The room had three occupants, two
were men, the third a woman. The men were middle-aged
and gray-haired, the woman on the contrary was in the
prime of youth; she was finely made, and well proportioned.
Her face was perhaps rather too pale, but the eyes
and brow were noble, and the sensitive mouth showed
indications of heart as well as intellect.
The girl, or rather young woman, for
she was past five and twenty, sat by the fire, a book
on her knee. The two men had drawn chairs close
to a table. The elder of these men bore such
an unmistakable likeness to the girl, that even the
most casual observer must have guessed the relationship
which existed between them. He was a handsome
man, handsomer even than his daughter, but the same
individualities marked both faces. While, however,
in the woman all was a profound serenity and calm,
the man had some anxious lines round the mouth, and
some expression, now coming, now going, in the fine
gray eyes, which betokened a long-felt anxiety.
The other and younger man was shrewd-looking
and commonplace; but a very close observer of human
nature might have said, “He may be commonplace,
but do not feel too certain; he simply possesses one
of those faces which express nothing, from which not
the cleverest detective in Scotland Yard could extract
any secret.”
He was a man with plenty to say, and
much humor, and at the moment this story opens he
was laughing merrily and in a heart-whole way, and
his older and graver companion listened with evident
enjoyment.
The room in which the three sat bore
evidence of wealth. It was a library, and handsome
books lay on the tables, and rare old folios could
have been found by those who cared to look within the
carefully locked bookcases. Some manuscripts
were scattered about, and by the girl’s side,
on a small table, lay several carefully revised proofs,
and even now she was bending earnestly over a book
of reference.
“Well, Jasper,” said the
elder man, when the younger paused for an instant
in his eager flow of words, “we have talked long
enough about that fine land you have just come from,
for even Australian adventures can keep I
am interested in something nearer home. What do
you say to Charlotte there? She was but a baby
when you saw her last.”
“She was five years old,”
replied Jasper. “A saucy little imp, bless
you! just the kind that would be sure to grow into
a fine woman. But to tell the truth I don’t
much care to look at her, for she makes me feel uncommonly
old and shaky.”
“You gave me twenty years to
grow into a woman, uncle,” answered the pleasant
voice of Charlotte Harman. “I could not
choose but make good use of the time.”
“So you have, lass so
you have; I have been growing old and you have been
growing beautiful; such is life; but never mind, your
turn will come.”
“But not for a long, long time,
Lottie my pet,” interrupted the father.
“You need not mind your uncle Jasper. These
little speeches were always his way. And I’ll
tell you something else, Jasper; that girl of mine
has a head worth owning on her shoulders, a head she
knows how to use. You will not believe me when
I say that she writes in this magazine and this, and
she is getting a book ready for the press; ay, and
there’s another thing. Shall I tell it,
Charlotte?”
“Yes, father; it is no secret,” replied
Charlotte.
“It is this, brother Jasper;
you have come home in time for a wedding. My
girl is going to leave me. I shall miss her, for
she is womanly in the best sense of the word, and
she is my only one; but there is a comfort the
man she is to marry is worthy of her.”
“And there is another comfort,
father,” said Charlotte; “that though I
hope to be married, yet I never mean to leave you.
You know that well, I have often told you so,”
and here this grave young girl came over and kissed
her father’s forehead.
He smiled back at her, all the care
leaving his eyes as he did so. Uncle Jasper had
sprung impatiently to his feet.
“As to the lass being married,”
he said, “that’s nothing; all women marry,
or if they don’t they ought to. But what
was that you said, John, about writing, writing in
a printed book? You were joking surely, man?”
“No, I was not,” answered
the father. “Go and show your uncle Jasper
that last article of yours, Charlotte.”
“Oh, heaven preserve us! no,”
said uncle Jasper, backing a pace or two. “I’m
willing with all my heart to believe it, if you swear
it, but not the article. Don’t for heaven’s
sake, confront me with the article.”
“There’s nothing uncommon
in my writing for magazines, Uncle Jasper; a great
many girls do write now. I have three friends
myself who ”
Uncle Jasper’s red face had
grown positively pathetic in its agitation. “What
a place England must have become!” he interrupted
with a groan. “Well, lass, I’ll believe
you, but I have one request to make. Tell me
what you like about your wedding; go into all the raptures
you care for over your wedding dress, and even over
the lucky individual for whom you will wear it; tell
me twenty times a day that he’s perfection, that
you and you alone have found the eighth wonder of
the world, but for the love of heaven leave out about
the books! The other will be hard to bear, but
I’ll endeavor to swallow it but the
books, oh! heaven preserve us leave out
about the printed books. Don’t mention the
unlucky magazines for which you write. Don’t
breathe to me the thoughts with which you fill them.
Oh, if there’s an awful creature under the sun
’tis a blue-stocking, and to think I should have
come back from England to find such a horror in the
person of my own niece!”