Part 16 (2/2)

The young man arose. ”_Du sublime au ridicule_,” he said, with his customary smile of gay mockery, as he went to the whist-table, and the evening pa.s.sed without any further opportunity for confidential words with Johanna.

The next morning Aunt Thekla appeared for the first time since the accident at the breakfast-table, in honor of the departing guests, who were all going in the ten-o'clock train from Thalrode. She, too, was full of hope for the invalid, and nodded an a.s.sent when the Freiherr insisted that all the family should rea.s.semble in Donninghausen to celebrate Johann Leopold's recovery.

”The Walburgs, of course; if they come, Waldemar will surely not stay away, and the postponed festival will be all the gayer,” the old Herr concluded.

Magelone looked at Otto; he was calmly sipping his coffee, and she asked herself, with some anxiety, whether he could really bring himself to depart without a word of explanation with her.

”Let him--for all I care!” she said to herself, in a burst of offended feeling, and after breakfast she devoted herself to the children, who were brought in to say good-by. At the same time--involuntarily, perhaps--she watched Otto. He spoke with his grandfather and with Aunt Thekla, and then approached Johanna. Resolved to know what they were saying to each other, she playfully chased little Johann Eduard around the room until she came near to the pair, and then, kneeling down to tie on the child's hat more securely, she heard Otto lament that he should hear no tidings of Johann Leopold.

”Aunt Thekla never writes,” he added, ”and grandpapa, only when he wants to read me a homily. Pray, dear Johanna, write to me sometimes, and tell me how the invalid's recovery progresses.”

In what a tone he spoke! Involuntarily Magelone sprang up to interrupt their conversation, but Eduard called out at this moment, ”Come, hurry; it is time.” Otto kissed Johanna's hand in farewell, and then turned to Magelone. ”_Au revoir_” he said, coldly. Magelone smiled and said as calmly, ”_Au revoir_.”

But when embraces and farewells were over and the three carriages drove out of the court-yard, gazed after by herself and Johanna, she could no longer control herself, but burst into tears, and hurried into the house.

The next instant Johanna was at her side. ”Dear Magelone,” she began, gently, and would have taken her hand, but her cousin turned hastily away. ”Leave me!” she cried. And, rus.h.i.+ng up-stairs to her room, she closed the door and shot the bolt behind her.

”Oh, this hypocrite!” she exclaimed, and raised her clasped hands to heaven. ”She thrusts herself forward everywhere. I cannot endure it any longer,--no, I cannot!”

She sank into an arm-chair, and wept in all the _abandon_ of a child.

Suddenly she sat erect, and wiped away her tears. ”What folly!” she said to herself. ”Am I helpless and unarmed? I am more beautiful than my rival; ought I not also to be more skilled,--cleverer? It is worth the trial. Otto must and shall return to me.”

CHAPTER XI.

RECOVERY.

Again the days pa.s.sed calmly and quietly at Donninghausen, but they wore a different aspect from those which had preceded Christmas. Then the Freiherr had been the centre around which everything revolved, now it was Johann Leopold. Ludwig had p.r.o.nounced all exciting causes dangerous for his patient, and begged that all his wishes might, as far as possible, be fulfilled. Therefore every one whose presence he requested was relieved from all other claim; even the meals, from which at other times only serious indisposition could excuse any member of the family, might be disregarded for Johann Leopold's sake.

With the egotism of an invalid, he required that either Ludwig or Aunt Thekla should be beside him all day, even when he was sleeping.

He took pleasure also in his grandfather's visits, so long as the old Herr could sit still; but as soon as he began, according to his habit, to pace the room to and fro, the sick man grew so restless as to oblige Ludwig courteously to dismiss the Freiherr.

”The lad is like a nervous girl,” the latter would then say, with an irritated knitting of his brows; but the next moment he would add, ”Well, we must be satisfied with seeing him as well as he is; by and by he will be perfectly reasonable again.”

Perfect recovery, however, came but slowly. Only gradually did his memory of people and events begin to revive. One morning when his grandfather was sitting beside him he suddenly said, ”Johanna!” and after a while he added, ”I want to see her; let her come to me.”

”Yes, my dear boy, I will send her to you,” the Freiherr replied; ”but send for Magelone too, or she will be hurt.”

”Magelone!” he repeated, and his eyes expressed distress. ”Magelone! No, no, she must not come! I will not see her. It is all her fault.”

The Freiherr was startled. Johann Leopold was more seriously ill than he had supposed. ”I will send Johanna,” he said, rising; but the patient refused now to see even her. ”No; send Dr. Werner,” he said, fretfully.

”I want him; he is the only one who knows what is good for me.”

The next morning he insisted upon seeing Johanna, and she went to him.

”Sit down; I have much to say to you,” he said, after her first greeting. ”Pray, Aunt Thekla, leave us alone.”

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