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"Herr von Wildenrod----"
"My name is Oscar!" interposed he beseechingly.
"Oscar--leave me!"
"No, I will not leave you!" e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed he pa.s.sionately. "I have found the jewel, now I will catch it and keep it all my life long. Maia, years, tens of years part us, I have no longer youth to offer you, but I love you with all the fervent ardor of youth. From the instant when you advanced to meet me on the threshold of your father's house, I knew that you were my destiny, my all. And you love me too, I know it--let me hear it now from your own lips. Speak, Maia, say that you will be mine! You have no idea what power this word will exert over me--to deliver and to save."
He had thrown his arm around her, his pa.s.sionate, glowing words pa.s.sing over the trembling girl like the breath of a burning flame. Her head rested upon his bosom, and fixedly she looked up at him. Now she no longer shrank from meeting his eyes, she only saw the melting tenderness in them, heard only the confession of his love, and that bodeful dread was lost in triumphant rapture.
"Yes, I do love you, Oscar," said she softly. "Dearly love you."
"My Maia!"
It rang out like a shout of joy. Oscar folded her in his arms, kissing again and again the light hair and rosy lips of his beloved. An intoxication of bliss had come over him. The past, with its dark shadows, sank into oblivion, and to the man who was already approaching the autumn of life sounded joyously the message that every blossom was repeating: Spring is here!
After a while Maia gently extricated herself from his arms, her lovely face all aglow.
"But my father, Oscar, will he consent?"
Wildenrod smiled. He knew that the difference of age between himself and his betrothed would be an objection hard for Dernburg to overcome, that his consent would neither be easily nor quickly obtained, but this did not frighten him. "Your father desires only to see you beloved and happy, I know that from his own mouth," said he with overflowing tenderness. "And my Maia, my sweet, pretty child, you shall be happy and beloved!"
CHAPTER XI.
A SECRET FOE AND OPEN ENEMY.
Dernburg sat in his office at the desk. He had just had a lengthy talk with the director of his works and was looking over the papers which he had left when the door was again opened. Count Eckardstein entered, who, as a guest of the house, needed no special announcement.
"I just saw the director leave," said he. "May I disturb you for a few minutes? I only come, preparatory to bidding adieu."
"Why, you will not be at dinner, as usual?" asked Dernburg, somewhat surprised.
"I thank you, I must return to Eckardstein.--Must I really have to report to my brother that you decline his invitation? We had depended so confidently upon your presence and that of your family."
"I am sorry. You have already heard that we have invited company to dinner, ourselves, for the day named."
This refusal of the invitation sounded just as positive as chilling, and so the young Count could but feel it to be. He impulsively drew a few steps nearer, and asked in a whisper:
"Herr Dernburg--what have you against me?"
"I? Nothing! What put such an idea into your mind, Sir Count?"
"Your very address proves it to me. This morning you called me Victor and treated me with your wonted kindness. Have I, then, become a stranger to you in the course of a few months? I am afraid that another influence has been brought to bear upon you, that I can guess."
Dernburg frowned, the hint at Wildenrod, which was only too intelligible, wounded him, but he was accustomed to go about things in a direct manner. Why seek to find out what he wanted to know by indirect methods. He looked at the handsome, open countenance of the young man, then he said slowly:
"I do not allow myself to be influenced, and it is not my way to condemn any one unheard, least of all you, Victor, whom I have known from the days of your earliest boyhood. Now that you introduce the subject yourself, it may as well be discussed between us. Will you answer me a few questions?"
"With pleasure, proceed."
"You stayed away from home a long while, and did not set foot on Eckardstein soil for years. Why was that?"
"It resulted from personal, family relations----"
"Which you would rather not talk about--I perceive."
"No, Herr Dernburg, I do not care to have concealments with you," said Victor, in a low tone. "My relation to my brother was never an especially friendly one, and since the death of our father has grown to be positively painful. Conrad is the elder, and heir of the entailed property, I am dependent upon him, and cannot maintain my rank as an officer without his a.s.sistance. He has often enough made me feel his unwillingness to do this, and in so insulting a manner, that I prefer to keep aloof from him."
One could see that it was exceedingly trying to the young Count to give this explanation, and still he was telling nothing that his hearer did not already know. The strained relations existing between the brothers was known to the whole neighborhood, but the main fault was attributed to the elder. Count Conrad, who, at the time, was still unmarried, and the senior of Victor by only a few years, was regarded as haughty and unmindful of the rights of others, and his ambition was a fact known to all. He was, therefore, anything but popular. Dernburg knew this likewise, but made not the slightest allusion to it, only asking:
"And yet you have come now?"
"This happened by my brother's express desire."
"He has concocted plans in conjunction with you--I know."
Victor started, and the blood began slowly to mount into his cheeks.
Dernburg watched him sharply and inquisitively, while he continued:
"You apprehend, without doubt, what I mean. I shall be quite candid with you, but shall expect just as candid an answer. It is said that you have been summoned by Count Conrad to Eckardstein, in order to turn to account your former intimacy at Odensburg."
Victor started at this insulting speech.
"Herr Dernburg!"
"Victor, I ask you, is that so?"
The young man cast down his eyes in painful embarra.s.sment.
"You put the question in a way----"
"That admits of no evasion. Yes or no, then?"
"You seem to take my courts.h.i.+p as an insult," said Victor, without lifting his eyes from the floor. "Is it such a crime, then, to seek the renewal of youthful friends.h.i.+p with such thoughts? Well, yes, I came here to seek a happiness that in memory took the shape of a bright little elf. What is there bad about that? At my age you would probably have done the same."
"But not at the behest of another person!" said Dernburg cuttingly.
"And when I went courting I had a different fortune to offer from what you have, Herr Lieutenant."
The young Count was incensed, and with difficulty restrained himself, but his voice trembled, when he answered:
"You make poverty very bitter to me."
"Such is not my desire, for poverty is no disgrace in my eyes. You only share the fate of the younger sons in those families whose whole property is entailed upon the oldest. But they say that your brother has still more pressing reasons for exhorting you to make a so-called good match. I am sorry, Sir Count, to hurt your feelings, but you have sought this interview yourself, not I."
"So they have informed you of that, too, and you put the most shameful interpretation upon it," said Victor bitterly. "If I have been indiscreet, my brother has already given me good cause to rue it, and I repent tenfold at this moment. Well, yes, I did not keep free of debt, could not do so with the small means that were at my command. It would have been an easy thing for Conrad to release me from my obligations, but he did not do it, even putting before me the possibility of being obliged to send in my resignation, and then----"