Barbara leaned against Ethel for support. She seemed to have gone all soft inside. The world reeled about, and she closed her eyes to shut out the dizzying spectacle. Through a shrouding mist she heard Sonia’s concluding words:
“... a he-virgin. Don’t get me wrong. I might have laughed yesterday. But I learned something. He was the sweetest damned boy friend I ever had... that’s taking in a lot of territory too. Believe me, I’m off you wise city slickers from now on. I’m going to spend my time plucking cherries from the farm. He stayed all night... and I’ve got a date with him for the dance and carousal at Brierly Manor to-night.” Sonia’s full voice ended abruptly. Laughing questions were showered upon her while Barbara shrank back against Ethel’s comforting arm.
The world had come to an end and she welcomed the void. She was glad she couldn’t think. And she was fiercely glad she had tried to give herself to Frank last night. She regretted only that she had not known fulfillment. She felt no anger toward Sonia... only a vague envy. Somehow, Sonia’s disregard of morals seemed magnificent. Her own doubts and fears were childish and laughable. She was resolved that she would teach herself to laugh at them as they deserved.
Suddenly there was a blare of exultant music in the distance. A cheer swept along the crowded street. Heads were turned and necks craned for a first glimpse of the long-awaited parade. All along the line of march was restless movement as banners were brought forth and the host swayed forward with thunderous acclaim. Far down the avenue the sunlight was caught by the brilliant color of the first float. King Rex! The merry monarch of the madly festive Carnival! Riding upon a gem-bedecked throne atop a magnificent float irradiating every splendid color of the rainbow!
“All right.” Ethel’s voice spoke in her ear. “Here comes King Rex. Snap out of it, Babs. Mardi Gras is just beginning. This is something you’ll never see again. Rex is proclaiming the end of dull care and the reign of license.”
Barbara set her teeth and swallowed hard. Her hand groped for Ethel’s and held it hard. Then she opened her eyes, and leaned forward with a gasp of wonderment.
The parade of King Rex defies description. Twenty huge floats in splendid cavalcade, each drawn by gayly caparisoned steeds led by mantled footmen. Every colorful detail of each float worked out in meticulous detail, bewildering the onlooker and stunning the imagination with the vivid beauty of the procession.
King Rex rode in state upon the first float, a great bird making a colorful canopy with brilliant plumage. The Monarch bows to the throngs and raises his scepter in joyous gesture.
The cheers were thunderous as he passed down the avenue. Numerous brass bands were interspersed with the floats to add their crashing symphony to the occasion.
Barbara leaned forward with eyes alight to see the second float. It was impossible to think of anything else.
The title float illustrated the theme of the pageant. This year Rex has chosen “The Conquest of the Air” as the theme to be presented by the various floats.
The earth glittering and spinning amongst clouds and gem-like flowers. A superb float which promises wonders to come.
The next was the flying horse of India. The Oriental splendor of the East is gloriously portrayed on the float as the prince exhibits his wonderful horse to the multitudes.
The Flight of Dædalus and Icarus: father and son flying with wings of feathers.
A Persian legend: Hausa, the Fire Bird. A more beautiful conception could not have been created.
Barbara was breathless as the exquisite floats passed down the avenue. Thousands of dollars and the skill and ingenuity of many men are represented in the Rex Pageant each year. No human can view the magnificent array without carrying away some small feeling that laughter and merriment are good.
Phaeton and the Sun Horses followed swiftly. Pegasus: The Magic Carpet of Bagdad: the Dragon Prince: Perseus and the Gorgon’s Head: The Flying Stool: The Flight of the Viking’s Soul: The Flight of Sinbad; and of Beelzebub.
One could grasp only the salient points of each float before the next appeared to dim the splendor of the preceding. The crowds were hoarse with excessive cheering. Each declared to his neighbor that this year’s pageant far surpassed anything seen before.
Barbara had forgotten Sonia. Robert did not matter. Her soul was lifted above mundane considerations by the glittering spectacle in the avenue below. Each float was a vision of such loveliness that she could only gasp as they came on and on.
The Flight of the Observation Balloons brought the first modern note of the parade. A beautiful tableau of varicolored balloons wafted in the air and surrounded by golden-tinted clouds. A group of soldiers in every glittering uniform of the past and present.
The Witch’s Flight on Halloween followed the balloons. Perhaps the most fantastic and weird of all the floats.
