“Is that you, Markham?” said he, startled and confounded at the apparition—perhaps, too, at the wildness of my looks.
“Yes, Lawrence; is that you?” I mustered the presence of mind to reply.
He smiled and coloured, as if half-proud and half-ashamed of his identity; and if he had reason to be proud of the sweet lady on his arm, he had no less cause to be ashamed of having concealed his good fortune so long.
“Allow me to introduce you to my bride,” said he, endeavouring to hide his embarrassment by an assumption of careless gaiety. “Esther, this is Mr. Markham; my friend Markham, Mrs. Lawrence, late Miss Hargrave.”
I bowed to the bride, and vehemently wrung the bridegroom’s hand.
“Why did you not tell me of this?” I said, reproachfully, pretending a resentment I did not feel (for in truth I was almost wild with joy to find myself so happily mistaken, and overflowing with affection to him for this and for the base injustice I felt that I had done him in my mind—he might have wronged me, but not to that extent; and as I had hated him like a demon for the last forty hours, the reaction from such a feeling was so great that I could pardon all offences for the moment—and love him in spite of them too).
“I did tell you,” said he, with an air of guilty confusion; “you received my letter?”
“What letter?”
“The one announcing my intended marriage.”
“I never received the most distant hint of such an intention.”