Twelve o’clock of the day on
which Ellis was to return the two hundred dollars
borrowed of Wilkinson came, and yet he did not appear
at the store of the latter, who had several payments
to make, and depended on receiving the amount due
from his friend.
“Has Mr. Ellis been here?”
asked Wilkinson of his clerk, coming in about noon
from a rather fruitless effort to obtain money.
The clerk replied in the negative.
“Nor sent over his check for two hundred dollars?”
“No, sir.”
“Step down to his store, then,
if you please, and say to him from me that he mustn’t
forget the sum to be returned to-day, as I have two
notes yet in bank. Say also, that if he has any
thing over, I shall be glad to have the use of it.”
The clerk departed on his errand.
In due time he returned, but with no money in his
possession.
“Did you see Mr. Ellis?” asked Wilkinson.
“No, sir,” was replied. “He
hasn’t been at the store to-day.”
“Not to-day!”
“No, sir.”
“What’s the matter? Is he sick?”
“His clerk didn’t say.”
Taking up his hat, Wilkinson left
his store hurriedly. In a few minutes he entered
that of his friend.
“Where is Mr. Ellis?” he inquired.
“I don’t know, sir,” was answered
by the clerk.
“Has he been here this morning?”
“No, sir.”
“He must be sick. Have you sent to his
house to make inquiry?”
“Not yet. I have expected him all the morning.”
“He was here yesterday?”
“Not until late in the afternoon.”
“Indeed! Did he complain of not being well?”
“No, sir. But he didn’t look very
well.”
There was something in the manner
of the clerk which Wilkinson did not understand clearly
at first. But all at once it flashed upon his
mind that Ellis might, in consequence of some trouble
with his wife, have suddenly abandoned himself to
drink. With this thought came the remembrance
of what had passed between them two days before; and
this but confirmed his first impression.
“If Mr. Ellis comes in,”
said he, after some moments of hurried thought, “tell
him that I would like to see him.”
The clerk promised to do so.
“Hadn’t you better send
to his house?” suggested Wilkinson, as he turned
to leave the store. “He may be sick.”
“I will do so,” replied
the clerk, and Wilkinson retired, feeling by no means
comfortable. By this time it was nearly one o’clock,
and six or seven hundred dollars were yet required
to make him safe for that day’s payments.
The failure of Ellis to keep his promise laid upon
him an additional burden, and gradually caused a feeling
of despondency to creep in upon him. Instead
of making a new and more earnest effort to raise the
money, he went back to his store, and remained there
for nearly half an hour, in a brooding, disheartened
state of mind. A glance at the clock, with the
minute-hand alarmingly near the figure 2, startled
him at length from his dreaming inactivity; and he
went forth again to raise, if possible, the money
needed to keep his name from commercial dishonour.
He was successful; but there were only fifteen minutes
in his favour when the exact sum he needed was made
up, and his notes taken out of bank.
Two o’clock was Mr. Wilkinson’s
dinner hour, and he had always, before, so arranged
his bank business as to have his notes taken up long
enough before that time to be ready to leave promptly
for home. But for the failure of Ellis to keep
his promise, it would have been so on this day.
“It’s hardly worth while
to go home now,” said he, as he closed his cash
and bill books, after making some required entries
therein. “Mary has given me over long ago.
And, besides, I don’t feel in the mood of mind
to see her just now. I can’t look cheerful,
to save me; and I have already called too many shadows
to her face to darken it with any more. By evening
I will recover myself, and then can meet her with
a brighter countenance. No, I won’t go home
now. I’ll stop around to Elder’s,
and get a cut of roast beef.”
Wilkinson had taken up his hat, and
was moving down the store, when a suggestion that
came to his mind made him pause. It was this:
“But is not Mary waiting for
me, and will not my absence for the whole day cause
her intense anxiety and alarm? I ought to go home.”
And now began an argument in his thoughts.
The fact was, a sense of exhaustion of body and depression
of spirits had followed the effort and trouble of
the day, and Wilkinson felt a much stronger desire
for something stimulating to drink than he did for
food. Elder’s was a drinking as well as
an eating-house; and in deciding to go there, instead
of returning home, the real influence, although he
did not perceive it to be so, was the craving felt
for a glass of brandy. And now came the conflict
between appetite and an instinctive sense of what
was due both to himself and his wife.
