Part 12 (1/2)
Royce's scissors could be heard, and the soft rustle of cotton cloth.
The sewing-circle was going on in the church vestry where there was a faint odour from the kerosene lamps, which had just been lighted. The Widow Criswell was the first to break the silence.
”Polly ain't showed no symptoms yet, has she?” she asked, testing one of the b.u.t.tons as if sceptical of her thread.
”Well, no; not yet. But then Dan seemed as smart as anybody six months ago, and just look at him to-day!”
The mental eyes of a score of women were turned upon Dan, as he was daily seen, round-shouldered and hollow-chested, toiling along the snowy country roads to and from school, coughing as he went. The topic was not an uncongenial one to the members of the sewing-circle, who had really very little to talk about. So absorbed were they, indeed, in the discussion of poor Dan's fate, and of the long list of casualties that had preceded it, that no one noticed the entrance of a young girl, rosy-cheeked and bright-eyed, who had come to help with the supper. There was an air of peculiar freshness about her, and as she stood in her blue dress and white ap.r.o.n near the door, her ruddy brown hair s.h.i.+ning in the lamp-light, the effect was like the opening of a window in a close room. Her step was arrested in the act of coming forward, and, as she paused to listen, the pretty colour was quite blotted out of her cheeks.
”I don't think Dan's will be a lingering case,” Mrs. Lapham was saying. ”The lingering cases are the most trying.”
Polly stood motionless. Was it true then, that which she had dreaded, that which she had shrunk from facing? Was it more than a cold that Dan had got? Was Dan really ill? Her Dan? Really ill? Her heart was beating like a trip-hammer, but no one seemed to hear it.
”Queer that the doctors don't find any cure for lung-trouble,” Mrs.
Royce was saying. ”Seems as though there must be some way of stopping it, if you could only find it out.”
”Have you tried Kinderling's Certain Cure?” asked Mrs. Dodge. ”They do say that it's _very_ efficacious.”
”Well, no,” said Mrs. Lapham; ”I don't hold much to medicines myself; but if I did I should think it just a wilful waste to try them for Dan. The boy's doomed, to begin with, and there's no help for it.”
”There _is_ a help for it, there _shall_ be a help for it!” cried a voice, vibrating with youthful energy and emotion. ”I don't see how you can talk so, Aunt Lucia! Dan _isn't_ doomed! he _sha'n't_ die! I won't _let_ him die!”
The women looked at Polly and then they looked at one another, fairly abashed by the girl's spirit; all, that is, excepting Aunt Lucia, who was not impressionable enough to feel anything but the superficial rudeness of Polly's outbreak.
”That'll do, Polly,” she said, with a spiritless severity. ”This is no place for a display of temper.”
The colour had come back into the girl's face now, and there were hot tears in her eyes. She turned without a word and left the room, nor was she seen again among the waitresses who came to hand the tea.
Polly was rather ashamed of having run away from the sewing-circle, and she had serious thoughts of going back. It was the first time in her life that she had allowed herself to be routed by circ.u.mstances; but somehow she felt as if she could not find it in her heart to hand about tea and seed-cakes, sandwiches and quince-preserve, to people who could think such dreadful thoughts of Dan. And then, besides, she knew what a pleasant surprise it would be for Dan to have her all to himself for an evening. Uncle Seth would be sure to go for his weekly game of checkers with Deacon White, and she could help Dan with his algebra and Latin, and see that he was warm and ”comfy,” and perhaps find that he did not cough so much as he did the evening before.
They had a very cozy evening, she and Dan, just as she had planned it in every particular but one, namely, the cough. There was no improvement in that since the night before, and for the first time the boy spoke of it.
”I say, Polly! Isn't it stupid, the way this cold hangs on? Do you remember how long it is since I caught it?”
”Why, no, Dan. It does seem a good while, doesn't it? I guess it must be about over by this time. Don't you know how suddenly those things go?”
Dan, who was on his way to bed, had stopped, close to the air-tight stove, to warm his hands.
”I wish it were summer, Polly,” he said, with a wistful look in his great black eyes that cut Polly to the heart. ”It's been such a cold winter; and a fellow gets kind of tired of barking all the time.”
”It'll be spring before you know it, Dan, you see if it isn't, and you'll forget you ever had a cold in your life.”
And when, half an hour later, the evening was over, and Polly was safe in her bed, she buried her head in her pillow and cried herself to sleep.
But tears and bewailings were not a natural resource with Polly, whose forte was action. Her first thought in the morning was: what should she do about it? Something must be done, of course, and she was the only one to do it. What it was she had not the faintest idea, but then it was her business to find out. Here was she, eighteen years old, strong and hearty, and with good practical common sense, the natural guardian and protector of her younger brother. It was time she bestirred herself!
As a first step, she got up with the sun and dressed herself, and then she slipped down-stairs to the parlour where such of her father's books as had been rescued from auction were lodged; her father had been the village doctor. All the medical works had been sold, and many other volumes besides, but among those remaining was an old encyclopaedia which had proved to Polly a mine of information on many subjects. As she took down the third volume, she heard a portentous _Meaouw!_ and there, outside the window, stood Mufty, the grey cat, rubbing himself against the frosty pane. Polly opened the window and Mufty sprang in, bringing a puff of frosty air in his wake. Without so much as a word of thanks he walked over to the stove. Finding it, however, cold, as only an empty air-tight stove can be cold, he strolled, with a disengaged air, beneath which lurked a very distinct intention, toward the only warm object in the room, namely, Polly in her woollen gown. She had the volume open on the table before her, and was deep in its perusal, murmuring as she read.
”Appears to have committed its ravages from the earliest time,” Polly read, ”and its distribution is probably universal, though far from equal.”
At this point Mufty lifted himself lightly in the air, after the manner peculiar to cats, and landed in Polly's lap. After switching his tail across her eyes once or twice, and rubbing himself against the book in rather a disturbing way, he at last settled down, and began purring vigorously in token of satisfaction. The room was very cold, and Polly, without interrupting her reading, was glad to bury her hands in the thick fur. Presently the colour in her cheeks grew brighter and her breath came quicker. There _was_ a way, after all!