<h2><SPAN name="XV" id="XV"></SPAN>XV</h2>
<h2>A REAL WEDDING</h2>
<p>It looks as if everybody who knows
Miss Katherine wants her to be married
from their house. Her brothers
want her to be married from theirs.
Her aunt, Mrs. Powhatan Bloodgood,
who lives in Loudon County, and
whose husband is as rich as a real lord, begs
her to be married in hers; and everybody in
Yorkburg—I mean the coat-of-arms everybodies—has
invited her to have the wedding
in their home.</p>
<p>But she just smiles and says no to them all.
Says she is going to be married from her house,
which is the Orphan Asylum, though the ceremony
will be at the church. It's going to be
in the morning at twelve o'clock, so they can
take the two-o'clock train for Richmond and
go on to New York.</p>
<p>Miss Katherine wants it to be quiet, but it
can't be quiet. There's nothing on human
legs that can use them who won't be at the
church to see that wedding take place.</p>
<p>Everybody has been paying her a lot of
attention of late. It's real strange what a difference
a man makes in a marriage, even if he
isn't noticed much in person at the time. If
he's rich and prominent, everybody is so pleasant
and sociable you'd think they were real
intimate. If he's just good and poor, few take
notice.</p>
<p>When Miss Vickie Toones married Mr. Joe
Blake they didn't get hardly any presents.
They had a lot of dead relations who used to
be rich and haughty, but their living ones are
as poor as the people they didn't used to know,
and hardly anybody gave them anything handsome.</p>
<p>Miss Katherine's presents are just amazing,
and my eyes are blistered by the shine of them.
I didn't know before such things were in the
world. People say Uncle Parke has made a
lot of money in some mines out West, besides
being a doctor, and that he doesn't have to
work. "But a man who doesn't work hasn't
any excuse for living," I heard him tell somebody,
and maybe it's so, though I don't know.</p>
<p>I don't know anything these days. I'm the
shape and size of Mary Cary, but I see and
hear so many things I never saw and heard
before that I'd like to borrow a dog to see if
he knows whether I am myself or somebody
else. And another thing I'd like to find out
is, How do other people know so much?</p>
<p>Mrs. Philip Creekmore has a cousin whose
wife's brother lives in the same place Uncle
Parke does, and Miss Amelia Cokeland wrote
out there and found out all about him. But
it doesn't matter whether she truly knows anything
or not. Miss Webb says she is like those
fish scientists. Give her one bone, and she can
tell you all the rest. She's had a grand time
telling more things about Uncle Parke than
Miss Katherine will ever learn in this world.</p>
<p>My dress is finished. I'm to be Maiden of
Honor. There are no bridesmaids. Think of
it! Me, Mary Cary, once just flesh and blood
mechanical, now a living creature who is to
wear a white Swiss dress and a sash with pink
rosebuds on it, and walk up the church aisle
with my arms full of roses. And—magnificent
gloriousness! most beautiful of all!—every girl
in this Asylum is to have a white dress and a
sash the color she likes best to wear to the
wedding. That's my wedding gift to the girls.
Uncle Parke gave it to me.</p>
<p>Miss Katherine's California brother and his
wife have come. I don't like them. He looks
bored to death, and chews the end of his
mustache till you wonder there's any left. As
for her, she's the limit. Maybe that's what's
the matter with him.</p>
<p>She seems to be afraid some of us might
touch her, and she stares as if we were figures
in a china-shop. No more says good-morning
than if we were.</p>
<p>She wears seven rings on one hand and four
on another, and rustles so when she walks she
sounds like a churner out of order. If she isn't
a bulgarian born, she's bought herself into
being one, for she oozes money. It's the only
thing you think of when she's around. You
can actually smell it. I think Miss Katherine
is sorry they came. She don't say it, of course,
but plenty of things don't have to be said.</p>
<p>Uncle Parke came last night, bringing his
best friend and some others. The best one is
Doctor Willwood. He's fine. He and I are
going to come down the aisle together. I
reach up to his elbow, and he says he may
put me in his pocket. I wish he would. I
know I will be that frightened I'd be glad to
get in it.</p>
<p>He wants to know all about Yorkburg and
the people, and to-day Miss Bray let me take
him all around the town and show him the
antiquities. He asked her. I had on the white
dress Miss Katherine gave me last summer, and
I looked real nice, for I had on my company
manners, too.</p>
<p>You see, he was from the West, and had
never been to Virginia before; and when a man
comes such a long way, one ought to put on
company manners and be extra polite. It
wouldn't be right not to. I put mine on, and
I guess I did do a lot of talking. I'm by nature
a talker, just like I can't help skipping when
my heart is happy and nothing hurts.</p>
<p>I told him about all the places we came to,
and about who lived in them, except the Alden
house which the Reagans now possess. When
we got there he stopped in front of it.</p>
<p>"My!" he said, "that's a beautiful old place!
