AFTER THE STORM.
AFTER the storm! How long
the treasure remained buried in deep waters!
How long the earth showed unsightly furrows and barren
places! For nearly twenty years there had been
warm sunshine, and no failure of the dews nor the
early and latter rain. But grass had not grown
nor flowers blossomed in the path of that desolating
tempest. Nearly twenty years! If the history
of these two lives during that long period could be
faithfully written, it would flood the soul with tears.
Four years later than the time when
we last presented Irene to the reader we introduce
her again. That meeting in the picture-gallery
had disturbed profoundly the quiet pulses of her life.
She did not observe Mr. Emerson’s companion.
The picture alone had attracted her attention; and
she had just began to feel its meaning when an audible
sigh reached her ears. The answering sigh was
involuntary. Then they looked into each other’s
faces again—only for an instant—but
with what a volume of mutual revelations!
It was four years subsequent to this
time that Irene, after a brief visit in New York to
her friend, Mrs. Everet, returned to her rural home.
Mrs. Everet was to follow on the next day, and spend
a few weeks with her father. It was yet in the
early summer, and there were not many passengers on
the-boat. As was usual, Irene provided herself
with a volume, and soon after going on board took a
retired place in one of the cabins and buried herself
in its pages. For over three hours she remained
completely absorbed in what she was reading.
Then her mind began to wander and dwell on themes that
made the even pulses of her heart beat to a quicker
measure; yet still her eyes remained fixed on the
book she held in her hand. At length she became
aware that some one was near her, by the falling of
a shadow on the page she was trying to read.
Lifting her head, she met the eyes of Hartley Emerson.
He was standing close to her, his hand resting on
the back of a chair, which he now drew nearly in front
of her.
“Irene,” he said, in a
low, quiet voice, “I am glad to meet you again
in this world.” And he reached out his hand
as he spoke.
For a moment Irene sat very still,
but she did not take her eyes from Mr. Emerson’s
face; then she extended her hand and let it lie in
his. He did not fail to notice that it had a low
tremor.
Thus received, he sat down.
“Nearly twenty years have passed,
Irene, since a word or sign has passed between us.”
Her lips moved, but there was no utterance.
“Why should we not, at least, be friends?”
Her lips moved again, but no words trembled on the
air.
“Friends, that may meet now
and then, and feel kindly one toward the other.”
His voice was still event in tone—very
even, but very distinct and impressive.
At first Irene’s face had grown
pale, but now a warm flush was pervading it.
“If you desire it, Hartley,”
she answered, in a voice that trembled in the beginning,
but grew firm ere the sentence closed, “it is
not for me to say, ‘No.’ As for kind
feelings, they are yours always—always.
The bitterness passed from my heart long ago.”
“And from mine,” said Mr. Emerson.
They were silent for a few moments, and each showed
embarrassment.
“Nearly twenty years! That
is a long, long time, Irene.” His voice
showed signs of weakness.
“Yes, it is a long time.”
It was a mere echo of his words, yet full of meaning.
“Twenty years!” he repeated.
“There has been full time for reflection, and,
it may be, for repentance. Time for growing wiser
and better.”
Irene’s eyelids drooped until
the long lashes lay in a dark fringed line on her
pale cheeks. When she lifted them they were wet.
“Yes, Hartley,” she answered
with much feeling, “there has been, indeed,
time for reflection and repentance. It is no light
thing to shadow the whole life of a human being.”
“As I have shadowed yours.”
“No, no,” she answered
quickly, “I did not mean that; as I have shadowed
yours.”
She could not veil the tender interest
that was in her eyes; would not, perhaps, if it had
been in her power.
At this moment a bell rang out clear
and loud. Irene started and glanced from the
window; then, rising quickly, she said—
“We are at the landing.”
There was a hurried passage from cabin
to deck, a troubled confusion of thought, a brief
period of waiting, and then Irene stood on the shore
and Hartley Emerson on the receding vessel. In
a few hours miles of space lay between them.
“Irene, darling,” said
Mrs. Everet, as they met at Ivy Cliff on the next
day, “how charming you look! This pure,
sweet, bracing air has beautified you like a cosmetic.
Your cheeks are warm and your eyes are full of light.
It gives me gladness of heart to see in your face
something of the old look that faded from it years
ago.”
Irene drew her arm around her friend
and kissed her lovingly.
“Come and sit down here in the
library. I have something to tell you,”
she answered, “that will make your heart beat
quicker, as it has mine.”
“I have met him,” she
said, as they sat down and looked again into each
other’s faces.
“Him! Who?”
“Hartley.”
“Your husband?”
“He who was my husband.
Met him face to face; touched his hand; listened to
his voice; almost felt his heart beat against mine.
Oh, Rose darling, it has sent the blood bounding in
new life through my veins. He was on the boat
yesterday, and came to me as I sat reading. We
talked together for a few minutes, when our landing
was reached, and we parted. But in those few
minutes my poor heart had more happiness than it has
known for twenty years. We are at peace.
