“And yet when all is thought and
said,
The heart still overrules the head;
Still what we hope, we must believe,
And what is given us receive.”
Snorro had indeed very much misjudged
Margaret. During her interview with him she had
been absorbed in one effort, that of preserving her
self-control while he was present. As soon as
he had gone, she fled to her own room, and locking
the door, she fell upon her knees. Jan’s
last love-gifts lay on the bed before her, and she
bent her head over them, covering them with tears
and kisses.
“Oh, Jan! Oh, my darling!”
she whispered to the deaf and dumb emblems of his
affection. “Oh, if thou could come back
to me again! Never more would I grieve thee,
or frown on thee! Never should thy wishes be
unattended to, or thy pleasure neglected! No one
on earth, no one should speak evil of thee to me!
I would stand by thee as I promised until death!
Oh, miserable, unworthy wife that I have been!
What shall I do? If now thou knew at last how
dearly Margaret loves thee, and how bitterly she repents
her blindness and her cruelty!”
So she mourned in half-articulate
sobbing words, until little Jan awoke and called her.
Then she laid him in her own bed and sat down beside
him; quiet, but full of vague, drifting thoughts that
she could hardly catch, but which she resolutely bent
her mind to examine. Why had Snorro kept these
things so long, and then that night suddenly brought
them to her at such a late hour? What was he going
away for? What was that strange light upon his
face? She had never seen such a look upon Snorro’s
face before. She let these questions importune
her all night, but she never dared put into form the
suspicion which lay dormant below them, that Jan had
something to do with it; that Snorro had heard from
Jan.
In the morning she took the trinkets
with her to Dr. Balloch’s. She laid them
before him one by one, telling when, and how, they
had been offered and refused. “All but
this,” she said, bursting into childlike weeping,
and showing the battered, tarnished baby coral.
“He brought this for his child, and I would
not let him see the baby. Oh, can there be any
mercy for one so unmerciful as I was?”
“Daughter, weep; thy tears are
gracious tears. Would to God poor Jan could see
thee at this hour. Whatever happiness may now
be his lot, thy contrition would add to it, I know.
Go home to-day. No one is in any greater trouble
than thou art. Give to thyself tears and prayers;
it may be that ere long God will comfort thee.
And as thou goes, call at Snorro’s house.
See that the fire is out, lock the door, and bring
me the key when thou comes to-morrow. I promised
Snorro to care for his property.”
“Where hath Snorro gone?”
“What did he say to thee?”
“That he was going to Wick.
But how then did he go? There was no steamer
due.”
“Lord Lynne took him in his yacht.”
“That is strange!” and
Margaret looked steadily at Dr. Balloch. “It
seems to me, that Lord Lynne’s yacht was at Lerwick,
on that night; thou knowest.”
“When Skager and Jan quarreled?”
She bowed her head, and continued to gaze inquisitively
at him.
“No, thou art mistaken.
On that night he was far off on the Norway coast.
It must have been two weeks afterward, when he was
in Lerwick.”
“When will Lord Lynne be here again?”
“I know not; perhaps in a few
weeks, perhaps not until the end of summer. He
may not come again this year. He is more uncertain
than the weather.”
Margaret sighed, and gathering her
treasures together she went away. As she had
been desired, she called at Snorro’s house.
The key was on the outside of the door, she turned
it, and went in. The fire had been carefully
extinguished, and the books and simple treasures he
valued locked up in his wooden chest. It had
evidently been quite filled with these, for his clothes
hung against the wall of an inner apartment.
Before these clothes Margaret stood in a kind of amazement.
She was very slow of thought, but gradually certain
facts in relation to them fixed themselves in her
mind with a conviction which no reasoning could change.
Snorro had gone away in his best clothes;
his fishing suit and his working suit he had left
behind. It was clear, then, that he had not gone
to the Wick fisheries; equally clear that he had not
gone away with any purpose of following his occupation
in loading and unloading vessels. Why had he
gone then? Margaret was sure that he had no friends
beyond the Shetlands. Who was there in all the
world that could tempt Snorro from the little home
he had made and loved; and who, or what could induce
him to leave little Jan?
Only Jan’s father!
She came to this conclusion at last
with a clearness and rapidity that almost frightened
her. Her cheeks burned, her heart beat wildly,
and then a kind of anger took possession of her.
If Snorro knew any thing, Dr. Balloch did also.
