Delta Wedding
By Eudora Welty
3.5/5
()
About this ebook
From one of the most treasured American writers, winner of a National Book Award and Pulitzer Prize, comes Delta Wedding, a vivid and charming portrait of Southern life. Set in 1923, the story is centered on the Fairchilds, a big and clamorous family, who live on a plantation in the Mississippi delta. They are in the midst of planning their daughter’s wedding when a nine-year-old relative, Laura McRaven, whose mother has just died, comes to visit.
Drama leads to drama, revelation to revelation, in a novel that is “nothing short of wonderful” (The New Yorker). The result is a sometimes-riotous view of a Southern family, and the parentless child who learns to become one of them.
Eudora Welty
EUDORA WELTY (1909–2001) was born in Jackson, Mississippi, and attended the Mississippi State College for Women, the University of Wisconsin, and Columbia University (where she studied advertising). In addition to short fiction, Welty wrote novels, novellas, essays, and reviews, and was the winner of both the National Book Award and the Pulitzer Prize.
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Reviews for Delta Wedding
143 ratings9 reviews
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5I found this delightful. I listened to this a few years ago when I worked at a public library. It was my first Welty story...and my last. I have not been able to get into any others since then. I was enchanted with the people on the old homeplace/plantation. Their references to their former lives...The way they came together for holidays and the general decadent, overgrown feeling. I confuse it now with The Christmas Gift by Ferrol Sams.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Reading Delta Wedding is like attending a family wedding and meeting all your distant relatives for the first time. You have a sense of belonging and, at the same time, a sense of being an outsider. Everyone seems to know everyone so much better than you do and you're rushing to catch up on everyone's story and sort out who is who. This is a relatively short book, but perhaps because she is primarily a short-story writer, Eudora Welty has packed this book so densely with character and detail, you will feel as though you have read a family saga of many hundred pages. The delta is recreated in such detail that you can feel the humid, misty breezes and hear the crickets chirping. The young girls through whose perspective you watch the proceedings are enchanting.
Struggling to keep track of the characters forced me to go back and re-read parts of the book at times, which was, in fact, helpful in discovering important overlooked details. This is a book you can re-read many times always discovering something or someone new. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5not too bad, a bit long-winded. i like it for the southerness, i think girls will like it better for everything else.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Though the writing was lush, and the characterizations apt, the novel did show the flaws that you might have expected from a first-time author.The tone of the first chapter, from the point of view of a young child, was excellent. But she was not able to construct a story line that could be told from Laura's point of view, and had to flit from character to character to continue the narrative. There was no character development, no revelations, no resolution, no explanation of any of the odd (though interesting) characters that drifted through the delta.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5St. Barts 2013 #3 - An ok book at best for me....certainly interesting at times, but overwhelmingly full of characters that were challenging to keep track of - are they siblings or cousins, which generation, and alive or dead? But I suppose this helped us feel a little like the nine-year-old Laura showing up for a big family wedding at Shellmound Plantation. Certainly an interesting portrait of the life on a 1920's Mississippi cotton plantation, specifically a huge self absorbed wealthy family surrounded by meddling sisters, cousins and aunts. I appreciated the efforts of a few of them to possibly question their values as a clan, but it was slow and tedious more than enlightening. (Oh, there were several appropriate references to some cool old cars of the time which always sparks a little something in me!) My guess is that this portrayal may be frighteningly spot-on, giving this book a far greater stature than I can give it personally. My complete lack of familiarity with the subject matter in a book usually does not preclude me from getting caught up nonetheless, but this never got a bite in me at all.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5I felt like I needed to read something of Welty's; so much has been made of her writing. This book paints a vivid picture and has very interesting characters. But I really felt like the story itself dragged.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5A tender look at a young girl thrust among her brood of colorful, yet loving, relations on the eve of a wedding. The relationships between all are explored including that of George who is married both to his family and to Robbie, a young woman who wants George to put her first. This family's love is almost too much, but somehow falls short of becoming a stranglehold -- but just barely.