З життя
Love Triumphs Over Betrayal
LOVE STRONGER THAN BETRAYAL
It is many years past now, and as I remember it, Mary entered the home of Elizabeth and Charles when their son, James, was but a small infant. To James, Mary was not merely a nannyshe was an angel watching over him. Elizabeth, preoccupied ever with her own interests, grew bitter as she saw her son run, with every trouble and tear, into the arms of the other woman. In the depths of a mothers heart, a poisonous jealousy began to fester.
When James turned eight, Elizabeth resolved to rid herself of her rival. Her husband stoutly opposed dismissing the kindly and honest nanny, so Elizabeth resorted to a cunning act. She slipped her cherished pearl necklace beneath Marys mattress, then summoned the constables. Poor Mary wept at the injustice, but the courts sentenced her to two years imprisonment. James clung to her, howling and grasping at her hands as she was led away in shackles, but he, too, was pulled back by force.
Twenty years drifted by.
James had reached the age of twenty-eight, and though he now prospered, an ache lingered always for the one who had shown him pure affection. Meanwhile, Elizabeth grew gravely ill. She lingered upon deaths threshold, yet the end would not come, and her suffering was dreadful beyond words.
One night, wracked with tears, she called for her son and confessed the terrible truth:
James, I cannot die. Death refuses me because I bear a great sin. I destroyed the life of an innocent soul. Find Mary. I beg you bring her to me.
James found Mary living modestly at the edge of town. She looked older, her hands roughened from years of hard labour, but her eyes had not changed: they were gentle and forgiving as ever.
Mother Mary James breathed as he embraced her. My own mother begs you to come. She is fading, and her peace depends on your forgiveness.
Without hesitation, Mary agreed. When they entered the sickroom, Elizabeth, frail and ravaged by illness, trembled.
Mary she whispered, stretching out a trembling hand.
Mary stepped forward and gently took her hand in hers.
Forgive me, Mary. Forgive the harm I brought upon you. I sinned against God, and burdened myself with this torment. Heaven will not take me until you speak the word
Mary gazed upon the woman who had sent her to prison, yet found her heart free of bitterness.
I forgave you long ago, Elizabeth. Rest easy. There is peace between us.
Elizabeth exhaled with relief, the lines upon her face softening. She looked one last time upon her son and then at Mary.
My son he is now your responsibilityto cherish and protect.
That very night, Elizabeth passed away. Mary remained with James as his true mother, holding a place of honour in his household. James showered her with the care she had been denied for so long. In time, he met a worthy English maiden and took her hand in marriage, and Mary blessed their union as though she were grandmother to their forthcoming children. In the end, truth prevailed, and mercy mended every wound the past had inflicted.
