<h1>Chapter XX.</h1>
<p>Sherwood was a very old place. It had been built a
hundred years at least before the Revolution in the
days when the States had English governors, and when
its founder had been governor of Rhode Island. His
last descendant in the direct line was Sybil Brandon’s
great-uncle.</p>
<p>The old country-seat was remarkable chiefly for the
extent of the gardens attached to the house, and for
the singularly advanced state of dilapidation in which
everything was allowed to remain. Beyond the gardens
the woods stretched down to the sea, unpruned and thick
with a heavy undergrowth; from the road the gardens
were hidden by thick hedges, and by the forbidding
gray front of the building. It was not an attractive
place to look at, and once within the precincts there
was a heavy sense of loneliness and utter desolation,
that seemed to fit it for the very home of melancholy.</p>
<p>The damp sea air had drawn green streaks of mould
downwards from each several jointing of the stones;
the long-closed shutters of some of the windows were
more than half hidden by creepers, bushy and straggling
by turns, and the eaves were all green with moss and
mould. From the deep-arched porch at the back a weed-grown
gravel walk led away through untrimmed hedges of box
and myrtle to an ancient summer-house on the edge
of a steep slope of grass. To right and left of this
path, the rose-trees and box that had once marked
the gayest of flower gardens now grew in such exuberance
of wild profusion that it would have needed strong
arms and a sharp axe to cut a way through. Far away
on a wooded knoll above the sea was the old graveyard,
where generations of Sherwoods lay dead in their quiet
rest, side by side.</p>
<p>But for a space in every year the desolation was touched
with the breath of life, and the sweet June air blew
away the mould and the smell of death, and the wild
flowers and roses sprang up joyfully in the wilderness
to greet the song-birds and the butterflies of summer.
And in this copious year a double spring had come
to Sherwood, for Sybil Brandon had arrived one day,
and her soft eyes and golden hair had banished all
sadness and shadow from the old place. Even the thin
old man, who lived there among the ghosts and shadows
of the dead and dying past, smoothed the wrinkles
from his forehead, forgetting to long selfishly for
his own death, when Sybil came; and with touching
thoughtfulness he strove to amuse her, and to be younger
for her sake. He found old garments of a gayer time,
full thirty years hidden away in the great wardrobes
up-stairs, and he put them on and wore them, though
they hung loosely about his shaken and withered frame,
lest he should be too sad a thing for such young eyes
to look upon.</p>
<p>Then Ronald came one day, and the old man took kindly
to him, and bade him come often. In the innocence
of his old age it seemed good that what youth and
life there was in the world should come together; and
Ronald treated him with a deference and respect to
which he had long been unused. Moreover, Ronald accepted
the invitation given him and came as often as he pleased,
which, before long, meant every day. When he came in
the morning he generally stayed until the evening,
and when he came in the afternoon he always stayed
as long as Sybil would let him, and rode home late
through the misty June moonlight pondering on the happiness
the world had suddenly brought forth for him who had
supposed, but a few months ago, that all happiness
was at an end.</p>
<p>Six months had gone by since Ronald had first seen
Sybil, and he had changed in that time from boy to
man. Looking back through the past years he knew that
he was glad Joe had not married him, for the new purpose
of his new life was to love and marry Sybil Brandon.
There was no doubt in his mind as to what he would
do; the strong nature in him was at last roused, and
he was capable of anything in reason or without it
to get what he wanted.</p>
<p>Some one has said that an Englishman’s idea
of happiness is to find something he can kill and
to hunt it. That is a metaphor as well as a fact.
It may take an Englishman half a lifetime to find out
what he wants, but when he is once decided he is very
likely to get it, or to die in the attempt. The American
is fond of trying everything until he reaches the
age at which Americans normally become dyspeptic, and
during his comparatively brief career he succeeds
in experiencing a surprising variety of sensations.
Both Americans and English are tenacious in their
different ways, and it is certain that between them
they have gotten more things that they have wanted
than any other existing nation.</p>
<p>What most surprised Ronald was that, having made up
his mind to marry Sybil, he should not have had the
opportunity, or perhaps the courage, to tell her so.
He remembered how easily he had always been able to
speak to Joe about matrimony, and he wondered why
it should be so hard to approach the subject with
one whom he loved infinitely more dearly than he had
ever loved his cousin. But love brings tact and the
knowledge of fitness, besides having the effect of
partially hiding the past and exaggerating the future
into an eternity of rose-colored happiness; wherefore
Ronald supposed that everything would come right in
time, and that the time for everything to come right
could not possibly be very far off.</p>
<p>On the day after he had seen Joe in Boston he rode
over to Sherwood in the morning, as usual, upon one
of Vancouver’s horses. He was lighter at heart
than ever, for he had somewhat dreaded the revelation
of his intentions to Joe; but she had so led him on
and helped him that it had all seemed very easy. He
was not long in reaching his destination, and having
put his horse in the hands of the single man who did
duty as gardener, groom, and dairyman for old Mr.
