It was within an hour of daylight
when Mrs. Howland, worn down by her long vigil, fell
asleep, and an hour after the sun had risen, before
her troubled slumber was broken. Then starting
up, she eagerly inquired of her husband, who had already
arisen, and was walking about the room, if Andrew
had yet returned. Mr. Howland merely shook his
head.
Soon after, breakfast was announced,
and the family assembled at the table; but one place
was vacant.
“Where is Andrew?” asked Mary.
No answer was made to this question;
and Mary saw by the expression of her parents faces,
that to repeat it would not be agreeable. A few
moments afterward the bell rung. As the steps
of a servant were heard moving along the passage toward
the door, Mr. and Mrs. Howland sat listening in breathless
expectation. Soon the servant came down, and
said that a man wished to see Mr. Howland.
At these words the latter started
up from the table and left the room. At the street
door he found a man, whose appearance indicated his
attachment to the police of the city.
“Mr. Howland!” said he,
respectfully, yet with the air of a man who had something
not very agreeable to communicate.
“That is my name,” replied
Mr. Howland, striving, but in vain, to assume an air
of unconcern.
“You are wanted at the Mayor’s
office,” said the policeman.
“For what purpose?” was inquired.
“Your son is before his Honor,
on a charge of attempting to set fire to a row of
new buildings last night.”
At this intelligence, Mr. Howland
uttered an exclamation of distress, and stepping back
a pace or two, leaned heavily against the wall.
“Well! What is wanted with
me?” asked the unhappy father, recovering himself,
after a few moments.
“To go his bail,” replied
the officer. “The Mayor demands a thousand
dollars bail, in default of which, he will have to
go to prison and there await his trial.”
“Let him go to prison!”
said Mr. Howland, in a severe tone of voice.
He was beginning to regain his self-possession.
“No, Andrew!” came firmly
from the lips of Mrs. Howland, who had followed her
husband, unperceived, to the door, and who had heard
the dreadful charge preferred against her son.
“Don’t say that! Go and save him
from the disgrace and wrong that now hang over his
head—and go quickly!”
“Yes, Mr. Howland,” said
the officer, “your lady is right. You should
not let him go to prison. That will do him no
good. And, moreover, he may be innocent of the
crime laid to his charge.”
“He must be innocent. My
boy has many faults, but he would not be guilty of
a crime like this,” said Mrs. Howland. “Oh,
Mr. Howland! go! go quickly and save him from these
dreadful consequences. If you do not, I must
fly to him. They shall not imprison my poor boy!”
“This is folly, Esther!”
returned Mr. Howland, severely. “He has
got himself, by his bad conduct, into the hands of
the law, and it will do him good to feel its iron
grip. I am clear for letting him at least go
to prison, and remain there for a few days. By
that time he will be sick enough of his folly.”
“I would not advise this,”
suggested the officer. “Depend upon it,
if his present position is of no avail toward working
change for the better—sending him to prison
will harden, rather than reform him.”
“Andrew!” said Mrs. Howland,
with a firmness and decision of tone that marked a
high degree of resolution on her part—“if
you do not go his bail, I will find some person who
will.”
“Esther!” The offended
husband fixed a look of stern rebuke upon his wife;
but her large eyes looked steadily into his, and he
saw in them, not rebellion, or anger—but
a spirit that his own heart told him instinctively,
it would be folly for him to oppose. That look
determined his action.
“I’ll go with you,”
said he, after pausing a few moments, turning to the
officer as he spoke.
The charge brought against Andrew
by the watchman, was an intention to set fire to the
buildings in which he found him. Several unfinished
houses had been burned of late, and there was some
excitement in the public mind thereat. Had it
not been for this, Andrew might have made his way
into the building where he intended to sleep, without,
in all probability, attracting attention. Unfortunately
for him, a few matches were found in one of his pockets.
This fact, added to his attempt to escape, and the
rather exaggerated statement of the watchman, caused
the Mayor to look upon the case as one that ought
to go before the Court. He accordingly decided
to require an appearance, under bail.
Not a word was spoken to Andrew by
his stern father, on the arrival of the latter at
the Mayor’s office. Mr. Howland looked at
the evidence which went to support the charge of intended
incendiarism against his son, and to his mind, prejudiced
as it was against that son, the evidence was conclusive.
In fact, the watchman’s eyes had seen rather
more, than in reality, was to be seen, and his testimony
was strongly colored.
