The maiden loved the young man well, After tea Ishmael, having missed Bee from the drawing room, went out into the garden, expecting to find her there. Not seeing her, he walked up and down the gravel walk, waiting for her appearance. Presently she came up, softly and silently, and joined him. "Thanks, dearest Bee," he said, as he drew her arm within his own. "It is a beautiful evening, Ishmael; I have never seen the garden look more lovely," said Bee. And it was indeed a beautiful evening and a lovely scene. The sun had just set; but all the western horizon and the waters of the distant river were aflame with crimson fire of his reflected rays; while over the eastern hills the moon and stars were shining from the dark gray heavens. In the garden, the shrubs and flowers, not yet damp with dew, were sending forth their richest fragrance; the latest birds were twittering softly before settling themselves to sleep in their leafy nests; and the earliest insects were tuning up their tiny, gleeful pipes before commencing their evening concert. "This garden is a very pleasant place, quite as pleasant as "Yes, it is very pleasant. You do not like the plan of returning to the country, Bee?" said Ishmael. "No, indeed, I do not; breaking up and parting is always a painful process." And Bee's lips quivered and the tears came into her eyes. Ishmael pressed the little hand that lay light as a snowflake on his arm, drew it closer within his embrace, and turned down the narrow path that led to the remote arbor situated far down in the angle of the wall in the bottom of the garden. He led her to a seat, placed himself beside her, took her hand, and said: "It is here, dearest Bee—here in the scene of my humiliation and of my redemption—that I would say to you all I have to say; that I would lay my heart open before you, and place it at your feet, for spurning, or for blessing." She looked up at him with surprise, but also with infinite affection in her innocent and beautiful eyes. Then, as she read the truth in his earnest gaze, her eyes fell, and her color rose. "And dearest Bee, I have your father's sanction for what I do, for without it I would not act." Her eyes were still fixed upon the ground, but her hand that he clasped in his throbbed like a heart. And oh! he felt how entirely she loved him; and he felt that he could devote his whole life to her. "Dearest of all dear ones, Bee, listen to me. Not many days have passed, since, one evening, you came to this arbor, seeking one that was lost and found—me!" She began to tremble. "You know how you found me, Bee," he said sadly and solemnly. "Oh, Ishmael, dear!" she cried, with an accent of sharp pain, "do not speak of that evening! forget it and let me forget it! it is past!" "Dearest girl, only this once will I pain you by alluding to that sorrowful and degrading hour. You found me—I will not shrink from uttering the word, though it will scorch my lips to speak it and burn your ears to hear it—you found me—intoxicated." "Oh, Ishmael, dear, you were not to blame! it was not your fault! it was an accident—a misfortune!" she exclaimed, as blushes burned upon her cheeks and tears suffused her eyes. "How much I blamed, how much I loathed myself, dearest Bee, you can never know! Let that pass. You found me as I said. Actually and bodily I was lying on this bench, sleeping the stupid sleep of intoxication; but morally and spiritually I was slipping over the brink of an awful chasm. Bee, dearest Bee! dearest saving angel! it was this little hand of yours that drew me back, so softly that I scarcely knew I had been in danger of ruin until that danger was past. And, Bee, since that day many days of storm have passed, but the face of my saving angel has ever looked out from among the darkest clouds a bright rainbow of promise. I did not perish in the storm, because her sweet face ever looked down upon me!" Bee did not attempt to reply; she could not; she sat with her flushed and tearful eyes bent upon the ground. "Love, do you know this token?" he inquired, in a voice shaking with agitation, as he drew from his bosom a little wisp of white cambric and laid it in her lap. "It is my—my—" she essayed to answer, but her voice failed. "It is your dear handkerchief," he said, as he took it, pressed it to his lips, and replaced it in his bosom. "It is your dear handkerchief! When you found me as you did, in your loving kindness you laid it over my face—mine! so utterly unworthy to be so delicately veiled! Oh, Bee, if I could express to you all I felt! all I thought! when I recognized this dear token and so discovered who it was that had sought me when I was lost, and dropped tears of sorrow over me! and then covered my face from the blistering sun and the stinging flies—if I could tell you all that I suffered and resolved, then you would feel and know how earnest and sincere is the heart that at last—at last, my darling, I lay at your beloved feet." She looked up at him for a moment and breathed a single word—a name that seemed to escape her lips quite involuntarily—"Claudia!" "Yes, my darling," he said, in tones vibrating with emotion, "it is as you suppose, or rather it was so! You have divined my secret, which indeed I never intended to keep as a secret from you. Yes, Bee; I loved another before loving you. I loved her whom you have just named. I love her no longer. When by her marriage with another my love would have become sinful, it was sentenced to death and executed. But, Bee, it died hard, very hard; and in its violent death-throes it rent and tore my heart, as the evil spirit did the possessed man, when it was driven out of him. Bee, my darling," said Ishmael, smiling for the first time since commencing the interview, "this may seem to you a