Sherwood, he entered the garden, where he hoped to
meet Sybil alone. He was not disappointed, for as he
walked down the path through the wilderness of shrubbery
he caught sight of her near the summer-house, stooping
down in the act of plucking certain flowers that grew
there.</p>
<p>She, too, was dressed all in white, as he had seen
his cousin on the previous day; but the difference
struck him forcibly as he came up and took her outstretched
hand. They had changed places and character, one could
almost have thought. Joe had looked so tired and weary,
so “wilted,” as they say in Boston, that
it had shocked Ronald to see her. Sybil, who had formerly
been so pale and cold, now was the very incarnation
of life; delicate and exquisitely fine in every movement
and expression, but most thoroughly alive. The fresh
soft color seemed to float beneath the transparent
skin, and her deep eyes were full of light and laughter
and sunshine. Ronald’s heart leaped in his breast
for love and pride as she greeted him, and his brow
turned hot and his hands cold in the confusion of
his happiness.</p>
<p>“You have been away again?” she asked
presently, looking down at the wild white lilies which
she had been gathering.</p>
<p>“Yes, I was in Boston yesterday,” answered
Ronald, who had immediately begun to help in plucking
the flowers. “I went to see Joe. She looks dreadfully
knocked up with the heat, poor child.”</p>
<p>And so they talked about Joe and Boston for a little
while, and Sybil sat upon the steps of the summer-house
on the side where there was shade from the hot morning
sun, while Ronald brought her handfuls of the white
lilies. At last there were enough, and he came and
stood before her. She was so radiantly lovely as she
sat in the warm shade with the still slanting sunlight
just falling over her white dress, he thought her so
super-humanly beautiful that he stood watching her
without thinking of speaking or caring that she should
speak to him. She looked up and smiled, a quick bright
smile, for she was woman enough to know his thoughts.
But she busied herself with the lilies and looked
down again.</p>
<p>“Let me help you,” said Ronald suddenly,
kneeling down before her on the path.</p>
<p>“I don’t think you can–very much,”
said Sybil, demurely. “You are not very clever
about flowers, you know. Oh, take care! You will crush
it– give it back to me!”</p>
<p>Ronald had taken one of the lilies and was smelling
it, but it looked to Sybil very much as though he
were pressing it to his lips. He would not give it
back, but held it away at arm’s length as he
knelt. Sybil made as though she were annoyed.</p>
<p>“Of course,” said she, “I cannot
take it, if you will not give it to me.” Ronald
gently laid the flower in her lap with the others.
She pretended to take no notice of what he did, but
went on composing her nosegay.</p>
<p>“Miss Brandon”–began Ronald, and stopped.</p>
<p>“Well?” said Sybil, without looking up.</p>
<p>“May I tell you something?” he asked.</p>
<p>“That depends,” said Sybil. “Is
it anything very interesting?”</p>
<p>“Yes,” said Ronald. There seemed to be
something the matter with his throat all at once,
as though he were going to choke. Sybil looked up and
saw that he was very pale. She had never seen him otherwise
than ruddy before, and she was startled; she dropped
the lilies on her knees and looked at him anxiously.
Ronald suddenly laid his hands over hers and held
them. Still she faced him.</p>
<p>“I am very unworthy of you–I know I am-but
I love you very, very much.” He spoke distinctly
enough now, and slowly. He was as white as marble,
and his fingers were cold, and trembled as they held
hers.</p>
<p>For an instant after he had spoken, Sybil did not
move. Then she quietly drew back her hands and hid
her face in a sudden, convulsive movement. She, too,
trembled, and her heart beat as though it would break;
but she said nothing. Ronald sprang from the ground
and kneeled again upon the step beside her; very gently
his arm stole about her and drew her to him. She took
one hand from her face and tried to disentangle his
hold, but he held her strongly, and whispered in her
ear,–</p>
<p>“Sybil, I love you–do you love me?”</p>
<p>Sybil made a struggle to rise, but it was not a very
brave struggle, and in another moment she had fallen
into his arms and was sobbing out her whole love passionately.</p>
<p>“Oh, Ronald, you mu–must not!” But Ronald
did.</p>
<p>Half an hour later they were still sitting side by
side on the steps, but the storm of uncertainty was
passed, and they had plighted their faith for better
and for worse, for this world and the next. Ronald
had foreseen the event, and had hoped for it as he
never had hoped for anything in his life; Sybil had
perhaps guessed it; at all events, now that the supreme
moment was over, they both felt that it was the natural
climax to all that had happened during the spring.</p>
<p>“I think,” said Sybil, quietly, “that
we ought to tell my uncle at once. He is the only
relation I have in the world.”</p>
<p>“Oh yes, of course,” said Ronald, holding
her hand. “That is, you know, I think we might
tell him after lunch. Because I suppose it would not
be the right thing for me to stay all day after he
knows. Would it?”</p>
<p>“Why not?” asked Sybil. “He must
know it soon, and you will come to-morrow.”</p>
<p>“To-morrow, and the next day, and the day after
that, and always,” said Ronald, lovingly. “But
he will not like it, I suppose.”</p>
<p>“Why not?” asked Sybil, again.</p>
<p>“Because I am poor,” said Ronald, quietly.