Why was she kept in anxiety and uncertainty? “I
will be very quiet and watch,” she thought, “and
when Lord Lynne comes again, I will follow him into
the manse, and ask him where my husband is.”
As she took a final look at Snorro’s
belongings, she thought pitifully, “How little
he has! And yet who was so good and helpful to
every one? I might have taken more interest in
his housekeeping! How many little things I could
easily have added to his comforts! What a selfish
woman I must be! Little wonder that he despised
me!” And she determined that hour to make Jan’s
friend her friend when he came back, and to look better
after his household pleasures and needs.
She had plenty now to think about,
and she was on the alert morning, noon, and night;
but nothing further transpired to feed her hope for
nearly a month. The fishing season was then in
full business, and Peter Fae, as usual, full of its
cares. There had been no formal reconciliation
between Margaret and her father and stepmother, and
there was no social intercourse between the houses,
but still they were on apparent terms of friendship
with each other. The anger and ill-will had gradually
worn away, and both Peter and Suneva looked with respect
upon a woman so much in the minister’s favor
and company. Peter sent her frequent presents
from the store, and really looked upon his handsome
little grandson with longing and pride. When he
was a few years older he intended to propose to pay
for his education. “We’ll send him
to Edinburgh, Suneva,” he frequently said, “and
we will grudge nothing that is for his welfare.”
And Suneva, who had carefully fostered
this scheme, would reply, “That is what I have
always said, Peter. It is a poor family that has
not one gentleman in it, and, please God and thy pocket-book,
we will make a gentleman and a minister of our little
Jan;” and the thought of his grandson filling
a pulpit satisfied Peter’s highest ambition.
So, though there had been no visiting
between the two houses, there were frequent tokens
of courtesy and good-will, and Margaret, passing through
the town, and seeing her father at his shop-door, stopped
to speak to him.
“Where hast thou been, and where is thy boy?”
he asked.
“He is at home with Elga.
I have been to read with Mary Venn; she is failing
fast, and not long for this life.”
As they spoke Tulloch approached,
and, with a cold bow to Peter, turned to Margaret
and said, “I will walk with thee, Mistress Vedder,
as I have some business matter to speak of.”
Then, after they had turned to Margaret’s home:
“It was about the interest of the seven hundred
pounds placed to thy credit a few days since.
I will count the interest from the first of the month.”
Margaret was completely amazed.
“Seven hundred pounds!” she said, in a
low trembling voice. “I know nothing about
it. Surely thou art dreaming. Who brought
it to thee?”
“Dr. Balloch. He said it
was conscience money and not to be talked about.
I suppose thy father sent it, for it is well known
that he made his will a few days ago.”
Margaret, however, did not believe
that it was her father. She was sure Jan had
sent the money. It was her L600, with L100 for
interest. And oh, how it pained her! Somewhere
on earth Jan was alive, and he would neither come
to her, nor write to her. He sent her gold instead
of love, as if gold were all she wanted. He could
scarcely have contrived a more cruel revenge, she
thought. For once she absolutely hated money;
but it put into her mind a purpose which would not
leave it. If Snorro could find Jan, she could.
The money Jan had sent she would use for that purpose.
She was cautious and suspicious by
nature, and she determined to keep her intention close
in her own heart. All summer she watched anxiously
for the return of “The Lapwing,” but it
came not. One day, in the latter part of August,
Dr. Balloch asked her to answer for him a letter which
he had received from Lord Lynne. She noted the
address carefully. It was in Hyde Park, London.
Very well, she would go to London. Perhaps she
would be nearer to Jan if she did.
She had now nearly L1,000 of her own.
If she spent every farthing of it in the search and
failed, she yet felt that she would be happier for
having made the effort. The scheme took entire
possession of her, and the difficulties in the way
of its accomplishment only made her more stubbornly
determined. The first, was that of reaching the
mainland without encountering opposition. She
was sure that both her father and Dr. Balloch would
endeavor to dissuade her; she feared they would influence
her against her heart and judgment. After August,
the mail boats would be irregular and infrequent;
there was really not a day to be lost.
In the morning she went to see Tulloch.
He was eating his breakfast and he was not at all
astonished to see her. He thought she had come
to talk to him about the investment of her money.
“Good morning, Mistress Vedder!
Thou hast been much on my mind, thou and thy money,
and no doubt it is a matter of some consequence what
thou will do with it.”
“I am come to speak to thee
as a friend, in whom I may confide a secret.
Wilt thou hear, and keep it, and give me good advice?”
