Darrel of the Blessed Isles - LightNovelsOnl.com
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"Supper is waiting," said she, merrily, as she came to meet him.
"There's blueberries, and biscuit, and lots of nice things."
"I'm hungry," said be; "but first, dear, let us enjoy love and kisses."
Then by the lonely road he held her close to him, and each could feel the heart-beat of the other; and for quite a moment speech would have been most idle and inadequate.
"Now the promise, Polly," said he soon. "I go not another step until I have your promise to be my wife."
"You do not think I'd let one treat me that way unless I expected to marry him, do you ?" said Polly, as she fussed with a ribbon bow, her face red with blushes. "You've mussed me all up."
"I'm to be a teacher in the big school, and if you were willing, we could be married soon."
"Oh, dear!" said she, sighing, and looking up at him with a smile; "I'm too happy to think." Then followed another moment of silence, in which the little G.o.d, if he were near them, must have smiled.
"Won't you name the day now?" he insisted.
"Oh, let's keep that for the next chapter!" said she. "Don't you know supper is waiting?"
"It's all like those tales 'to be continued in our next,'" he answered with a laugh.
Then they walked slowly up the long hill, arm in arm.
"How very grand you look!" said she, proudly. "Did you see the Governor?"
"Yes, but he can do nothing now. It's the only cloud in the sky."
"Dear old man!" said Polly. "We'll find a way to help him."
"But he wouldn't thank us for help--there's the truth of it," said Trove, quickly. "He's happy and content. Here is a letter that came to-day. 'Dear Sidney,' he writes. 'Think of all I have said to thee, an', if ye remember well, boy, it will bear thee up. Were I, indeed, as ye believe, drinking the cup o' bitterness for thy sake, know ye not the law will make it sweet for me? After all I have said to thee, are ye not prepared? Is my work wasted; is the seed fallen upon the rocks? And if ye hold to thy view, consider--would ye rob the dark world o' the light o' sacrifice?
"Nay," ye will answer. Then I say: "If ye would give me peace, go to thy work, boy, and cease to waste thyself with worry and foolish wandering."'
"Somehow it puts me to shame," said Trove, as he put the letter in his pocket. "I'm so far beneath him. I shall obey and go to work and pray for the speedy coming of G.o.d's justice."
"It's the only thing to do," said she. "Sidney, I hope now I have a right to ask if you know who is your father?"
"I believe him to be dead."
"Dead!" there was a note of surprise in the word.
"I know not even his name."
"It is all very strange," said Polly. In a moment she added, "I hope you will forgive my mother if she seemed to doubt you."
"I forgive all," said the young man. "I know it was hard to believe me innocent."
"And impossible to believe you guilty. She was only waiting for more light."
The widow and her two boys came out to meet them.
"Mother, behold this big man! He is to be my husband." The girl looked up at him proudly.
"And my son?" said Mrs. Vaughn, with a smile, as she kissed him.
"You've lost no time."
"Oh! I didn't intend to give up so soon," said Polly, "but--but the supper would have been ruined."
"It's now on the table," said Mrs. Vaughn.
"I've news for you," said Polly, as they were sitting down. "Tunk has reformed."
"He must have been busy," said Trove, "and he's ruined his epitaph."
"His epitaph?"
"Yes; that one Darrel wrote for him: 'Here lies Tunk. O Grave!
where is thy victory?'"
"Tunk has one merit: he never deceived any one but himself," said the widow.
"Horses have run away with him," Trove continued. "His character is like a broken buggy; and his imagination--that's the unbroken colt. Every day, for a long time, the colt has run away with the wagon, tipping it over and dragging it in the ditch, until every bolt is loose, and every spoke rattling, and every wheel awry. I do hope he's repaired his 'ex.'"
"He walks better and complains less," the widow answered.
"Often he stands very straight and walks like you," said Polly, laughing.
"He thinks you are the only great man," so spoke the widow.
"Gone from one illusion to another," said Trove. "It's a lesson; every one should go softly. Tom, will you now describe the melancholy feat of Theophilus Thistleton?"
The fable was quickly repeated.
"That Mr. Thistleton was a foolish fellow, and there's many like him," said Trove. "He had better have been thrusting blueberries into his mouth. I declare!" he added, sitting back with a look of surprise, "I'm happy again."
"And we are going to keep you so," Polly answered with decision.
"Darrel would tell me that I am at last in harmony with a great law which, until now, I have been defying. It is true; I have thought too much of my own desires."
"I do not understand you," said Polly. "Now, we heard of the shot and iron--how you came by them and how, one night, you threw them into the river at Hillsborough. That led, perhaps, to most of your trouble. I'd like to know what moral law you were breaking when you flung them into the river?"
"A great law," Trove answered; "but one hard to phrase."
"Suppose you try."
"The innocent shall have no fear," said he. "Until then I had kept the commandment."
There was a little time of silence.
"If you watch a coward, you'll see a most unhappy creature." It was Trove who spoke. "Darrel said once, 'A coward is the prey of all evil and the mark of thunderbolts.'"