Diana - BestLightNovel.com
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"In thinking of you first, you mean? O yes, I do. I will. But you think of people you do not care for."
"No, I don't. Never. You cannot think of people you do not care for, in the way you mean. They will not come into your head."
"How can one do then, Basil? How do _you_ do?"
"Obviously, the only way is to care for them."
"Who is sick in Pleasant Valley?"
"n.o.body you know. One is an old man who lives back on the mountain; the other is a woman near Blackberry hill."
"Blackberry hill? do you go _there?_"
"Now and then."
"But those are dreadful people there."
"Well," said the minister, "they want help so much the more."
"Help to live, do you mean? They do stealing enough for that."
"n.o.body _lives_ by stealing," said the minister. "It is one of the ways of death; and help to live is just what they want. But 'how shall they believe on him of whom they have not heard? and how shall they hear without a preacher'?"
"And do you _preach_ to them in that place?"
"I try."
"But there is no church there?"
"When you have got anything to do," said the minister, with a dry sort of humourousness which belonged to him, "it is best not be stopped by trifles."
"Where do you preach, then, Basil?"
"Wherever I can find a man or a woman to listen to me."
"In the houses?" exclaimed Diana.
"Why not?"
"Well, we never had a minister in Pleasant Valley like you before."
"Didn't you?"
"I don't believe anybody ever went to those people to preach to them, until you went."
"They had a good deal of that appearance," Mr. Masters a.s.sented.
"But," Diana began again after a short pause, "to go back; Basil, you do not _care_ for those people?"
"I think I do," said the minister very quietly.
"I suppose you do!" said Diana, in a sort of admiration. "But how can you?"
"Easy to tell," was the answer. "G.o.d made them, and G.o.d loves them; I love all that my Father loves. And Christ died for them; and I seek the lost whom my Master came to save. And there is not one of them but has in him the possibility of glory; and I see that possibility, and when I see it, Diana, it seems to me a small thing to give my life, if need be, that it may be realized."
"I am not good enough to be your wife!" said Diana, sinking her head.
And her secret self-abas.e.m.e.nt was very deep.
"Does that mean, that you object to the cutting short of our holiday?"
the minister asked, in his former tone of dry humourous suggestion.
"I?" said Diana, looking up and meeting his eyes. "No, certainly. I am ready for whatever you wish, and whenever you wish."
"I don't wish it at all," said the minister, giving a somewhat longing look at the green wilderness before them, of which the lovely hilly outlines were all that the gathering twilight left distinct. "But the thing is, Di, I cannot play when I ought to be working."
It made little difference to Diana. Indeed, she had a hope that in her new home she would find, as she always had found in her old home, engrossing duties that would make her part easier to get through, and in some measure put a check to the rush of thought and feeling. So with her full consent the very next day they set out upon their journey home. It was not a great journey, indeed; a long day's drive would do it; their horse was fresh, and they had time for a comfortable rest and dinner at mid-day. The afternoon was very fair, and as they began to get among the hills overlooking Pleasant Valley, something in air or light reminded Diana of the time, two years ago, when she had gone up the brook with Evan. She began to talk to get rid of her thoughts.
"What a nice, comfortable little carriage this is, Basil! Where did it come from?"
"From Boston."
"From Boston! I thought there was nothing like it in Pleasant Valley, that ever I saw. But how did you get it from Boston?"
"Where's the difficulty?" said the minister, sitting at ease sideways on the front seat and looking in at her. He had put Diana on the back seat, that she might take a more resting position than there was room for beside him.
"Why, it's so far."
"Railway comes to Manchester. I received it there, and that is only ten miles. I rode Saladin over a few days ago, and drove him back. I had ordered the set of harness sent with the rockaway. Ecco!"
"Echo?" said Diana. "Where?"
"A very sweet echo," said the minister, smiling. "Didn't you hear it?"
"No. But Basil, do you mean that this carriage is yours?"
"No; it is yours."
"Mine! then you have bought it! Didn't it cost a great deal?"
"I thought not. If you like it, certainly not."
"O, Basil, you are very good!" said Diana humbly. "But indeed I do not want you to go to any expense, ever, for me."
"I am not a poor man, Diana."
"Aren't you? I thought you were."
"What right had you to think anything about it?"