“I do not like to have to do
with women’s secrets, but thou art a woman by
thyself. Tell me all, then, but do not make more
of the matter than it is worth.”
“When Jan Vedder had no other
friend, thou stood by him.”
“What then? Jan was a good
man. I say that yet, and I say it to thy face,
Margaret Vedder. I think, too, that he had many
wrongs.”
“I think that too, and I shall
be a miserable woman until I have found Jan, and can
tell him to his face how sorry I am. So then,
I am going away to find him.”
“What art thou talking of?
Poor Jan is dead. I am sure that is so.”
“I am sure it is not so.
Now let me tell thee all.” Then she went
over the circumstances which had fed her convictions,
with a clearness and certainty which brought conviction
to Tulloch’s mind also.
“I am sure thou are right,”
he answered gravely, “and I have nothing at
all to say against thy plan. It is a very good
plan if it has good management. Now, then, where
will thou go first?”
“I have Lord Lynne’s address
in London. I will go first of all to him.
Jan sent me that money, I am sure. It must have
been a person of wealth and power who helped him to
make such a sum, or he must have lent Jan the money.
I think this person was Lord Lynne.”
“I think that too. Now about thy money?”
“I will take it with me. Money in the pocket
is a ready friend.”
“No, it will be a great care
to thee. The best plan for thee is this:
take fifty pounds in thy pocket, and I will give thee
a letter of credit for the balance on a banking firm
in London. I will also write to them, and then,
if thou wants advice on any matter, or a friend in
any case, there they will be to help thee.”
“That is good. I will leave
also with thee twenty-five pounds for Elga. Thou
art to pay her five shillings every week. She
will care for my house until I return.”
“And thy child?”
“I will take him with me.
If Jan is hard to me, he may forgive me for the child’s
sake.”
“Build not thy hopes too high.
Jan had a great heart, but men are men, and not God.
Jan may have forgotten thee.”
“I have deserved to be forgotten.”
“He may not desire to live with thee any more.”
“If he will only listen to me
while I say, ’I am sorry with all my heart,
Jan;’ if he will only forgive my unkindness to
him, I shall count the journey well made, though I
go to the ends of the earth to see him.”
“God go with thee, and make
all thy plans to prosper. Here is the table of
the mail boats. One leaves next Saturday morning
at six o’clock. My advice is to take it.
I will send on Thursday afternoon for thy trunk, and
Friday night I will find some stranger fisher-boy
to take it to the boat. Come thou to my house
when all is quiet, and I will see thee safely on board.
At six in the morning, when she sails, the quay will
be crowded.”
“I will do all this. Speak
not of the matter, I ask thee.”
“Thou may fully trust me.”
Then Margaret went home with a light
heart. Her way had been made very plain to her;
it only now remained to bind Elga to her interest.
This was not hard to do. Elga promised to remain
for two years in charge of the house if Margaret did
not return before. She felt rich with an allowance
of five shillings a week, and the knowledge that Banker
Tulloch had authority to prevent either Peter or Suneva
from troubling her during that time. So that
it was Elga’s interest, even if it had not been
her will, to give no information which might lead to
the breaking up of the comfort dependent on Margaret’s
absence.
Nothing interfered with Margaret’s
plans. During the three intervening days, she
went as usual to Dr. Balloch’s. Twice she
tried to introduce the subject of Snorro’s singular
journey, and each time she contrived to let the minister
see that she connected it in her own mind with Jan.
She noticed that on one of these occasions, the doctor
gave her a long, searching look, and that the expression
of his own face was that of extreme indecision.
She almost thought that he was going to tell her something,
but he suddenly rose and changed the subject of their
conversation, in a very decided manner. His reticence
pained and silenced her, for she almost longed to
open her heart to him. Yet, as he gave her no
encouragement, she was too shy, and perhaps too proud
to force upon him an evidently undesired confidence.
She determined, however, to leave letters for him,
and for her father, stating the object of her voyage,
but entering into no particulars about it. These
letters she would put in Elga’s care, with orders
not to deliver them until Saturday night. By
that time Margaret Vedder hoped to be more than a
hundred miles beyond Lerwick.
In the meantime Snorro had reached
Portsmouth, his journey thither having been uneventful.
“The Retribution” had arrived two days
before, and was lying in dock. At the dock office
a letter which Lord Lynne had given him, procured
an admission to visit the ship, and her tall tapering
masts were politely pointed out to him. Snorro
went with rapid strides toward her, for it was near
sunset and he knew that after the gun had been fired,
there would be difficulty in getting on board.
