Part 24 (1/2)

Miss Felicia sprang forward and caught her in her arms.

”Come!--none of this, Child. Pull yourself together right away. Get her some water, nurse,--she has stood all she can. There now, dearie--”

Ruth's head was on her breast now. ”There--there--Such a poor darling, and so many things coming all at once. There, darling, put your head on my shoulder and cry it all out.”

The girl sobbed on, the wrinkled hand patting her cheek.

”Oh, but you don't know, aunty--” she crooned.

”Yes, but I do--you blessed child. I know it all.”

”And won't somebody go and help him? He is all alone, he told me so.”

”Uncle Peter is with him, dearie.'”

”Yes,--but some one who can--” she straightened up--”I will go, aunty--I will go now.”

”You will do nothing of the kind, you little goose; you will stay just where you are.”

”Well, won't you go, then? Oh, please--please--aunty.” Peter's bald head now rose above the edge of the banisters. Miss Felicia motioned him to go back, but Ruth heard his step and raised her tear-drenched face half hidden in her dishevelled hair.

”Oh, Uncle Peter, is Jack--is Mr. Breen--”

Miss Felicia's warning face behind Ruth's own, for once reached Peter in time.

”In his bed and covered up, and his landlady, Mrs. Hicks, sitting beside him,” responded Peter in his cheeriest tones.

”But he fainted from pain--and--”

”Yes, but that's all over now, my dear,” broke in Miss Felicia.

”But you will go, anyhow--won't you, aunty?” pleaded Ruth.

”Certainly--just as soon as I put you to bed, and that is just where you have got to go this very minute,” and she led the overwrought trembling girl into her room and shut the door.

Peter stood for an instant looking about him, his mind taking in the situation. Ruth was being cared for now, and so was MacFarlane--the white cap and ap.r.o.n of the noiseless nurse pa.s.sing in and out of the room in which he lay, a.s.sured him of that. Bolton, too, in the room next to Jack's, was being looked after by his sister who had just arrived.

He, too, was fairly comfortable, though a couple of his fingers had been shortened. But there was n.o.body to look after Jack--no father, mother, sister--n.o.body. To send for the boy's uncle, or Corinne, or his aunt, was out of the question, none of them having had more than a word with him since his departure. Yet Jack needed attention. The doctor had just pulled him out of one fainting spell only to have him collapse again when his coat was taken off, and the bandages were loosened. He was suffering greatly and was by no means out of danger.

If for the next hour or two there was anything to be done at MacFarlane's, Peter was ready to do it, but this accomplished, he would shoulder his bag and camp out for the night beside the boy's bed. He had come, indeed, to tell Felicia so, and he meant to sleep there whatever her protests. He was preparing himself for her objections, when she reentered the room.

”How is young Breen?” Miss Felicia asked in a whisper, closing the door behind her. She had put Ruth to bed, where she had again given way to an uncontrollable fit of weeping.

”Pretty weak. The doctor is with him now.”

”What did the fool get up for?” She did not mean to surrender too quickly about Jack despite his heroism--not to Peter, at any rate. Then, again, she half suspected that Ruth's tears were equally divided between the rescuer and the rescued.

”He couldn't help it, I suppose,” answered Peter, with a gleam in his eyes--”he was born that way.”

”Born! What stuff, Peter--no man of any common-sense would have--”