SHOCKED as was Emily Winters at the
sight of Andrew, bleeding in the hands of the watchman,
and by the subsequent newspaper report of his bad
conduct; and estranged from her early regard for him,
as she had been, by these and other things that she
had heard, the young girl could not entirely banish
from her mind the image of the boy who had been to
her so gentle and affectionate since the early and
innocent days of childhood. In spite of all her
efforts to turn her thoughts away from him, they were
ever turning toward him; and, as time passed on, and
his long absence left all in doubt concerning his
fate, his memory became to her something like a hallowed
thing.
In passing on to the estate of womanhood,
Emily, who possessed more than common beauty, attracted
admirers, and from two or three of these she received
offers of marriage. But in each case the suitor
had failed to win her heart, and she was too true a
woman to give her hand to any one unless her heart
could go also.
In at least one case her father took
sides with the lover, and urged his suit with a degree
of feeling that resulted in a partial estrangement
of affection. But he afterward had cause to be
well satisfied with Emily’s decision in the
case.
On the morning that had succeeded
the day of Andrew Howland’s return to P—,
Emily Winters, who had long since ceased to think of
the young man as alive, was informed that a gentleman
had called, and wished to see her.
“Who is he?” was the natural inquiry.
“I don’t know,” replied the servant.
“You should have asked his name.”
“I did so, but he said that it was no matter.”
After making some slight change in
her dress, Emily went down to the parlor. As
she entered, a gentleman arose and advanced a few steps
toward her.
“Miss Winters!” said he,
while he fixed his eyes intently on her face.
The young lady bowed slightly in return,
while she looked at him inquiringly.
“You don’t know me?”
said the stranger, with perceptible disappointment
in his voice.
Emily dropped her eyes for a moment
to the floor, and then lifted them again to his countenance.
There was a gentle suffusion on her face, as she slowly
shook her head.
“I have seen you before,”
she remarked, “but I cannot, at this moment,
tell where.”
“Years have passed since we
met,” replied the stranger, with something of
sadness in his voice; “but I had hoped you would
not forget me.”
As he spoke, he came nearer, and held
out his hand, which Emily did not hesitate to take.
At the moment of this contact, a light
flashed on the maiden’s face, and she exclaimed,
with sudden emotion—
“Andrew Howland! Can it be?”
And she stepped back a pace or two,
and sunk upon a chair. Andrew did not relinquish
her hand, but sat down by her side, replying, as he
did so—
“Yes, Emily, it is even so.
After a long, long absence, I have come back to my
old home, wiser and better, I trust, than when I went
away.”
It was some time before Emily looked
up or replied; but she did not make a motion to withdraw
the hand which Andrew held with no slight pressure.
“How often, Emily,” continued
Andrew, seeing that she remained silent, “have
I thought of the sweet hours we spent together as
children—hours, too often, of stolen delight.
Their remembrance has, many a time, saved me from
evil when strongly tempted. But for that, and
the memory of my mother, I should long since have become
a castaway on the ocean of life.”
The voice of Andrew became tremulous
as he uttered the last sentence. It was then
that Emily raised her eyes from the floor, gently
withdrawing her hand at the same time, and fixed them
upon his face. His words had sent her thoughts
back to the old time when they were children together,
and when, to be within him, was one of her highest
pleasures; and, not only that, his words and tones
had reached her heart, and awakened therein an echo.
“It is a long time since you
went away,” said Emily. “A very long
time.”
“Yes; it is a long time.
But, the weary slow-passing years are ended, and I
am back again among early scenes and old friends, and
back, I trust, to remain.”
“How is your mother?”
inquired Emily, after a slight pause.
“I found her much changed—older
by twice the number of years that have elapsed since
I went away.”
But all that passed between Andrew
Howland and Emily Winters in the hour they spent together
at this first meeting, after so long an absence, we
cannot write. For a time, their intercourse was
marked by a reserve and embarrassment on the part
of Emily; but this insensibly wore off, and, ere the
young man went away, their hearts, if not their lips,
had spoken to each other almost as freely as in the
days of childhood.
Not many months elapsed ere the tender
regard that was spontaneously awakened in their bosoms
when children, and which had never ceased to exist,
led them into a true marriage union, to which no one
raised even a whisper of opposition. Almost at
the very time that Andrew was holding his first interview
with Emily, Mr. Winters was listening to a brief account
of his return, with some of the pleasing incidents
immediately attendant thereon. In a meeting with
the young man shortly afterward, he was (sic) prepossesed
in his favor, and when he saw that he was disposed
to renew the old intimate relations with Emily, he
did not in the least object.
Thus, after a lapse of over twenty-five
years, two families, each possessed of substantial
virtues, and with social qualities forming a plane
for reciprocal good feeling, but which had been forced
apart by the narrow prejudice and iron will of Mr.
Howland, came together in a marriage of two of its
members. Alas! how much of wrong and suffering
appertained to that long period during which they were
thus held apart! How many scars from heart-wounds
were left; and these not always painless!
Can any summing up of the causes and
consequences set forth in our story give force to
the lessons it teaches? We think not; and therefore
leave it with the reader to do its own work.