Jo was alone in the twilight, lying
on the old sofa, looking at the fire, and thinking.
It was her favorite way of spending the hour of dusk.
No one disturbed her, and she used to lie there on
Beth’s little red pillow, planning stories,
dreaming dreams, or thinking tender thoughts of the
sister who never seemed far away. Her face looked
tired, grave, and rather sad, for tomorrow was her
birthday, and she was thinking how fast the years
went by, how old she was getting, and how little she
seemed to have accomplished. Almost twenty-five,
and nothing to show for it. Jo was mistaken
in that. There was a good deal to show, and
by-and-by she saw, and was grateful for it.
“An old maid, that’s what
I’m to be. A literary spinster, with a
pen for a spouse, a family of stories for children,
and twenty years hence a morsel of fame, perhaps,
when, like poor Johnson, I’m old and can’t
enjoy it, solitary, and can’t share it, independent,
and don’t need it. Well, I needn’t
be a sour saint nor a selfish sinner, and, I dare say,
old maids are very comfortable when they get used to
it, but...” and there Jo sighed, as if the prospect
was not inviting.
It seldom is, at first, and thirty
seems the end of all things to five-and-twenty.
But it’s not as bad as it looks, and one can
get on quite happily if one has something in one’s
self to fall back upon. At twenty-five, girls
begin to talk about being old maids, but secretly
resolve that they never will be. At thirty they
say nothing about it, but quietly accept the fact,
and if sensible, console themselves by remembering
that they have twenty more useful, happy years, in
which they may be learning to grow old gracefully.
Don’t laugh at the spinsters, dear girls, for
often very tender, tragic romances are hidden away
in the hearts that beat so quietly under the sober
gowns, and many silent sacrifices of youth, health,
ambition, love itself, make the faded faces beautiful
in God’s sight. Even the sad, sour sisters
should be kindly dealt with, because they have missed
the sweetest part of life, if for no other reason.
And looking at them with compassion, not contempt,
girls in their bloom should remember that they too
may miss the blossom time. That rosy cheeks don’t
last forever, that silver threads will come in the
bonnie brown hair, and that, by-and-by, kindness and
respect will be as sweet as love and admiration now.
Gentlemen, which means boys, be courteous
to the old maids, no matter how poor and plain and
prim, for the only chivalry worth having is that which
is the readiest to pay deference to the old, protect
the feeble, and serve womankind, regardless of rank,
age, or color. Just recollect the good aunts
who have not only lectured and fussed, but nursed and
petted, too often without thanks, the scrapes they
have helped you out of, the tips they have given you
from their small store, the stitches the patient old
fingers have set for you, the steps the willing old
feet have taken, and gratefully pay the dear old ladies
the little attentions that women love to receive as
long as they live. The bright-eyed girls are
quick to see such traits, and will like you all the
better for them, and if death, almost the only power
that can part mother and son, should rob you of yours,
you will be sure to find a tender welcome and maternal
cherishing from some Aunt Priscilla, who has kept
the warmest corner of her lonely old heart for ’the
best nevvy in the world’.
Jo must have fallen asleep (as I dare
say my reader has during this little homily), for
suddenly Laurie’s ghost seemed to stand before
her, a substantial, lifelike ghost, leaning over her
with the very look he used to wear when he felt a
good deal and didn’t like to show it. But,
like Jenny in the ballad...
“She could not think it he,”
and lay staring up at him in startled
silence, till he stooped and kissed her. Then
she knew him, and flew up, crying joyfully...
“Oh my Teddy! Oh my Teddy!”
“Dear Jo, you are glad to see me, then?”
“Glad! My blessed boy, words can’t
express my gladness. Where’s Amy?”
“Your mother has got her down
at Meg’s. We stopped there by the way,
and there was no getting my wife out of their clutches.”
“Your what?” cried Jo,
for Laurie uttered those two words with an unconscious
pride and satisfaction which betrayed him.
“Oh, the dickens! Now
I’ve done it,” and he looked so guilty
that Jo was down on him like a flash.
“You’ve gone and got married!”
“Yes, please, but I never will
again,” and he went down upon his knees, with
a penitent clasping of hands, and a face full of mischief,
mirth, and triumph.
“Actually married?”
“Very much so, thank you.”
“Mercy on us. What dreadful
thing will you do next?” and Jo fell into her
seat with a gasp.
