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"O Bella! n.o.ble soul, alone great among women, cast away all these European casuistries; with a single step put this whole, old-maidish Europe behind you!"
A still longer pause followed: there was no sound but the screaming of the parrot.
"When do you start?" asked Bella.
"To-night, by the railway."
"No, by boat. Is no boat going?"
"Certainly; one this very night."
"I will go with you. But leave me now, leave me. Here is my hand, I go with you."
She sat motionless, her hands folded, her eyes closed. Sonnenkamp took her hand firmly in his, touched her wedding-ring, and drew it gently from her finger.
"What are you doing?" exclaimed Bella in sudden pa.s.sion. Her eyes were fixed on Sonnenkamp; she saw the ring in his hand.
"Let me keep it as a pledge," he urged.
"What do you mean? We are not people to make a scene. Give it to me."
He gave back the ring; but she did not return it to her finger.
That night, a steamer stopped at the little town; there was a storm of wind and rain, and the engine screeched and hissed. On the wharf stood a man wrapped in his cloak, and presently a tall veiled figure pa.s.sed him.
"Leave me to myself!" the woman said as she hurried by.
A plank was laid across from the steamer: the woman crossed it, followed by the man.
The plank was drawn up, the boat turned, and steamed away into the darkness and the storm. No one was on deck except those two figures: the sailors made haste into the cabin. The pilot, wrapped in his suit of India-rubber, whistled softly to himself as he turned the wheel.
The tall figure of the woman, m.u.f.fled in black, stood upon the deck of the steamer as it shot down the stream. Long she stood, abstractedly gazing at the water and the towns and villages on the sh.o.r.e, with here and there a light flas.h.i.+ng from the windowpanes, and casting a swiftly-vanis.h.i.+ng gleam upon the river. A fiery shower, a stream, of bright sparks from the chimney, swept over the figure. A hand appeared from under the folds of the cloak; it held a ring between its fingers for a while, then dropped it into the stream below.
BOOK XIV.
CHAPTER I.
MANY KINDS OF LOVE.
The modest little dwelling of the Major became once more the place where all sought rest and found it.
As Eric had first gone to the Major to tell him of his happiness, so the Cooper also, and his betrothed, first sought the Major and Fraulein Milch, to tell their new-found joy.
Here they met Knopf, who was an especial favorite with Fraulein Milch, because he had a faculty for being taken care of; and besides he had brought her a great many books in former days, and instructed her in many things. He must always be the young ladies' school-teacher, even with Fraulein Milch.
When Knopf heard of Eric's betrothal with Manna, he said,--
"That is the way! If is the old story over again,--the story of the maiden freed from enchantment, which is a great favorite here on the Rhine. This is a new version of it. Only a youth as pure as Dournay could have set the pure virgin free."
He spoke in a kind of low, dreamy mysterious tone, which so touched the Major's heart, that he fell upon the speaker's neck, embraced and kissed him, and cried,--
"You must enter our society. You must speak so there. That is the place for you."
Knopf had come to fulfil Weidmann's commission, and to make some inquiries of Eric about the black man Adams. When the Cooper and his betrothed entered, and the Major gave them his blessing, and Fraulein Milch brought in a bottle of wine, Knopf was the merriest of the company. He could not fully say what was in his heart; but he laid his hand on the tablets in his breast-pocket, which meant, "Here is another beautiful romance for me to write down. Ah, how beautiful the world is!"
Into the midst of this joyful company came the tidings of Sonnenkamp's flight.
"And we have not yet pa.s.sed sentence upon him!" cried the Major.
Fraulein Milch smiled knowingly at the Major, as much as to say, "Did I not tell you he was making fools of you?"
Without waiting to finish their wine, the Major and Knopf hurried to the Villa.
Eric was busy with the notary, and they had to wait some time before they could speak with him.
The notary had brought Eric a paper in Sonnenkamp's handwriting, which declared that he had taken with him all the property made in slave-traffic; he appointed Weidmann and Eric guardians of his children, and arranged for Roland's being declared of age in the spring.
Another messenger came from Weidmann bringing the good news, that, according to a letter just received from Doctor Fritz, Abraham Lincoln had been elected President.
The thought pa.s.sed through Eric's mind, that there might be some connection between this event and Sonnenkamp's flight.
He had no time to dwell upon the idea, for immediately after Weidmann's messenger had been admitted, the Major and Knopf entered.
News followed hard upon news. A telegram arrived, desiring Eric to go to the city and wait at the telegraph-office, as some one wished to communicate with him. The despatch was signed, "The Man from Eden."
Eric requested the Major to stay with his mother and send for Fraulein Milch to join him; at the same time he begged Knopf to bring Roland home, and prepare him as gently as he could for what had happened.
From every side, fresh difficulties poured in upon Eric. How every thing had come together! Clodwig's death, Sonnenkamp's flight, the fate of Roland, the fate of Manna--all weighed upon his heart.
As he was mounting his horse, he fortunately descried Professor Einsiedel, to whom he told in a few words what had happened, and begged him to stay with Manna.
He rode to the city. A despatch awaited him, telling that in an hour he should receive some definite tidings.
This suspense was most trying to Eric: he knew not what steps he should take next.
He walked through the city: everywhere were men and women safe in the privacy of their homes, while he and his seemed cast out into the street. He lingered long before the Justice's house. Lina was singing her favorite song from "Figaro;" and the words, "that I with roses may garland thy head," were given so feelingly, with so much suppressed emotion, that Eric's breath came hard as he listened. He knew just how it looked up there in the sitting-room. The Architect was leaning back in the red armchair, while his betrothed sang to him; flowers were blooming in the window; and the whole atmosphere was rich with music and perfume.
Unwilling to disturb their comfort by his heavy thoughts, he returned to the telegraph-station, and left word that he should be sent for at the hotel if any despatch came for him.
He sat alone in a dark corner and waited. The guests were gathered about the long table with their gla.s.ses of beer before them. Their talk was dry, and seemed to make the liquor the more refres.h.i.+ng. Eric forced himself to listen to their chat. They talked of Paris, of London, of America; one man was going to one place, another to another, a third was coming back: the free, mobile character of the Rhineland people was spread out before him; they live as if always floating on their native stream.