Fritz Kober came nearer and bowed so low that he was almost kneeling.
“Charles Henry Buschman, will you be my wife?”
Charles Henry did not answer; tears and bobs choked his voice, and trembling with emotion he laid his head on Fritz Kober’s shoulder.
“Does that mean yes?” said Fritz, breathlessly.
“Yes,” whispered she, softly.
And now Fritz uttered a wild shout, and threw his arms around the soldier’s neck and kissed him heartily.
“God be thanked that it is over,” said he; “God be thanked that I did not deceive myself—that you are truly a girl. When you were last sick, and the surgeon bled you, I was suspicious. I said to myself, ‘That is not the arm of a man.’ I went out, but in the evening you were praying, and you did not know that I was in the tent, and you said, ‘You dear parents in heaven, pity your poor daughter.’ I could have shouted with rapture and delight, but I held my peace. I wished to wait and see if you would be good to me.”
“But the expression of your eyes was so changed,” whispered Charles Henry; “I was obliged to turn away when their glance fell upon me. I felt that my secret was discovered, and therefore I avoided being with you.”
“Officer Buschman,” cried Deesen, in a commanding voice from the house, “is your work finished?”
“Immediately; I have but a few stitches to do,” cried Charles Henry. “Be silent,” said he to Fritz, “and let me sew.”