“A characteristic, but not exactly
complimentary, congratulation,” returned Laurie,
still in an abject attitude, but beaming with satisfaction.
“What can you expect, when you
take one’s breath away, creeping in like a burglar,
and letting cats out of bags like that? Get up,
you ridiculous boy, and tell me all about it.”
“Not a word, unless you let
me come in my old place, and promise not to barricade.”
Jo laughed at that as she had not
done for many a long day, and patted the sofa invitingly,
as she said in a cordial tone, “The old pillow
is up garret, and we don’t need it now.
So, come and ’fess, Teddy.”
“How good it sounds to hear
you say ‘Teddy’! No one ever calls
me that but you,” and Laurie sat down with an
air of great content.
“What does Amy call you?”
“My lord.”
“That’s like her.
Well, you look it,” and Jo’s eye plainly
betrayed that she found her boy comelier than ever.
The pillow was gone, but there was
a barricade, nevertheless, a natural one, raised by
time, absence, and change of heart. Both felt
it, and for a minute looked at one another as if that
invisible barrier cast a little shadow over them.
It was gone directly however, for Laurie said, with
a vain attempt at dignity...
“Don’t I look like a married
man and the head of a family?”
“Not a bit, and you never will.
You’ve grown bigger and bonnier, but you are
the same scapegrace as ever.”
“Now really, Jo, you ought to
treat me with more respect,” began Laurie, who
enjoyed it all immensely.
“How can I, when the mere idea
of you, married and settled, is so irresistibly funny
that I can’t keep sober!” answered Jo,
smiling all over her face, so infectiously that they
had another laugh, and then settled down for a good
talk, quite in the pleasant old fashion.
“It’s no use your going
out in the cold to get Amy, for they are all coming
up presently. I couldn’t wait. I
wanted to be the one to tell you the grand surprise,
and have ‘first skim’ as we used to say
when we squabbled about the cream.”
“Of course you did, and spoiled
your story by beginning at the wrong end. Now,
start right, and tell me how it all happened.
I’m pining to know.”
“Well, I did it to please Amy,”
began Laurie, with a twinkle that made Jo exclaim...
“Fib number one. Amy did
it to please you. Go on, and tell the truth,
if you can, sir.”
“Now she’s beginning to
marm it. Isn’t it jolly to hear her?”
said Laurie to the fire, and the fire glowed and sparkled
as if it quite agreed. “It’s all
the same, you know, she and I being one. We planned
to come home with the Carrols, a month or more ago,
but they suddenly changed their minds, and decided
to pass another winter in Paris. But Grandpa
wanted to come home. He went to please me, and
I couldn’t let him go alone, neither could I
leave Amy, and Mrs. Carrol had got English notions
about chaperons and such nonsense, and wouldn’t
let Amy come with us. So I just settled the
difficulty by saying, ’Let’s be married,
and then we can do as we like’.”
“Of course you did. You
always have things to suit you.”
“Not always,” and something
in Laurie’s voice made Jo say hastily...
“How did you ever get Aunt to agree?”
“It was hard work, but between
us, we talked her over, for we had heaps of good reasons
on our side. There wasn’t time to write
and ask leave, but you all liked it, had consented
to it by-and-by, and it was only ‘taking time
by the fetlock’, as my wife says.”
“Aren’t we proud of those
two words, and don’t we like to say them?”
interrupted Jo, addressing the fire in her turn, and
watching with delight the happy light it seemed to
kindle in the eyes that had been so tragically gloomy
when she saw them last.
“A trifle, perhaps, she’s
such a captivating little woman I can’t help
being proud of her. Well, then Uncle and Aunt
were there to play propriety. We were so absorbed
in one another we were of no mortal use apart, and
that charming arrangement would make everything easy
all round, so we did it.”
“When, where, how?” asked
Jo, in a fever of feminine interest and curiosity,
for she could not realize it a particle.
“Six weeks ago, at the American
consul’s, in Paris, a very quiet wedding of
course, for even in our happiness we didn’t forget
dear little Beth.”
Jo put her hand in his as he said
that, and Laurie gently smoothed the little red pillow,
which he remembered well.
“Why didn’t you let us
know afterward?” asked Jo, in a quieter tone,
when they had sat quite still a minute.
“We wanted to surprise you.
