By Theo’s request old Hagar
had been taken home the day before, yielding submissively,
for her frenzied mood was over-her strength
was gone-her life was nearly spent-and
Hagar did not wish to live. That for which she
had sinned had been accomplished, and, though it had
cost her days and nights of anguish, she was satisfied
at last. Margaret was coming home again-would
be a lady still-the bride of Arthur Carrollton,
for George Douglas had told her so, and she was willing
now to die, but not until she had seen her once again-had
looked into the beautiful face of which she had been
so proud.
Not to-day, however, does she expect
her; and just as the sun was setting, the sun which
shines on Margaret at home, she falls away to sleep.
It was at this hour that Margaret was wont to visit
her, and now, as the treetops grew red in the day’s
departing glory, a graceful form came down the woodland
path, where for many weeks the grass has not been
crushed beneath her feet. They saw her as she
left the house,-Madam Conway, Theo, all,-but
none asked whither she was going. They knew,
and one who loved her best of all followed slowly
after, waiting in the woods until that interview should
end.
Hagar lay calmly sleeping. The
servant was as usual away, and there was no eye watching
Margaret as with burning cheeks and beating heart
she crossed the threshold of the door, pausing not,
faltering not, until the bed was reached-the
bed where Hagar lay, her crippled hands folded meekly
upon her breast, her white hair shading a whiter face,
and a look about her half-shut mouth as if the thin,
pale lips had been much used of late to breathe the
word “Forgive.” Maggie had never
seen her thus before, and the worn-out, aged face had
something touching in its sad expression, and something
startling too, bidding her hasten, if to that woman
she would speak.
“Hagar,” she essayed to
say, but the word died on her lips, for standing there
alone, with the daylight fading from the earth, and
the lifelight fading from the form before her, it
seemed not meet that she should thus address the sleeper.
There was a name, however, by which she called another-a
name of love, and it would make the withered heart
of Hagar Warren bound and beat and throb with untold
joy. And Margaret said that name at last, whispering
it first softly to herself; then, bending down so
that her breath stirred the snow-white hair, she repeated
it aloud, starting involuntarily as the rude walls
echoed back the name “Grandmother!”
“Grandmother!” Through
the senses locked in sleep it penetrated, and the
dim eyes, once so fiery and black, grew large and bright
again as Hagar Warren woke.
Was it a delusion, that beauteous
form which met her view, that soft hand on her brow,
or was it Maggie Miller?
“Grandmother,” the low
voice said again, “I am Maggie-Hester’s
child. Can you see me? Do you know that
I am here?”
Yes, through the films of age, through
the films of coming death, and through the gathering
darkness, old Hagar saw and knew, and with a scream
of joy her shrunken arms wound themselves convulsively
around the maiden’s neck, drawing her nearer,
and nearer still, until the shriveled lips touched
the cheek of her who did not turn away, but returned
that kiss of love.
“Say it again, say that word
once more,” and the arms closed tighter round
the form of Margaret, who breathed it yet again, while
the childish woman sobbed aloud, “It is sweeter
than the angels’ song to hear you call me so.”
She did not ask her when she came-she
did not ask her where she had been; but Maggie told
her all, sitting by her side with the poor hands clasped
in her own; then, as the twilight shadows deepened
in the room, she struck a light, and coming nearer
to Hagar, said, “Am I much like my mother?”
“Yes, yes, only more winsome,”
was the answer, and the half-blind eyes looked proudly
at the beautiful girl bending over the humble pillow.
“Do you know that?” Maggie
asked, holding to view the ambrotype of Hester Hamilton.
For an instant Hagar wavered, then
hugging the picture to her bosom, she laughed and
cried together, whispering as she did so, “My
little girl, my Hester, my baby that I used to sing
to sleep in our home away over the sea.”
Hagar’s mind was wandering amid
the scenes of bygone years, but it soon came back
again to the present time, and she asked of Margaret
whence that picture came. In a few words Maggie
told her, and then for a time there was silence, which
was broken at last by Hagar’s voice, weaker
now than when she spoke before.
“Maggie,” she said, “what
of this Arthur Carrollton? Will he make you his
bride?”
“He has so promised,”
answered Maggie; and Hagar continued: “He
will take you to England, and you will be a lady,
sure. Margaret, listen to me. ’Tis
the last time we shall ever talk together, you and
I, and I am glad that it is so. I have greatly
sinned, but I have been forgiven, and I am willing
now to die. Everything I wished for has come
to pass, even the hearing you call me by that blessed
name; but, Maggie, when to-morrow they say that I
am dead-when you come down to look upon
me lying here asleep, you needn’t call me ‘Grandmother,’
you may say ‘poor Hagar!’ with the rest;
and, Maggie, is it too much to ask that your own hands
will arrange my hair, fix my cap, and straighten my
poor old crooked limbs for the coffin? And if
I should look decent, will you, when nobody sees you
do it-Madam Conway, Arthur Carrollton,
nobody who is proud-will you, Maggie, kiss
me once for the sake of what I’ve suffered that
you might be what you are?”
“Yes, yes, I will,” was
Maggie’s answer, her tears falling fast, and
a fear creeping into her heart, as by the dim candlelight
she saw a nameless shadow settling down on Hagar’s
face.
The servant entered at this moment,
and, glancing at old Hagar, sunk into a chair, for
she knew that shadow was death.
“Maggie,” and the voice
was now a whisper, “I wish I could once more
see this Mr. Carrollton. ’Tis the nature
of his kin to be sometimes overbearing, and though
I am only old Hagar Warren he might heed my dying
words, and be more thoughtful of your happiness.