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Delta Wedding is the story of the Fairchild family at the time of daughter Dabney’s wedding. The Fairchilds are a wealthy early 20th-century Mississippi Delta family; Dabney is marrying their overseer, Troy. That Dabney is 17 and Troy in his 30s, and that she is marrying beneath her station, don’t seem to bother anyone – at least not enough to do something about it. In another author’s hands this might be the central conflict of this novel, but Eudora Welty has something else in mind. This is primarily a portrait of a family at a certain place and time, how each person relates to one another, and how class informs their world view.While Welty’s prose gripped me from the first page, as her characters tumbled off the page I found I had to concentrate more than usual just to keep up. Characters are given little introduction and it took quite a while for me to piece together the family relationships, and distinguish the servants from family members. Dabney is one of the least complex characters; her uncle George, on the other hand, is an enigma. He is different from the rest and held on a pedestal, for reasons that are never entirely clear. The plot – events in the days leading up to Dabney’s wedding – is secondary to the everyday interactions between people, and the composite picture this creates.Although I can’t quite say I enjoyed Delta Wedding, it left me with a respect and appreciation for Eudora Welty and a desire to read more of her work.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5It's 1923, and nine-year-old Laura McRaven is taking the train down to visit her mother's family in the Delta for the wedding of one of her cousins. As preparations for the big day ramp up, family secrets circulate and emotions run high.Does anyone ever read Eudora Welty and immediately comprehend exactly what she's getting at? Because I find her immensely challenging. The writing is beautiful, but sometimes I have to read a sentence multiple times to untangle the syntax -- and there were a few times when I basically shrugged and moved on! Add to that the particularly Southern vocabulary (for instance, I had to look up "joggling boards"), and characters with names like Battle, Dabney, and Lady Clare (many of which repeat over generations, so they may be talking about an existing character or her deceased great-great-aunt), and the result is a slow-reading text, languid as a Mississippi summer.Personally, I would have liked this book better if it had remained in Laura's perspective the whole way through. Instead, the point of view shifted frequently, sometimes disconcertingly, from one character to another, and that character might get lost in reminiscences for several pages before picking back up in the middle of a scene. There's not a great deal of plot here ("a southern family prepares for a big wedding" about sums it up), so there's nothing to pull the story along.I did enjoy parts of this book -- the characterization was strong, and of course the setting shines. I probably won't keep or reread it, but I'm glad I made the effort.
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Book preview
Delta Wedding - Eudora Welty
First Mariner Books edition 2020
Copyright 1946, 1945 by Eudora Welty
Copyright renewed 1974, 1973 by Eudora Welty
Introduction copyright © 2020 by Anne Tyler
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
For information about permission to reproduce selections from this book, write to trade.permissions@hmhco.com or to Permissions, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company, 3 Park Avenue, 19th Floor, New York, New York 10016.
hmhbooks.com
The Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Welty, Eudora, 1909–2001, author. | Tyler, Anne, writer of introduction.
Title: Delta wedding / Eudora Welty ; introduction by Anne Tyler.
Description: First Mariner Books edition. | Boston : Mariner Books, Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2020.
Identifiers: LCCN 2020009621 (print) | LCCN 2020009622 (ebook) | ISBN 9780358212522 (trade paperback) | ISBN 9780547538686 (ebook)
Subjects: LCSH: Weddings—Fiction. | Plantation life—Mississippi—Fiction. | Delta (Miss. : Region)—Fiction. | Domestic fiction.
Classification: LCC PS3545.E6 D4 2020 (print) | LCC PS3545.E6 (ebook) | DDC 813/.52—dc23
LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2020009621
LC ebook record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2020009622
Cover painting © Gracia Lam
Cover design by Mark R. Robinson
eISBN 978-0-547-53868-6
v5.0520
To
JOHN ROBINSON
Introduction
I first came upon Eudora Welty’s writing when I was fourteen years old, living on the edge of a tobacco farm outside Raleigh, North Carolina. Her short story The Wide Net
somehow landed in my lap, and it mentioned in passing a girl named Edna Earle, who was not a very quick thinker. As one character put it, Edna could ponder all day on how the little tail of the ‘C’ got through the ‘L’ in a Coca-Cola sign.
Well. I sat up pretty sharply, let me tell you.
