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A Forest Betrothal
by
Mr. Zacharias heard nothing of all this, for he was sleeping soundly; but the noise of a handful of peas being thrown against the window waked him suddenly. He listened and heard outside at the bottom of the wall, a “scit! scit!” so softly whispered that you might almost think it the cry of some bird. Nevertheless, the good man’s heart fluttered.
“What is that?” he cried.
After a few seconds’ silence a soft voice replied:
“Charlotte, Charlotte–it is I!”
Zacharias trembled; and as he listened with ears on the alert for each sound, the foliage on the trellis struck against the window and a figure climbed up quietly–oh so quietly–then stopped and stared into the room.
The old man being indignant at this, rose and opened the window, upon which the stranger climbed through noiselessly.
“Do not be frightened, Charlotte,” he said, “I have come to tell you some good news. My father will be here tomorrow.”
He received no response, for the reason that Zacharias was trying to light the lamp.
“Where are you, Charlotte?”
“Here I am,” cried the old man turning with a livid face and gazing fiercely at his rival.
The young man who stood before him was tall and slender, with large, frank, black eyes, brown cheeks, rosy lips, just covered with a little moustache, and a large brown, felt hat, tilted a little to one side.
The apparition of Zacharias stunned him to immovability. But as the Judge was about to cry out, he exclaimed:
“In the name of Heaven, do not call. I am no robber–I love Charlotte!”
“And–she–she?” stammered Zacharias.
“She loves me also! Oh, you need have no fear if you are one of her relations. We were betrothed at the Kusnacht feast. The fiances of the Grinderwald and the Entilbach have the right to visit in the night. It is a custom of Unterwald. All the Swiss know that.”
“Yeri Foerster–Yeri, Charlotte’s father, never told me.”
“No, he does not know of our betrothal yet,” said the other, in a lower tone of voice; “when I asked his permission last year he told me to wait–that his daughter was too young yet–we were betrothed secretly. Only as I had not the Forester’s consent, I did not come in the night-time. This is the first time. I saw Charlotte in the town; but the time seemed so long to us both that I ended by confessing all to my father, and he has promised to see Yeri tomorrow. Ah, Monsieur, I knew it would give such pleasure to Charlotte that I could not help coming to announce my good news.”
The poor old man fell back in his chair and covered his face with his hands. Oh, how he suffered! What bitter thoughts passed through his brain; what a sad awakening after so many sweet and joyous dreams.
And the young mountaineer was not a whit more comfortable, as he stood leaning against a corner of the wall, his arms crossed over his breast, and the following thoughts running through his head:
“If old Foerster, who does not know of our betrothal, finds me here, he will kill me without listening to one word of explanation. That is certain.”
And he gazed anxiously at the door, his ear on the alert for the least sound.
A few moments afterward, Zacharias lifting his head, as though awakening from a dream, asked him:
“What is your name?”
“Karl Imnant, Monsieur.”
“What is your business?”
“My father hopes to obtain the position of a forester in the Grinderwald for me.”
There was a long silence and Zacharias looked at the young man with an envious eye.
“And she loves you?” he asked in a broken voice.
“Oh, yes, Monsieur; we love each other devotedly.”
And Zacharias, letting his eyes fall on his thin legs and his hands wrinkled and veined, murmured:
“Yes, she ought to love him; he is young and handsome.”
And his head fell on his breast again. All at once he arose, trembling in every limb, and opened the window.
“Young man, you have done very wrong; you will never know how much wrong you have really done. You must obtain Mr. Foerster’s consent–but go–go–you will hear from me soon.”