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"I know what you mean, you good little thing, and I promise you that when the rest of your property is sent to me I will invest it so that your parents shall have no right to any of it, but that you may do with it just what Herr Leonhardt advises."
"Ah, that will be splendid!" cried Kathchen, as she kissed the sleeve of Johannes' coat. "Herr Walter!" she called out, "then you will find out all the poor people for me, and tell me how much to give them?"
"Yes, Kathi dear, indeed we will!" Walter gladly replied.
Johannes gave the child some pieces of silver. "There, my darling, give those to the next beggar you see, if you want to do so. Farewell, all of you. I will not delay a moment, for it is time to proceed to extremities." He pressed Leonhardt's hand, and walked quickly away in the direction of the castle.
"What can have pa.s.sed up there between the uncle and niece?" said Leonhardt, shaking his head.
"Father Leonhardt," said Kathchen, "don't you tell, but I know something."
"What is it, my child?"
"That guardian up there is a very bad man."
"That is an old story, Kathi," said Walter.
"Yes, but you don't know what he does; he empties the letter-box at the school-house when it is dark."
"Is that true?"
"Yes, father saw him do it, but he told me he would shut me up for three days if I told any one."
"How did your father happen to see such a thing?" asked Herr Leonhardt, amazed.
"Oh, he told mother all about it, and I ought not to have heard it, but I did hear. Last week, one night when he was biding to try and catch the thief who steals our grapes, he heard some one going softly towards the school-house, and he hid close, thinking it was the thief. And then he saw it was Herr Gleissert, who busied himself about the place where the letters are slipped into the box. And father crept nearer, and saw plainly how he poked something long and thin into the slit and drew out the letters, and then lighted a match and held his hat before it that no one might see it. Then by the light of the match he read all the writing on the letters, and put them back again into the box,--all but one, which he kept. And then he went home to the castle again. Father said he wanted to seize him and hold him, but he did not know what weapons he might have about him, and that there was no use of accusing him, for father would be sure to get the worst of it."
"What mischief can the scoundrel be brewing?" said Herr Leonhardt, anxiously.
Walter laughed. "Ah, father, we are paid now for always reading the addresses of the letters he sent from the castle."
"That is an entirely different case," said Leonhardt "But our friend ought to know this before he reaches the castle. Run, Walter, you are young and strong; try to overtake him, and tell him."
"Yes, father, I can do it easily. Sit down here, I will soon return,"
said the young man, hurrying away, fleet-footed as a deer.
Herr Leonhardt felt for Kathchen. "My child, are you there?"
"Yes, Father Leonhardt."
"Kathchen, you have repaid me to-day for all the love I have ever given you." He pa.s.sed his hands over the little, thin face. "I cannot see you; they tell me you are changed,--and I think you must be. But in my mind's eye you will always have the same roguish black eyes and chubby rosy cheeks, with the little berry-stained mouth,--you have never since told what is not true, eh, Kathi?"
"No, Father Leonhardt, on my word and honour, never, and I never will again. I am now the richest child in all the country round, mother says, and I will try to be the best, and thank the kind G.o.d, as you say I should, by kindness to others. And, now that I cannot fold my hands any more when I say my prayers, I must pray very hard indeed,--harder than before,--for then I always felt as if I had the dear G.o.d between my hands and could keep Him and make Him listen to me, but now that I cannot do that I must call Him oftener, and beg Him to listen to my prayers."
"My dear little child, G.o.d is always near you,--he loves to dwell in a pure, childlike heart. Kathchen, you are a flower in the blind man's path. Do you know what that means?"
Kathchen laid her head upon Leonhardt's knee. "I think it means that you love me."
"Yes, my child, and that there are few joys in my life like what you are to me."
"But, father, you have Walter, he is more to you than I can be."
"G.o.d bless him! he is my staff and prop in the darkness. He is the best that I have on this earth."
"Father Leonhardt, when I grow up I will marry Walter, and then we will all live together."
"My child, what put that into your little head?"
"Why, my mother says that now I am so rich that I can choose any husband that I please,--and I will choose Walter and no one else--no one."
"But suppose he will not have you?" asked Herr Leonhardt with a smile.
"Oh, but he will have me,--I know he will," said the child confidently.
"Oh, holy, holy simplicity!" whispered the old man, and laid his hand in blessing upon the little girl's head.
And as he sat there, gazing into the night that had closed around him, suddenly to his inner vision all grew light about him. From the vanishing darkness arose the columns of a church, and through the high arched windows the sunlight fell full upon the heads of a youthful pair kneeling at the altar. Around stood a throng of glad relatives and friends, amongst them a h.o.a.ry blind father, and by his side an old mother, with tears of joy standing in her eyes. The young couple were fair to look upon,--the bridegroom blonde, bearded, manly, the bride blushing in girlish timidity. Her large, frank eyes were swimming in tears of devotion and emotion, but her charming little mouth was slightly stained as if from eating berries.
"What! what!" said the people around her, "picking blackberries upon her wedding-day?"
Then the organ began a well-known hymn, and all present joined in singing it The bride gave her lover her hand,--only her left, to be sure,--but its clasp was as strong as if there were two to give,--for it was for a lifetime. And then the ceremony was ended, and they all went out into the clear Spring sunshine. A crowd of familiar faces pressed around,--poor, deformed, and maimed figures, that still seemed not unhappy, for they were all well clad and fed,--and they waved their caps in the air, with "Long life to the bridal pair! Since you have made this place your home, there will be no starving or freezing poor here. Long life to our Doctor Walter Leonhardt and to Silver-armed Kathchen!"
Oh, sunny, peaceful picture! how it cheered the blind man's soul! A lovely dream of the future, born of the prattle of a child, hovering around an old man upon the verge of the grave!
"Father Leonhardt, what are you smiling at?" asked the child.
"At something beautiful that I have just seen."
"I thought you could not see any more?"
"I can see, my child, not things that are, but perhaps all the more plainly things that are to be."
CHAPTER IV.
BATTLE.
Ernestine was sitting at her writing-table, arranging books and papers to be packed up. Her uncle was a.s.sisting her with trembling haste. From time to time she leaned her head wearily upon her hand.
"It will be impossible for us to leave to-day if you do not make more haste," said Leuthold urgently.
"I am doing all that I can, but I am so weak that I do not know whether I shall be able to travel to-night."
"I cannot imagine how you can give way so. You never used to do it.
When I think of the self-control that you were wont to exercise,--your determination would have done honour to a man,--and now! Oh, it is deplorable!"