Paulines Passion and Punishment | Page 4

Louisa May Alcott
worldly gifts in my hand and that hand is
yours. See, I offer it."
She did so, but it was not taken. Manuel had left his seat and now stood
before her, awed by the undertone of strong emotion in her calmly
spoken words, bewildered by the proposal so abruptly made, longing to
ask the natural question hovering on his lips, yet too generous to utter it.
Pauline read his thought, and answered it with no touch of pain or pride
in the magical voice that seldom spoke in vain.
"I know your wish; it is as just as your silence is generous, and I reply
to it in all sincerity. You would ask, 'When I have given all that I
possess, what do I receive in return?' This--a wife whose friendship is
as warm as many a woman's love; a wife who will give you all the
heart still left her, and cherish the hope that time may bring a harvest of
real affection to repay you for the faithfulness of years; who, though
she takes the retribution of a wrong into her hands and executes it in the
face of heaven, never will forget the honorable name you give into her
keeping or blemish it by any act of hers. I can promise no more. Will
this content you, Manuel?"
Before she ended his face was hidden in his hands, and tears streamed
through them as he listened, for like a true child of the south each
emotion found free vent and spent itself as swiftly as it rose. The

reaction was more than he could bear, for in a moment his life was
changed, months of hopeless longing were banished with a word, a
blissful yes canceled the hard no that had been accepted as inexorable,
and Happiness, lifting her full cup to his lips, bade him drink. A
moment he yielded to the natural relief, then dashed his tears away and
threw himself at Pauline's feet in that attitude fit only for a race as
graceful as impassioned.
"Forgive me! Take all I have--fortune, name, and my poor self; use us
as you will, we are proud and happy to be spent for you! No service
will be too hard, no trial too long if in the end you learn to love me with
one tithe of the affection I have made my life. Do you mean it? Am I to
go with you? To be near you always, to call you wife, and know we are
each other's until death? What have I ever done to earn a fate like this?"
Fast and fervently he spoke, and very winsome was the glad
abandonment of this young lover, half boy, half man, possessing the
simplicity of the one, the fervor of the other. Pauline looked and
listened with a soothing sense of consolation in the knowledge that this
loyal heart was all her own, a sweet foretaste of the devotion which
henceforth was to shelter her from poverty, neglect, and wrong, and
turn life's sunniest side to one who had so long seen only its most bleak
and barren. Still at her feet, his arms about her waist, his face flushed
and proud, lifted to hers, Manuel saw the cold mask soften, the stern
eyes melt with a sudden dew as Pauline watched him, saying, "Dear
Manuel, love me less; I am not worth such ardent and entire faith.
Pause and reflect before you take this step. I will not bind you to my
fate too soon lest you repent too late. We both stand alone in the world,
free to make or mar our future as we will. I have chosen my lot. Recall
all it may cost you to share it and be sure the price is not too high a one.
Remember I am poor, you the possessor of one princely fortune, the
sole heir to another."
"The knowledge of this burdened me before; now I glory in it because I
have the more for you."
"Remember, I am older than yourself, and may early lose the beauty
you love so well, leaving an old wife to burden your youth."

"What are a few years to me? Women like you grow lovelier with age,
and you shall have a strong young husband to lean on all your life."
"Remember, I am not of your faith, and the priests will shut me out
from your heaven."
"Let them prate as they will. Where you go I will go; Santa Paula shall
be my madonna!"
"Remember, I am a deserted woman, and in the world we are going to
my name may become the sport of that man's cruel tongue. Could you
bear that patiently; and curb your fiery pride if I desired it?"
"Anything for you,
Continue reading on your phone by scaning this QR Code

 / 25
Tip: The current page has been bookmarked automatically. If you wish to continue reading later, just open the Dertz Homepage, and click on the 'continue reading' link at the bottom of the page.