<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XXXIII" id="CHAPTER_XXXIII"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXXIII.</h2>
<h3>INTO THE LIGHT.</h3>
<p>For two weeks longer Ralph taught at the Flat Creek
school-house. He was everybody's hero. And he was Bud's idol. He
did what he could to get Bud and Martha together, and though Bud
always "saw her safe home" after this, and called on her every
Sunday evening, yet, to save his life, he could not forget his big
fists and his big feet long enough to say what he most wanted to
say, and what Martha most wanted him to say.</p>
<p>At the end of two weeks Ralph found himself exceedingly weary of
Flat Creek, and exceedingly glad to hear from Mr. Means that the
school-money had "gin out." It gave him a good excuse to return to
Lewisburg, where his heart and his treasure were. A certain sense
of delicacy had kept him from writing to Hannah just yet.</p>
<p>When he got to Lewisburg he had good news. His uncle, ashamed of
his previous neglect, and perhaps with an eye to his nephew's
growing popularity, had got him the charge of the grammar
department in the new graded school in the village. So he quietly
arranged to board at a boarding-house. His aunt could not have him
about, of which fact he was very glad. She could not but feel, she
said, that he might have taken better care of Walter than he did,
when they were only four miles apart.</p>
<p>He did not hasten to call on Hannah. Why should he? He sent her
a message, of no consequence in itself, by Nancy Sawyer. Then he
took possession of his school; and then, on the evening of the
first day of school, he went, as he had appointed to himself, to
see Hannah Thomson.</p>
<p>And she, with some sweet presentiment, had got things ready by
fixing up the scantily-furnished room as well as she could. And
Miss Nancy Sawyer, who had seen Ralph that afternoon, had guessed
that he was going to see Hannah. It's wonderful how much enjoyment
a generous heart can get out of the happiness of others. Is not
that what He meant when he said of such as Miss Sawyer that they
should have a hundred-fold in this life for all their sacrifices?
Did not Miss Nancy enjoy a hundred weddings and have the love of
five hundred children? And so Miss Nancy just happened over at Mrs.
Thomson's humble home, and, just in the most matter-of-course way,
asked that lady and Shocky to come over to her house. Shocky wanted
Hannah to come too. But Hannah blushed a little, and said that she
would rather not.</p>
<p>And when she was left alone, Hannah fixed her hair two or three
times, and swept the hearth, and moved the chairs first one way and
then another, and did a good many other needless things. Needless:
for a lover, if he be a lover, does not see furniture or dress.</p>
<p>And then she sat down by the fire, and tried to sew, and tried
to look unconcerned, and tried to feel unconcerned, and tried not
to expect anybody, and tried to make her heart keep still. And
tried in vain. For a gentle rap at the door sent her pulse up
twenty beats a minute and made her face burn. And Hartsook was for
the first time, abashed in the presence of Hannah. For the
oppressed girl had, in two weeks, blossomed out into the full-blown
woman.</p>
<p>And Ralph sat down by the fire, and talked of his school and her
school, and everything else but what he wanted to talk about. And
then the conversation drifted back to Flat Creek, and to the walk
through the pasture, and to the box-elder tree, and to the painful
talk in the lane. And Hannah begged to be forgiven, and Ralph
laughed at the idea that she had done anything wrong. And she
praised his goodness to Shocky, and he drew her little note out
of—But I agreed not tell you where he kept it. And then she
blushed, and he told how the note had sustained him, and how her
white face kept up his courage in his flight down the bed of Clifty
Creek. And he sat a little nearer, to show her the note that he had
carried in his bosom—I have told it! And—but I must not
proceed. A love-scene, ever so beautiful in itself, will not bear
telling. And so I shall leave a little gap just here, which you may
fill up as you please. . . . Somehow, they never knew how, they got
to talking about the future instead of the past, after that, and to
planning their two lives as one life. And . . . And when Miss Nancy
and Mrs. Thomson returned later in the evening, Ralph was standing
by the mantel-piece, but Shocky noticed that his chair was close to
Hannah's. And good Miss Nancy Sawyer looked in Hannah's face and
was happy.</p>
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