THE GILBERTS : CHAPTER VI
POOR, POOR NELLIE.
And now, in the closing chapter of
this brief sketch of the Gilberts, I come to the saddest
part-the fate of poor Nellie, the dearest
playmate my childhood ever knew, she whom the lapse
of years ripened into a graceful, beautiful girl,
loved by everybody, even by Tom Jenkins, whose boyish
affection had grown with his growth and strengthened
with his strength.
And now Nellie was the affianced bride
of William Raymond, who had replaced the little cornelian
with the engagement ring. At last the rumor reached
Tom Jenkins, awaking him from the sweetest dream he
had ever known. He could not ask Nellie if it
were true, so he came to me; and when I saw how he
grew pale and trembled, I felt that Nellie was not
altogether blameless. But he breathed no word
of censure against her; and when, a year or two afterward,
I saw her given to William Raymond, I knew that the
love of two hearts was hers; the one to cherish and
watch over her, the other to love and worship, silently,
secretly, as a miser worships his hidden treasure.
The bridal was over. The farewells
were over, and Nellie had gone-gone from
the home whose sunlight she had made, and which she
had left forever. Sadly the pale, sick mother
wept, and mourned her absence, listening in vain for
the light footfall and soft, ringing voice she would
never hear again.
Three weeks had passed away, and then,
far and near the papers teemed with accounts of the
horrible Norwalk catastrophe, which desolated many
a home, and wrung from many a heart its choicest treasure.
Side by side they found them-Nellie and
her husband-the light of her brown eyes
quenched forever, and the pulses of his heart still
in death!
I was present when they told the poor
invalid of her loss, and even now I seem to hear the
bitter, wailing cry which broke from her white lips,
as she begged them to unsay what they had said, and
tell her Nellie was not dead-that she would
come back again.
It could not be. Nellie would
never return; and in six weeks’ time the broken-hearted
mother was at rest with her child.