Part 40 (2/2)

”I'm sure He did, my Phebe.” There was such a glad ring in the voice.

”If only we could be young again!”

”Look at the sky, dearest!” There were bars of light and dark in the western sky, and above these a flock of tiny clouds. Along the edge of the horizon ran a line of rosy light. Presently the bars merged into dark purple clouds, the cloudlets above took on a rosy light, the glory widened from below and from above, till the whole western sky was aflame with radiant beauty. ”That is like our life, dearest,” Stephen whispered, putting his arm round her as they sat. ”All our clouds which memory may bring or the future reveal are going to be made beautiful, covered all over with rosy love.”

”But it's evening, Stephen,” she whispered, ”the darkness is creeping on,” and he felt that she was trembling.

”But we are together. Besides, no ill.u.s.tration can be strained too far: it's evening in the heavens but mid-day in our lives.”

”Well I never!”--it was Jack's voice. (Was there ever stranger ending to a wooing!) ”Are you two chums?” Evidently he was feeling very annoyed.

His mother having failed to meet him at the appointed time and place he had come in search of her.

Stephen jumped up at once, seized hold of the lad with loving hands, and compelled him to sit down between them. ”Yes, we're chums,” said Stephen, in his old bright manner, ”and we want to tell you how it came about.”

Jack's face looked rather dark, and he muttered: ”This is why, then, mummy wanted to come here so much.”

”No, it was not,” said Stephen firmly, and then he told him of their unexpected meeting, of how G.o.d had seemingly led them both on the path, and of his (Stephen's) boyhood love for his mother. And all the time Phebe said never a word, but sat looking at the two with eyes full of love.

”Ah!” said Jack, with a sigh of relief, ”I don't mind now. I thought you'd been keeping it dark from me. But, I say, if you take mummy, you'll have to take me as well! Else what will become of me?”

”Of course I shall; the fact is, we'll all be chums together, won't we?”

”Rather!” said Jack. ”I call this spiffin,” and then their hands seemed to get all mixed up together.

The next day Stephen had a particular request to make. It was that, seeing he had waited for his love so long, they should be married at once, and Phebe felt she could not refuse him.

Nanna, Aunt Lizzie, Bessie, Reynolds and Jones were all communicated with at once, and on a given day the three establishments were closed, all a.s.sistants given a holiday, and the above-named individuals summoned to the ceremony. To please Jack he was allowed to give his mother away, and Reynolds was the bridegroom's best man.

Bessie--the Bessie of old!--was delighted. ”This is what I call fine!

I'm as happy as if I were being married to my dear 'Darling Jones' over again!” Nanna was just as radiant; her old dream after all had come true!

Once more during the honeymoon Phebe referred to the past. ”If only we could have started our life together! How was it I was so blind? Why did not my heart respond to your love as it does now? Nanna was not nearly so blind as I was,” and then she told Stephen of Mrs. Colston's guesses that afternoon in the old kitchen where the mangle was.

”I cannot answer your questions, dearest; but I am sure you are the richer women to-day for the trials you have had.”

”Yes, Nanna said that day, when I told her I was a Christian, that to be a full Christian was a matter of development, that there were many creases in my nature G.o.d had to mangle out. I am afraid there are many creases still left.”

”Yes, though we may be blameless before G.o.d our education is still going on.”

”But I have been far from blameless. I have often thought if I had entered more into Ralph's ambitions it would have been better and his end would have been different. What if I should bring defeat into your life too!”

”Dearest! you have brought nothing but inspiration into my life. You are not to have these sad thoughts. I was not brave enough in the past to show my love, or you might have seen it in a plainer manner--and all would have been different. But we neither of us acted from selfishness.

You considered at the time you acted rightly by resisting Ralph's restlessness. G.o.d will never blame us for not acting up to any light that was hidden from us. If we have made mistakes in the past G.o.d has forgiven us, and therefore we should put the past entirely from us.”

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