A Lowcountry Wedding (44 page)

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Authors: Mary Alice Monroe

BOOK: A Lowcountry Wedding
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Carson approached the box with care. Reaching out, she spread open the folded tissue with fingertips. Mamaw held her breath, eyes wide, one moment looking at the dress, the next checking on Carson’s reaction. Suddenly she felt afraid Carson wouldn’t like the gown. She’d think it was old-fashioned, nothing a modern girl such as Carson would like.

Slowly, reverently, Carson lifted the dress from the box. Huge mounds of tissue paper that had carefully been tucked between the folds of the dress fell away like birds, taking flight to scatter on the floor. Yards of creamy satin flowed from the box. Carson took a step back and held the dress in front of her, arms straight out, while she studied it.

As did Mamaw. As she saw her gown again, heady memories of that glorious day in 1951 came rushing back at her. Her wedding was one of the most talked about of the season. Her and Edward’s union had marked the blending together of two historic Charleston families. At that time, most of her friends wanted to look like Elizabeth Taylor or Grace Kelly: the fashion was tight bodices with sweetheart necklines and full, layered skirts. Her dress was quite the opposite, a sleeveless gown of duchesse satin, V-neck and V-back. Carson held the gown to
her body. The ivory color complemented her tanned skin and dark hair. The dramatic cut would show off her tiny waist and the graceful curve of her back, as would the covered buttons that trailed to the court train.

Mamaw sighed, feeling again like the young bride. The dress was as beautiful to her now, and as precious, as it was when she’d worn it on her wedding day.

“Do you like it?” she dared to ask. “The veil is all French lace. That was the rage then, postwar.”

Carson fingered the soft fabric and said softly, “Vintage satin . . . lace . . . It’s everything I wanted.”

Encouraged, Mamaw brought Carson to the bathroom so she could look into the picture mirror. “It should fit you. We’re the same height. And once upon a time I had a small waist, like yours.”

Mamaw flicked on the bathroom lights and, for a moment, blinked in the brightness. Carson held the gown in place against her body. She stood staring, unblinkingly. Mamaw held her breath.

To Mamaw’s surprise, tears began flowing down Carson’s cheeks. As she looked at the gown, her expression was as if she couldn’t quite believe what she was seeing in the mirror—her very own fairy tale.

“Harper told me I was supposed to feel like this,” she said with a choked laugh. “But I didn’t believe her. Look at me! I’m crying.
Me!
” She laughed again. “And so are you!”

Mamaw brought her hand to her trembling lips and nodded.

“Oh, Mamaw!” Carson then said the words she’d come to believe would never cross her lips: “I’ve found my dress!”

“There’s one thing more.” Mamaw reached out to pick up a small navy velvet bag from the bathroom counter. “I want you to have this.”

Carson took the velvet bag, which was surprisingly heavy. As she tipped the bag, a large piece of jewelry fell into her palm. The large circular brooch had diamonds in a starburst pattern around a large sapphire. Carson could only stare, speechless, it was so stunning.

“My mother gave it to me to wear on my wedding day. It’s been in the family for ages. Bought at Croghan’s back in the day the store was still in Mr. Croghan’s home. That piece is a part of your history.”

“Oh, Mamaw, it’s too much.”

“Now, Carson, that brooch is meant to be worn with that dress, and it will give me the greatest pleasure seeing you wear it as I did. Right here.” Mamaw touched Carson’s left shoulder. “You can’t wear your black pearls on your wedding day. It wouldn’t be seemly. You don’t want to wear pearls anyway. That dress was designed to show off my swan’s neck. Or rather, like it was, once upon a time.” Mamaw smiled tenderly. “Wear it, dear. It’s your something blue.”

Chapter Twenty-Two

This is our adventure, right? Our weddings. We’ve never been afraid before. Let’s not start now. Like you said, the future begins today.

M
ay arrived with a heat wave. The lowcountry shot from spring to summer. By the end of the month the trees had exploded with color, flowers overflowed their boxes, residents caught short were racing to plant their gardens, and local children were crossing off days on calendars till the school doors opened and they were set free. Talk on the streets was of how warm the waters were already, always a predictor of hurricanes. Some thought the sea-turtles season would begin early. Folks were selecting programs for the upcoming Spoleto Festival.

At Sea Breeze, however, the only thing on the ladies’ minds were the impending weddings.

Outside Sea Breeze, large tents were being erected for the
rehearsal dinner the following night. Mamaw was standing on the deck at a safe distance overseeing the workmen. She didn’t have any directions to give them, per se, but felt they needed watching nonetheless. The house would not be open to guests, but a crew was inside buffing the floors and washing the windows until they sparkled in the sunshine. The porch had been transformed. The wicker table and chairs had been removed, to God only knew where, and replaced with a handsome bar and several long tables that a woman was now covering with a pile of silvery linens. Men were delivering potted plants, and three women in green butcher aprons emblazoned with
WILDFLOWERS INC
. were hanging lush ivy, greenery, and flowers from a poled framework over the porch. All this under the direction of a bubbly, talkative, happy-go-lucky woman with the eye of an eagle.

Dora, her blue eyes bright with excitement, came to join Mamaw on the deck. Dora was dressed to work in white pedal pushers and a blue T-shirt that had
SEA BREEZE BRIDES
in script across her breast. The girls had ordered T-shirts for all of them, but Mamaw couldn’t bring herself to wear hers.

“Mamaw!” Dora exclaimed. “There you are. Isn’t this exciting? It’s all beginning. It’s wedding time!” Her enthusiasm could not be contained.