He soon came to the ship of his desire. Her crew
were at their evening mess, only two or three sailors
were to be seen.
Snorro paused a moment, for he was
trembling with emotion, and as he stood he saw three
officers come from the cabin. They grouped themselves
on the quarter-deck, and one of them, taller, and more
splendidly dressed than the others, turned, and seemed
to look directly at Snorro. The poor fellow stretched
out his arms, but his tongue was heavy, like that
of a man in a dream, and though he knew it was Jan,
he could not call him. He had received at the
office, however, a permit to board “The Retribution”
in order to speak with her commander, and he found
no difficulty in reaching him.
Jan was still standing near the wheel
talking to his officers as Snorro approached.
Now that the moment so long watched and waited for,
had come, poor Snorro could hardly believe it, and
beside, he had seen in the first glance at his friend,
that this was a different Jan somehow from the old
one. It was not alone his fine uniform, his sash
and sword and cocked hat; Jan had acquired an air of
command, an indisputable nobility and ease of manner,
and for a moment, Snorro doubted if he had done well
to come into his presence unannounced.
He stood with his cap in his hand
waiting, feeling heart-faint with anxiety. Then
an officer said some words to Jan, and he turned and
looked at Snorro.
“Snorro! Snorro!”
The cry was clear and glad, and the
next moment Jan was clasping both his old friend’s
hands. As for Snorro, his look of devotion, of
admiration, of supreme happiness was enough. It
was touching beyond all words, and Jan felt his eyes
fill as he took his arm and led him into his cabin.
“I am come to thee, my captain.
I would have come, had thou been at the end of the
earth.”
“And we will part no more, Snorro,
we two. Give me thy hand on that promise.”
“No more, no more, my captain.”
“To thee, I am always ‘Jan.’”
“My heart shall call thee ‘Jan,’
but my lips shall always say ’my captain,’
so glad are they to say it! Shall I not sail with
thee as long as we two live?”
“We are mates for life, Snorro.”
Jan sent his boy for bread and meat.
“Thou art hungry I know,” he said; “when
did thou eat?”
“Not since morning. To-day
I was not hungry, I thought only of seeing thee again.”
At first neither spoke of the subject
nearest to Jan’s heart. There was much
to tell of people long known to both men, but gradually
the conversation became slower and more earnest, and
then Snorro began to talk of Peter Fae and his marriage.
“It hath been a good thing for Peter,”
he said; “he looks by ten years a younger man.”
“And Suneva, is she happy?”
“Well, then, she dresses gayly,
and gives many fine parties, and is what she likes
best of all, the great lady of the town. But she
hath not a bad heart, and I think it was not altogether
her fault if thy wife was -”
“If my wife was what, Snorro?”
“If thy wife was unhappy in
her house. The swan and the kittywake can not
dwell in the same nest.”
“What hast thou to tell me of my wife and son?”
“There is not such a boy as
thy boy in all Scotland. He is handsomer than
thou art. He is tall and strong, and lish and
active as a fish. He can dive and swim like a
seal, he can climb like a whaler’s boy, he can
fling a spear, and ride, and run, and read; and he
was beginning to write his letters on a slate when
I came away. Also, he was making a boat, for
he loves the sea, as thou loves it. Oh, I tell
thee, there is not another boy to marrow thy little
Jan.”
“Is he called Jan?”
“Yes, he is called Jan after thee.”
“This is great good news, Snorro. What
now of my wife?”
Snorro’s voice changed, and
all the light left his face. He spoke slowly,
but with decision. “She is a very good woman.
There is not a better woman to be found anywhere than
Margaret Vedder. The minister said I was to tell
thee how kind she is to all who are sick and in trouble,
and to him she is as his right hand. Yes, I will
tell thee truly, that he thinks she is worthy of thy
love now.”
“And what dost thou think?”
“I do not think she is worthy.”
“Why dost thou not think so?”
“A woman may be an angel, and love thee not.”
“Then thou thinks she loves
me not? Why? Has she other lovers? Tell
me truly, Snorro.”
“The man lives not in Lerwick
who would dare to speak a word of love to Margaret
Vedder. She walks apart from all merry-making,
and from all friends. As I have told thee she
lives in her own house, and enters no other house
but the manse, unless it be to see some one in pain
or sorrow. She is a loving mother to thy son,
but she loves not thee. I will tell thee why
I think.” Then Snorro recounted with accurate
truthfulness his last interview with Margaret.