We thought we were coming directly home, at first,
but the dear old gentleman, as soon as we were married,
found he couldn’t be ready under a month, at
least, and sent us off to spend our honeymoon wherever
we liked. Amy had once called Valrosa a regular
honeymoon home, so we went there, and were as happy
as people are but once in their lives. My faith!
Wasn’t it love among the roses!”
Laurie seemed to forget Jo for a minute,
and Jo was glad of it, for the fact that he told her
these things so freely and so naturally assured her
that he had quite forgiven and forgotten. She
tried to draw away her hand, but as if he guessed
the thought that prompted the half-involuntary impulse,
Laurie held it fast, and said, with a manly gravity
she had never seen in him before...
“Jo, dear, I want to say one
thing, and then we’ll put it by forever.
As I told you in my letter when I wrote that Amy had
been so kind to me, I never shall stop loving you,
but the love is altered, and I have learned to see
that it is better as it is. Amy and you changed
places in my heart, that’s all. I think
it was meant to be so, and would have come about naturally,
if I had waited, as you tried to make me, but I never
could be patient, and so I got a heartache. I
was a boy then, headstrong and violent, and it took
a hard lesson to show me my mistake. For it
was one, Jo, as you said, and I found it out, after
making a fool of myself. Upon my word, I was so
tumbled up in my mind, at one time, that I didn’t
know which I loved best, you or Amy, and tried to
love you both alike. But I couldn’t, and
when I saw her in Switzerland, everything seemed to
clear up all at once. You both got into your
right places, and I felt sure that it was well off
with the old love before it was on with the new, that
I could honestly share my heart between sister Jo
and wife Amy, and love them dearly. Will you
believe it, and go back to the happy old times when
we first knew one another?”
“I’ll believe it, with
all my heart, but, Teddy, we never can be boy and
girl again. The happy old times can’t come
back, and we mustn’t expect it. We are
man and woman now, with sober work to do, for playtime
is over, and we must give up frolicking. I’m
sure you feel this. I see the change in you,
and you’ll find it in me. I shall miss
my boy, but I shall love the man as much, and admire
him more, because he means to be what I hoped he would.
We can’t be little playmates any longer, but
we will be brother and sister, to love and help one
another all our lives, won’t we, Laurie?”
He did not say a word, but took the
hand she offered him, and laid his face down on it
for a minute, feeling that out of the grave of a boyish
passion, there had risen a beautiful, strong friendship
to bless them both. Presently Jo said cheerfully,
for she didn’t want the coming home to be a
sad one, “I can’t make it true that you
children are really married and going to set up housekeeping.
Why, it seems only yesterday that I was buttoning
Amy’s pinafore, and pulling your hair when you
teased. Mercy me, how time does fly!”
“As one of the children is older
than yourself, you needn’t talk so like a grandma.
I flatter myself I’m a ‘gentleman growed’
as Peggotty said of David, and when you see Amy, you’ll
find her rather a precocious infant,” said Laurie,
looking amused at her maternal air.
“You may be a little older in
years, but I’m ever so much older in feeling,
Teddy. Women always are, and this last year has
been such a hard one that I feel forty.”
“Poor Jo! We left you
to bear it alone, while we went pleasuring. You
are older. Here’s a line, and there’s
another. Unless you smile, your eyes look sad,
and when I touched the cushion, just now, I found a
tear on it. You’ve had a great deal to
bear, and had to bear it all alone. What a selfish
beast I’ve been!” and Laurie pulled his
own hair, with a remorseful look.
But Jo only turned over the traitorous
pillow, and answered, in a tone which she tried to
make more cheerful, “No, I had Father and Mother
to help me, and the dear babies to comfort me, and
the thought that you and Amy were safe and happy,
to make the troubles here easier to bear. I am
lonely, sometimes, but I dare say it’s good for
me, and...”
“You never shall be again,”
broke in Laurie, putting his arm about her, as if
to fence out every human ill. “Amy and
I can’t get on without you, so you must come
and teach ‘the children’ to keep house,
and go halves in everything, just as we used to do,
and let us pet you, and all be blissfully happy and
friendly together.”
“If I shouldn’t be in
the way, it would be very pleasant. I begin to
feel quite young already, for somehow all my troubles
seemed to fly away when you came. You always
were a comfort, Teddy,” and Jo leaned her head
on his shoulder, just as she did years ago, when Beth
lay ill and Laurie told her to hold on to him.