The Nuptial Flight of the Bee was in beautiful contrast with the foregoing. Here the designer had given full and free hand to his imagination in depicting the tragic wedding journey of the Queen Bee and her mate.
A tear streamed down Barbara’s cheek as she turned from the tableau of the Flight from which only one will return. It seemed to her, somehow, symbolic of the tragedy she was finding in discovering passion.
The Flight of Sound Through Air was the next float. Radio and its marvelous development.
The Flight of Santa Claus was the fantasy which made up the next float to the last.
The end of the gorgeous procession was a float which drew a new burst of thunderous applause from the wearied throats of the spectators. The cheers swelled in volume until the very buildings seemed to vibrate with the sound.
A superb concept of the thrilling adventure which stirred the world. Lindbergh! The Flight of The Lone Eagle. A heroic tableau showing the tiny plane poised in mid-ocean while the airman stands in the conflicting elements and watches.
Barbara sank back and her hand went to her bosom as the procession was ended.
“We can stay here and see it go back,” Ethel offered. “They’ll go down St. Charles to Canal and swing around back this way, if you want to wait.”
“Oh, I don’t know,” Barbara breathed. “I don’t know whether I want to see it again. I think I’d rather hold the memory I have. Seeing it again might take away some of the beauty by giving me too many details. I... I feel as though I want to hide away and just remember it forever.” She grasped at this memory as a straw to keep her mind from the thing which she had heard before the parade.
Ethel gazed at her understandingly. Her heart ached for her. She knew how Barbara had regarded her love for Robert. It had been something sublime. A thing apart from material considerations.
Now that she had discovered Robert had feet of clay?
What now?
Ethel turned her gaze to the throng below and uttered a little cry. “There’s Frank!” she, exclaimed.
“Oh, Frank! Yoo-hoo!” She leaned over the balcony.
“Where is he?” Barbara was by her side eagerly. Her animation was forced, but her voice rang out eagerly, “I see him. Frank!”
Her voice cut through the shouting and babble about him to Frank’s ears. He looked upward smilingly and saw them on the balcony above.
“Hello,” he called gayly. “You going to wait for Rex to come back?”
Barbara knew, suddenly, what she was going to do. It was as though a voice spoke to her and made her course clear. There was no doubting. No hesitation. There would be no regrets.
“Not if you can get me out of this bedlam,” she called to Frank.
“Nothing easier,” he laughed back. “My car’s parked a few blocks away... out of the jam. Come on down.” He stepped directly beneath the balcony and held out his arms laughingly.
“All right,” Barbara said composedly. She turned to Ethel. “You don’t mind, do you?”
“Of course not. Frank is exactly what you need. Don’t forget you’re going to the dance at Brierly to-night. That is...” Ethel hesitated in momentary confusion. She remembered that Sonia had said she was going with Robert. She held her breath as she waited to see Barbara’s reaction.
“Of course I’m going,” Barbara told her impatiently. “And I’ll get Frank to bring me home in time for dinner.”
“Come on,” Frank called impatiently. “I’ll catch you.”
Without hesitation Barbara kissed Ethel swiftly and swung her body over the rail. Ethel gasped and clutched at her hand, but Barbara swung clear. She hung there momentarily, her feet some two yards above the sidewalk, and she remembered that she wore nothing whatever beneath the wide skirt.
Her cheeks flamed scarlet as she looked down into Frank’s dancing eyes, and a little burst of laughing applause came from those who stood grouped about him.
Then she let go her grip on the railing and dropped, plummet-like, into his arms.
The skirt flared up above her head as she dropped, and Frank’s arms encircled her nude loins. He held her thus as the costume wafted down about her limbs.
Her arms went around his neck and she kissed him. She hoped Sonia was watching... and she hoped Ethel would tell Sonia who she was... and she wished Robert might see her thus.
Frank’s hands disengaged themselves reluctantly from behind her back, and came away with a lingering caress which made her more wholly his.
“Take me home with you,” she said desperately. “I won’t drink anything this time.” Her eyes promised him while her lips smiled.
“Come on,” he muttered gruffly. “Follow me while I give an imitation of a snow plow as I break a path for you.”
"Mardi Gras Madness (Carnival of Love)" отзывы
Отзывы читателей о книге "Mardi Gras Madness (Carnival of Love)". Читайте комментарии и мнения людей о произведении.
Понравилась книга? Поделитесь впечатлениями - оставьте Ваш отзыв и расскажите о книге "Mardi Gras Madness (Carnival of Love)" друзьям в соцсетях.