Do you think that he would come?”
Ere Maggie had time to answer there
was a step upon the floor, and Arthur Carrollton stood
at her side. He had waited for her long, and
growing at last impatient had stolen to the open door,
and when the dying woman asked for him he had trampled
down his pride and entered the humble room. Winding
his arm round Margaret, who trembled violently, he
said: “Hagar, I am here. Have you aught
to say to me?”
Quickly the glazed eyes turned towards
him, and the clammy hand was timidly extended.
He took it unhesitatingly, while the pale lips murmured
faintly, “Maggie’s too.” Then,
holding both between her own, old Hagar said solemnly,
“Young man, as you hope for heaven, deal kindly
with my child,” and Arthur Carrollton answered
her aloud, “As I hope for heaven, I will,”
while Margaret fell upon her knees and wept.
Raising herself in bed, Hagar laid her hands upon the
head of the kneeling girl, breathing over her a whispered
blessing; then the hands pressed heavily, the fingers
clung with a loving grasp, as it were, to the bands
of shining hair-the thin lips ceased to
move-the head fell back upon the pillow,
motionless and still, and Arthur Carrollton, leading
Margaret away, gently told her that Hagar was dead.
Carefully, tenderly, as if she had
been a wounded dove, did the whole household demean
themselves towards Margaret, seeing that everything
needful was done, but mentioning never in her presence
the name of the dead. And Margaret’s position
was a trying one, for though Hagar had been her grandmother
she had never regarded her as such, and she could
not now affect a grief she did not feel. Still,
from her earliest childhood she had loved the strange
old woman, and she mourned for her now, as friend
mourneth for friend, when there is no tie of blood
between them.
Her promise, too, was kept, and with
her own hands she smoothed the snow-white hair, tied
on the muslin cap, folded the stiffened arms, and
then, unmindful who was looking on, kissed twice the
placid face, which seemed to smile on her in death.
By the side of Hester Hamilton they
made another grave, and, with Arthur Carrollton and
Rose standing at either side, Margaret looked on while
the weary and worn was laid to rest; then slowly retraced
her steps, walking now with Madam Conway, for Arthur
Carrollton and Rose had lingered at the grave, talking
together of a plan which had presented itself to the
minds of both as they stood by the humble stone which
told where Margaret’s mother slept. To Margaret,
however, they said not a word, nor yet to Madam Conway,
though they both united in urging the two ladies to
accompany Theo to Worcester for a few days.
“Mrs. Warner will help me keep
house,” Mr. Carrollton said, advancing the while
so many good reasons why Margaret at least should go,
that she finally consented, and went down to Worcester,
together with Madam Conway, George Douglas, Theo,
and Henry, the latter of whom seemed quite as forlorn
as did she herself, for Rose was left behind, and
without her he was nothing.
Madam Conway had been very gracious
to him; his family were good, and when as they passed
the Charlton depot thoughts of the leghorn bonnet
and blue umbrella intruded themselves upon her, she
half wished that Henry had broken his leg in Theo’s
behalf, and so saved her from bearing the name of
Douglas.
The week went by, passing rapidly
as all weeks will, and Margaret was again at home.
Rose was there still, and just as the sun was setting
she took her sister’s hand, and led her out into
the open air toward the resting-place of the dead,
where a change had been wrought; and Margaret, leaning
over the iron gate, comprehended at once the feeling
which had prompted Mr. Carrollton and Rose to desire
her absence for a time. The humble stone was
gone, and in its place there stood a handsome monument,
less imposing and less expensive than that of Mrs.
Miller, it is true, but still chaste and elegant, bearing
upon it simply the names of “Hester Hamilton,
and her mother Hagar Warren,” with the years
of their death. The little grave, too, where for
many years Maggie herself had been supposed to sleep,
was not beneath the pine tree now; that mound was
leveled down, and another had been made, just where
the grass was growing rank and green beneath the shadow
of the taller stone, and there side by side they lay
at last together, the mother and her infant child.
“It was kind in you to do this,”
Margaret said, and then, with her arm round Rose’s
waist, she spoke of the coming time when the sun of
another hemisphere would be shining down upon her,
saying she should think often of that hour, that spot,
and that sister, who answered: “Every year
when the spring rains fall I shall come to see that
the grave has been well kept, for you know that she
was my mother, too,” and she pointed to the
name of “Hester,” deep cut in the polished
marble.
“Not yours, Rose, but mine,”
said Maggie. “My mother she was, and as
such I will cherish her memory.” Then, with
her arm still around her sister’s waist, she
walked slowly back to the house.
A little later, and while Arthur Carrollton,
with Maggie at his side, was talking to her of something
which made the blushes burn on her still pale cheeks,
Madam Conway herself walked out to witness the improvements,
lingering longest at the little grave, and saying to
herself, “It was very thoughtful in Arthur, very,
to do what I should have done myself ere this had
I not been afraid of Margaret’s feelings.”
Then, turning to the new monument,
she admired its chaste beauty, but hardly knew whether
she was pleased to have it there or not.
“It’s very handsome,”
she said, leaving the yard, and walking backward to
observe the effect. “And it adds much to
the looks of the place. There is no question
about that. It is perfectly proper, too, or Mr.
Carrollton would never have put it here, for he knows
what is right, of course,” and the still doubtful
lady turned away, saying as she did so, “On
the whole, I think I am glad that Hester has a handsome
monument, and I know I am glad that Mrs. Miller’s
is a little the taller of the two!”