very fanciful way of putting the case; but is a good one, for in no other manner could I give you to understand how terrible my sufferings have been for the last few weeks, how completely my evil passion has perished; and yet how sore and weak it has left my heart. Bee, it is this heart, wounded and bleeding from a dead love, yet true and single in its affection for you, that I open before you and lay at your feet. Spurn it away from you, Bee, and I cannot blame you. Raise it to your own and I shall love and bless you." Bee burst into tears. He put his arm around her and drew her to his side and she dropped her head upon his shoulder and wept passionately. Many times she tried to speak, but failed. At last, when she had exhausted all her passion, she raised her head from its resting-place. He wiped the tears from her eyes and stooping, whispered: "You will not reject me, Bee, because I loved another woman once?" "No," she answered softly, "for if you loved another woman before me, you could not help it, Ishmael. It is not that I am concerned about." "What then, dearest love? Speak out," he whispered. "Oh, Ishmael, tell me truly one thing;" and she hid her face on his shoulder while she breathed the question: "Isn't it only for my sake, to please me and make me happy, that you offer me your love, Ishmael?" She spoke so low, with her face so muffled on his shoulder, that he scarcely understood her; so he bent his head and inquired: "What is it that you say, dear Bee?" She tried to speak more clearly, for it seemed with her a point of principle to put this question; but her voice was, if possible, lower and more agitated than before, so that he had to stoop closely and listen intently to catch her words as she answered: "Do you not offer me your love, only because—because you have found out—found out somehow or other that I—that I loved you first?" He clasped her suddenly close to his heart, and whispered eagerly: "I offer you my love because I love you, best and dearest of all dear ones!" And he felt at that moment that he did love her entirely. She was sobbing softly on his shoulder; but presently through her tears she said: "And will my love do you any good, make you any happier, compensate you a little for all that you have missed in losing that brilliant one?" He held her closely to his heart while he stooped and answered: "Dearest, your love has always been the greatest earthly blessing Heaven ever bestowed upon my life! I thank Heaven that the blindness and madness of my heart is past and gone, and I am enabled to see and understand this! Your love, Bee, is the only earthly thing that can comfort all the sorrows that may come into my life, or crown all its joys. You will believe this, dearest Bee, when you remember that I never in my life varied from the truth to anyone, and least of all would I prevaricate with you. I love you. Bee, let those three words answer all your doubts!" Brightly and beautifully she smiled up at him through her tears. "All is well, then, Ishmael! For all that I desire in this world is the privilege of making you happy!" "Then you are my own!" he said, stooping and kissing the sparkling tears that hung like dew-drops on the red roses of her cheeks; and holding her to his heart, in profound religious joy and gratitude, he bowed his head and said: "Oh, Father in Heaven! how I thank thee for this dear girl! Oh, make me every day more worthy of her love, and of thy many blessings!" And soon after this Ishmael, happier than he ever thought it possible to be in this world, led forth from the arbor his betrothed bride. He led her at once to the house and to the presence of her parents, whom he found in their private sitting room. Standing before them and holding her hand, he said: "She has promised to be my wife, and we are here for your blessing." "You have it, my children! You have it with all my heart! May the "Amen," said Mrs. Middleton. Later in the evening Judge Merlin was informed of the engagement. "Heaven knows how I envy you your son-in-law." The gratified parents smiled, for they were proud of Ishmael, and what he would become. But Walter Middleton grinned and said: "Heaven may know that, Uncle Merlin; but I know one thing!" "What is that, Jackanapes?" "I know they may thank Bee for their son-in-law, for she did all the courting!" The panic-stricken party remained silent for a moment, and then "Well, sir! I know another thing!" "And what is that, uncle?" "That it will be a long time before you find a young lady to do you such an honor!" Everybody laughed, not at the brilliancy of the joke, for the joke was not brilliant, but because they were happy; and when people are happy they do honor to very indifferent jests. But Bee turned a ludicrously appalled look upon her lover and whispered: "Oh, Ishmael! suppose he had known about that little bit of white cambric. He would have said that I had 'thrown the handkerchief' to you! And so I did! it is a dreadful reflection!" "That handkerchief was a plank thrown to the drowning, Bee. It saved me from being whelmed in the waves of ruin. Oh, dearest, under heaven, you were my salvation!" said Ishmael, with emotion. "Your comfort, Ishmael—only your comfort. Your own right- mindedness, 'under heaven,' would have saved you." This was the last and the happiest evening they all spent at the city home together. Early in the morning they separated. Judge Merlin and his servants started for Tanglewood, and Mr. and Mrs. Middleton and their family for The Beacon, where Ishmael promised as soon as possible to join them. Walter Middleton left for Saratoga. And, last of all, Ishmael locked up the empty house, took charge of the key, and departed to take possession of his new lodgings—alone, but blessed and happy. |