Whose is it?"</p>
<p>"Some people by the name of Reagan live
there," I said. "I don't know them." And
I started on.</p>
<p>I came near forgetting, and saying, "That
is Alden house, where my grandfather used to
live," but I remembered in time. I don't acknowledge
my grandfather, and I knew somebody
else would tell him Uncle Parke was born
and lived there until he went West.</p>
<p>We had a grand time. We stayed out over
four hours, and I forgot all about dinner. He
didn't want to go in when I suddenly remembered
and told him I must, and then he said
I was going to take dinner with him at the
Colonial. He'd asked Miss Bray, and it was
all right. And that's what I did. Took dinner
with him at the Colonial!</p>
<p>I tell you, Mary Martha Cary had what you
could truly call a Time. And Doctor Willwood
said he never had enjoyed a morning in his life
like that one. Laugh? I never heard a man
laugh so hearty. Half the time I couldn't tell
why. I'd be real serious, but he'd look at me
and almost die laughing. I bet I said some
things I oughtn't, but I don't remember, and
I couldn't take them back if I did.</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>It's over. The wedding is over. Everything
is after a while in this life, even death;
and time is the only thing that keeps on just
the same.</p>
<p>They're gone. Gone on their bridal tour,
and the happiness that's left Yorkburg would
run a family for a long life. I wish everybody
could have seen that wedding. It's going to
be long remembered, for the earth and sky,
and birds and flowers, and trees and sunshine
all took part. Everything tried to help, and
as for blessings on them, they took away
enough for the human race. But now it's over
I feel like my first balloon looked when I stuck
a pin in it to see what would happen. I saw.</p>
<p>I had a telegram from them to-day. It said:</p>
<blockquote><p>We sail at eleven o'clock. Love to all, and hearts
full for Mary Cary.</p>
<p>UNCLE PARKE and AUNT KATHERINE.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Well, she's my Aunt now. That's fixed, anyhow,
and the marriage that fixed it was a
beauty. Every bird in Yorkburg was singing,
every flower was blooming, and every heart
was blessing; and when those fifty-eight
orphans walked in, all in white and two by
two, every hand was dropping roses. And that
is what each girl was wishing: Roses, roses all
her life!</p>
<p>After the ushers, I came in all alone by myself;
that is, my shape did. Mary was really
inside the altar looking at me coming up slow
and easy, and Martha was ordering me to keep
step to the music. "All right, I'm doing my
best," I was saying to both. And I was, but
I was thankful when I got to where I could
stop, for my legs were so excited I wouldn't
have been surprised if they'd turned and run
out.</p>
<p>Behind me came Miss Katherine, on her Army
brother's arm. He's as nice as the other isn't.
He hasn't got the money-making disease.
When Uncle Parke and Doctor Willwood came
out of the vestry-room Uncle Parke gave me
one look, just one, but it was so understanding
I winked back, and then he came farther down
and stood by Miss Katherine like she was his
until kingdom come, forever more. Amen.</p>
<p>Then the minister began, and the music was
so soft you could hear the birds outside. The
breeze through the window blew right on Miss
Katherine's veil, and I was so busy watching
it I didn't know the time had come to pray,
and I hardly got my head bent before I had
to take it up again. Then the minister was
through, and I was walking down the aisle
with Doctor Willwood, and in just about two
minutes more we were back at the Asylum,
and it was all over—the thing we'd been looking
forward to so long.</p>
<p>The Asylum looked real nice that morning.
There were bushels and bushels of flowers in it,
for everybody in town who had any sent them.
Flowers cover a multitude of poverties. The
reception was grand. That California Richness
called it a breakfast, but that was pure style.
Yorkburg don't have breakfast between twelve
and one, and everybody else called it a reception.
As for the people at it, there were more
kinds than were ever in one dining-room before;
and every single one had a good time.
Every one.</p>
<p>You see, Miss Katherine, besides being who
she was, was what she was. Having known a
great deal about all sorts of people since being
a nurse, and finding out that the plain and the
fancy, the rich and the poor, those who've had
a chance and those who haven't, are a heap
more alike than people think, she said she was
going to invite to her wedding whoever she
wanted. And she did.</p>
<p>There wasn't one invited who didn't come:
the bent and the broke and the blind (that's
true, for old Mr. Forbes is bent, and Mrs. Rowe's
hip was broken and she uses crutches, and
Bobbie Anderson is blind); and the old, that's
the high-born coat-of-arms kind; and the new,
that's the Reagans and Hinchmans and some
others, and Mr. Pinkert the shoemaker, who,
she says, is a gentleman if he don't remember
his grandfather's name; and Miss Ginnie Grant,
who made her underclothes—all were there.