He asked why we might not be as friends who could meet
now and then, and feel kindly toward each other?
God bless him for the words! After a long, long
night of tears, the sweet morning has broken!”
And Irene laid her head down against
Rose, hiding her face and weeping from excess of joy.
“What a pure, true, manly face
he has!” she continued, looking up with swimming
eyes. “How full it is of thought and feeling!
You called him my husband just now, Rose. My
husband!” The light went back from her face.
“Not for time, but—” and she
glanced upward, with eyes full of hope—“for
the everlasting ages! Oh is it not a great gain
to have met here in forgiveness of the past—to
have looked kindly into each other’s faces—to
have spoken words that cannot die?”
What could Rose say to all this?
Irene had carried her out of her depth. The even
tenor of her life-experiences gave no deep sea-line
that could sound these waters. And so she sat
silent, bewildered and half afraid.
Margaret came to the library, and,
opening the door, looked in. There was a surprised
expression on her face.
“What is it?” Irene asked.
“A gentleman has called, Miss Irene.”
“A gentleman!”
“Yes, miss; and wants to see you.”
“Did he send his name?”
“No, miss.”
“Do you know him, Margaret?”
“I can’t say, miss, for certain, but—”
she stopped.
“But what, Margaret?”
“It may be just my thought,
miss; but he looks for all the world as if he might
be—”
She paused again.
“Well?”
“I can’t say it, Miss
Irene, no how, and I won’t. But the gentleman
asked for you. What shall I tell him?”
“That I will see him in a moment,” answered
Irene.
Margaret retired.
The face of Irene, which flushed at
first, now became pale as ashes. A wild hope
trembled in her heart.
“Excuse me for a few minutes,”
she said to Mrs. Everet, and, rising, left the room.
It was as Irene had supposed.
On entering the parlor, a gentleman advanced to meet
her, and she stood face to face with Hartley Emerson!
“Irene,” he said, extending his hand.
“Hartley,” fell in an
irrepressible throb from her lips as she put her hand
in his.
“I could not return to New York
without seeing you again,” said Mr. Emerson,
as he stood holding the hand of Irene. “We
met so briefly, and were thrown apart again so suddenly,
that some things I meant to say were left unspoken.”
He led her to a seat and sat down
beside her, still looking intently in her face.
Irene was far from being as calm as when they sat
together the day before. A world of new hopes
had sprung up in her heart since then. She had
lain half asleep and half awake nearly all night,
in a kind of delicious dream, from which the morning
awoke her with a cold chill of reality. She had
dreamed again since the sun had risen; and now the
dream was changing into the actual.
“Have I done wrong in this, Irene?” he
asked.
And she answered,
“No, it is a pleasure to meet you, Hartley.”
She had passed through years of self-discipline,
and the power acquired during this time came to her
aid. And so she was able to answer with womanly
dignity. It was a pleasure to meet him there,
and she said so.
“There are some things in the
past, Irene,” said Mr. Emerson, “of which
I must speak, now that I can do so. There are
confessions that I wish to make. Will you hear
me?”
“Better,” answered Irene,
“let the dead past bury its dead.”
“I do not seek to justify myself, but you, Irene.”
“You cannot alter the estimate
I have made of my own conduct,” she replied.
“A bitter stream does not flow from a sweet fountain.
That dead, dark, hopeless past! Let it sleep
if it will!”
“And what, then, of the future?” asked
Mr. Emerson.
“Of the future!” The question
startled her. She looked at him with a glance
of eager inquiry.
“Yes, of the future, Irene.
Shall it be as the past? or have we both come up purified
from the fire? Has it consumed the dross, and
left only the fine gold? I can believe it in
your case, and hope that it is so in mine. But
this I do know, Irene: after suffering and trial
have done their work of abrasion, and I get down to
the pure metal of my heart, I find that your image
is fixed there in the imperishable substance.
I did not hope to meet you again in this world as
now—to look into your face, to hold your
hand, to listen to your voice as I have done this
day—but I have felt that God was fitting
us through earthly trial, for a heavenly union.
We shall be one hereafter, dear Irene—one
and for ever!”
The strong man broke down. His
voice fell into low sobs—tears blinded
his vision. He groped about for the hand of Irene,
found it, and held it wildly to his lips.
Was it for a loving woman to hold
back coldly now? No, no, no! That were impossible.
“My husband!” she said,
tenderly and reverently, as she placed her saintly
lips on his forehead.
There was a touching ceremonial at
Ivy Cliff on the next day—one never to
be forgotten by the few who were witnesses. A
white-haired minister—the same who, more
than twenty years before, had said to Hartley Emerson
and Irene Delancy, “May your lives flow together
like two pure streams that meet in the same valley,”—again
joined their hands and called them “husband
and wife.” The long, dreary, tempestuous
night had passed away, and the morning arisen in brightness
and beauty.
THE END.