The required security given, Mr. Howland,
without turning toward his son, or speaking to him,
left the office.
“You can go home, young man,”
said the Mayor, addressing Andrew.
“Oh, sir!” exclaimed the
unhappy boy, in a distressed tone—“I
am not guilty of this thing. Father turned me
from the door because I was not at home at ten o’clock,
and I had no place to sleep.”
“Disobedience to parents ever
brings trouble,” replied the Mayor, in a voice
of admonition. “Go home, and try to behave
better in future. If innocent, you will no doubt
be able to make it so appear when your trial comes
on before the Court.”
Slowly the lad arose, and with a troubled
and downcast look, retired from the office.
“Where is Andrew?” eagerly
asked the mother, as Mr. Howland entered the house,
after returning from the errand upon which he had gone.
“I left him at the Mayor’s
office,” was coldly replied.
“Did you go his bail?”
“Yes.”
“Why didn’t he come home with you?”
“I didn’t ask him.”
“Andrew!”
Mr. Howland started at the tone of
voice with which his name was pronounced. Again
there was an expression in the eyes of his wife that
subdued him.
“I gave bail for his appearance
at Court, and then came away. He will, no doubt,
be home in a few minutes,” he replied. “But
I do not wish to hold any intercourse with him; for
he has disgraced both himself and me.”
“Is he not your son?” asked the mother,
solemnly.
“He is not a son worthy of affection and regard.”
“Andrew! when the sons of men
wandered far away from God, and broke all his laws,
did He turn from them as you have turned from this
erring boy? No! All day long He stretched
forth His hands to them, and said, in a voice full
of infinite kindness, ’Return unto Me; why will
you die?’ It is not Godlike to be angry at those
who sin against us; but Godlike to draw them back
with cords of love from error. Oh, Andrew! you
have wronged this boy!”
“Esther! I will not hear
the utterance of such language from any one!”
exclaimed Mr. Howland, whose imperious nature could
ill brook an accusation like this.
“I have uttered only what I
believe to be true,” answered the wife, in a
milder tone, yet with a firmness that showed her spirit
to be unsubdued. No further words passed between
them. Half an hour afterward, up to which time
Andrew had not come home, Mr. Howland left the house
and went to his place of business.
Time passed on until nearly noon,
and yet Andrew was still away. Mrs. Howland,
whose mind was in a state of strong excitement, could
bear her suspense and fear no longer, and she resolved
to go out and seek for her wandering son. She
had dressed herself, and was just taking up her bonnet,
as the door of her room opened, and Andrew came in,
looking pale and distressed. Across his forehead
was a deep, red mark, the scar left by the wound he
received, when he fell on the pavement, in the attempt
to escape from the watchman.
“My son!” exclaimed Mrs.
Howland, in a voice that thrilled the poor boy’s
heart—for it was full of sympathy and tenderness—and
then she threw her arms around his neck and kissed
him.
Overcome by this reception, Andrew
wept aloud. As soon as he could speak, he said—
“Indeed, indeed, mother!
I am innocent. You wouldn’t let me in last
night, and I was going to sleep in the building, when
the watchman came and said I meant to set it on fire!
I’m bad enough, mother, but not so wicked as
that! Why should I set a house on fire?”
“I didn’t believe it for
a moment, Andrew,” replied Mrs. Howland.
“But, oh! isn’t it dreadful?”
“I’m not to blame, mother,”
said the weeping boy. “I didn’t mean
to stay out later than ten. But I was deceived
in the time. I was a good way off when the clock
struck, and I ran home as fast as I could. I’m
sure it wasn’t ten minutes after when I rang
the bell. But nobody would let me in; not even
you, mother—and I thought so hard
of that!”
With what a pang did these last words
go through the heart of Mrs. Howland.
“I wanted to let you in,”
replied the mother, “but your father said that
I must not do so.”
“And so you left me to sleep
in the streets,” said the boy, with much bitterness.
“I couldn’t have turned a dog off in that
way!”
“Don’t, don’t speak
so, Andrew! You will break my heart!” returned
the mother, sobbing, “I did open the door for
you, but you were not there.”
“I knocked and rung a good while.”
“I know. But I had to wait
until your father was asleep. Then I went down,
but it was too late.”
“Yes—yes, it was
too late,” said Andrew, speaking now in a firmer
voice. “And it is too late now. I am
to be tried as a felon, and it may be, will be sent
to the State Prison. Oh, dear!”
