Alma was sitting in her own room,
with her treasure-house before her. Its door
was still fast locked, as was her purse for all applications
for pecuniary help. Closed, too, seemed the door
of her heart to the great Friend who still lovingly
knocked without. His question, “Where
is the guest-room?” had been met by a long, unbroken
silence.
Now Alma’s mind was on her future
plans. She had shaken the little cottage, and
had been quite dissatisfied with the result.
She rose hastily. A drawer in her writing-desk
was impulsively unlocked. She took out a jewel-case
where a diamond ring, and a brooch set with the same
precious stones, and a watch with a monogram in pearls,
were lying side by side. She looked admiringly
at them, and carefully examined them all. The
ring, the brooch, and the little watch were then deliberately
let down the chimney of the golden house, as if they
had been black sweeps on a lawful errand. They
were given, “offered,” she felt, and her
design was now far on its way to its accomplishment.
There could be no more earthquake-like shakings of
that cottage. That amusement must be abandoned.
There was a sharp prick from Alma’s
conscience in the midst of her evident satisfaction.
Her father had said this jewellery would some day
belong to her, and had even, at her special request,
allowed her to have the now sacrificed treasures in
her own keeping. “They were to be mine.
They are mine,” she said to herself.
“I have offered them. I shall never wear
them now. My mother in heaven would approve of
what I have done.” Here her conscience
gave her a cruel pang. She was inclined to open
again the velvet-lined box, and lay the jewellery
where it had so long rested, but that was impossible
without opening the little locked door of the treasure-house.
That she had vowed to herself she would not do before
the time appointed a time she was now most
anxious should soon arrive.
At this moment Alma heard the sound
of footsteps. She thrust the case into its drawer,
locked it and dropped the key into her pocket like
one disturbed in a dishonest act rather than in a
noble deed. There was a loud knock at the door.
Alma opened it, and Frans stood before her.
“What do you want here?” she said impatiently.
“I can’t find papa,”
said Frans. “I wanted to tell him that
it went ‘bully’ for me at the examination
this morning. I thought perhaps your highness
might like to know it too. The teachers seem
to think I shall stand ‘tip-top’ in my
report.”
“I don’t believe you will
deserve it,” said Alma sharply. “I
never see you studying.”
“But I have studied lately,
more than I ever studied in my life. I didn’t
go to bed a single night last week before one o’clock.”
“You ought to be ashamed to
tell it!” said Alma reprovingly. “You
know papa don’t allow you to sit up late.”
“I shall tell him about it myself,
and I know papa will excuse me,” said Frans,
in high spirits.
The colonel did excuse Frans, and
was delighted to hear of his success, though he did
not fail to say it was hard to make up by such forced
studying for neglect during the term, and a thing that
he hoped would never be needed again.
Frans was in a glorious good-humour
during the short time he allowed himself for lunch,
and made his pony fly as he hurried back to school
immediately afterwards.
The school was in a village about
twenty minutes’ ride from the colonel’s
home. The afternoon session was over, and yet
Frans did not return. The colonel was very anxious
about his son. He feared that he had been induced
to celebrate his success in some wild frolic, and sent
in a messenger to search after him.
The report came back that Frans had
done very badly at school during the latter part of
the day, and had ridden off at full speed, evidently
in a very bad humour at his failure.
Later in the evening the pony came
home, riderless, and sorrow settled on the household
at Ekero.
“It is only some foolish trick
that Frans is playing upon us!” Alma had said
at first, but as the hours wore away she too had become
really anxious.
The colonel, who went himself at once
to the village, came home late, discouraged and distressed.
Telegraphing and sending off messengers in every
direction had been in vain. The morning brought
terrible news. A theft had been committed in
a shop near the schoolhouse the evening before, and
an older pupil of bad repute had disappeared.
It was generally whispered that he and Frans had
gone off together.
Alma’s feelings can easily be
imagined. Shame, anger, righteous indignation,
and real distress were strangely mingled together.
Her father left home as soon as these horrible rumours
were told him. Alma was alone all day, save
when she was called on to hear the moans of the housekeeper
over her “dear boy who had gone wrong; such a
sweet boy as he had always been towards her.”
At such a mention of himself Frans
would have been much astonished, as this faithful
friend of the family had not failed to set his shortcomings
fully before him. She now reproached Alma for
not making home more pleasant for her brother, for
“worrying and worrying at him until he had no
peace of his life. Such a knowing boy as he was,
too, with the ways and doings of beasts and birds
at his tongue’s end. As for the Swedish
kings, he could tell stories about them all a long
midsummer day, if a body had patience to listen.
And he not do well at an examination!”
and the housekeeper snapped her fingers in contempt
of the whole pedagogical corps.
To these various forms of lamenting
Alma listened in convicted silence. She was glad
of any company in the dismal loneliness of the house,
and felt she deserved much blame, if not all the burden
of responsibility that was cast upon her, for Frans’s
misdoings.
The colonel had been unwearied in
his efforts to find his son; but when he was at last
convinced that he had gone off in company with a boy
suspected of actual theft, he would not seek for his
son to be brought home to public trial and possible
conviction. The authorities might find the boys
if they could, he would take no further steps in the
matter.
The colonel locked himself into his
room, and not even Alma’s gentle knock was answered.
Like the housekeeper, he had a deep sense of Alma’s
coldness and bitterness towards her brother, and he
understood how Frans must have dreaded to meet her
after his disgrace at the examination. He understood,
too, how much Frans must have feared his displeasure;
but that such a mother’s son should be so degraded
as to consort with a thief and possibly share his
guilt! The thought was madness. He pictured
the desperate boy, flying perhaps to a far country,
to suffer, and sin and go down to the lowest depths
of degradation. The prayer burst forth from
the depths of the colonel’s heart, “God
have mercy on my son! God have mercy on me, a
sinner!” There was a thoroughgoing penitence
in that closed room. The colonel’s whole
life stood before him, with all its shortcomings and
its sins. To the world it had been an outwardly
blameless life, but within there had been an uncertain
faith, a half-heartedness, an indecision in his inner
life, that ill befitted one who so well knew the love
and purity of his heavenly Father. He cast himself
upon his knees, to rise forgiven, and strengthened
to lead a decided, devoted Christian life. With
his own humiliation came back his tenderness towards
his absent, erring boy.
When the door was opened at last to
Alma, she saw the traces of sorrow and deep emotion
on her father’s face. She threw herself
into his arms, exclaiming, “Dear, dear papa!”
She could say no more. He gently closed the
door by which she had entered. No human being
ever knew the words that then passed between them,
but they were henceforward to be bound together by
a new and a holier tie than ever before.