The Woman Thou Gavest Me eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 874 pages of information about The Woman Thou Gavest Me.

The Woman Thou Gavest Me eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 874 pages of information about The Woman Thou Gavest Me.

Nevertheless I shouldn’t have been a woman If I had not coquetted with my great happiness, so when Martin had finished I said: 

“But dare you?”

“Dare I—­what?” said Martin.

“Dare you go home . . . with me?”

I knew what I wanted him to say, and he said it like a darling.

“Look here, Mary, I’m just spoiling for a sight of the little island, and the old people are destroyed at not seeing me; but if I can’t go back with you, by the Lord God!  I’ll never go back at all.”

I wanted to see baby before going away, but that was forbidden me.

“Wait until you’re well enough, and we’ll send her after you,” said Dr. O’Sullivan.

So the end of it all was that inside a week I was on my way to Ellan, not only with Martin, but also with Mildred, who, being a little out of health herself, had been permitted to take me home.

Shall I ever forget our arrival at Blackwater!  The steamer we sailed in was streaming with flags from stem to stern, and as she slid up the harbour the dense crowds that packed the pier from end to end seemed frantic with excitement.  Such shouting and cheering!  Such waving of hats and handkerchiefs!

There was a sensible pause, I thought, a sort of hush, when the gangway being run down, Martin was seen to give his arm to me, and I was recognised as the lost and dishonoured one.

But even that only lasted for a moment, it was almost as if the people felt that this act of Martin’s was of a piece with the sacred courage that had carried him down near to the Pole, for hardly had he brought me ashore, and put me into the automobile waiting to take us away, when the cheering broke out into almost delirious tumult.

I knew it was all for Martin, but not even the humility of my position, and the sense of my being an added cause of my darling’s glory, could make me otherwise than proud and happy.

We drove home, with the sunset in our faces, over the mountain road which I had crossed with my husband on the day of my marriage; and when we came to our own village I could not help seeing that a little—­just a little—­of the welcome waiting for us was meant for me.

Father Dan was there.  He got into the car and sat by my side; and then some of the village women, who had smartened themselves up in their Sunday clothes, reached over and shook hands with me, speaking about things I had said and done as a child and had long forgotten.

We had to go at a walking pace the rest of the way, and while Martin saluted old friends (he remembered everybody by name) Father Dan talked in my ear about the “domestic earthquake” that had been going on at Sunny Lodge, everything topsy-turvy until to-day, the little room being made ready for me, and the best bedroom (the doctor’s and Christian Ann’s) for Martin, and the “loft” over the dairy for the old people themselves—­as if their beloved son had been good in not forgetting them, and had condescended in coming home.

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The Woman Thou Gavest Me from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.