June 19, 1891 - Church of St. Fergus, Irvingly @ the Delaney Darrow Wedding
Evander DarrowChristianne had assured her daughter that it was perfectly normal to feel nervous on one's wedding day - not that Caroline had particularly believed her. Any doubts in her choice of a husband had vanished during the ordeal at sea and her return to his arms. There was no doubt in Caroline's mind that they would be a good match, they would even each other out perfectly. And while it may not be the adventerous life she had once dreamed of, she was far more convinced now that adventures of the variety she had once wanted were rather overrated. This said she was surprised to find that she was indeed nervous on the morning of her wedding. Not of the wedding or the marriage itself, but rather of the wedding night - something that struck her as odd. It wasn't as if she were a green girl who never been kissed. She had been kissed and she had been kissed quite thoroughly - but never to the point where her virtue had been at risk. And yet she was nervous of what was to come when Evander and herself arrived at their honeymoon suite.
Looking in the mirror Caroline was quite certain that it did not show in her face. Indeed, her pale skin (magical potions having restored it from the tan that had appeared from her sunburn) looked luminscent. Her dark hair was piled elegantly under the long trailing veil, the gauze edged in embroidered flowers - enchanted to look almost real, lifting and swaying from the edges, and pooling into a garden on the floor behind her, pearls and diamonds at the center of each. Her gown echoed the motif, with Flanders lace imported from Paris accenting the white silk. She would have gone with stars for the gown had she not wished to accent the theme of Evander's ring - flowers. Yet looking at herself Caroline thought she could see, despite the finery, a very small nervous edge to her eyes.
She had her something new (a diamond and pearl necklace), her something old (pearl earrings that her mother's mother's mother had worn at her own wedding), her something borrowed (Nimiane's carefully embroidered handkerchief tucked into Caroline's corset), and her something blue (a blue ribbon sewn into her silk white garter, holding up enchanted Flemish lace stockings). These were to bring her luck, but luck to what - her marriage or her marital duties? She should not have been as nervous as she were, but the moment her mother had left her side to check on the church was the moment Caroline could no longer admit that she was not plagued by nerves. Left to look at herself she could see the swallow of her throat and the fractures of the brave facade she had put on. She was sure there was a small tremble in her hands as well.
Then there was no more time to be nervous. She was led to the doors of the church, her arm placed in her father's, her veil pulled over her face, a bouquet of white gardenias, periwinkles, peonies, snapdragons, and hyacinths, placed in her hand, and then the doors opened. There before her was a church full of family, both her old and her new. They all looked at her and perhaps they gasped, or perhaps they stared in awed silence, Caroline wouldn't have known. She had eyes only for Evander. He was even more handsome than she remembered him, standing there at the end of the aisle.
When her father handed her to Evander she gave him a tentative smile, she had meant to reassure him, but somehow she found she needed his support as well. Her fingers on his arm trembled ever so slightly and she knew there was no way to hide her nerves from him. But he was here and that alone made everything better.