“I might get excited once I see the tent securely up. There’s mud back there.” Mamaw shook her head. “I hope it will hold.”

“Don’t worry, Mamaw, these guys know what they’re doing. What can I do to help?”

“Thank heavens you’re here. Would you supervise what’s going on in the living room? I can’t be in two places at once. Carson is inside talking to the Legares. Cru Catering hasn’t
received the shrimp from the Captain yet. I know they’ve been culling the best shrimp from the crop and I’m grateful, but they have to get a move on. You can’t make a Lowcountry Boil without shrimp!” Mamaw brought her handkerchief up to dab at her brow and upper lip. “Is it just me or is it hotter’n Hades out here?”

“It’s hot. Don’t get flustered, now, Mamaw. Harper’s given everyone a time line with strict instructions to follow it. We all know where to be when.”

Mamaw fanned herself with her clipboard. “Let’s hope so. Harper doesn’t want any surprises.”

Harper was in her office finishing wrapping up the cookbooks she had created from Lucille’s recipes. She was proud of the project. When she’d blithely come up with the idea, she had no idea of the number of hours of concentrated labor all the testing of recipes would take. Just deciphering the yellowed and stained cards and scraps of paper she’d found with Lucille’s chicken scratch all over them was a labor of love. Harper had made what she called “loving changes” to the recipes, partly because she didn’t want to cook with bacon fat or lard and partly because she couldn’t read the writing. But she was finally done. She stood back and admired the wrapped books with pride. She was giving them to her sisters, as well as all the ladies in the family, tonight as wedding gifts.

“Harper!”

Taylor’s voice boomed through the house. He was in the attic working on his project. She smiled, thinking of him up there doing what he needed to do to make this house feel like
his own. Although, she thought with a sigh, why he had to start the project right before their wedding was beyond her.

She hurried to the hall in time to see his head pop out from the attic. “What is it, honey?”

“You’d better come up and take a look at this.”

Something in his tone told her not to waste any time arguing. She hurried to the pull-down stairs and climbed monkey-style up into the attic.

Taylor took her hand and helped her climb up at the top. The air in the attic was thick with dust motes shaken up from all Taylor’s hammering and moving things around. It was nearly empty now. Mamaw had cleared the attic of all her belongings when she’d moved out the previous fall. They’d had quite a party sorting through the boxes of memorabilia. Only a few unwanted pieces of furniture had remained. These Taylor had shoved out of the way of his labors until he could get help moving them out. Some of them were immense, which was the reason they’d remained in the attic.

Taylor led her to the far left end of the attic. “Careful where you walk,” he called out.

“Oh, look at that!” she exclaimed, mesmerized by the small fort that had been constructed in the corner. It was shabbily built of miscellaneous pieces of wood nailed together. Its door opening was so small that an adult would have to crawl through to get inside. Most arresting, however, were the letters—large, malformed, and crudely written—and drawings in paint. There was a sun, a moon, stars. A rough sketch of a skull and crossbones, and a long grassy mound that looked like a mole’s tunnel.

“I found it behind the bookcase when I moved it,” Taylor
told her. “That thing was heavy as hell. Hadn’t budged in years. Was this your playhouse?”

“No.” She shook her head in wonder. “At least not mine. I don’t know about Carson and Dora. But I doubt it.” She pointed. “It says
NO GIRLS ALLOWED
.” She clutched Taylor’s arm. “Oh my God, Taylor. It must’ve been my father’s.”

She bent at the waist to peer in. Its window was grimy with dirt, but some light peered through, giving her a glimpse of the space. Someone had constructed a wood floor and painted more drawings on the inside. There were words, too, that stood alone—
COURAGE, MAGIC, BELIEVE, HEART, PERSEVERE
. These were written in a neater, more mature script. Other than a ratty-looking red blanket piled in a corner, it was empty.

“Have you gone in?” she asked Taylor over her shoulder.

“Not yet. Not sure I can squeeze through the opening.”

This was one of the times Harper was glad she was small. She got down on all fours, relieved she was wearing jeans today.

“Be careful,” Taylor warned.

“I’ll be fine.” She slowly crept into the fort, eyes on the lookout for mice or spiders. Once inside, she sat Indian-style and looked around. The space was tight and cozy, a right proper fort, she thought to herself, and smiled. Just the kind of place she would have loved to hide out in as a child.

“See anything?” Taylor was on his hands and knees, peering in.

“You can fit through. But it might be tight.” Poised to leap back, she reached out and gingerly lifted the red blanket, half expecting a mouse to scamper out. She released a long sigh when one didn’t, but she was surprised nonetheless. Under the blanket was an ashtray filled with butts.

“That’s weird,” she said.

“Not really. Parker probably came up here to sneak a smoke.”

Nasty habit, she thought as she leaned over to grab the ashtray. The floor under the ashtray teetered beneath the weight of her hand. Catching her balance, she set the ashtray aside, then lowered her head and inspected the floor.

“The wood floor in here has been cut. I wonder . . .” She wiggled the wood a bit, getting one side to rise up a few inches. Grabbing the edge, she lifted the board off. “I knew it. It’s a secret compartment!” She was filled with admiration for her father’s cleverness. It’s exactly what she would have done if she’d had a fort like this.

“What’s in it?”

“Just a minute.” She wiped her brow, feeling the heat of the attic. Behind her, Taylor had climbed through the door to his waist and was watching over her shoulder with keen interest. She handed him the pieces as she pulled them out.

There were three watches sans bands. A black velvet bag. A few empty gun shells. A World War II medal, a few pennies so green with age she couldn’t make them out. On the bottom of the compartment were three slim books. She pulled them out and set them on her lap.

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