“It will only put her to trouble
if I go home now.” Thus he sought to justify
himself in doing what his better sense clearly condemned
as wrong.
“It will rather relieve her
from trouble,” was quickly answered to this.
For a little while Wilkinson stood
undecided, then slowly retired to a remote part of
the store, took off his hat, and sat down to debate
the point at issue in his mind more coolly.
“I will go home early,” said he to himself.
“Why not go home now?” was instantly replied.
“It is too late; Mary has given me up long ago.”
“She will be extremely anxious.”
“I can explain all.”
“Better do it now than two or
three hours later: poor Mary has suffered enough
already.”
This last suggestion caused the image
of his wife to come up before the mind of Wilkinson
very distinctly. He saw, now, her smile of winning
love; now, the sad drooping of her countenance, as
he turned to leave her alone for an evening; now,
the glance of anxiety and fear with which she so often
greeted his return; and now, her pale, grief-stricken
face, after some one of his too many lapses from the
right way. And, in imagination, his thoughts went
to his home in the present moment. What did he
see? A waiting, anxious, troubled wife, now sitting
with fixed and dreamy eyes; now moving about with
restless steps; and now standing at the street-door,
eagerly straining her eyes to see in the distance
his approaching form. With such images of his
wife came no repulsive thought to the mind of Wilkinson.
Ever loving, tender, patient, forbearing, and true-hearted
had Mary been. Not once in the whole of their
married life had she jarred the chord that bound them
together, with a touch of discord. He could only
think of her, therefore, with love, and a feeling
of attraction; and this it was that saved him in the
present hour. Starting up suddenly, he said,
“I will go home: why have I hesitated an
instant? My poor Mary! Heaven knows you have
already suffered enough through my short-comings and
wanderings from the way of right and duty. I
am walking a narrow path, with destruction on either
hand: if I get over safely, it will be through
you as my sustaining angel.”
A skilful limner, at least in this
instance, was the imagination of Wilkinson. Much
as it had been pictured to his thoughts was the scene
at home. Poor Mary! with what trembling anxiety
did she wait and hope for her husband’s coming,
after the usual hour for his return had passed.
Now she sat motionless, gazing on some painful image
that was presented to her mind; now she moved about
the room from an unquietness of spirit that would
not let her be still; and now she bent her ear towards
the street, and listened almost breathlessly for the
sound of her husband’s footsteps. Thus the
time passed from two until three o’clock, the
dinner yet unserved.
“Oh, what can keep him away so long?”
How many, many times was this spoken
audibly! Now her heart beat with a quick, panting
motion, as the thought of some accident to her husband
flitted through the mind of Mrs. Wilkinson; now its
irregular motion subsided, and it lay almost still,
with a heavy pressure; for the fear lest he had again
been tempted from the path of sobriety came with its
deep and oppressive shadow.
And thus the lingering moments passed.
Three o’clock came, and yet Mr. Wilkinson was
absent.
“I can bear this suspense no
longer,” said the unhappy wife. “Something
has happened.”
And as she said this, she went quickly
into her chamber to put into execution some suddenly-formed
resolution. Opening a wardrobe, she took therefrom
her bonnet and a shawl. But, ere she had thrown
the latter around her shoulders, she paused, with
the words on her lips—
“If business should have detained
him at his store, how will my appearance there affect
him? I must think of that. I do not want
him to feel that I have lost confidence in him.”
While Mrs. Wilkinson stood, thus musing,
her ear caught the sound of her husband’s key
in the lock of the street-door. How quickly were
her bonnet and shawl returned to their places!
How instant and eager were her efforts to suppress
all signs of anxiety at the prolonged absence!
“He must not see that I have
been over-anxious,” she murmured.
The street-door closed; Mr. Wilkinson’s
well-known tread sounded along the passage and up
the stairway. With what an eager discrimination
was the ear of his wife bent towards him for a sign
that would indicate the condition in which he returned
to her! How breathless was her suspense!
A few moments, and the door of her room opened.
