Overland eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 454 pages of information about Overland.

Overland eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 454 pages of information about Overland.

It was another of those interviews which cannot be described, and perhaps should not be.  They were uninterrupted, for the ladies of the house had learned from Clara that this was her betrothed, and they had woman’s sense of the sacredness of such meetings.  Presents came, and were not sent in:  Coronado called and was not admitted.  The two were alone for two hours, and the two hours passed like two minutes.  Of course all the ugly past was explained.

“A letter dismissing you!” exclaimed Clara with tears.  “Oh! how could you think that I would write such a letter?  Never—­never!  Oh, I never could.  My hand should drop off first.  I should die in trying to write such wickedness.  What! don’t you know me better?  Don’t you know that I am true to you?  Oh, how could you believe it of me?  My darling, how could you?”

“Forgive me,” begged the humbled young fellow, trembling with joy in his humility.  “It was weak and wicked in me.  I deserved to be punished as I have been.  And, oh, I did not deserve this happiness.  But, my little girl, how could I help being deceived?  There was your handwriting and your signature.”

“Ah!  I know who it was,” broke out Clara.  “It has been he all through.  He shall pay for this, and for all,” she added, her Spanish blood rising in her cheeks, and her soft eyes sparkling angrily for a minute.

“I have saved his life for the last time,” returned Thurstane.  “I have spared it for the last time.  Hereafter—­”

“My darling, my darling!” begged Clara, alarmed by his blackening brow.  “Oh, my darling, I don’t love to see you angry.  Just now, when we have just been spared to each other, don’t let us be angry.  I spoke angrily first.  Forgive me.”

“Let him keep out of my way,” muttered Thurstane, only in part pacified.

“Yes,” answered Clara, thinking that she would herself send Coronado off, so that there might be no duel between him and this dear one.

Presently the lover added one thing which he had felt all the time ought to have been said at first.

“The letter—­it was right.  Although he wrote it, it was right.  I have no claim to marry a rich woman, and you have no right to marry a poor man.”

He uttered this in profound misery, and yet with a firm resolution.  Clara turned pale and stared at him with anxious eyes, her lips parted as though to speak, but saying nothing.  Knowing his fastidious sense of honor, she guessed the full force with which this scruple weighed upon him, and she did not know how to drag it off his soul.

“You are worth a million,” he went on, in a broken-hearted sort of voice which to us may seem laughable, but which brought the tears into Clara’s eyes.

The next instant she brightened; she knew, or thought she knew, that she was not worth a million; so she smiled like a sunburst and caught him gayly by the wrists.

“A million!” she scoffed, laughingly.  “Do you believe all Coronado tells you?”

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Project Gutenberg
Overland from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.