第27章 A CHINESE GIRL GRADUATE BY R.K.DOUGLAS(10)
"Why not?" said Tu, in alarmed surprise."Because I am bound to Wei.""What! Does Wei know your secret?"
"No.But do you remember when I shot that arrow in front of your study?""Perfectly," said Tu."But what has that to do with it?""Why, Wei discovered my name on the shaft, and I, to keep my secret, told him that it was my sister's name.He then wanted to marry my sister, and I undertook, fool that I was, to arrange it for him.Now I shall be obliged to confess the truth, and he will have a right to claim me instead of my supposed sister.""But," said Tu, "I have a prior right to that of Wei, for it was I who found the arrow.And in this matter I shall be ready to outface him at all hazards.But," he added, "Wei, I am sure, is not the man to take an unfair advantage of you.""Do you really think so?" asked Jasmine."Certainly I do," said Tu.
"Then--then--I shall be--very glad," said poor Jasmine, hesitatingly, overcome with bashfulness, but full of joy.
At which gracious consent Tu recovered the hand which had been withdrawn from his, and Jasmine sank again into the chair at his side.
"But, Tu, dear," she said, after a pause, "there is something else that I must tell you before I can feel that my confessions are over.""What! You have not engaged yourself to any one else, have you?" said Tu, laughing.
"Yes, I have," she replied, with a smile; and she then gave her lover a full and particular account of how Mr.King had proposed to her on behalf of his cousin, and how she had accepted her.
"How could you frame your lips to utter such untruths?" said Tu, half laughing and half in earnest.
"O Tu, falsehood is so easy and truth so difficult sometimes.But I feel that I have been very, very wicked," said poor Jasmine, covering her face with her hands.
"Well, you certainly have got yourself into a pretty hobble.So far as I can make out, you are at the present moment engaged to one young lady and two young men."The situation, thus expressed, was so comical that Jasmine could not refrain from laughing through her tears; but, after a somewhat lengthened consultation with her lover, her face recovered its wonted serenity, and round it hovered a halo of happiness which added light and beauty to every feature.There is something particularly entrancing in receiving the first confidences of a pure and loving soul.So Tu thought on this occasion, and while Jasmine was pouring the most secret workings of her inmost being into his ear, those lines of the poet of the Sung dynasty came irresistibly into his mind:
'T is sweet to see the flowers woo the sun, To watch the quaint wiles of the cooing dove, But sweeter far to hear the dulcet tones Of her one loves confessing her great love.
But there is an end to everything, even to the "Confucian Analects," and so there was also to this lovers' colloquy.For just as Jasmine was explaining, for the twentieth time, the origin and basis of her love for Tu, a waiter entered to announce the arrival of her luggage.
"I don't know quite," said Tu, "where we are to put your two men.But, by-the-bye," he added, as the thought struck him, "did you really travel all the way in the company of these two men only?""O Tu," said Jasmine, laughing, "I have something else to confess to you.""What! another lover?" said Tu, affecting horror and surprise.
"No; not another lover, but another woman.The short, stout one is a woman, and came as my maid.She is the wife of 'The Dragon.' ""Well, now have you told me all? For I am getting so confused about the people you have transformed from women to men, that I shall havedoubts about my own sex next."
"Yes, Tu, dear; now you know all," said Jasmine, laughing.But not all the good news which was in store for him, for scarcely had Jasmine done speaking when a letter arrived from his friend in the Board of War, who wrote to say that he had succeeded in getting the military intendant of Mienchu transferred to a post in the province of Kwangsi, and that the departure of this noxious official would mean the release of the colonel, as he alone was the colonel's accuser.This news added one more chord of joy which had been making harmony in Jasmine's heart for some hours, and readily she agreed with Tu that they should set off homeward on the following morning.
With no such adventure as that which had attended Jasmine's journey to the capital, they reached Mienchu, and, to their delight, were received by the colonel in his own yamun.After congratulating him on his release, which Jasmine took care he should understand was due entirely to Tu's exertions, she gave him a full account of her various experiences on the road and at the capital.
"It is like a story out of a book of marvels," said her father, "and even now you have not exhausted all the necessary explanations.For, since my release, your friend Wei has been here to ask for my daughter in marriage.From some questions I put to him, he is evidently unaware that you are my only daughter, and I therefore put him off and told him to wait until you returned.He is in a very impatient state, and, no doubt, will be over shortly."Nor was the colonel wrong, for almost immediately Wei was announced, who, after expressing the genuine pleasure he felt at seeing Jasmine again, began at once on the subject which filled his mind.
"I am so glad," he said, "to have this opportunity of asking you to explain matters.At present I am completely nonplussed.On my return from Peking I inquired of one of your father's servants about his daughter.'He has not got one,' quoth the man.I went to another, and he said, 'You mean the "young noble," I suppose.' 'No, I don't,' I said; 'I mean his sister.' 'Well, that is the only daughter I know of,' said he.Then I went to your father, and all I could get out of him was, 'Wait until the "young noble"comes home.' Please tell me what all this means.""Your great desire is to marry a beautiful and accomplished girl, is it not?" said Jasmine.
"That certainly is my wish," said Wei.