The Wedding Veil(10)



The leaves, the cheers, and the view of America’s largest, most spectacular home all collided in a mere moment underneath the horseshoe made of flowers that read, almost unbelievably, “Welcome home.”

Welcome home, Edith thought. Home.

“Is it to your liking, Edi?” George asked, without a hint of irony.

Edith only laughed.

After years of being an orphan, of then losing her grandmother, of scrimping and saving and moving from one fashionable yet inexpensive locale to the next, what she thought she found most to her liking was the idea of really, truly, being home.

Edith turned to George and said, “Does it offend you if I say that wherever you are is to my liking now?”

What shocked Edith most is that she truly meant it.



* * *



Now, almost sixteen years later, in a very different house in a very different place, Edith still felt most at home wherever she was with George. She hadn’t meant to fall in love with him so handily, but he had made it impossible not to.

“That was a magical day, George. One of the best of my life.”

“You know, my dearest, I think the entire time I was building Biltmore, I was creating it for you. I was thinking of you, and maybe even our Cornelia too. I didn’t even know you yet, but I wanted you to have everything.”

Edith controlled her sigh. Biltmore had, over the last few years, become more and more of an albatross. They had nearly lost it on more than one occasion. She was certainly made of strong stuff, but the stress of its upkeep had taken its toll. But when she closed her eyes, when she imagined their daughter playing in the fresh mountain air, the beauty of the cool limestone walls, and the sprawling sitting rooms—and, maybe most of all, George’s beloved library—she knew it was a place worth fighting for.

“And I think if we continue its full transformation into a working estate—”

Edith looked at George’s pale, tired face and decided this was a conversation that could wait. Instead, she finished, “When I think of Biltmore, I think of you. Biltmore is the essence of you, the essence of Cornelia, the representation of all I love most in this life.” In rare moments like these, Edith could put away the worry and simply feel grateful for her family, both her biological one and the one she had made in Asheville, the people from all walks of life and every station.

George smiled at Edith and took her hand. “Second only to our daughter, Biltmore is my life’s greatest work. It makes me so happy to know that no matter what happens, I have created a legacy that future generations of Vanderbilts can look on with pride.”

A warmth crept over Edith, thinking of her part in that legacy. She knew, in fact, that it might not continue without her. George was a kind, caring man, but perhaps he hadn’t known enough strife and hard work in his life. They could agree on what would make Biltmore sustainable—the dairy, Biltmore Industries, selling some of the forest land, among other things—but Edith had learned quickly that when it came to matters of their business, she couldn’t wait for him to lead her. George had a bit of a tendency toward distraction and wanderlust and could hardly be pinned down long enough to transform an idea into action. It was how he was raised, the precious baby of the family, the apple of his doting mother’s eye until the day she died.

In contrast, Edith already had Cornelia out on the land, learning how the dairy operated, the ins and outs of Biltmore Industries—the thriving weaving and woodworking business they had created—committing to memory the names of every family member that lived on the vast estate, learning their specific role in the running of America’s largest home. No, George wasn’t one for hard work. But Edith was, and Cornelia would be. Edith would see to that.

“Edi, could you fetch me the papers please?” George asked. “They should be here by now. And where is that lovely daughter of ours? I’d like to talk to her.”

Edith smiled warmly, putting aside her worries about the estate. “I will find her. The newspapers too. But please, for me, close your eyes and rest for just a moment.”

George sighed. “I’m so tired of resting. Resting, as you know, doesn’t come easily.”

She leaned over and kissed her husband lightly on the lips. “I know, George. I know.”

She stood up and he grabbed her hand. “I love you, Edith,” he said. “I truly do. You and Cornelia are the best thing I’ve ever done with my life.”

“And Biltmore,” she joked. “Now quit procrastinating on that nap.”

He smiled.

As Edith walked down the steps, she touched her lips. When she was younger, she used to worry that marriage devolved over the years, that the person she was when she married George would barely resemble who she became inside her marriage. It was true—Edith had changed. But she had become a woman she was proud to be.

She grabbed George’s papers from the kitchen and fixed him a glass of water. She could have asked one of the servants, but she liked taking care of him. When Cornelia entered the room, Edith looked up. “Oh, good. You’re here. Make sure you say goodbye to Daddy before you go out with Bunchy.” Rachel Strong—or “Bunchy,” as everyone called her—and Cornelia had become fast friends at Miss Madeira’s, where they went to school. Both American heiresses—Bunchy because of a string of Cleveland department stores; Cornelia because of the railroad—they had quite a lot in common.

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