Mattie:—A Stray (Vol 3 of 3)
is just worth when he cast her off as unworthy of the love he had borne her. She had not seen him since that time; he had hel
had come there, and given that strange unearthly look to eyes still clear and bright, and which turned towards her, and startled her with their expressi
of me at last," he said, with the querulousness characterist
to ask how you were," sai
"and you answered her, and let her go away, sparing me the pain of replying f
es
hands together; he spoke firmly; he spoke the truth as h
o difference in the voice. Mattie's voice, we have remarked at an earlier stage of this narrativ
ng of a new business for us
" gasped
, and induce your father to extend his consent. I have no o
N
counts. I was always clever at mental arithmetic, and it don't strike me that I shall be quite a dummy. And then when I am used to the place-when I can find the drawers, and know what is in them,
Mattie-Mattie in whom he believed and trusted, and on whose support in the future he built upon from that day! She knew how the story would end for him and Mattie-a peaceful and happy ending, and what both had already thought of, perhaps-let it be
efore him. Harriet had risen, and was standing with her
Who would have thought of me in particular, cut out for a man of action, with no
resigne
l-al
very
attie? Why don't you sit down and ta
sent
he lower regions-I'm as talkative to-day as an old
N
if I can write in the dark-my first
Harriet left her post by the do
. She shivered as she read the words. The story s
e read, "saved from sh
gnation," said he, laying his hand upon Harriet's. "M
cowering from him as though he saw her there, the
noticing the glove upon the
r a litt
are you going that I
shall be back
or, sister, friend, and that I cannot bear you too long away from me. I wish I were more worthy of y
, with a vehemence that star
d to make perhaps, out of gratitude for the life of servitude Mattie had chosen for herself. He had been wrong; he had taken a mean advantage, and rendered Mattie's presence there embarrassing; his desire to be grateful had scared her from him, as well it might-he, a blind man, prating o
ithout a good
otten," she
aid to him?-have
Harriet; "I have not taken your advice. He thinks and speaks only of
don't go away yet, with tha
thi
offend
N
ve
well. I ought not to have intruded here. I
g me in the good work I have begun here. You and I together,
I shall return, or what use I shall be to eithe
ntently; "what have I done? Don't you," she added, as a new thought of hers
tie, it cannot matter
-to
riending him, as a sister might come?
our, with
"why tell him that your father gave his consent
id not undeceive him, lest he should s
our house. He is anxious
m so
ve no right to be here
t, you do n
with you. You have been too good a friend of mine, for me to envy
aid yo
ntic from a child. It is all passe
he-w
protector; you alone can save him now from desol
hat did she mean?-what had Sidney said to her that she should go away like that, distr
ited and trembling. Close to his side
ing straightforward in your speech-of tell
changed me, I
u said to Har
wh
the facts of the case at once,
arriet We
es
ssumed your character, Mattie?" h
t you, and she had come hither to make inquiries witho
on?" he asked
wo might become bette
ppiness, except her own, perhaps. Mattie, you talk as if I had my sight, and were strong enough to win m
om she has loved-it would not stand in the way of any true woma
rce outcry; "Mattie, I ask
ersisted
ow-let me b
forth that morbid despondency which had kept him weak and hopeless. The remainder of that day the old enemy