He looked down at her, wondering if
she remembered the time, but Jo was smiling to herself,
as if in truth her troubles had all vanished at his
coming.
“You are the same Jo still,
dropping tears about one minute, and laughing the
next. You look a little wicked now. What
is it, Grandma?”
“I was wondering how you and Amy get on together.”
“Like angels!”
“Yes, of course, but which rules?”
“I don’t mind telling
you that she does now, at least I let her think so,
it pleases her, you know. By-and-by we shall
take turns, for marriage, they say, halves one’s
rights and doubles one’s duties.”
“You’ll go on as you begin,
and Amy will rule you all the days of your life.”
“Well, she does it so imperceptibly
that I don’t think I shall mind much.
She is the sort of woman who knows how to rule well.
In fact, I rather like it, for she winds one round
her finger as softly and prettily as a skein of silk,
and makes you feel as if she was doing you a favor
all the while.”
“That ever I should live to
see you a henpecked husband and enjoying it!”
cried Jo, with uplifted hands.
It was good to see Laurie square his
shoulders, and smile with masculine scorn at that
insinuation, as he replied, with his “high and
mighty” air, “Amy is too well-bred for
that, and I am not the sort of man to submit to it.
My wife and I respect ourselves and one another too
much ever to tyrannize or quarrel.”
Jo liked that, and thought the new
dignity very becoming, but the boy seemed changing
very fast into the man, and regret mingled with her
pleasure.
“I am sure of that. Amy
and you never did quarrel as we used to. She
is the sun and I the wind, in the fable, and the sun
managed the man best, you remember.”
“She can blow him up as well
as shine on him,” laughed Laurie. “Such
a lecture as I got at Nice! I give you my word
it was a deal worse than any of your scoldings, a
regular rouser. I’ll tell you all about
it sometime, she never will, because after telling
me that she despised and was ashamed of me, she lost
her heart to the despicable party and married the
good-for-nothing.”
“What baseness! Well,
if she abuses you, come to me, and I’ll defend
you.”
“I look as if I needed it, don’t
I?” said Laurie, getting up and striking an
attitude which suddenly changed from the imposing to
the rapturous, as Amy’s voice was heard calling,
“Where is she? Where’s my dear old
Jo?”
In trooped the whole family, and everyone
was hugged and kissed all over again, and after several
vain attempts, the three wanderers were set down to
be looked at and exulted over. Mr. Laurence,
hale and hearty as ever, was quite as much improved
as the others by his foreign tour, for the crustiness
seemed to be nearly gone, and the old-fashioned courtliness
had received a polish which made it kindlier than
ever. It was good to see him beam at ‘my
children’, as he called the young pair.
It was better still to see Amy pay him the daughterly
duty and affection which completely won his old heart,
and best of all, to watch Laurie revolve about the
two, as if never tired of enjoying the pretty picture
they made.
The minute she put her eyes upon Amy,
Meg became conscious that her own dress hadn’t
a Parisian air, that young Mrs. Moffat would be entirely
eclipsed by young Mrs. Laurence, and that ‘her
ladyship’ was altogether a most elegant and
graceful woman. Jo thought, as she watched the
pair, “How well they look together! I was
right, and Laurie has found the beautiful, accomplished
girl who will become his home better than clumsy old
Jo, and be a pride, not a torment to him.”
Mrs. March and her husband smiled and nodded at each
other with happy faces, for they saw that their youngest
had done well, not only in worldly things, but the
better wealth of love, confidence, and happiness.
For Amy’s face was full of the
soft brightness which betokens a peaceful heart, her
voice had a new tenderness in it, and the cool, prim
carriage was changed to a gentle dignity, both womanly
and winning. No little affectations marred it,
and the cordial sweetness of her manner was more charming
than the new beauty or the old grace, for it stamped
her at once with the unmistakable sign of the true
gentlewoman she had hoped to become.
“Love has done much for our
little girl,” said her mother softly.
“She has had a good example
before her all her life, my dear,” Mr. March
whispered back, with a loving look at the worn face
and gray head beside him.
Daisy found it impossible to keep
her eyes off her ‘pitty aunty’, but attached
herself like a lap dog to the wonderful chatelaine
full of delightful charms. Demi paused to consider
the new relationship before he compromised himself
by the rash acceptance of a bribe, which took the
tempting form of a family of wooden bears from Berne.
A flank movement produced an unconditional surrender,
however, for Laurie knew where to have him.
