'It
must have crossed you on your way then - it should have reached you yesterday
morning - it was rather late, I acknowledge. But what brought you here, then,
if you received no information?'
It
was now
my turn to be confounded; but the young lady, who had been
busily patting the snow with her foot during our short, sotto voce
colloquy, very opportunely came to my assistance by pinching her companion's
arm and whispering a suggestion that his friend should be invited to step into
the carriage and go with them; it being scarcely agreeable to stand there among
so many gazers, and keeping their friends waiting into the bargain.'And
so cold as it is too!' said he, glancing with dismay at her slight drapery, and
immediately handing her into the carriage. 'Markham, will you come? We are
going to Paris, but we can drop you anywhere between this and Dover.'
'No,
thank you. Good-by - I needn't wish you a pleasant journey; but I shall expect
a very handsome apology, some time, mind, and scores of letters, before we meet
again.'
He
shook my hand, and hastened to take his place beside his lady. This was no time
or place for explanation or discourse: we had already stood long enough to
excite the wonder of the village sight-seers, and perhaps the wrath of the
attendant bridal party; though, of course, all this passed in a much shorter
time than I have taken to relate, or even than you will take to read it. I
stood beside the carriage, and, the window being down, I saw my happy friend
fondly encircle his companion's waist with his arm, while she rested her
glowing cheek on his shoulder, looking the very impersonation of loving,
trusting bliss. In the interval between the footman's closing the door and
taking his place behind she raised her smiling brown eyes to his face,
observing, playfully -
'I
fear you must think me very insensible, Frederick: I know it is the custom for
ladies to cry on these occasions, but I couldn't squeeze a tear for my life.'
He
only answered with a kiss, and pressed her still closer to his bosom.
'But
what is this?' he murmured. 'Why, Esther, you're crying now!'
'Oh,
it's nothing - it's only too much happiness - and the wish,' sobbed she, 'that
our dear Helen were as happy as ourselves.'
'Bless
you for that wish!' I inwardly responded, as the carriage rolled away - 'and Heaven
grant it be not wholly vain!'
I
thought a cloud had suddenly darkened her husband's face as she spoke. What did
he think? Could he grudge such happiness to his dear sister and his
friend as he now felt himself? At such a moment it was impossible. The
contrast between her fate and his must darken his bliss for a time.
Perhaps, too, he thought of me: perhaps he regretted the part he had had in
preventing our union, by omitting to help us, if not by actually plotting
against us - I exonerated him from that charge, now, and deeply lamented
my former ungenerous suspicions; but he had wronged us, still - I hoped,
I trusted that he had. He had not attempted to cheek the course of our love by
actually damming up the streams in their passage, but he had passively watched
the two currents wandering through life's arid wilderness, declining to clear
away the obstructions that divided them, and secretly hoping that both would
lose themselves in the sand before they could be joined in one. And meantime he
had been quietly proceeding with his own affairs; perhaps, his heart and head
had been so full of his fair lady that he had had but little thought to spare
for others. Doubtless he had made his first acquaintance with her - his first
intimate acquaintance at least - during his three months' sojourn at F-, for I
now recollected that he had once casually let fall an intimation that his aunt
and sister had a young friend staying with them at the time, and this accounted
for at least one-half his silence about all transactions there. Now, too, I saw
a reason for many little things that had slightly puzzled me before; among the
rest, for sundry departures from Woodford, and absences more or less prolonged,
for which he never satisfactorily accounted, and concerning which he hated to
be questioned on his return. Well might the servant say his master was 'very
close.' But why this strange reserve to me? Partly, from that remarkable
idiosyncrasy to which I have before alluded; partly, perhaps, from tenderness
to my feelings, or fear to disturb my philosophy by touching upon the
infectious theme of love.
Chapter 52,
Fluctuations