I knew a lot of Edna Earles, as it happened. I just hadn’t realized you could write about them. I had thought I could never be a writer myself because I had no experience of anyone royal, or historical, or given to literary-sounding discourse.
So I guess you could say Eudora Welty changed my life.
I went on to read every book she’d written, and then each new one as it came out. I loved all of them, but most especially her novel Delta Wedding and her novel-like collection of stories called The Golden Apples. Those I read over and over. I read them so many times that often, as I began reading, whole paragraphs would return to me that I didn’t even know I’d memorized, like those pieces of past dreams that float back up to the surface when you set your head on your pillow the following night.
But that was long ago, and bit by bit my grown-up life intervened and it was all I could do to find the time to read current-day writers, let alone the old ones. The edition of Delta Wedding that’s in my bookcase now was published in 1982, which suggests to me that I’d lost track of my original copy at some point along the way, snatched up the new one when it was reissued, and then after one more rereading, at most, had shelved it for good.
Which makes it nearly forty years since I’ve last read Delta Wedding.
One sad conclusion I’ve reached as I’ve grown older is that books are very seldom truly timeless. The Catcher in the Rye, for instance, hit me like a thunderbolt when I was a high school junior, but when I tried it again just last year, I found it so annoying that I abandoned it after page three. I won’t offer further examples for fear of shaking other readers’ long-cherished opinions, but let’s just say that by now I’ve reached the point where I’m scared to reread any book I’ve loved because I can’t face the disillusionment.
You can imagine, therefore, how apprehensive I was when I finally reopened that 1982 edition of Delta Wedding.
The book begins with a train ride. It’s September 10, 1923, and nine-year-old Laura McRaven is traveling to a cousin’s wedding in the Mississippi Delta, where her late mother’s people live. The scenery along the way is described at length and very minutely, but it takes no time at all for the reader to downshift from jet speed to Yellow Dog speed (as the Yazoo-Delta train is fondly referred to). Each of the Yellow Dog’s windows is propped open with a stick of kindling. A butterfly outside one window seems to be outpacing the train. The engineer makes an unscheduled stop beside a field to pick a bouquet of goldenrod.
Then all at once, the arrival. The explosion, more like it. Cousins are jumping up and down on the platform, five or six of them, although it reads more like a couple of dozen, somehow. A baby is thrust into Laura’s face to be kissed. (Kiss Bluet!
) Her suitcases are piled in the Studebaker (Let Bluet drive!
), and the baby is stood between Cousin Orrin’s knees at the wheel. (Orrin was fourteen—a wonderful driver.
) They take off for home in a cloud of dust.
And so it begins.
Unlike most plots, which could be diagrammed as a single straight thread, this one is more like a scarf—a billowing abundance of fabric, splashed here and there with bright colors and a riot of extravagant flowers. But not till we’re immersed in the Fairchilds’ household do we fully appreciate the control that Welty exercises over it all. I suppose I could stop and count the actual number of relatives she’s assembled here, but let’s just say that there are throngs, and yet she manages to make each one unforgettably distinct. Attention: that is her salient strength. Her attention is unswerving and narrowed to a pinpoint. She never once just vaguely flaps a hand and says, of a character, Oh, well, you get the general idea.
The bride’s mother happens to be holding a silver goblet she has rescued from the children’s sandbox. An aunt’s soft plump shoulders came in view like more bosoms in the back, over her corset.
And How is Mary Denis’s little new baby?
a small boy asks out of the blue. Is it still a boy?
Even the house receives its share of loving attention—the big red Heatrola in the hall, the Tinker-Toy windmill spinning next to a priceless vase, the almost comically extensive collection of firearms on a gilt and marble table. (That was Somebody’s gun—he had killed twelve bears every Saturday with it. And Somebody’s pistol in the lady’s workbox; he had killed a man with it in self-defense at Cotton Gin Port, and of the deed itself he had never brought himself to say a word; he had sent the pistol ahead of him by two Indian bearers to his wife, who had put it in this box and held her peace, a lesson to girls.
) A table lamp consists of three white marble Graces holding the shade in their six arms, with dust unreachable in the folds of their draperies and the dents of their eyes.
When the clock strikes two, everyone knows it’s eight.
