Part 19 (1/2)
”Oh, not a word, sir!” came the eager answer.
”You didn't tell him to come and see me?”
The woman gave a start, looked dismayed, and began:--
”N-no, sir; you didn't tell”--
”Um--hum,” growled the Doctor. He took out a card and wrote on it. ”Now see if you can remember to give him that.”
CHAPTER XVI.
MANY WATERS.
As the day faded away it began to rain. The next morning the water was coming down in torrents. Richling, looking out from a door in Prieur street, found scant room for one foot on the inner edge of the sidewalk; all the rest was under water. By noon the sidewalks were completely covered in miles of streets. By two in the afternoon the flood was coming into many of the houses. By three it was up at the door-sill on which he stood. There it stopped.
He could do nothing but stand and look. Skiffs, canoes, hastily improvised rafts, were moving in every direction, carrying the unsightly chattels of the poor out of their overflowed cottages to higher ground.
Barrels, boxes, planks, hen-coops, bridge lumber, piles of straw that waltzed solemnly as they went, cord-wood, old s.h.i.+ngles, door-steps, floated here and there in melancholy confusion; and down upon all still drizzled the slackening rain. At length it ceased.
Richling still stood in the door-way, the picture of mute helplessness.
Yes, there was one other thing he could do; he could laugh. It would have been hard to avoid it sometimes, there were such ludicrous sights,--such slips and sprawls into the water; so there he stood in that peculiar isolation that deaf people content themselves with, now looking the picture of anxious waiting, now indulging a low, deaf man's chuckle when something made the rowdies and slatterns of the street roar.
Presently he noticed, at a distance up the way, a young man in a canoe, pa.s.sing, much to their good-natured chagrin, a party of three in a skiff, who had engaged him in a trial of speed. From both boats a shower of hilarious French was issuing. At the nearest corner the skiff party turned into another street and disappeared, throwing their lingual fireworks to the last. The canoe came straight on with the speed of a fish. Its dexterous occupant was no other than Narcisse.
There was a grace in his movement that kept Richling's eyes on him, when he would rather have withdrawn into the house. Down went the paddle always on the same side, noiselessly, in front; on darted the canoe; backward stretched the submerged paddle and came out of the water edgewise at full reach behind, with an almost imperceptible swerving motion that kept the slender craft true to its course. No rocking; no rush of water before or behind; only the one constant gla.s.sy ripple gliding on either side as silently as a beam of light. Suddenly, without any apparent change of movement in the sinewy wrists, the narrow sh.e.l.l swept around in a quarter circle, and Narcisse sat face to face with Richling.
Each smiled brightly at the other. The handsome Creole's face was aglow with the pure delight of existence.
”Well, Mistoo Itchlin, 'ow you enjoyin' that watah? As fah as myseff am concerned, 'I am afloat, I am afloat on the fee-us 'olling tide.' I don't think you fine that stweet pwetty dusty to-day, Mistoo Itchlin?”
Richling laughed.
”It don't inflame my eyes to-day,” he said.
”You muz egscuse my i'ony, Mistoo Itchlin; I can't 'ep that sometime'.
It come natu'al to me, in fact. I was on'y speaking i'oniously juz now in calling allusion to that dust; because, of co'se, theh is no dust to-day, because the g'ound is all covvud with watah, in fact. Some people don't understand that figgah of i'ony.”
”I don't understand as much about it myself as I'd like to,” said Richling.
”Me, I'm ve'y fon' of it,” responded the Creole. ”I was making seve'al i'onies ad those fwen' of mine juz now. We was 'unning a 'ace. An' tha.s.s anotheh thing I am fon' of. I would 'ather 'un a 'ace than to wuck faw a livin'. Ha! ha! ha! I should thing so! Anybody would, in fact. But tha.s.s the way with me--always making some i'onies.” He stopped with a sudden change of countenance, and resumed gravely: ”Mistoo Itchlin, looks to me like you' lookin' ve'y salad.” He fanned himself with his hat. ”I dunno 'ow 'tis with you, Mistoo Itchlin, but I fine myseff ve'y oppwessive thiz evening.”
”I don't find you so,” said Richling, smiling broadly.
And he did not. The young Creole's burning face and resplendent wit were a sunset glow in the darkness of this day of overpowering adversity. His presence even supplied, for a moment, what seemed a gleam of hope. Why wasn't there here an opportunity to visit the hospital? He need not tell Narcisse the object of his visit.
”Do you think,” asked Richling, persuasively, crouching down upon one of his heels, ”that I could sit in that thing without turning it over?”
”In that pee-ogue?” Narcisse smiled the smile of the proficient as he waved his paddle across the canoe. ”Mistoo Itchlin,”--the smile pa.s.sed off,--”I dunno if you'll billiv me, but at the same time I muz tell you the tooth?”--