And he covered his face with his hands, and sobbed.
What little comfort she had to offer
her unhappy child, was offered by Mrs. Howland.
But few rays of light came through the heavy clouds
that enveloped both of their hearts.
At dinner time, Andrew declined meeting
his father at the table.
“Go and tell him,” said
the unyielding man, when the servant, who had been
sent to his room to call him to dinner, came back and
said that he did not wish to come down, “that
he cannot have a mouthful to eat unless he comes to
the table.”
“No, no, Andrew—don’t
say that!” quickly spoke Mrs. Howland.
“I do say it, and I mean it,”
replied Mr. Howland, fixing his eyes rebukingly upon
his wife.
Mrs. Howland answered nothing.
But her purpose to stand between her unrelenting husband
and wandering son, was none the less fixed; and in
her countenance Mr. Howland read this distinctly.
Accordingly, so soon as the latter had left the house,
she took food to Andrew, who still remained in his
room, at the same time that she expressed to him her
earnest wish that he would meet the family at the tea-table
in the evening.
“I don’t want to meet
father,” he replied to this. “He will
only frown upon me.”
“He is, of course, very much
fretted at this occurrence,” said the mother.
“And you cannot much wonder at it, Andrew.”
“He is more to blame than I
am,” was answered in an indignant tone.
“Don’t speak of your father
in that way, my son,” said the mother, a gentle
reproof in her voice.
“I speak as I feel, mother. Is it not so?”
An argument on this subject Mrs. Howland
would not hold with her boy, and she therefore changed
it; but she did not cease her appeals to both his
reason and his feelings, until he yielded to her wishes.
At supper time he joined the family at table—it
was his first meeting with his father since morning.
Oh, what an intense desire did he feel for a kind
reception from his stern parent! It seemed to
him that such a reception would soften everything harsh
and rebellious, and cause him to throw himself at
his feet, and make the humblest confessions of error,
and the most truthful promise of future well doing.
Alas! for the repentant boy! no such reception awaited
him. His father did not so much as turn his eyes
upon his son, and, during the meal, maintained a frigid
silence. Andrew ate but a few mouthfuls.
He had no appetite for food. On leaving the table,
he went into one of the parlors, whither he was followed
in a little while, by his younger brother, Edward,
who was, by nature, almost as hard and unsympathsizing
as his father. It was the first time, on that
day, that the two boys had been alone.
“Set a house on fire!”
said Edward, in a half-sneering, half-censorious,
tantalizing voice.
“If you say that again, I’ll
knock you down!” fell sharply from the lips
of Andrew, in whom his father’s repulsive coldness
was beginning to awaken bad feelings.
“Set a house on fire!”
repeated Edward, in a tone still more aggravating.
The words had scarcely left his tongue,
ere the open hand of his brother came along side of
his head, with a force that knocked him across the
room. At this instant Mr. Howland entered.
He made no inquiry as to the cause of the blow he
saw struck, but took it for granted that it was an
unprovoked assault of Andrew upon his brother.
Yielding to the impulse of the moment, he caught the
former by the arm, in a fierce grip, and struck him
with his open hand, as he had struck his brother,
repeating the blow three or four times.
Andrew neither shrunk from the blows,
cried out, nor offered the smallest resistance, but
stood firmly, until his incensed father had satisfied
his outraged feelings.
“You forgot, I suppose, that
I could strike also?” said the latter angrily,
when he released his son from the tight grasp, with
which he held him.
“No sir,” replied Andrew,
with a calmness that surprized, yet still more incensed
his father; “I thought nothing about it.
I punished Edward as he deserved; and if he says to
me what he did just now, will repeat the punishment,
if it cost me my life.”
“Silence!” cried Mr. Howland.
“I said nothing but the truth,” spoke
up Edward.
“What did you say?” inquired the father.
“I told him that he’d set a house on fire.”
“And lied when he said it,” calmly and
deliberately spoke Andrew.
“Silence! I’ll have
no such language in my presence!” angrily retorted
Mr. Howland.
“It is bad enough to be accused
falsely by a lying policeman,” said Andrew,
“but to have the charge repeated by my own brother
is more than I can or will bear. And I warn Edward,
in your presence, not to try the experiment again.
If he does he will not escape so lightly.”
“Silence, I say!”
Andrew remained silent.