“You know I am not rich at all, Sybil dearest.
We shall have to be very economical, and live on the
place in Scotland. But it is a very pretty place,”
he added, reassuringly.</p>
<p>Sybil flushed a little. He did not know, then, that
she had a fortune of her own. It was a new pleasure.
She did not say anything for a moment.</p>
<p>“Do you mind very much, dearest?” asked
Ronald, doubtfully. “Do you think it would bore
you dreadfully to live in the country?”</p>
<p>Sybil hesitated before she answered. She hardly knew
whether to tell him or not, but at last she decided
it would be better.</p>
<p>“No, Ronald,” said she, smiling a little;
“I like the country. But, you know, we can live
anywhere we please. I am rich, Ronald–you did not
know it?”</p>
<p>Ronald started slightly. It was indeed an unexpected
revelation.</p>
<p>“Really?” he cried. “Oh, I am so
glad for you. You will not miss anything, then. I
was so afraid.”</p>
<p>That evening Ronald telegraphed to Joe the news of
his engagement, and the next day he wrote her a long
letter, which was more remarkable for the redundant
passion expressed than for the literary merit of the
expression. It seemed far easier to write it since
he had seen her and talked with her about Sybil, not
because he felt in the least ashamed of having fallen
in love within six months of the dissolution of his
former engagement with Joe, but because it seemed
a terribly difficult thing to speak to any one about
Sybil. Ronald was very far from being poetical, or
in any way given to lofty and medieval reflections
of the chivalric sort, but he was a very honest fellow,
loving for the first time, and he understood that his
love was something more to be guarded and respected
than anything that had yet come into his life; wherefore
it seemed almost ungentlemanly to speak about it.</p>
<p>When Joe received the intelligence her satisfaction
knew no bounds, for although she had guessed that
the climax of the affair was not far off, she had
not expected it so very soon. Had she searched through
the whole of her acquaintance at home and in America
she could have found no one whom she considered more
fit to be Ronald’s wife, and that alone was
enough to make her very happy; but the sensation of
freedom from all further responsibility to Ronald,
and the consciousness that every possible good result
had followed upon her action, added so much to her
pleasure in the matter, that for a time she utterly
forgot herself and her own troubles. She instantly
wrote a long and sympathetic letter to Ronald, and
another to Sybil.</p>
<p>Sybil replied at once, begging Joe to come and spend
a month at Sherwood, or as much time as she was able
to give.</p>
<p>“I expect you had best go,” remarked Miss
Schenectady. “It is getting pretty hot here,
and you look quite sick.”</p>
<p>“Oh no, I am very well,” said Joe; “but
I think I will go for a week or ten days.”</p>
<p>“Well, if you find you are going to have a good
time, you can always stay, any way,” replied
the old lady. “I think if I were you I would
take some books and a Bible and a pair of old boots.”</p>
<p>Miss Schenectady did not smile, but Joe laughed outright.</p>
<p>“A Bible and a pair of old boots!” she
cried.</p>
<p>“Yes, I would,” said her aunt. “Old
Tom Sherwood cannot have seen a Bible for fifty years,
I expect, and it might sort of freshen him up.”