The title says it all: this novel covers a wedding, and ostensibly nothing else—the several days leading up to it, the ceremony itself, and the immediate aftermath. But so much more is going on besides, all around the edges. Uncle George’s wife has run away from him; a strange young woman is found wandering in the woods; two railroad fatalities are narrowly averted while a third is not. And come to think of it, the approaching marriage itself holds out the strong possibility of future complications—the bride just seventeen years old, the groom exactly twice her age and merely an overseer at that, hailing from extremely backwoods people.
It’s as messy a story, in fact, as real life is.
And it’s a messy family. You’re all a spoiled, stuck-up family that thinks nobody else is really in the world!
Uncle George’s wife accuses them. But they are! You’re just one plantation.
And then, most damningly, You’re just loving yourselves in each other—yourselves over and over again!
You will be wanting to know, though: has the book withstood the passage of time?
It has, I’m happy to say. Oh, the modern reader can’t fail to notice the leisurely pace, so different from the pace of today’s novels. But that seems a gift. Uncle George, for instance—the family’s most enigmatic character—emerges gradually but fully, like a photograph slowly developing, thanks to the pages-long ruminations of the various people who love him. The result feels generous. It feels as if Welty has opened a door and welcomed us in.
It’s true that younger readers may be taken aback by the novel’s treatment of Negroes, as they were referred to in those days. Generally, they’re presented as lovably foolish, almost childlike. When Partheny, a kitchen servant, is asked about the tight white hat she’s wearing with points standing up all around it, she says, Oh, Miss India Bright-Eyes! It’s a drawer-leg . . . Miss Shell, don’t you go back tellin’ your Mama you caught me with no drawer-leg on my old head!
And it’s just naturally assumed that these are people with lesser rights. Girl, I’m going to rest inside, you rest outside,
Uncle George’s wife tells a young black girl whom she discovers taking shelter in a barn.
But the fact that this is the Fairchilds’ attitude, rather than Welty’s own, will be clear to anyone familiar with One Time, One Place, the book of photographs she took while traveling for the WPA during the 1930s. There, her African American subjects gaze at the camera lens with confident, serene expressions, plainly trusting that they have her respect. Delta Wedding, in this one regard, is a kind of sociology report: Welty is merely telling us how things were, once upon a time. And no one was better at that than she was.
Many years after I first discovered The Wide Net,
when I was long grown, I had a chance to hear Ms. Welty speak at a literary event. During the question-and-answer period afterward, one listener rose to ask her if she really cared whether anyone read her work. She gazed at him for a moment in silence. Why!
she said finally, in a soft and wondering voice. Why, that’s like asking if I’d like other people to have a telephone!
Well, guess what, Eudora Welty. I’m still at the other end of the line, still smiling at your dear characters as fondly as I ever did.
Anne Tyler
1
THE nickname of the train was the Yellow Dog. Its real name was the Yazoo-Delta. It was a mixed train. The day was the 10th of September, 1923—afternoon. Laura McRaven, who was nine years old, was on her first journey alone. She was going up from Jackson to visit her mother’s people, the Fairchilds, at their plantation named Shellmound, at Fairchilds, Mississippi. When she got there, Poor Laura little motherless girl,
they would all run out and say, for her mother had died in the winter and they had not seen Laura since the funeral. Her father had come as far as Yazoo City with her and put her on the Dog. Her cousin Dabney Fairchild, who was seventeen, was going to be married, but Laura could not be in the wedding for the reason that her mother was dead. Of these facts the one most persistent in Laura’s mind was the most intimate one: that her age was nine.
In the passenger car every window was propped open with a stick of kindling wood. A breeze blew through, hot and then cool, fragrant of the woods and yellow flowers and of the train. The yellow butterflies flew in at any window, out at any other, and outdoors one of them could keep up with the train, which then seemed to be racing with a butterfly. Overhead a black lamp in which a circle of flowers had been cut out swung round and round on a chain as the car rocked from side to side, sending down dainty drifts of kerosene smell. The Dog was almost sure to reach Fairchilds before the lamp would be lighted by Mr. Terry Black, the conductor, who had promised her father to watch out for her. Laura had the seat facing the stove, but of course no fire was burning in it now. She sat leaning at the window, the light and the sooty air trying to make her close her eyes. Her ticket to Fairchilds was stuck up in her Madge Evans straw hat, in imitation of the drummer across the aisle. Once the Dog stopped in the open fields and Laura saw the engineer, Mr. Doolittle, go out and pick some specially fine goldenrod there—for whom, she could not know. Then the long September cry rang from the thousand unseen locusts, urgent at the open windows of the train.