He told Jan every thing, for he had noted every thing:-her
dress, her attitude, her rising color, her interest
in the locket’s chain, her indifference as to
his own hurried journey, its object, or its length.
Jan heard all in silence, but the
impression made on him by Snorro’s recital,
was not what Snorro expected. Jan knew Margaret’s
slow, proud nature. He would have been astonished,
perhaps even a little suspicious of any exaggeration
of feeling, of tears, or of ejaculations. Her
interest in the locket chain said a great deal to
him. Sitting by his side, with her fair face almost
against his own, she had drawn the pattern of the
chain she wished. Evidently she had remembered
it; he understood that it was her emotion at the recognition
which had made her so silent, and so oblivious of
Snorro’s affairs. The minister’s opinion
had also great weight with him. Dr. Balloch knew
the whole story of his wrong, knew just where he had
failed, and where Margaret had failed. If he believed
a reconciliation was now possible and desirable, then
Jan also was sure of it.
Snorro saw the purpose in his face.
Perhaps he had a moment’s jealous pang, but
it was instantly put down. He hastened to let
Jan feel that, even in this matter, he must always
be at one with him:
“Trust not to me,” he
said; “it is little I know or understand about
women, and I may judge Margaret Vedder far wrong.”
“I think thou does, Snorro.
She was never one to make a great show of her grief
or her regrets. But I will tell thee what she
did when thou wert gone away. In her own room,
she wept over that chain the whole night long.”
“That may be. When little
Jan had the croup she was still and calm until the
boy was out of danger, and then she wept until my heart
ached for her. Only once besides have I seen her
weep; that was when Suneva accused her of thy murder;
then she took her baby in her arms and came through
the storm to me at the store. Yes, she wept sorely
that night.”
Jan sat with tightly-drawn lips.
“If it will make thee happy,
send me back to Lerwick, and I will bring thy wife
and child safely here. Thou would be proud indeed
to see them. The boy is all I have told thee.
His mother is ten times handsomer than when thou married
her. She is the fairest and most beautiful of
women. When she walks down the street at the minister’s
side, she is like no other woman. Even Peter Fae
is now proud that she is his daughter, and he sends
her of the finest that comes to his hand. Shall
I then go for thee? Why not go thyself?”
“I will think about it, Snorro.
I can not go myself. I received my promotion
yesterday, and I asked to be transferred for immediate
service. I may get my orders any day. If
I send thee, I may have to sail without thee, and
yet not see my wife and child. No, I will not
part with thee, Snorro; thou art a certain gain, and
about the rest, I will think well. Now we will
say no more, for I am weary and weak; my head aches
also, and I fear I have fever again.”
The next day Jan was very ill, and
it was soon evident that typhoid fever of a long and
exhausting character had supervened on a condition
enfeebled by African malaria. For many weeks he
lay below the care of love or life, and indeed it
was August when he was able to get on deck again.
Then he longed for the open sea, and so urged his
desire, that he received an immediate exchange to the
ship Hydra, going out to Bornéo with assistance for
Rajah Brooke, who was waging an exterminating war
against the pirates of the Chinese and Indian seas.
The new ship was a very fine one,
and Jan was proud of his command. Snorro also
had been assigned to duty on her, having special charge
of a fine Lancaster gun which she carried, and no
words could express his pride and joy in his position.
She was to sail on the 15th day of August, one hour
after noon, and early in the morning of that day, Jan
went off the ship alone. He went direct to the
Post Office, and with trembling hands, for he was
still very weak, he dropped into it the following
letter:
MY DEAR WIFE-MY FAIR DEAR MARGARET:
I have never ceased to love thee.
Ask Dr. Balloch to tell thee all. To-day I
leave for the Chinese sea. If thou wilt forgive
and forget the past, and take me again for thy husband,
have then a letter waiting for me at the Admiralty
Office, and when I return I will come to Shetland
for thee. Snorro is with me. He hath told
me all about thy goodness, and about our little
Jan. Do what thy heart tells thee to do, and
nothing else. Then there will be happiness.
Thy loving husband,
JAN VEDDER.
A few hours after this letter had
been posted Jan stood on his quarter deck with his
face to the open sea, and Snorro, in his new uniform,
elate with joy and pride, was issuing his first orders
to the quarter-master, and feeling that even for him,
life had really begun at last.