Part 3 (2/2)

Strange Stories Grant Allen 64850K 2022-07-22

For hours and hours he sat there watching, and no sign came. Dr. Abury sat at the bottom of the couch, watching with him; and as they watched, Arthur felt from time to time that his face was again twitching horribly. However, he had only thoughts for one thing now: would Hetty die or would she recover? The servants brought them a little cake and wine. They sat and drank in silence, looking at one another, but each absorbed in his own thoughts, and speaking never a word for good or evil.

At last Hetty's eyes opened. Arthur noticed the change first, and took her hand in his gently. Her staring gaze fell upon him for a moment, and she asked feebly, ”Arthur, Arthur, do you still love me?”

”Love you, Hetty? With all my heart and soul, as I have always loved you!”

She smiled, and said nothing. Dr. Abury gave her a little wine in a teaspoon, and she drank it quietly. Then she shut her eyes again, but this time she was sleeping.

All night Arthur watched still by the bedside where they put her a little later, and Dr. Abury and a nurse watched with him. In the morning she woke slightly better, and when she saw Arthur still there, she smiled again, and said that if he was with her, she was happy. When Freeling came to inquire after the patient, he found her so much stronger, and Arthur so worn with fear and sleeplessness, that he insisted upon carrying off his friend in his brougham to his own house, and giving him a slight restorative. He might come back at once, he said; but only after he had had a dose of mixture, a gla.s.s of brandy and seltzer, and at least a mouthful of something for breakfast.

As Freeling was drawing the cork of the seltzer, Arthur's eye happened to light on a monkey, which was chained to a post in the little area plot outside the consulting-room. Arthur was accustomed to see monkeys there, for Freeling often had invalids from the Zoo to observe side by side with human patients; but this particular monkey fascinated him even in his present shattered state of nerves, because there was a something in its face which seemed strangely and horribly familiar to him. As he looked, he recognized with a feeling of unspeakable aversion what it was of which the monkey reminded him. It was making a series of hideous and apparently mocking grimaces--the very self-same grimaces which he had seen on his own features in the mirror during the last day or two!

Horrible idea! He was descending to the level of the very monkeys!

The more he watched, the more absolutely identical the two sets of grimaces appeared to him to be. Could it be fancy or was it reality? Or might it be one more delusion, showing that his brain was now giving way entirely? He rubbed his eyes, steadied his attention, and looked again with the deepest interest. No, he could not be mistaken. The monkey was acting in every respect precisely as he himself had acted.

”Harry,” he said, in a low and frightened tone, ”look at this monkey. Is he mad? Tell me.”

”My dear Arthur,” replied his friend, with just a shade of expostulation in his voice, ”you have really got madness on the brain at present. No, he isn't mad at all. He's as sane as you are, and that's saying a good deal, I can a.s.sure you.”

”But, Harry, you can't have seen what he's doing. He's grimacing and contorting himself in the most extraordinary fas.h.i.+on.”

”Well, monkeys often do grimace, don't they?” Harry Freeling answered coolly. ”Take this brandy and you'll soon feel better.”

”But they don't grimace like this one,” Arthur persisted.

”No, not like this one, certainly. That's why I've got him here. I'm going to operate upon him for it under chloroform, and cure him immediately.”

Arthur leaped from his seat like one demented. ”Operate upon him, cure him!” he cried hastily. ”What on earth do you mean, Harry?”

”My dear boy, don't be so excited,” said Freeling. ”This suspense and sleeplessness have been too much for you. This is antivivisection carried _ad absurdum_. You don't mean to say you object to operations upon a monkey for his own benefit, do you? If I don't cut a nerve, teta.n.u.s will finally set in, and he'll die of it in great agony. Drink off your brandy, and you'll feel better after it.”

”But, Harry, what's the matter with the monkey? For heaven's sake, tell me!”

Harry Freeling looked at his friend for the first time a little suspiciously. Could Warminster be right after all, and could Arthur really be going mad? It was so ridiculous of him to get into such a state of flurry about the ailments of a tame monkey, and at such a moment, too! ”Well,” he answered slowly, ”the monkey has got facial distortions due to a slight local paralysis of the inhibitory nerves supplied to the buccal and pharyngeal muscles, with a tendency to end in teta.n.u.s. If I cut a small ganglion behind the ear, and exhibit santonin, the muscles will be relaxed; and though they won't act so freely as before, they won't jerk and grimace any longer.”

”Does it ever occur in human beings?” Arthur asked eagerly.

”Occur in human beings? Bless my soul, yes! I've seen dozens of cases.

Why, goodness gracious, Arthur, it's positively occurring in your own face at this very moment!”

”I know it is,” Arthur answered in an agony of suspense. ”Do you think this twitching of mine is due to a local paralysis of the inhibitories, such as you speak of?”

”Excuse my laughing, my dear fellow; you really do look so absurdly comical. No, I don't think anything about it. I know it is.”

”Then you believe Warminster was wrong in taking it for a symptom of incipient insanity?”

It was Freeling's turn now to jump up in surprise. ”You don't mean to tell me, Arthur, that that was the sole ground on which that old fool, Warminster, thought you were going crazy?”

”He didn't see it himself,” answered Arthur, with a sigh of unspeakable relief. ”I only described it to him, and he drew his inference from what I told him. But the real question is this, Harry: Do you feel quite sure that there's nothing more than that the matter with me?”

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