Then at one place a white foxy farm dog ran beside the Yellow Dog for a distance just under Laura’s window, barking sharply, and then they left him behind, or he turned back. And then, as if a hand reached along the green ridge and all of a sudden pulled down with a sweep, like a scoop in the bin, the hill and every tree in the world and left cotton fields, the Delta began. The drummer with a groan sank into sleep. Mr. Terry Black walked by and took the tickets out of their hats. Laura brought up her saved banana, peeled it down, and bit into it.
Thoughts went out of her head and the landscape filled it. In the Delta, most of the world seemed sky. The clouds were large—larger than horses or houses, larger than boats or churches or gins, larger than anything except the fields the Fairchilds planted. Her nose in the banana skin as in the cup of a lily, she watched the Delta. The land was perfectly flat and level but it shimmered like the wing of a lighted dragonfly. It seemed strummed, as though it were an instrument and something had touched it. Sometimes in the cotton were trees with one, two, or three arms—she could draw better trees than those were. Sometimes like a fuzzy caterpillar looking in the cotton was a winding line of thick green willows and cypresses, and when the train crossed this green, running on a loud iron bridge, down its center like a golden mark on the caterpillar’s back would be a bayou.
When the day lengthened, a rosy light lay over the cotton. Laura stretched her arm out the window and let the soot sprinkle it. There went a black mule—in the diamond light of far distance, going into the light, a child drove a black mule home, and all behind, the hidden track through the fields was marked by the lifted fading train of dust. The Delta buzzards, that seemed to wheel as wide and high as the sun, with evening were going down too, settling into far-away violet tree stumps for the night.
In the Delta the sunsets were reddest light. The sun went down lopsided and wide as a rose on a stem in the west, and the west was a milk-white edge, like the foam of the sea. The sky, the field, the little track, and the bayou, over and over—all that had been bright or dark was now one color. From the warm window sill the endless fields glowed like a hearth in firelight, and Laura, looking out, leaning on her elbows with her head between her hands, felt what an arriver in a land feels—that slow hard pounding in the breast.
Fairchilds, Fairchilds!
Mr. Terry Black lifted down the suitcase Laura’s father had put up in the rack. The Dog ran through an iron bridge over James’s Bayou, and past a long twilighted gin, its tin side looking first like a blue lake, and a platform where cotton bales were so close they seemed to lean out to the train. Behind it, dark gold and shadowy, was the river, the Yazoo. They came to the station, the dark-yellow color of goldenrod, and stopped. Through the windows Laura could see five or six cousins at once, all jumping up and down at different moments. Each mane of light hair waved like a holiday banner, so that you could see the Fairchilds everywhere, even with everybody meeting the train and asking Mr. Terry how he had been since the day before. When Mr. Terry set her on the little iron steps, holding her square doll’s suitcase (in which her doll Marmion was horizontally suspended), and gave her a spank, she staggered, and was lifted down among flying arms to the earth.
Kiss Bluet!
The baby was put in her face.
She was kissed and laughed at and her hat would have been snatched away but for the new elastic that pulled it back, and then she was half-carried along like a drunken reveler at a festival, not quite recognizing who anyone was. India hadn’t come—We couldn’t find her
—and Dabney hadn’t come, she was going to be married. They piled her into the Studebaker, into the little folding seat, with Ranny reaching sections of an orange into her mouth from where he stood behind her. Where were her suitcases? They drove rattling across the Yazoo bridge and whirled through the shady, river-smelling street where the town, Fairchild’s Store and all, looked like a row of dark barns, while the boys sang Abdul the Bulbul Amir
or shouted Let Bluet drive!
and the baby was handed over Laura’s head and stood between Orrin’s knees, proudly. Orrin was fourteen—a wonderful driver. They went up and down the street three times, backing into cotton fields to turn around, before they went across the bridge again, homeward.