“Young man, when I first had
the honor of making your acquaintance you hit me in
the face. Now I demand the satisfaction of a
gentleman,” and with that the tall uncle proceeded
to toss and tousle the small nephew in a way that
damaged his philosophical dignity as much as it delighted
his boyish soul.
“Blest if she ain’t in
silk from head to foot; ain’t it a relishin’
sight to see her settin’ there as fine as a fiddle,
and hear folks calling little Amy ‘Mis.
Laurence!’” muttered old Hannah, who could
not resist frequent “peeks” through the
slide as she set the table in a most decidedly promiscuous
manner.
Mercy on us, how they did talk! first
one, then the other, then all burst out together trying
to tell the history of three years in half an hour.
It was fortunate that tea was at hand, to produce
a lull and provide refreshment for they
would have been hoarse and faint if they had gone
on much longer. Such a happy procession as filed
away into the little dining room! Mr. March proudly
escorted Mrs. Laurence. Mrs. March as proudly
leaned on the arm of ‘my son’. The
old gentleman took Jo, with a whispered, “You
must be my girl now,” and a glance at the empty
corner by the fire, that made Jo whisper back, “I’ll
try to fill her place, sir.”
The twins pranced behind, feeling
that the millennium was at hand, for everyone was
so busy with the newcomers that they were left to revel
at their own sweet will, and you may be sure they
made the most of the opportunity. Didn’t
they steal sips of tea, stuff gingerbread ad libitum,
get a hot biscuit apiece, and as a crowning trespass,
didn’t they each whisk a captivating little
tart into their tiny pockets, there to stick and crumble
treacherously, teaching them that both human nature
and a pastry are frail? Burdened with the guilty
consciousness of the sequestered tarts, and fearing
that Dodo’s sharp eyes would pierce the thin
disguise of cambric and merino which hid their booty,
the little sinners attached themselves to ‘Dranpa’,
who hadn’t his spectacles on. Amy, who
was handed about like refreshments, returned to the
parlor on Father Laurence’s arm. The others
paired off as before, and this arrangement left Jo
companionless. She did not mind it at the minute,
for she lingered to answer Hannah’s eager inquiry.
“Will Miss Amy ride in her coop
(coupe), and use all them lovely silver dishes that’s
stored away over yander?”
“Shouldn’t wonder if she
drove six white horses, ate off gold plate, and wore
diamonds and point lace every day. Teddy thinks
nothing too good for her,” returned Jo with
infinite satisfaction.
“No more there is! Will
you have hash or fishballs for breakfast?” asked
Hannah, who wisely mingled poetry and prose.
“I don’t care,”
and Jo shut the door, feeling that food was an uncongenial
topic just then. She stood a minute looking at
the party vanishing above, and as Demi’s short
plaid legs toiled up the last stair, a sudden sense
of loneliness came over her so strongly that she looked
about her with dim eyes, as if to find something to
lean upon, for even Teddy had deserted her.
If she had known what birthday gift was coming every
minute nearer and nearer, she would not have said to
herself, “I’ll weep a little weep when
I go to bed. It won’t do to be dismal now.”
Then she drew her hand over her eyes, for one of her
boyish habits was never to know where her handkerchief
was, and had just managed to call up a smile when
there came a knock at the porch door.
She opened with hospitable haste,
and started as if another ghost had come to surprise
her, for there stood a tall bearded gentleman, beaming
on her from the darkness like a midnight sun.
“Oh, Mr. Bhaer, I am so glad
to see you!” cried Jo, with a clutch, as if
she feared the night would swallow him up before she
could get him in.
“And I to see Miss Marsch, but
no, you haf a party,” and the Professor paused
as the sound of voices and the tap of dancing feet
came down to them.
“No, we haven’t, only
the family. My sister and friends have just come
home, and we are all very happy. Come in, and
make one of us.”
Though a very social man, I think
Mr. Bhaer would have gone decorously away, and come
again another day, but how could he, when Jo shut the
door behind him, and bereft him of his hat? Perhaps
her face had something to do with it, for she forgot
to hide her joy at seeing him, and showed it with
a frankness that proved irresistible to the solitary
man, whose welcome far exceeded his boldest hopes.
“If I shall not be Monsieur
de Trop, I will so gladly see them all. You haf
been ill, my friend?”
