"Old Georgie. If you took possession of the Grove, you'd change it, eh?" said Battle. Ellen was leaning against him, she rubbed his arm tenderly. "Well—Shellmound's open, Prim, bear it in mind."
"Uncle Denis would never do this," said India dramatically.
"India," said Ellen, "you don't even remember your Uncle Denis, and why are you so wide awake? Laura's asleep."
"No, I'm not!"
"Well, Denis wouldn't," said Tempe. "Selfish, selfish! Spoiling the picnic. I don't understand George, he was always supposed to be so unselfish, unspoiled, never do anything but kind things. Now listen, he's as spoiled as any of us!"
"Oh, foot, Tempe," said Primrose. "Can't you listen to man talk without getting upset? Can't you listen to George and Battle talking?"
"What would Jim Allen think?" Battle said, yawning.
"She hates rats." Primrose laughed breathlessly. "We're two old maids, all right!"
"Well, take it then!" said Jim Allen all at once.
Ellen sighed. Poor deaf sister, she could not listen to herself, hear how grudging she sounded.
"I'd let George build Jim Allen and me a little house quick as anything," said Primrose. "And furniture, there's enough beds and all in the attic for a world of houses here."
"Your night light will be gone," said India. "Dabney broke it for good, carrying it away."
There was another silence, but gender, more restful.
"Come back, George," said Robbie.
"Bless your hearts, Primrose," said George. He kissed her and Jim Allen.
"It's got rats!" said Jim Allen, and she sank back, restfully, as if there were comforts, after all, in a little spitefulness.
"But I don't understand George at all," Tempe began again, as if George himself were not there, and he kissed her too. "You just want to provoke your sisters, you're just teasing."
"It's his house," said Ellen. (Had she started interfering with the Fairchilds again—this far along? She sounded to herself for a moment like herself as a bride.)
"But I didn't dream he wanted it," Battle said.
"'Here, take the Grove,' he said to the girls, when they minted to fool with a house. Did that sound like he wanted it?"
"Why not?" said Primrose proudly. "Anyway—he only said tonight 'If—then maybe.'"
"Oh, my." Dabney yawned in luxury. "I'm glad he doesn't want to take Marmion away from me."
"Shame on you, pussy," said Troy sharply, and she was quiet.
"Watermelons and greens!" Tempe still fumed softly. "Sisters out in the cold. George, sometimes I don't think you show the most perfect judgment." Then they both laughed gently at each other.
"Oft in the stilly night,
Ere Slumber's chain has bound me..."
They began to sing, softly, wanderingly, each his way. But Jim Allen, whose voice rose strongest, stretched tilted on her small plump elbow on the grassy blanket, was looking at Robbie Reid as if she were for the first time quite aware that her brother was married—not hopelessly, like the dead Denis, but problematically, not promisingly!
"Oft in the stilly night—"
"I like your idea, George," Troy said with deliberation through the song. "Growing greens and getting some cows around. I love a little Jersey, more than anything."
George, with his left-handed throw, put pebbles in the Yazoo. "We'll keep in touch...."
One great golden star went through the night falling.
"Oh!" cried Laura aloud. "Oh, it was beautiful, that star!"
"I saw it, I saw it!" cried India.
Dabney reached over and put her arm around her, drew her to her. "Yes. Beautiful!" India smiled faintly, leaning on Dabney's beating heart, the softness of her breast.
Then, "Oh, India, you still look so tacky!" cried Dabney breathlessly. "I thought you'd be changed, some! Oh, Mania, look at her!"
"Stand still, India," said Ellen.
But India darted off and ran to look in the river. She stood showily, hands on hips, as if she saw some certain thing, neither marvelous nor terrible, but simply certain, come by in the Yazoo River.
Laura lifted on her knees and took her Aunt Ellen around the neck. She held her till they swayed together. Would Aunt Ellen remember it against her, that she had run away from her when she fainted? Of course Aunt Ellen would never find out about the rosy pin. Should she tell her, and suffer? Yes. No. She touched Aunt Ellen's cheek with three anxious, repaying kisses.
"Oh, beautiful!" Another star fell in the sky.
Laura let go and ran forward a step. "I saw that one too."
"Did you?" said somebody—Uncle George.
"I saw where it fell," said Laura, bragging and in reassurance.
She turned again to them, both arms held out to the radiant night.
Books by Eudora Welty
available in Harvest paperback
editions from Harcourt, Inc.
The Bride of the Innisfallen and Other Stories
The Collected Stories of Eudora Welty
A Curtain of Green and Other Stories
Delta Wedding
The Golden Apples
The Ponder Heart
The Robber Bridegroom
Thirteen Stories
The Wide Net and Other Stories
Eudora Welty, Delta Wedding
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