Part 3 (1/2)
”May evenings are cool.”
”Then let's take it along and save it for evening.” Annie folded the robe and handed it to her mother, then readjusted her skirts.
With a sound of exasperation, her mother tucked the blanket under her arm and pushed Annie's chair from the room.
”You look lovely, my dear,” Eldon Sweet.w.a.ter said to his wife as she pushed Annie's chair down the ramp beside the front steps. Dressed in a dark-brown serge suit and a starched white s.h.i.+rt, he came forward to a.s.sist. ”And Annie, you're the prettiest little girl a father could ever have.”
”Thank you, Daddy.”
He lifted her from her chair to the rear seat of their carriage, where she caught her weight with her hands and arms and swung herself onto the upholstery. It was a well-rehea.r.s.ed routine, one with which they were all accustomed. Her chair took up s.p.a.ce beside her, and her mother sat on the front seat with her father.
Side curtains enclosed the vehicle and blocked much of the view, but if she complained, she would be told that they prevented the wind and weather from making her ill, so she peered out the flaps at the scenery and appreciated the much-awaited outing.
The church had been decorated with pink azaleas and delicate baby's breath. Wide bows of gauzy white tulle draped the altar and the end of each wooden pew, and Annie smiled with satisfaction over the hours of preparation in which she'd taken part.
Charmaine located her and bent to give her a hug. ”Isn't everything beautiful?” Her pretty face flushed with excitement and yearning. ”Come this way, Uncle Eldon, Mama and Papa are already seated and we saved room for you. Annie, your chair can go on the end by the wall.”
Which would place her out of view of the proceedings, but she could hardly sit in the middle aisle as the bride came past, so Annie nodded and accepted her cousin's placement.
Sometime later, after the wedding march, after the prayers, while the couple was exchanging vows, Annie's curiosity got the best of her and she glanced across the room. Luke Carpenter, dressed in a smart black suit, his ebony hair combed and glistening, nodded her way.
She smiled a shy greeting and turned back to the ceremony. But her gaze was drawn to him again. He was watching the proceedings, but glanced her way and their eyes met. He smiled this time, a slow, heart-touching expression of recognition and favor that made her stomach flutter.
Seated between Annie and Luke, amidst a sea of onlookers and a row or two back, Burdell caught the direction of Luke's focus and speared Annie with a glare. Annie took her attention from Luke and offered her brother a benign smile. His gaze shot back to Luke, who had looked away and was seemingly engaged with the service. Burdy frowned at Annie.
Beside Burdell, his dark-haired wife, Diana, touched her husband's hand and drew his concentration back to the proceedings. Annie believed that Diana was the best thing that could have happened to Burdy. She was a kind and loving young woman, but she held a will and a mind of her own. She possessed more energy than any three women Annie knew, and was always involved in either a benevolence project or a political campaign. If she believed in a local candidate, she hopped on his bandwagon, distributing flyers and hosting fund-raising teas.
Burdy quite obviously adored Diana, along with everyone who knew her. Her very zest for life and liberty drew people and made her a prominent community figure. She and Burdy had a child now, and with Will's birth, Burdy had pampered and catered to his wife even more.
Annie loved Diana, too.
The ceremony ended and, to the strains of the organ music, the newlyweds linked arms and strolled from the church.
All around, guests stood and spoke in excited voices, milling toward the door, ready for the rest of the festivities to begin.
Annie sat, waiting for one of her family members to come for her. Occasionally wedding guests greeted her on their way past. Times like these, she wished she could fade into the background, where she and her c.u.mbersome chair weren't an eyesore.
Growing impatient, she rolled herself to the back of the building, and as the crowd thinned, toward the door to the small foyer and the three stairs. She knew there were three because her father always found someone to a.s.sist him in lifting her and her chair up and down those stairs.
Today it was Ike McPhillips, but his help came too late for her to see the newlyweds depart.
Father pushed her to the social hall building which sat beside the church. The doorways and tables were festooned with swags of white tulle and pink paper flowers. The smooth wooden floor provided s.p.a.ce for Annie to push herself independently, and she did so, wheeling away from her parents toward the gathering of young ladies near the refreshment tables.
”May I help?”
Mary Chancelor and Doneta Parker glanced at each other and at the tables. ”You can sit right here at the end of this table and pour punch,” Doneta told her.
”Okay.” Annie accepted the a.s.signment gratefully and took her position.
Though the other girls carried gla.s.s bowls and silverware and dashed about arranging things just so, Annie was content to sit at her station and wait for the opportunity to serve someone. She had time to watch the musicians set up and to see people arrive and greet each other. Her mother checked on her, found her occupied, and moved on into the growing throng.
Eventually the food and cake were ready, and guests were encouraged to move through the line. Annie poured punch, while on her left, Charmaine had a.s.sumed the coffee duty.
Annie noticed Luke in the line moving toward her, and her heart beat double-time. Handing Mrs. Whitmore a cup, her sudden trembling caused punch to spill over the side.
”I'm so sorry,” she said, quickly handing the woman a napkin and wiping her own fingers.
”That's quite all right, dear,” she said, in a kind, yet condescending tone. ”Accidents happen to all of us, don't they?”
She hadn't meant it unkindly, but she'd meant that even regular people-people who could walk-spilled things, and the meaning sliced Annie's pride. She blinked back the sting of tears, folded the napkin and poured punch for the next person.
When Luke reached her, she had composed her hands and her feelings.
”That's a pretty color on you, Miss Annie,” he said in his soul-pleasing voice. ”It does something that brings out the fire in your hair.”
Annie looked up, wis.h.i.+ng she didn't have to, wis.h.i.+ng she could look him in the eye without craning her neck. Her mother had taught her that when approached with flattery, a young woman should never encourage painted words with a smile or a blush. Annie didn't encourage the flattery or blush, but she responded immediately with, ”I didn't know I had fire in my hair.”
”Oh, yes,” he said, extending an empty cup.
She reached to take it, but he held on, their knuckles grazing.
”Sometimes I see a little in your eyes, too,” he said. ”Before you have a chance to look away or hide it.”
His words were disturbing, and she started to tear her gaze away, then caught herself, challenged in some way she couldn't have explained. Was this the flattery she was expected to discourage? She held his stare, his fingers touching hers until she thought she felt the same fire he claimed was in her hair.
He smiled, two rakish slashes forming in his cheeks. ”I'll take some punch now.”
He released the cup into her hand, and she glanced behind him to see if the next person in line had noticed anything unusual, but Guy Halverson's father spoke to the man behind him conversationally.
Annie dipped liquid and handed Luke his drink.
”Thank you.” With a grin, he moved on.
After an hour or so, the line ran out; people finished eating and began to dance. Annie remained at her post. Even though folks could get their own refills, the duty made her feel useful and not quite so out of place.
Finally, Mrs. Jamison shooed her away, telling her to go eat and visit with the young people. She fixed a plate and rolled herself to a secluded spot where she watched the dancing. Trying not to look for him was like trying not to worry a sore tooth with a tongue. She scanned the crowd again and again, occasionally spotting his black hair and then looking quickly away.
She picked at the food without much interest, but holding the plate made her look as though she were doing something.
”Hi, Annie,” Burdell said sometime later, coming to take a seat on a wooden chair beside her. He had his little boy, Will, in tow, and pulled him onto his knee.
”Hi, Burdy. Hi, Will.”
The two-year-old yawned, then grinned at her. ”Hi, Nannie.”
”You having a good time?” Burdell asked.