All. It was a different wedding from any that
was ever before in Yorkburg, and if any feelings
were hurt it was because they were trying
to be. Some feelings are kept for that purpose.</p>
<p>Of course, Mrs. Christopher Pryor had remarks
to make. "Katherine always was too
independent," I heard her tell Miss Queechy
Spence. "But I don't believe in anything of
the kind. If you once let people get out of
the place they were born in, there'll be no doing
anything with them. You mark me, if this
wedding don't make trouble. Some of these
people will expect to be invited to my house
next." And she took another helping of salad
that was enough for three. She's an awful eater.</p>
<p>"Oh no, they won't," said Miss Queechy.
"They know better than to expect anything
like that of you," and she gave me a little wink
and walked off with Mr. Morris, who's her beau.
I went off, too. It isn't safe for Martha Cary
to be too near Mrs. Pryor, for Mary never
knows what she may do.</p>
<p>And, oh, you ought to have seen Miss Bray!
She was stepsister to the Queen of Sheba.
Solomon never had a wife arrayed like she was
on that twenty-seventh day of June. I believe
she is engaged to Doctor Rudd. I really do.</p>
<p>You see, after people got over teasing him
about that make-believe wedding, he got to
thinking about her. He's bound to know he
isn't much of a man, and no young girl would
have him, so lately he's been ambling 'round
Miss Bray. If he can stand her, he'll do well
to get her. She's a grand manager on little.</p>
<p>He was at the wedding, too. His beard was
flowinger and redder, and the part in the back
of his head shininger than ever. He had an
elegant time. He was so full of himself you
would have thought it was his own party.</p>
<p>Uncle Parke and Aunt Katherine have been
on the ocean three days. I wonder if they are
sick. I don't think I will go to Europe with
my children's father. I was seasick once on
land, and there wasn't a human being I even
liked that day. It would be bad to find out
so soon that the very sight of your husband
makes you ill. After you know him better,
you could tell him to go off somewhere; but at
first I suppose you have to be polite.</p>
<p>They were awful nice about wanting me to
go with them. The bride and groom were.
They said I had to, and they were so surprised
when I said I couldn't that they didn't think
I meant it. When they found out I did, they
were dreadfully worried, and didn't know what
to do next. There wasn't anything to do, and
here I am. Here I'm going to be, too, until
the first day of October, when they will be back,
and we will start for the West, for Michigan.</p>
<p>I'm going to like Michigan. I've decided
before I get there. I know there will be something
to like, there always is in every place
and every person, Miss Katherine says, if you
just will see it instead of the all wrong. I was
by nature born critical. There are a lot of
things I don't like in this world, but there's no
use in mentioning them. As for opinions, if
they're not pleasant they'd better be kept to
yourself. I learned that early in life and forget
it every day.</p>
<p>I'm going to try and think Michigan is a
grand place, and next to Virginia the best to
live in. They couldn't, <i>couldn't</i> expect me to
think it was like Virginia!</p>
<p>Perhaps, after a while, Uncle Parke may come
back. For over two hundred years his people
have lived here, and sometimes I believe he
feels just like that dog did who had his call in
him. The call of the place that the first dogs
came from, that wild, free place, and I think
Uncle Parke wants to come back, wants to be
with his own people.</p>
<p>Out West is very convenient, though, Peggy
Green says. She has an aunt who used to live
out there, and she told her you could do as you
choose in almost everything. If husbands and
wives didn't like each other, there was no
trouble in getting new ones. They could get
a divorce and marry somebody else.</p>
<p>I wonder what a divorce is. We've never
had one in Yorkburg, and I never knew until
the other day that when you got married it
wasn't really truly permanent. I thought it
was for ever and ever and until death parted.
The prayer-book says so, and I thought it
meant it.</p>
<p>By the time I'm grown I guess I'll find a lot
of things are said and not meant. Maybe when
I find out I will be all the gladder to come back
to Yorkburg, where people don't seem to know
much about these new-fashioned things. Where
they still believe in the old ones, and just live
on and don't hurry, and are kind and polite and
dear, if they are slow and queer and proud a
little bit.</p>
<p>It makes me have such a funny feeling in
my throat when I think about going away.
I'm trying not to think. But I do. Think all
the time. I want this summer to be the happiest
the children ever had. It's the last for
me. That sounds consumptive, but I don't
mean that way. I mean it's my last Orphan
summer.</p>
<p>Of course, I'm glad, awful glad; but I'm so
sorry the other children aren't going, too. For
them it's prunes and blue-and-white calico to
look forward to until they're eighteen. Year
in and year out, prunes and calico.</p>
<p>But maybe it isn't. If Mary Cary will do
her part something nicer may happen. She
doesn't know yet the way to make it happen,
having nothing much to send back but love.
Somebody says love finds the way. Oh, Mary
Cary, you and Love <i>must</i> find a way!</p>
<h3>THE END</h3>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />