CHAPTER XXVII - CONCLUSION
The maples in front of Liddy’s
home were just showing the first tints of autumn color
when Manson returned. It had been a long three
weeks of separation to her, and her first words contained
a note of reproach.
“You might have written me once
or twice, Charlie,” she said; “the days
have seemed so long!”
“I could not,” he replied;
“I was lost to the world on an island twenty
miles from a post office, and letters were not in style
there. The people are so far removed from the
world they do not seem to think communication of any
value. It is a wild and romantic spot, and the
only thing I do not like about it is every house has
two or three tombstones close by.”
He seemed in a surprisingly cheerful
mood, and described his visit and the friends he had
met in glowing words. One incident of his visit,
however, he withheld, and for a purpose. The little,
half-jesting remark Liddy had made a month previous
on Blue Hill-a remark merely expressive
of her pride-still lingered in his mind,
and he was resolved to test that pride in his own
peculiar way.
A short distance from her house and
near the brook was a rustic seat beneath the maple.
Many hours she had passed there with him, and many
more alone with only sad thoughts for company, when
the brook’s music seemed a voice of sympathy.
Even when a child she had learned to love this spot,
and the low, sweet murmur of the stream. Early
that evening, when the full moon had just appeared
over Blue Hill, they intuitively sought this familiar
place. Perhaps the joy in their hearts added a
new charm, for the ripples in the brook appeared like
so many laughing water sprites dancing there in the
silvery light. For a few moments they silently
yielded to the magic witchery of the time and place,
and then she could contain herself no longer.
She had noticed his unusual elation-even
more than could be ascribed to his gladness at being
once more beside her, and, grown accustomed to his
ways, knew there was a surprise in store.
“Well, Charlie,” she said
at last, with a bright smile, “you need not
wait to take me up to Blue Hill this time to tell your
story. Tell it now. You have some good news,
for I can see it in your face. What is it?”
He looked at her a moment in silence, and then answered:
“Yes, I have a story to tell
you, and one that will more than surprise you, but
first I have a question to ask. Do you remember
the promise you made me a month ago?”
The thought of that tender pledge
and his now evident intention to ask its fulfillment
brought the color to her face, but she bravely answered:
“I have never made a promise and failed to keep
it. I shall not begin now.”
Then, as the question he asked and
the answer he received were heard only by the elfin
sprites dancing in the brook beside them, so we will
leave it to those fairies to tell if they choose.
Suffice it to say it was such as filled his heart
so full of happiness it could no longer hold a secret,
and there, where the moonlight fell in little rifts
upon them, and the music of running water echoed their
feelings, he told her the strange story of Pocket
Island, and what he had found in the cave.
When late that evening they returned
to the house, never again in their lives did the man
in the moon seem to smile so graciously or the brook
sound so sweet.
Then one day-a day bright
above all others to them, when nature seemed aglow
with joyous color-all those who were near
and dear gathered to listen to their vows, and wish
them well in life. Whether those kind wishes
were deserved or not, and whether the Fates that direct
the steps of all human kind led theirs along the pleasant
walks of prosperity and happiness, or among the rocks
and thorns of adversity, we will leave to the imagination
of those who have read this story, for here their
history ends.
It is told that when Jove, the mythological
ruler of the universe, conceived the creation of the
human race, he sent Pandora to the realms of Pluto
to bring him the box containing all the good and evil
impulses he intended to select from in his creative
work. He gave her strict orders not to open the
box, lest its contents escape and work woe to the
coming mortals. But as woman’s curiosity
never was restrained by any power, human or divine,
since Mother Eve ate apples, and most likely never
will be, no sooner had Pandora set out upon her return
than she lifted the lid of that fatal box, and the
result to the human race need not be enlarged upon.
One good result came from her disobedience, however,
for, seeing her error in time, she closed the cover
before Hope escaped, and so that blessed impulse came
to be shared alike by mortals.
Life at best is but an enigma, and
like children pursuing an Ignis Fatuus,
so do we all pursue the illusive beacon light of a
brighter and happier to-morrow-always hoping,
never attaining, though striving ever until, wearied
of the vain pursuit, at last we fall by the wayside
and are forgotten.