"As if she could ever forget it! Good Heaven! Well, Ishmael, I see that your pupils are a.s.sembling fast. I will not detain you from your duties longer. Good-morning; and remember that we shall expect you on Sat.u.r.day evening."
"Good-morning, sir! I will remember; pray give my respects to Mrs.
Middleton and all the family."
"Certainly," said Mr. Middleton, as he walked away.
Ishmael re-entered the schoolroom, rang the bell to call the pupils in, and commenced the duties of the day.
On Sat.u.r.day afternoon, all his weekly labors being scrupulously finished, Ishmael walked over to Rushy Sh.o.r.e Beacon, as Mr. Middleton"s house was called.
It was a very large old edifice of white stone, and stood upon the extreme point of a headland running out into the river. There were many trees behind it, landward; but none before it, seaward; so that really the tall white house, with its many windows, might well serve as a beacon to pa.s.sing vessels.
Around the headland upon which it was situated the waters swept with a mighty impetus and a deafening roar that gave the place its descriptive name of Rushy Sh.o.r.e. As the air and water here were mildly salt, the situation was deemed very healthy and well suited to such delicate lungs as required a stimulating atmosphere, and yet could not bear the full strength of the sea breezes. As such the place had been selected by Mr.
Middleton for the residence of his invalid wife.
When Ishmael approached the house he found the family all a.s.sembled in the long front porch to enjoy the fine view.
Walter Middleton, who was the first to spy Ishmael"s approach, ran down the steps and out to meet him, exclaiming, as he caught and shook his hand:
"How are you, old boy, how are you? Looking in high health and handsomeness, at any rate! I should have come down to school to see you, Ishmael, only, on the very morning after our arrival, I had to mount my horse and ride down to Baymouth to attend to some business for my father, and I did not get back until late last night. Come, hurry on to the house! My mother is anxious to see her old favorite."
And so, overpowering Ishmael with the cordiality of his greeting, Walter drew his friend"s arm within his own, and took him upon the porch in the midst of the family group, that immediately surrounded and warmly welcomed him.
"How handsome and manly you have grown, my dear," said Mrs. Middleton, with almost motherly pride in her favorite.
Ishmael blushed and bowed in reply to this direct compliment. And soon he was seated among them, chatting pleasantly.
This was but the first of many delightful visits to Bushy Sh.o.r.e enjoyed by Ishmael. Mr. Middleton liked to have him there, and often pressed him to come. And Ishmael, who very well knew the difference between invitations given from mere politeness and those prompted by a sincere desire for his company, frequently accepted them.
One day Mr. Middleton, who took a deep interest in the struggles of Ishmael, said to him:
"You should enter some law school, my young friend."
"I intend to do so, sir, as soon as I have accomplished two things."
"And what are they?"
"Saved money enough to defray my expenses and found a subst.i.tute for myself as master of this little school."
"Oh, bother the school! you must not always be sacrificing yourself to the public welfare, Ishmael," laughed Mr. Middleton, who sometimes permitted himself to use rough words.
"But to duty, sir?"
"Oh, if you make it a question of duty, I have no more to say," was the concluding remark of Ishmael"s friend.
Thus, in diligent labor and intellectual intercourse, the young man pa.s.sed the summer months.
One bright hope burned constantly before Ishmael"s mental vision--of seeing Claudia; but, ah! this hope was destined to be deferred from week to week, and finally disappointed.
Judge Merlin did not come to Tanglewood as usual this summer. He took his daughter to the seaside instead, where they lived quietly at a private boarding house, because it was not intended that Miss Merlin should enter society until the coming winter at Washington.
To Ishmael this was a bitter disappointment, but a bitter tonic, too, since it served to give strength to his mind.
Late in September his friend Walter Middleton, who was a medical student, left them to attend the autumn and winter course of lectures in Baltimore. Ishmael felt the loss of his society very much; but as usual consoled himself by hard work through all the autumn months.
He heard from Judge Merlin and his daughter through their letters to the Middletons. They were again in Annapolis, where Miss Merlin was pa.s.sing her last term at the finishing school, but they were to go to Washington at the meeting of Congress in December.