That’s to Marmion,
said Orrin to Laura kindly. He waved at an old track that did not cross the river but followed it, two purple ruts in the strip of wood shadow.
Marmion’s my dolly,
she said.
It’s not, it’s where I was born,
said Orrin.
There was no use in Laura and Orrin talking any more about what anything was. On this side of the river were the gin and compress, the railroad track, the forest-filled cemetery where her mother was buried in the Fairchild lot, the Old Methodist Church with the steamboat bell glinting pink in the light, and Brunswicktown where the Negroes were, smoking now on every doorstep. Then the car traveled in its cloud of dust like a blind being through the fields one after the other, like all one field but Laura knew they had names—the Mound Field, and Moon Field after Moon Lake. When they were as far as the overseer’s house, Laura saw all the cousins lean out and spit, and she did too.
I thought you all liked Mr. Bascom,
she said, after they got by.
It’s not Mr. Bascom now, crazy,
they said. Is it, Bluet? Not Mr. Bascom now.
Then the car crossed the little bayou bridge, whose rackety rhythm she remembered, and there was Shellmound.
Facing James’s Bayou, back under the planted pecan grove, it was gently glowing in the late summer light, the brightest thing in the evening—the tall, white, wide frame house with a porch all around, its bayed tower on one side, its tinted windows open and its curtains stirring, and even from here plainly to be heard a song coming out of the music room, played on the piano by a stranger to Laura. They curved in at the gate. All the way up the drive the boy cousins with a shout would jump and spill out, and pick up a ball from the ground and throw it, rocketlike. By the carriage block in front of the house Laura was pulled out of the car and held by the hand. Shelley had hold of her—the oldest girl. Laura did not know if she had been in the car with her or not. Shelley had her hair still done up long, parted in the middle, and a ribbon around it low across her brow and knotted behind, like a chariot racer. She wore a fountain pen on a chain now, and had her initials done in runny ink on her tennis shoes, over the ankle bones. Inside the house, the piece
all at once ended.
Shelley!
somebody called, imploringly.
Dabney is an example of madness on earth,
said Shelley now, and then she ran off, trailed by Bluet beating plaintively on a drum found in the grass, with a little stick. The boys were scattered like magic. Laura was deserted.
Grass softly touched her legs and her garter rosettes, growing sweet and springy for this was the country. On the narrow little walk along the front of the house, hung over with closing lemon lilies, there was a quieting and vanishing of sound. It was not yet dark. The sky was the color of violets, and the snow-white moon in the sky had not yet begun to shine. Where it hung above the water tank, back of the house, the swallows were circling busy as the spinning of a top. By the flaky front steps a thrush was singing waterlike notes from the sweet-olive tree, which was in flower; it was not too dark to see the breast of the thrush or the little white blooms either. Laura remembered everything, with the fragrance and the song. She looked up the steps through the porch, where there was a wooden scroll on the screen door that her finger knew how to trace, and lifted her eyes to an old fanlight, now reflecting a skyey light as of a past summer, that she had been dared—oh, by Maureen!—to throw a stone through, and had not.
She dropped her suitcase in the grass and ran to the back yard and jumped up with two of the boys on the joggling board. In between Roy and Little Battle she jumped, and the delights of anticipation seemed to shake her up and down.
