fashion of uncultured people from New England and upstate New York.
“Yes, I am Miss Sheramy,” she returned, and tried to get by him, but he had moved his mule inconveniently in her way.
“Howdy do, ma’am,” he said, bowing again. “I’m Gilday, come to oversee your pa’s cotton. Pleased to make your acquaintance, I’m sure.” He wet his lips, his eyes going over her again. Ann started and felt her nostrils quivering with disgust.
“Will you please let me get by?” she exclaimed.
“Why sure, ma’am. Always your servant, ma’am.” He moved the mule a trifle, and without answering she struck her horse and rushed past. Though she was going away from him as fast as she could she still had a feeling that his eyes were on her, stroking her up and down. Ann shivered and felt nauseated. So that was the new overseer. Well, he wouldn’t be here long. A suggestion to Jerry or her father of how he had examined her and Gilday would be off the plantation before they got in the crop.
As she went around a turn in the road she slowed her horse. The road lay between the cottonfields, with big trees edging it and hanging long streamers of gray moss above her head. Far away across the fields she could see the green slope of the levee curving with the river. How fast the cotton was growing! How fast everything grew here on these thick velvet acres under the levee. The cotton with its bursting bolls and dangling pink and white blossoms seemed so rich and still, so serenely untroubled by the low-down ways of overseers. She felt her angry spirit relaxing before the quiet peace of the land.
As Plato caught up with her he spoke.
“Miss Ann?”
“Yes?”
“Dat new overseer. He ain’t no ’count.”
“Oh, don’t talk about him,” said Ann. “He won’t last long.”
“No’m.” Plato dropped behind her again and she rode on. The highway wound like a sun-dappled gray ribbon under the trees. She felt pleasantly peaceful again, and she pushed Gilday into the back of her head to wait there until she could tell Jerry what a disgusting creature he was. In spite of meeting him, she was glad she had come outdoors. The abundant life of the midsummer fields always delighted her. The pomegranate trees that marked the division between Silverwood and Ardeith were flaming with crimson blooms. As she passed the line she heard a voice calling her name, and there was a flutter in her throat as she looked around and saw Denis riding through his cotton toward her.
Ann drew back on the bridle and waited for him to reach the highway. How splendid he looked as he rode among the high blossoming cotton plants. Denis was tall, with a body all compact bone and muscle, broad shoulders, narrow waist, long hard legs. He wore neither coat nor hat, and his reddish sun-bleached hair blew merrily in the wind above his strong aquiline face, the modeling of which was accented by the line of beard trimmed to razor-thinness down each side of his face and only widening a trifle where it met the jawline.
“This is luck!” Denis exclaimed as he joined her. “How are you, and where are you going?”
“Fine, and I’m not going anywhere,” she returned. Denis regarded her with frank pleasure, and thinking how different this was from the lecherous look of Gilday she thought she had never realized before what a thoroughly decent person Denis was. He was saying,
“You look perfectly lovely, and cool as ice-cream.”
“Thank you.” She smiled with more admiration of him than she would have liked for him to guess. “And thank you,” she added, “for the roses you sent this morning. They’re lovely.”
They were riding together at a leisurely pace along the road. “I looked out of the window and saw them as the sun was coming up,” said Denis, “and they looked like you.”
“What have you been doing?” she asked.
“Seeing to the cotton. It’s opening faster than usual. How’s your father’s new overseer?”
“He’s perfectly abominable,” Ann said with an inward shudder. “I’m going to tell Jerry and father I don’t like him. Are you—” she fumbled for a subject removed from Gilday—“are you getting your cypress cut in spite of the fever scare?”
“Oh yes. There wasn’t very much fever, and it’s over now. I was very sorry about it.”
“So was I,” said Ann. “I felt a little bit responsible in a way. I met that Upjohn girl in the park the day you stopped to order the signs put up, and I told her about the work, and yesterday when I saw her at Ardeith she told me her brothers had died in the camp.”
“But that wasn’t your fault, Ann!”
“No, but I felt dreadful all the same. I wanted to ask you if you knew where she lived. Maybe she’s in want, or something.”
“Don’t bother about it,” Denis said soothingly. “I know she’s not in want. I paid indemnity to the families of all the men who died.”
“You did?” she exclaimed with admiring astonishment. “Oh dear, you make me feel so much better! That’s really marvelous of you, Denis. Not many men are so charitable.”
But praise always embarrassed Denis and with a deprecating little laugh he switched the conversation. “Anyway, the fever’s passed and I’ll get the cypress cut before the fogs set in. I’m glad to have sold that timber. Now I can put the land into rice.”
“You’re very astute,” she observed, thinking how few men of Denis’ youth could be trusted with the responsibility of a plantation like Ardeith. Most of them would have been glad to let the banks take care of it while they put on airs at watering-places.
“Not astute,” he returned smiling, “just ambitious. Here we are,” he added, as they reached the gates of
Ardeith. “Come on in for awhile.”
She agreed, and their horses entered the avenue. Ann felt unreasonably happy. Denis’ cool self-assurance was so refreshing compared to the formal insincerity of most young gentlemen. She looked with increasing approval at his lean young figure and patrician face. They reached the house, and he held her horse while she dismounted. The air was thick with the fragrance of gardenias blooming around the steps. Denis picked one for her and she thrust it into the buttonhole of her lapel.
“You’re very lovely,” he said, half under his breath lest Plato hear him.
She smiled. Denis called to Plato that he could get something to eat from the kitchen while he waited, and he and Ann went up on the gallery. “Shall I order us some lemonade?” he asked her.
“Why yes. And tell them to put in lots of ice.”
“All right.”
When he had left her Ann stood a moment on the gallery, thoughtfully striking one of the columns with her crop. Though she had visited Ardeith a hundred times in her life, it seemed to her that she had never seen its legended magnificence as clearly as she was seeing it this morning, now that she was seriously considering the probability that she would spend the rest of her life here. Dalroy, the town below the plantations, was often referred to as a city of palaces, and the road leading from Dalroy into the countryside was one of the noblest residential streets in America, but there was no other house along its length that could equal this one.
A wrought-iron fence with wide gates at front and back divided the estate from the plantation fields. Many years ago the Larnes had brought a landscape artist from France to plan the gardens—mimosa, magnolias, myrtles, banana trees, a dozen kinds of palm, roses and azaleas and calla lilies and gardenias, fire-colored cannas and crimson hibiscus with long golden-feathered tongues, camellias, jasmine, oleanders, and lavender water-hyacinths with bulby stems. The house had been built of cypress beams cut from the Ardeith lands, for cypress is a wood that will outlast many lifetimes. Around its four verandas stood vast Doric columns. Over the double door in front was a cut glass fanlight, and the house stood with its back to the river so the fanlight would catch the morning sun like a rainbow. The great hall ran through to another double door opening on the back veranda.