As the month of November drew to a close Ishmael began to compute the labors, progress, and profits of the year. He found that he had brought his school into fine working order; he had brought his pupils on well; he had made Reuben Gray a very good reader, penman, arithmetician, and bookkeeper; and lastly, he had advanced himself very far in his chosen professional studies. But he had made but little money, and saved less than a hundred dollars. This was not enough to support him, even by the severest economy, at any law school. Something else, he felt, must be done for the next year, by which more money might be made. So after reflecting upon the subject for some time, he wrote out two advertis.e.m.e.nts--one for a teacher, competent to take charge of a small country school, and the other for a situation as bookkeeper, clerk, or amanuensis. In the course of a week the first advertis.e.m.e.nt was answered by a Methodist preacher living in the same neighborhood, who proposed to augment the small salary he received for preaching on Sundays, by teaching a day school all the week. Ishmael had an interview with this gentleman, and finding him all that could be desired in a clergyman and country schoolmaster, willingly engaged to relinquish his own post in favor of the new candidate on the first of the coming year.
His second advertis.e.m.e.nt was not yet answered; but Ishmael kept it on and anxiously awaited the result.
At length his perseverance was crowned with a success greater than he could have antic.i.p.ated. It was about the middle of December, a few days before the breaking up of his school for the Christmas holidays, that he called at the Shelton post office to ask if there were any letters for "X.Y.Z.," those being the initials he had signed to his second advertis.e.m.e.nt. A letter was handed him; at last, then, it had come!
Without scrutinizing the handwriting or the superscription, Ishmael tore it open and read:
"Washington, December 14.
"Mr. "X.Y.Z."--I have seen your advertis.e.m.e.nt in the Intelligencer. I am in want of an intelligent and well-educated young man to act as my confidential secretary and occasional amanuensis. If you will write to me, enclosing testimonials and references as to your character and competency, and stating the amount of salary you will expect to receive, I hope we may come to satisfactory arrangement.
"Respectfully yours,
"RANDOLF MERLIN."
It was from Claudia"s father, then! It was a stroke of fate, or so it seemed to the surprised and excited mind of Ishmael.
Trembling with joy, he retired to the private parlor of the quiet little village inn to answer the letter, so that it might go off to Washington by the mail that started that afternoon. He smiled to himself as he wrote that Judge Merlin himself had had ample opportunity of personally testing the character and ability of the advertiser, but that if further testimony were needed, he begged to refer to Mr. James Middleton, of Rushy Sh.o.r.e. Finally, he left the question of the amount of salary to be settled by the judge himself. He signed, sealed, and directed this letter, and hurried to the post office to post it before the closing of the mail.
And then he went home in a maze of delight.
Three anxious days pa.s.sed, and then Ishmael received his answer. It was a favorable and a conclusive one. The judge told him that from the post office address given in the advertis.e.m.e.nt, as well as from other circ.u.mstances, he had supposed the advertiser to be Ishmael himself, but could not be sure until he had received his letter, when he was glad to find his supposition correct, as he should much rather receive into his family, in a confidential capacity, a known young man like Mr. Worth than any stranger, however well recommended the latter might be; he would fix the salary at three hundred dollars, with board and lodging, if that would meet the young gentleman"s views; if the terms suited, he hoped Mr. Worth would lose no time in joining him in Washington, as he, the writer, was overwhelmed with correspondence that was still acc.u.mulating.
Ishmael answered this second letter immediately, saying that he would be in Washington on the following Tuesday.
After posting his letter he walked rapidly homeward, calling at Rushy Sh.o.r.e on his way to inform his friends, the Middletons, of his change of fortune. As Ishmael was not egotistical enough to speak of himself and his affairs until it became absolutely needful for him to do so, he had never told Mr. Middleton of his plan of giving up the school to the Methodist minister and seeking another situation for himself. And during the three days of his correspondence with Judge Merlin he had not even seen Mr. Middleton, whom he only took time to visit on Sat.u.r.day evenings.
Upon this afternoon he reached Rushy Sh.o.r.e just as the family were sitting down to dinner. They were as much surprised as pleased to see him at such an unusual time as the middle of the week. Mr. Middleton got up to shake hands with him; Mrs. Middleton ordered another plate brought; Bee saw that room was made for another chair; and so Ishmael was welcomed by acclamation, and seated among them at the table.
"And now, young gentleman, tell us what it all means. For glad as we are to see you, and glad as you are to see us, we know very well that you did not take time to come here in the middle of the week merely to please yourself or us; pleasure not being your first object in life, Ishmael," said Mr. Middleton.
"I regret to say, sir, that I came to tell you, I am going away on Monday morning," replied Ishmael gravely, for at the moment he felt a very real regret at the thought of leaving such good and true friends.
"Going away!" exclaimed all the family in a breath, and in consternation; for this boy, with his excellent character and charming manners had always deeply endeared himself to all his friends. "Going away!" they repeated.
"I am sorry to say it," said Ishmael.
"But this is so unexpected, so sudden!" said Mrs. Middleton.
"What the grand deuce is the matter? Have you enlisted for a soldier, engaged as a sailor, been seized with the gold fever?"