The old lady’s eye twinkled slightly and the
corners of her mouth twitched a little. “As
for the old boots, if you conclude to go, you will
want them, for you will be right out in the country
there.”</p>
<p>Joe laughed again, but she took her aunt’s advice;
and on the following day she reached Newport, and
was met by Sybil and Ronald, who conveyed her to Sherwood
in a thing which Joe learned was called a “carryall.”</p>
<p>Late in the afternoon, when Ronald was gone, the two
girls sat in an angle of the old walls, looking over
the sea to eastward. The glow of the setting sun behind
them touched them softly, and threw a rosy color upon
Joe’s pale face, and gilded Sybil’s bright
hair, hovering about her brows in a halo of radiant
glory. Joe looked at her and wondered at the change
love had wrought in so short a time. Sybil had once
seemed so cold and white that only a nun’s veil
could be a fit thing to bind upon her saintly head;
but now the orange blossoms would look better there,
Joe thought, twined in a bride’s wreath of white
and green, of purity and hope.</p>
<p>“My Snow Angel,” she exclaimed, “the
sun has melted you at last!”</p>
<p>“Tell me the story of the Snow Angel,”
said Sybil, smiling. “You once said that you
would.”</p>
<p>“I will tell you,” said Joe, “as
well I can remember it. Mamma used to tell it to me
years and years ago, when I was quite a small thing.
It is a pretty story. Listen.”</p>
<p>“Once on a time, far away in the north, there
lived an angel. She was very, very beautiful, and
all of the purest snow, quite white, her face and
her hands and her dress and her wings. She lived alone,
ever so far away, all through the long winter, in
a valley of beautiful snow, where the sun never shone
even in the summer. She was the most lovely angel that
ever was, but she was so cold that she could not fly
at all, and so she waited in the valley, always looking
southward and wishing with all her heart that the
sun would rise above the hill.</p>
<p>“Sometimes people passed, far down below, in
sledges, and she almost would have asked some one
of them to take her out of the valley. But once, when
she came near the track, a man came by and saw her,
and he was so dreadfully frightened that he almost
fell out of the sled.</p>
<p>“Sometimes, too, the little angels, who were
young and curious, would fly down into the cold valley
and look at her and speak to her.</p>
<p>“‘Pretty angel,’ they would say,
’why do you stay all alone in this dreary place?’</p>
<p>“‘They forgot me here,’ she used
to answer, ’and now I cannot fly until the sun
is over the hill. But I am very happy. It will soon
come.’</p>
<p>“It was too cold for the little angels, and
so they soon flew away and left her; and they began
to call her the Snow Angel among themselves, and some
of them said she was not real, but the other ones said
she must be, because she was so beautiful. She was
not unhappy, because angels never can be, you know;
only it seemed a long time to wait for the sun to come.</p>
<p>“But at last the sun heard of her, and the little
angels who had seen her told him it was a shame that
he should not rise high enough to warm her and help
her to fly. So, as he is big and good-natured and strong,
he said he would try, and would do his best; and on
midsummer’s day he determined to make a great
effort. He shook himself, and pushed and struggled
very hard, and got hotter than he had ever been in
his whole life with his exertions, but at last, with
a great brave leap, he found himself so high that
he could see right down into the valley, and he saw
the Snow Angel standing there, and she was so beautiful
that he almost cried with joy. And then, as he looked,
he saw a very wonderful sight.</p>
<p>“The Snow Angel, all white and glistening, looked
up into the sun’s face and stretched her arms
towards him and trembled all over; and as she felt
that he was come at last and had begun to warm her,
she thrust out her delicate long wings, and they gleamed
and shone and struck the cold clear air. Then the
least possible tinge of exquisite color came into her
face, and she opened her lips and sang for joy; and
presently, as she was singing, she rose straight upward
with a rushing sound, like a lark in the sunlight,
the whitest and purest and most beautiful angel that
ever flew in the sky. And her voice was so grand and
clear and ringing, that all the other angels stopped
in their songs to listen, and then sang with her in
joy because the Snow Angel was free at last.</p>
<p>“That is the story mamma used to tell me, long
ago, and when I first saw you I thought of it, because
you were so cold and beautiful that you seemed all
made of snow. But now the sun is over the hill, Sybil
dear, is it not?”</p>
<p>“Dear Joe,” said Sybil, winding her arm
round her friend’s neck and laying her face
close to hers, “you are so nice.”</p>
<p>The sun sank suddenly behind them, and all the eastern
water caught the purple glow. It was dark when the
two girls walked slowly back to the old house.</p>
<p>Joe stayed many days with Sybil at Sherwood, and the
days ran into weeks and the weeks to months as the
summer sped by. Ronald came and went daily, spending
long hours with Sybil in the garden, and growing more
manly and quiet in his happiness, while Sybil grew
ever fairer in the gradual perfecting of her beauty.
It was comforting to Joe to see them together, knowing
what honest hearts they were. She occupied herself
as she could with books and a few letters, but she
would often sit for hours in a deep chair under the
overhanging porch, where the untrimmed honeysuckle
waved in the summer breeze like a living curtain,
and the birds would come and swing themselves upon
its tendrils. But Joe’s cheek was always pale,
and her heart weary with longing and with fighting
against the poor imprisoned love that no one must
ever guess.</p>
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