He put the question abruptly, for,
as Jo hung up his coat, the light fell on her face,
and he saw a change in it.
“Not ill, but tired and sorrowful.
We have had trouble since I saw you last.”
“Ah, yes, I know. My heart
was sore for you when I heard that,” and he
shook hands again, with such a sympathetic face that
Jo felt as if no comfort could equal the look of the
kind eyes, the grasp of the big, warm hand.
“Father, Mother, this is my
friend, Professor Bhaer,” she said, with a face
and tone of such irrepressible pride and pleasure that
she might as well have blown a trumpet and opened
the door with a flourish.
If the stranger had any doubts about
his reception, they were set at rest in a minute by
the cordial welcome he received. Everyone greeted
him kindly, for Jo’s sake at first, but very
soon they liked him for his own. They could
not help it, for he carried the talisman that opens
all hearts, and these simple people warmed to him at
once, feeling even the more friendly because he was
poor. For poverty enriches those who live above
it, and is a sure passport to truly hospitable spirits.
Mr. Bhaer sat looking about him with the air of a
traveler who knocks at a strange door, and when it
opens, finds himself at home. The children went
to him like bees to a honeypot, and establishing themselves
on each knee, proceeded to captivate him by rifling
his pockets, pulling his beard, and investigating his
watch, with juvenile audacity. The women telegraphed
their approval to one another, and Mr. March, feeling
that he had got a kindred spirit, opened his choicest
stores for his guest’s benefit, while silent
John listened and enjoyed the talk, but said not a
word, and Mr. Laurence found it impossible to go to
sleep.
If Jo had not been otherwise engaged,
Laurie’s behavior would have amused her, for
a faint twinge, not of jealousy, but something like
suspicion, caused that gentleman to stand aloof at
first, and observe the newcomer with brotherly circumspection.
But it did not last long. He got interested in
spite of himself, and before he knew it, was drawn
into the circle. For Mr. Bhaer talked well in
this genial atmosphere, and did himself justice.
He seldom spoke to Laurie, but he looked at him often,
and a shadow would pass across his face, as if regretting
his own lost youth, as he watched the young man in
his prime. Then his eyes would turn to Jo so
wistfully that she would have surely answered the
mute inquiry if she had seen it. But Jo had her
own eyes to take care of, and feeling that they could
not be trusted, she prudently kept them on the little
sock she was knitting, like a model maiden aunt.
A stealthy glance now and then refreshed
her like sips of fresh water after a dusty walk, for
the sidelong peeps showed her several propitious omens.
Mr. Bhaer’s face had lost the absent-minded
expression, and looked all alive with interest in the
present moment, actually young and handsome, she thought,
forgetting to compare him with Laurie, as she usually
did strange men, to their great detriment. Then
he seemed quite inspired, though the burial customs
of the ancients, to which the conversation had strayed,
might not be considered an exhilarating topic.
Jo quite glowed with triumph when Teddy got quenched
in an argument, and thought to herself, as she watched
her father’s absorbed face, “How he would
enjoy having such a man as my Professor to talk with
every day!” Lastly, Mr. Bhaer was dressed in
a new suit of black, which made him look more like
a gentleman than ever. His bushy hair had been
cut and smoothly brushed, but didn’t stay in
order long, for in exciting moments, he rumpled it
up in the droll way he used to do, and Jo liked it
rampantly erect better than flat, because she thought
it gave his fine forehead a Jove-like aspect.
Poor Jo, how she did glorify that plain man, as she
sat knitting away so quietly, yet letting nothing escape
her, not even the fact that Mr. Bhaer actually had
gold sleeve-buttons in his immaculate wristbands.
“Dear old fellow! He couldn’t
have got himself up with more care if he’d been
going a-wooing,” said Jo to herself, and then
a sudden thought born of the words made her blush
so dreadfully that she had to drop her ball, and go
down after it to hide her face.
The maneuver did not succeed as well
as she expected, however, for though just in the act
of setting fire to a funeral pyre, the Professor dropped
his torch, metaphorically speaking, and made a dive
after the little blue ball. Of course they bumped
their heads smartly together, saw stars, and both
came up flushed and laughing, without the ball, to
resume their seats, wishing they had not left them.
Nobody knew where the evening went
to, for Hannah skillfully abstracted the babies at
an early hour, nodding like two rosy poppies, and Mr.
