Daisy In The Field - Page 17/231

Our correspondence must cease. I must tell him that. - It was

dreadfully hard to think it, but I knew it must cease. I could

not receive letters from Christian in Switzerland, and

certainly I could not write them, without the knowledge of my

father and mother; - and if I could, I would not. We must stop

writing; we must be hundreds of miles apart, know that dangers

clustered round the path of one if not both, know that clouds

and uncertainties hung over all our future, and we must not

write. And I must tell Mr. Thorold so. It was very hard; for I

did not flatter myself with an easy bright clearing away of

our difficulties by and by, even if the storm of the war

should roll over and leave Christian to encounter them with

me. I did not hope that explanations and a little persuasion

would induce my mother and my father to look favourably on a

Northern suitor for their daughter's hand. My father? - he

possibly might give up his pleasure for the sake of my

happiness; with my mother I saw no such possibility. It was

useless to hope they would let me write to an officer in the

Union army. If any chance at all for my happiness were in the

future, it must lie in changes not yet accomplished, or in Mr.

Thorold's own personal power of recommending himself; rather

in both these. For the present - I could not tell how long -

now, soon, as soon as I should leave Washington again, we must

be separated. I wished I could see Thorold that very evening!

In Washington - maybe not far off - and days so few - and I

could not see him! I sat down again and put my head in my

hand. Had I done wrong, made any unconscious mistake neglected

any duty, that this trouble had come upon me? I tried to

think. I could not find that I had to blame myself on any such

score. It was not wrong to go to West Point last summer. I

held none but friendly relations with Mr. Thorold there, so

far as I knew. I was utterly taken by surprise, when at Miss

Cardigan's that night I found that we were more than friends.

Could I hide the fact then? Perhaps it would have been right

to do it, if I had known what I was about; but I did not know.

Mr. Thorold was going to the war; I had but a surprised

minute; it was simply impossible to hide from him all which

that minute revealed. Now? Now I was committed; my truth was

pledged; my heart was given. My heart might be broken, but

could never be taken back. Truth must be truth; and my life

was Mr. Thorold's if it belonged to anybody but my father and

mother. I settled that point. It was needless ever to look at

it again.