She remembered (as one remembers first the eyes of a loved person) the old blue water cooler on the back porch—how thirsty she always was here!—among the round and square wooden tables always piled with snap beans, turnip greens, and onions from the day’s trip to Greenwood; and while you drank your eyes were on this green place here in the back yard, the joggling board, the neglected greenhouse, Aunt Ellen’s guineas in the old buggy, the stable wall elbow-deep in a vine. And in the parlor she knew was a clover-shaped footstool covered with rose velvet where she would sit, and sliding doors to the music room that she could open and shut. In the halls would be the rising smell of girls’ fudge cooking, the sound of the phone by the roll-top desk going unanswered. She could remember mostly the dining room, the paintings by Great-Aunt Mashula that was dead, of full-blown yellow roses and a watermelon split to the heart by a jackknife, and every ornamental plate around the rail different because painted by a different aunt at a different time; the big table never quite cleared; the innumerable packs of old, old playing cards. She could remember India’s paper dolls coming out flatter from the law books than hers from a shoe box, and smelling as if they were scorched from it. She remembered the Negroes, Bitsy, Roxie, Little Uncle, and Vi’let. She put out her arms like wings and knew in her fingers the thready pattern of red roses in the carpet on the stairs, and she could hear the high-pitched calls and answers going up the stairs and down. She thought of the upstairs hall where it was twilight all the time from the green shadow of an awning, and where an old lopsided baseball lay all summer in a silver dish on the lid of the paper-crammed plantation desk, and how away at either end of the hall was a balcony and the little square butterflies that flew so high were going by, and the June bugs knocking. She remembered the sleeping porches full of late sleepers, some strangers to her always among them when India led her through and showed them to her. She remembered well the cotton lint on ceilings and lampshades, fresh every morning like a present from the fairies, that made Vi’let moan.
Little Battle crowded her a little as he jumped, and she had to move down the board a few inches. They could play an endless game of hide-and-seek in so many rooms and up and down the halls that intersected and turned into dead-end porches and rooms full of wax begonias and elephant’s-ears, or rooms full of trunks. She remembered the nights—the moon vine, the ever-blooming Cape jessamines, the verbena smelling under running feet, the lateness of dancers. A dizziness rose in Laura’s head, and Roy crowded her now, but she jumped on, keeping in with their rhythm. She remembered life in the undeterminate number of other rooms going on around her and India, where they lay in bed—life not stopping for a moment in deference to children going to sleep, but filling with later and later laughter, with Uncle Battle reciting Break! Break! Break!,
the phone ringing its two longs and a short for the Fairchilds, Aunt Mac reading the Bible aloud (was she dead yet?), the visiting planters arguing with Uncle Battle and her other uncle, Uncle George, from dining room to library to porch, Aunt Ellen slipping by in the hall looking for something or someone, the distant silvery creak of the porch swing by night, like a frog’s voice. There would be little Ranny crying out in his dream, and the winding of the Victrola and then a song called I Wish I Could Shimmy like my Sister Kate
or Uncle Pinck’s favorite (where was he?), Sir Harry Lauder singing Stop Yer Ticklin’, Jock.
The girls that were old enough, dressed in colors called jade and flamingo, danced with each other around the dining-room table until the boys came to get them, and could be watched from the upper landing cavorting below, like marvelous mermaids down a transparent sea.
In bed Laura and India would slap mosquitoes and tell each other things. Last summer India had told Laura the showboat that came on the high water and the same old Rabbit’s Foot Minstrel as always, and Laura told India Babes in the Wood,
Thurston the Magician, Annette Kellerman in Daughter of the Gods,
and Clara Kimball Young in Drums of Jeopardy,
and if Laura went off to sleep, India would choke her. She remembered the baying of the dogs at night; and how Roy believed when you heard dogs bay, a convict had got out of Parchman and they were after him in the swamp; every night of the world the dogs would bay, and Roy would lie somewhere in the house shaking in his bed.
Just then, with a last move down the joggling board, Roy edged Laura off. She ran back to the steps and picked up her suitcase again. Then her heart pounded: India came abruptly around the house, bathed and dressed, busily watering the verbena in the flower bed out of a doll’s cream pitcher, one drop to each plant. India too was nine. Her hair was all spun out down her back, and she had a blue ribbon in it; Laura touched her own Buster Brown hair, tangled now beyond anyone’s help. Their white dresses (Laura’s in the suitcase, folded by her father, and for a man to fold anything suddenly nearly killed her) were still identical, India had blue insertion run in the waist now and Laura had white, but the same little interlocking three hoops were briar-stitched in the yokes, and their identical gold lockets still banged there against their chests.
My mother is dead!
said Laura.
India looked around at her, and said Greenie!
Laura took a step back.
We never did unjoin,
said India. Greenie!
All right,
Laura said. Owe you something.
She stooped and put a pinch of grass in her shoe.
You have to wash now,
said India. She added, looking in