Laurence went home to rest. The others sat round
the fire, talking away, utterly regardless of the
lapse of time, till Meg, whose maternal mind was impressed
with a firm conviction that Daisy had tumbled out of
bed, and Demi set his nightgown afire studying the
structure of matches, made a move to go.
“We must have our sing, in the
good old way, for we are all together again once more,”
said Jo, feeling that a good shout would be a safe
and pleasant vent for the jubilant emotions of her
soul.
They were not all there. But
no one found the words thougtless or untrue, for Beth
still seemed among them, a peaceful presence, invisible,
but dearer than ever, since death could not break the
household league that love made disoluble.
The little chair stood in its old place. The
tidy basket, with the bit of work she left unfinished
when the needle grew ‘so heavy’, was still
on its accustomed shelf. The beloved instrument,
seldom touched now had not been moved, and above it
Beth’s face, serene and smiling, as in the early
days, looked down upon them, seeming to say, “Be
happy. I am here.”
“Play something, Amy.
Let them hear how much you have improved,” said
Laurie, with pardonable pride in his promising pupil.
But Amy whispered, with full eyes,
as she twirled the faded stool, “Not tonight,
dear. I can’t show off tonight.”
But she did show something better
than brilliancy or skill, for she sang Beth’s
songs with a tender music in her voice which the best
master could not have taught, and touched the listener’s
hearts with a sweeter power than any other inspiration
could have given her. The room was very still,
when the clear voice failed suddenly at the last line
of Beth’s favorite hymn. It was hard to
say...
Earth hath no sorrow that
heaven cannot heal;
and Amy leaned against her husband,
who stood behind her, feeling that her welcome home
was not quite perfect without Beth’s kiss.
“Now, we must finish with Mignon’s
song, for Mr. Bhaer sings that,” said Jo, before
the pause grew painful. And Mr. Bhaer cleared
his throat with a gratified “Hem!” as
he stepped into the corner where Jo stood, saying...
“You will sing with me?
We go excellently well together.”
A pleasing fiction, by the way, for
Jo had no more idea of music than a grasshopper.
But she would have consented if he had proposed to
sing a whole opera, and warbled away, blissfully regardless
of time and tune. It didn’t much matter,
for Mr. Bhaer sang like a true German, heartily and
well, and Jo soon subsided into a subdued hum, that
she might listen to the mellow voice that seemed to
sing for her alone.
Know’st thou the land
where the citron blooms,
used to be the Professor’s favorite
line, for ‘das land’ meant Germany
to him, but now he seemed to dwell, with peculiar warmth
and melody, upon the words...
There, oh there, might I with
thee,
O, my beloved, go
and one listener was so thrilled by
the tender invitation that she longed to say she did
know the land, and would joyfully depart thither whenever
he liked.
The song was considered a great success,
and the singer retired covered with laurels.
But a few minutes afterward, he forgot his manners
entirely, and stared at Amy putting on her bonnet,
for she had been introduced simply as ‘my sister’,
and no one had called her by her new name since he
came. He forgot himself still further when Laurie
said, in his most gracious manner, at parting...
“My wife and I are very glad
to meet you, sir. Please remember that there
is always a welcome waiting for you over the way.”
Then the Professor thanked him so
heartily, and looked so suddenly illuminated with
satisfaction, that Laurie thought him the most delightfully
demonstrative old fellow he ever met.
“I too shall go, but I shall
gladly come again, if you will gif me leave, dear
madame, for a little business in the city will
keep me here some days.”
He spoke to Mrs. March, but he looked
at Jo, and the mother’s voice gave as cordial
an assent as did the daughter’s eyes, for Mrs.
March was not so blind to her children’s interest
as Mrs. Moffat supposed.
“I suspect that is a wise man,”
remarked Mr. March, with placid satisfaction, from
the hearthrug, after the last guest had gone.
“I know he is a good one,”
added Mrs. March, with decided approval, as she wound
up the clock.
“I thought you’d like
him,” was all Jo said, as she slipped away to
her bed.
She wondered what the business was
that brought Mr. Bhaer to the city, and finally decided
that he had been appointed to some great honor, somewhere,
but had been too modest to mention the fact.
If she had seen his face when, safe in his own room,
he looked at the picture of a severe and rigid young
lady, with a good deal of hair, who appeared to be
gazing darkly into futurity, it might have thrown some
light upon the subject, especially when he turned
off the gas, and kissed the picture in the dark.