‘Do not be angry with me,’ he said imploringly. He had but one idea, that was, to keep this radiant dream of beauty with him as long as possible.
’I’m not angry; I am not angry at all—indeed’—and here she looked down at the twigs in her hand and began pulling the young leaves rather roughly—’I am not sure but that I am rather pleased. I have so often met you in the woods, you know; only I didn’t know that you had ever noticed me.’
‘I never did,’ said the schoolmaster; but happily his nervous lips gave but indistinct utterance to the words, and his tone was pathetic. She thought he had only made some further pleading.
‘I—I—I like you very much,’ she said. ’I suppose, of course, everybody will be very much surprised, and mother may not be pleased, you know, just at first; but she’s good and dear, mother is, in spite of what she says; and father will be glad about anything that pleases me.’
He did not understand what she said; but he felt distressed at the moment to notice that she was twisting the tender willow leaves, albeit he saw that she only did so because, in her embarrassment, her fingers worked unconsciously. He came forward and took her hands gently, to disentangle them from the twigs. She let them lie in his, and looked up in his face and smiled.
’I will try to be a good wife, and manage all the common things, and not tease you to be like other men, if you will sometimes read your books to me and explain to me what life means, and why it is so beautiful, and why things are as they are.’
‘I’m afraid I don’t understand these matters myself very well,’ he said; ‘but we can talk about them together.’
While he held her hands, she drooped her head till it touched his shoulder.
He had kissed no one since his mother died, and the great joy that took possession of his heart brought, by its stimulus, a sudden knowledge of what had really happened to his mind. In a marvellously tender way, for a man who could not go a-courting, he put his hand under the pretty chin and looked down wonderingly, reverently, at the serious upturned face. ‘And this is bonnie Eelan Reid?’
Then Eelan, thinking that he was teasing her gently for being so easily won when she had gained the reputation of being so proud, cast down her eyes and blushed.
So they were married, and lived happily, very happily, although they had their sorrows, as others have. The schoolmaster was man enough to keep the knowledge of his blunder a secret between himself and God.
As for Miss Blakely, she never quite understood who had stolen the dollar, or when, or where; but she was glad to get it back. She never forgave Mrs. Sims for having managed her trust so ill, although the widow declared, with tears in her eyes, that she had done her best.
’He would have taken in the knowingest person, he would indeed, Ann Blakely; and, to my notion, a straightforward woman like you is well quit of a man who, while he looked so innocent, could act so deep.’