“Edward, leave the room,”
said Mr. Howland. There was little sternness
in his voice, as he thus spoke to his favorite boy.
The lad retired. For several
minutes Mr. Howland walked the floor, and Andrew who
had seated himself, waited in a calm, defiant spirit,
for him to renew the interview. It was at length
done in these words—
“What do you expect is to become of you, sir?”
Not feeling inclined to answer such
an interrogation, Andrew continued silent.
“Say!” repeated the father,
“what do you think is to become of you?”
Still the boy answered not a word.
“Under bail to answer for a crime—”
“Which I never committed—nor
designed to commit!” spoke up Andrew, quickly
interrupting his father, and fixing his eyes upon,
him with an unflinching gaze.
“It is easy to make a denial.
But the evidence against you is positive.”
“The evidence against me is
a positive lie!” was Andrew’s indignant
response.
“I won’t be talked to
in this way!” said Mr. Howland, in an offended
tone. “No son of mine shall insult me!”
“A strange insult to a father,
for a son to declare himself innocent of a crime falsely
laid to his charge,” replied Andrew, with a
strong rebuke in his voice. “A true father
would be glad—”
“Silence!” again fell
harshly from the lips of Mr. Howland. “Silence,
I say; I will hear no such language from a son of mine!”
Without a word, Andrew arose, and,
retiring from the room, took up his hat and left the
house—the relation between him and his father
by no means in a better position than it was before.
Within a few minutes of ten o’clock the boy
returned, and, being admitted, went up to his room
without joining the family.
On the next morning, one or two of
the daily papers contained an account of Andrew’s
arrest, with his father’s name and all the particulars
of the transaction. Any one reading this account,
with the reporter’s comment, could not help
but believe that Andrew was a desperate bad boy, and
undoubtedly guilty in design of incendiarism.
“See what a disgrace you have
brought upon us!” exclaimed Mr. Howland, flinging
a paper, containing this mortifying intelligence in
the face of his son.
The boy took up the paper, and read
the paragraph referred to with a burning cheek.
He made no remark, but sat for some time in a state
of profound abstraction. No one guessed the thoughts
that were passing through his mind, nor the utter
hopelessness that was lying, with a heavy weight,
upon his spirit. Before him was the image of
Emily. She had seen him with his blood-disfigured
face, in the hands of the watchman; and now she would
see this slanderous story, and what was worse, believe
it!
Some two hours subsequently, while
walking along the street, Andrew perceived Emily,
within a few paces of him. He looked her steadily
in the face, and saw that she saw him; for a quick
flush overspread her countenance. But, averting
her eyes, she passed him without a further sign of
recognition.
At night-fall, the boy did not return to his home.
Anxiously did the time pass with Mrs.
Howland until ten o’clock, and yet he was away.
Eleven—twelve—one o’clock,
pealed on the ear of the watching mother, but he came
not. It was all in vain that her husband remonstrated
with her. His words passed her unheeded; and
she remained waiting and watching, until near the hour
of morning, but her waiting and watching were all
in vain.
Two days passed—yet there
came no tidings of the absent boy. On the third
day, Mrs. Howland received the following letter:—
“My dear mother:—I
have left my home—forever! What is
to become of me, I do not know. But I can remain
with you no longer. Father treats me like a dog—or
worse than a dog; and he has never treated me much
better. I have tried to do right a great many
times; but it was of no use. The harder I tried
to do right, the more he found fault with me.
He was always blaming me for something I didn’t
do. It is all a lie of the watchman’s about
my setting the house on fire. Such a thing never
entered my mind. Father (sic) would’t let
me in, and I had to sleep somewhere. He wouldn’t
speak a word for me in the Mayor’s office.
So it’s all his fault that I am to be tried
before the Court. But I’m not going to be
sent to the Penitentiary. Father is my bail for
a thousand dollars. I shall be sorry if he has
to pay it; but it will be better for him to do that,
than for me to go to the Penitentiary for nothing.
So, good-by, mother, I love you! You have always
been good to me. If father had been as good, I
would have been a better boy. Don’t grieve
about me. It’s better that I should leave
home. You’ll all be happier. If I ever
return to you, I will be different from what I am
now. Farewell mother! Don’t forget
me. I will never forget you. Don’t
grieve about me. The thought of that troubles
me the most. But it is better for me to go away,
mother—better for us all. Farewell.
“Andrew.”