“Why, John!” said she,
with a pleasant smile, and a tone so well disguised
that it betrayed little of the sea of agitation below—“what
has kept you so late? I was really afraid something
had happened. Have you been sick; or did business
detain you?”
“It was business, dear,”
replied Mr. Wilkinson, as he took the hand which Mary
placed within his. The low, nervous tremour of
that hand he instantly perceived, and as instantly
comprehended its meaning. She had been deeply
anxious, but was now seeking to conceal this from
him. He understood it all, and was touched by
the fact.
“I ought to have sent you word,”
said he, as he kissed her with more than usual tenderness
of manner. “It was wrong in me. But
I’ve been very hard put to it to take up my
notes, and didn’t succeed until near the closing
of bank hours. I loaned Ellis some money, which
he was to return to me to-day; but his failing to
do so put me to a good deal of inconvenience.”
“Oh, I’m sorry,”
was the sympathizing response. “But how
came Mr. Ellis to disappoint you?”
“I don’t exactly know.
He hasn’t been at his store to-day.”
“Is he sick?”
“Worse, I’m afraid.”
“How, worse?”
“His habits have not been very good of late.”
“Oh! how sad! His poor wife!”
This was an almost involuntary utterance
on the part of Mrs. Wilkinson.
“Her poor husband, rather say,”
was the reply. “The fact is, if Ellis goes
to ruin, it will be his wife’s fault. She
has no sympathy with him, no affectionate consideration
for him. A thoroughly selfish woman, she merely
regards the gratification of her own desires, and
is ever making home repulsive, instead of attractive.”
“You must be mistaken.”
“No. Ellis often complains to me of her
conduct.”
“Why, John! I can scarcely credit such
a thing.”
“Doubtless it is hard for you
to imagine any woman guilty of such unwifelike conduct.
Yet such is the case. Many a night has Ellis
spent at a tavern, which, but for Cara’s unamiable
temper, would have been spent at home.”
“Ah! she will have her reward,” sighed
Mrs. Wilkinson.
“And you yours,” was the
involuntary but silent ejaculation of Wilkinson.
Ere further remark was made, the dinner-bell
rang, and Mr. Wilkinson and his wife repaired to the
dining-room.
It was not possible for the former
to endure the pressure that was on his feelings without
letting the fact of its existence betray itself in
his countenance; and Mary, whose eyes were scarcely
a moment from her husband’s face, soon saw that
his mind was ill at ease.
“How much did Mr. Ellis borrow
of you?” she asked, soon after they had taken
their places at the table.
“Two hundred dollars,” was replied.
“No more?” The mind of
Mrs. Wilkinson was evidently relieved, at knowing
the smallness of the sum.
“True, it isn’t much,”
said Wilkinson. “But even a small sum is
of great importance when we have a good deal to pay,
and just lack that amount, after gathering in all
our available resources. And that was just my
position to-day.” Why didn’t you call
on me?” Mary smiled, with evident meaning as
she said this.
“On you!” Wilkinson looked
at her with a slight air of surprise.
“Yes, on me. I think I
could have made you up that sum.”
“You!”
A bright gleam went over the face
of Mrs. Wilkinson, as she saw the surprise of her
husband.
“Yes, me. Why not?
You have always been liberal in your supplies of money,
and it is by no means wonderful that I should have
saved a little. The fact is, John, I’ve
never spent my entire income; I always made it a point
of conscience to keep as far below it as possible.”
“Mary!” Beyond this simple
ejaculation, Wilkinson could not go, but sat, with
his eyes fixed wonderingly on the face of his wife.
“It is true, dear,” she
answered, in her loving gentle way. “I
haven’t counted up lately; but, if I do not err,
I have twice the sum you needed to-day; and, what
is more, the whole is at your service. So don’t
let this matter of Ellis’s failure to return
you the sum borrowed, trouble you in the least.
If it never comes back to you, the loss will be made
up in another quarter.”
It was some moments before Wilkinson
could make any answer. At last, dropping the
knife and fork which he held in his hands, he started
from his place, and coming round to where his wife
sat, drew his arms around her, and as he pressed his
lips to hers, said with an unsteady voice—
“God bless you, Mary! You are an angel!”
Had she not her reward in that happy moment?
Who will say nay?